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Just started this last week, I've seen the movie and I wanted to give the book a try. So far, it's actually really good, and really violent (almost more violent than the movie).

Nice speed! That book is awesome. I personally had to start over after about 50 pages or so, because it has so much of that slang Burgess invented for it. I understood the beginning much better after I re-started it.

 

Burgess is one of my favorite writers, actually. I'm actually reading the Steinbeck book on my Kindle, but I also have The Doctor is Sick in my garage where I (unfortunately) smoke my disgusting cigarettes. So I'm kinda reading both of them at the same time.

 

If you like the book, I strongly recommend The Wanting Seed by Burgess. It's a dystopian type novel in the 1984, Brave New World mode and it's actually my favorite novel of that genre. It's darkly, sardonically humorous. I bet you'd like it.

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Just started this last week, I've seen the movie and I wanted to give the book a try. So far, it's actually really good, and really violent (almost more violent than the movie).

Nice speed! That book is awesome. I personally had to start over after about 50 pages or so, because it has so much of that slang Burgess invented for it. I understood the beginning much better after I re-started it.

 

Burgess is one of my favorite writers, actually. I'm actually reading the Steinbeck book on my Kindle, but I also have The Doctor is Sick in my garage where I (unfortunately) smoke my disgusting cigarettes. So I'm kinda reading both of them at the same time.

 

If you like the book, I strongly recommend The Wanting Seed by Burgess. It's a dystopian type novel in the 1984, Brave New World mode and it's actually my favorite novel of that genre. It's darkly, sardonically humorous. I bet you'd like it.

Agree on the slang he uses, I didn't get the whole British slang when I started the book. But after awhile, and like you did going back and re-reading certain parts of the book it becomes pretty clear what they are saying.

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Some books I read recently that I really liked were the Hunger Games Trilogy. It is probably one of my favorite set of books that I have read in quite a while. Here is a short little thing on what it is about:

 

The Hunger Games is a young-adult science fiction novel written by Suzanne Collins. It was originally published on September 14, 2008, by Scholastic.[1] It is the first book of the Hunger Games trilogy.[2] It introduces sixteen-year-old Katniss Everdeen, who lives in a post-apocalyptic world in the country of Panem where North America once stood. This is where a powerful government working in a central city called the Capitol holds power. In the book, the Hunger Games are an annual televised event where the Capitol chooses one boy and one girl from each district to fight to the death. The Hunger Games exist to demonstrate not even children are beyond the reach of the Capitol's power

 

I just finished reading book one of The Hunger Games and honestly I enjoyed it far more than I thought I would. I'm going to read the rest of the books now and I'm actually wanting to see the movie.

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Cannery Row, Steinbeck.

The book (novella?) is great! The movie is great too, if you can find it. Nick Nolte and Debra Winger. The great frog hunt is one of the best movie scenes ever. :lol:

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  • 2 weeks later...

Just finished 11/22/63, an extremely interesting look at what the world may have become IF Kennedy hadn’t been assassinated.

 

Steven King pens this massive (800 + pages) narrative about an ordinary Joe slipping into a time-continuum bubble and being back in 1958 and whether or not he can go through with altering history by stopping the events in Dallas. Lots of butterfly effects to consider.

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Wow. Since finishing the Swiss Family Robinson in late March, I've read ten novels! Started with Devil in the White City, about one of America's first known serial killers AND the 1893 Chicago World's Fair. It's a weird double story, with two seemingly disparate narratives mooshed into one book. The killer was far, far ahead of his time and the police had very little basis for dealing with him.

 

Since then I've been reading The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, a series of books written by different authors, all purporting to be the writings of Dr. John Watson. I've read:

 

The Giant Rat of Sumatra - figured out the plot in the first 30 pages. Not a good book.

The Angel of the Opera - Holmes meets the Phantom of the Opera in Paris. Pretty good read.

Seance for a Vampire - Holmes is distantly related to Count Dracula, who assists Holmes and Watson with a vampire problem in 1890s England.

The Scroll of the Dead - An ancient Egyptian scroll purportedly holding the key to resurrection is sought by academics and thugs.

The Stalwart Companions - A very young (pre-Watson) Holmes on tour with a Shakespearean company in New York meets Teddy Roosevelt, just out of college, and they solve a mystery together. "Written" by Roosevelt. It's a really quick read.

The Ectoplasmic Man - Holmes meets Harry Houdini, and helps him out of some serious trouble.

The Web Weaver - A new challenger nearly as devious as Moriarty rises, and Holmes must untangle the web to find the "spider" in the center. Holmes is cast as an ardent man, nearly a lover, which is entirely contrary to Conan Doyle's Holmes.

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Holmes - Holmes was the first to solve the mysterious set of crimes surrounding the enigmatic Mr. Hyde, but even he was shocked as the facts unfolded to the only possible conclusion. Robert Louis Stevenson has a small part in the final chapter, where Holmes provides him with the story - but cautions Stevenson to leave Holmes out of his work, and to make it a "fiction," rather than an account of real events.

The War of the Worlds - nearly as entertaining as HG Wells' classic. War of the Worlds remains one of my favorite novels, and this was a worthy "alternate history" to the original.

 

Some of these novels are quite good. Some are quite disappointing. But I've been thoroughly entertained by them, and I'm looking forward to finishing the next nine or ten on the shelf. Sam Siciliano wrote two of these, Web Weaver and Angel of the Opera, and for both he axes Watson and introduces Holmes' cousin, Dr. Vernier - a terribly poor replacement for Watson, who constantly derides Watson's writings and casts him as little more than an annoying hanger-on to Holmes - Siciliano's Dr. Vernier even goes so far as to have Holmes denounce Watson, something that Holmes purists probably find horrifying.

 

If you're a Sherlock Holmes fan, I recommend these books. They are NOT Conan Doyle-esque, but they're entertaining.

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