tzikeh: (Sam)
[personal profile] tzikeh
A few more book questions for all of you - stuff I'm excited to hear the answers to.

Book you keep meaning to read that always gets bumped to second place by new purchases: A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers. GAH! Must. Read. Book.

Book you put down halfway through and never got back to: The Quincunx by Charles Palliser. Huge mother of a book. It was really interesting, I was reading it on a plane to California, I slept on the return trip instead of reading, and just never got back into it. Somehow in the intervening years I lost my copy, and that's damned hard to do. It's the size of a good dictionary!

Book you love and can never convince anyone else to read: Gödel, Escher, Bach by Douglas Hofstadter. I try to explain how it's about thought and philosophy and language and creativity and invention, and the reaction I get is invariably "But, it's math!"

Book you'll never read no matter how many people tell you you should: The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen. Family comedy-dramas don't really interest me, be they movies, television shows, or books. No matter how well-crafted they are, I just don't care for them much.

Children's book that no one else remembers except you: This category's a toss-up - either Lizard Music by D. Manus Pinkwater, or Bob Fulton's Amazing Soda-Pop Stretcher by Jerome Beatty Jr. Oh, or T.A. For Tots (and Other Prinzes) by Alvyn M. Freed.

Children's book everyone seems to have read that you've never read / heard of: That book about the balloons and diamonds and Krakatoa.

Terrific book, terrible movie: The Bonfire of the Vanities by Tom Wolfe. Jeez.

Book you loved on first reading which on subsequent readings wow, not so much: Sadly, it has to be A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle. I know, I know - blasphemy! But - what can I say. I re-read it very recently and found it boring, overwrought, and simplistic. And I LOVED this series as a pre-teen. Read the first three over and over.

Most Overrated / Overhyped Book or Author, in your opinion: Midnight In the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt. It was fine and all, but jeez, the hype surrounding that book - critics were running out of superlatives!

Most Underrated / Misunderstood Book or Author, in your opinion: Hannibal by Thomas Harris. ::looks to [livejournal.com profile] cesperanza for support on this one::

So. Thoughts?

more books!

Date: 2003-01-29 11:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sanj.livejournal.com
Oh, good, somebody else who hasn't read the Eggers book yet. :) I love these memes; I keep finding new things to read ... someday.

And -- you're not wrong, you know. But I still love A Wrinkle in Time anyway.

Re: more books!

Date: 2003-01-30 01:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tzikeh.livejournal.com
And -- you're not wrong, you know. But I still love A Wrinkle in Time anyway.

Yeah - it's weird. I mean, I still think of them as great and wonderful books, but also not, at the same time. Reading Wrinkle recently was a real downer. C'est la vie.

Date: 2003-01-29 11:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mei-x.livejournal.com
Very interesting meme. I'll definitely do this one.

Quick thought --

Most Underrated / Misunderstood Book or Author, in your opinion: Hannibal by Thomas Harris.

I totally agree with this. Yes, I can tell that it was hastily written and sloppily edited in parts. Still, I was riveted by it, I could readily believe Starling's disillusionment 10 years down the line, and it totally made me want to go to Florence.

Date: 2003-01-30 01:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tzikeh.livejournal.com
Dood. Florence is mind-blowingly beautiful. And yeah, lots of Hannibal made me want to go back to Italy. But there's so much there in that last third of the book that's worth pondering w/r/t feminism, morality, family...

The movie went the wrong way.

mmm. books.

Date: 2003-01-30 05:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kassrachel.livejournal.com
Actually, the Eggers book is one I may never read, no matter who recs it, because Dave Eggers basically annoys me. Also, a good friend of mine maintains that the title and the first few pages are the best part, and that it's all downhill from there... :-)

E. is a big fan of Pinkwater, so while I never read him as a kid, I've read basically his collected works now. :-) I started with Lizard Music, which you're right, is totally lovely and not near well-known-enough. Have you read Uncle Boris in the Yukon and Other Shaggy Dog Stories, his book of storylike essays (for adults) about dogs?

I've tried Godel, Escher, Bach at least three times. Each time I love it at the beginning; start reading slower and slower; and then get totally bogged down and stop. It's like some kind of weird event horizon that I can't get past. But I totally accept that it's fantastic -- I expect everyone in my local circle of geek friends has read it multiple times, E. included.

Re: mmm. books.

Date: 2003-01-30 05:41 am (UTC)
ext_2918: (Default)
From: [identity profile] therealjae.livejournal.com
Another Pinkwater fan, here. I also started with Lizard Music, but the one I loved more than anything was Alan Mendelssohn, the boy from Mars.

-J

Re: mmm. books.

Date: 2003-01-30 01:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tzikeh.livejournal.com
I've tried Godel, Escher, Bach at least three times. Each time I love it at the beginning; start reading slower and slower; and then get totally bogged down and stop.

But you made it through The Simarillion this year. After that, GEB is cake! ;)

And you used the phrase "event horizon" properly, so you are excused.

Date: 2003-01-30 06:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lanchid.livejournal.com
Hey! I remember Bob Fulton's Amazing Soda-Pop Stretcher! What a great book. In fact, I may still have my copy floating about somewhere....

Date: 2003-01-30 01:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tzikeh.livejournal.com
No way!

You are seriously the only other person I know of who has read it.

Date: 2003-01-30 06:25 am (UTC)
luminosity: (Default)
From: [personal profile] luminosity
Book you love and can never convince anyone else to read: Gödel, Escher, Bach by Douglas Hofstadter. I try to explain how it's about thought and philosophy and language and creativity and invention, and the reaction I get is invariably "But, it's math!"

I love this book!! I found an old hardcover in the used book store about 15 years ago, and I've been trying to foist it off (for reading purposes only--give it back! give it back!) on friends ever since I read it. And reread it. It's one of those super open-it-anywhere-and-read books.

And it's only partly about math. :)


Date: 2003-01-30 06:30 am (UTC)
luminosity: (Default)
From: [personal profile] luminosity
adding another comment simply because I can...

Most Underrated / Misunderstood Book or Author, in your opinion: Hannibal by Thomas Harris. ::looks to cesperanza for support on this one::

Well, I'm not cesperanza, but I really liked this book--almost as much as the first two. I liked that Hannibal/Clarice went the romantic path, the way of the monster. I can't really *get* why people didn't go for that. :) At the denouement, I was sort of weepy. And femoral arteries and Florence and emeralds oh my.. come on. EMERALDS.

More commentary later after work stops breathing down my neck.
hee

Date: 2003-01-30 01:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tzikeh.livejournal.com
Yay on the G,E,B front!

And for Hannibal:

I liked that Hannibal/Clarice went the romantic path, the way of the monster. I can't really *get* why people didn't go for that. :)

Amen, sister. ;)

Emeralds!!

Date: 2003-01-30 11:07 am (UTC)
ratcreature: RatCreature's toon avatar (Default)
From: [personal profile] ratcreature
I never finished reading Gödel, Escher, Bach. But then my older brother gave it to me when I was 12 or 13 or so, and maybe that was just a bit too early. I loved Escher and math, I was a lot into computers and AI theory at the time, and my brother said it was great and right for my interests, but somehow I just got stuck. But then my brother's book recommendations were never really age appropriate. He gave me a copy of "Also Sprach Zarathustra" by Nietzsche a bit before that. Though with that book I never got past the second page. I still don't like Nietzsche, but maybe I should give Gödel, Escher, Bach another try.

Date: 2003-01-30 01:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tzikeh.livejournal.com
Yeah, I think 12 or 13 is a bit early to be reading about recursive theory. You might find it easier going this time around.

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