50 Book Challenge 2010

Wasted Tourist
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by Wasted Tourist » Sat Mar 13, 2010 8:24 pm

1)DBC Pierre - Vernon God Little
2)Christopher Hitchens - Letters to a Young Contrarian
3)Salman Rushdie - The Satanic Verses
4)Ian McEwan - Amsterdam
5)Cormac McCarthy - The Road
6)Richard Dawkins- The Blind Watchmaker
7)Christopher Hitchens - Love, Poverty and War
8)Stephen King - On Writing
9)Stephen King - Under The Dome
10)Ben Dupre - 50 Philosophy Ideas YoU Really Need to Know
11)Noam Chomsky - What We Say Goes
12)Ian McEwan - Atonement
13)Richard Dawkins - Unweaving the Rainbow
14)Noam Chomsky - Understanding Power
15)George Orwell - Animal Farm
16)Noam Chomsky - Profit Over People
17)Christopher Hitchens - The Missionary Position
18)Noam Chomsky - Hegemony or Survival
19)James Joyce - Dubliners
20)Ian McEwan - On Chesil Beach
21)Ian McEwan - The Cement Garden
22)Chuck Palahniuk - Lullaby
23)Ian McEwan - Black Dogs
24)Richard Dawkins - Climbing Mount Improbable

Wasted Tourist
Posts: 12
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by Wasted Tourist » Tue Mar 16, 2010 7:31 pm

1)DBC Pierre - Vernon God Little
2)Christopher Hitchens - Letters to a Young Contrarian
3)Salman Rushdie - The Satanic Verses
4)Ian McEwan - Amsterdam
5)Cormac McCarthy - The Road
6)Richard Dawkins- The Blind Watchmaker
7)Christopher Hitchens - Love, Poverty and War
8)Stephen King - On Writing
9)Stephen King - Under The Dome
10)Ben Dupre - 50 Philosophy Ideas YoU Really Need to Know
11)Noam Chomsky - What We Say Goes
12)Ian McEwan - Atonement
13)Richard Dawkins - Unweaving the Rainbow
14)Noam Chomsky - Understanding Power
15)George Orwell - Animal Farm
16)Noam Chomsky - Profit Over People
17)Christopher Hitchens - The Missionary Position
18)Noam Chomsky - Hegemony or Survival
19)James Joyce - Dubliners
20)Ian McEwan - On Chesil Beach
21)Ian McEwan - The Cement Garden
22)Chuck Palahniuk - Lullaby
23)Ian McEwan - Black Dogs
24)Richard Dawkins - Climbing Mount Improbable
25)Ian McEwan - Saturday

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hotshoe
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by hotshoe » Tue Mar 16, 2010 7:35 pm

hotshoe wrote:Funny, almost the only post I regret losing from RDnet was the 50 book challenge. So, here is mine:

The Snack Thief - Andrea Camilleri; translated by Stephen Sartarelli
Third in a series of detective novels about a Sicilian detective, Inspector Montalbano

Stitch'n bitch : the Knitter's Handbook - Debbie Stoller

The City & the City - China Miéville
Mind-bending story about a city divided amongst two nations

The Light Fantastic - Terry Pratchett
An early discworld novel

Rain Gods - James Lee Burke
crime thriller set in Texas, by the great James Lee Burke -- but it's marred by improbable coincidences and much repetition of themes

Ringworld - Larry Niven
science fiction classic I have read three (or four?) times, but not in this millenium. Holds up pretty well, with interesting speculations about the tradeoff between lucky genes and free will

Ringworld Engineers - Larry Niven
after re-reading Ringworld, I wanted to re-read the sequel as well. Less philosophical than the first.

Tripoint - C.J. Cherryh
Maybe the least interesting of the Merchanter novels, marred by emphasis on how being fathered by a rapist had damaged the protagonist Tom Bowe-Hawkins. Nonetheless, compelling.

Foreigner - C. J. Cherryh
The first book of the "Foreigner universe" where human colonists are stranded on a planet inhabited by an alien civilization, the Atevi, who have no feelings of love or affection but an overruling concept of duty and loyalty. The only human character in most of the book is the translator/paidhi Bren Cameron.


Invader - C. J. Cherryh
Second book, where Bren Cameron suddenly has to deal with the appearance of a human space ship in orbit and the reactions to it in both Atevi and human colonial politics

Inheritor - C. J. Cherryh
Third in this series, with more overt action, as war is threatened by conservatives on both sides
Echo Burning - Lee Childs
Jack Reacher. Great modern noir fiction. This one is a little different, set in border Texas with home-grown criminals having nothing to do with Reacher's military past. Probably not the best introduction to Childs' writing if not already a fan, though, too much driving around and griping about the heat.

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Mephistopheles
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by Mephistopheles » Tue Mar 16, 2010 10:04 pm

Aaaaaaaaand now that my comp is out for nearly a month, I'll probably be reading more often. Soooooooo...

1) The Hunchback of Notre Dame - Victor Hugo
2) The Blood of the Fold - Terry Goodkind

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hotshoe
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by hotshoe » Thu Mar 25, 2010 12:34 am

hotshoe wrote:Funny, almost the only post I regret losing from RDnet was the 50 book challenge. So, here is mine:

The Snack Thief - Andrea Camilleri; translated by Stephen Sartarelli
Third in a series of detective novels about a Sicilian detective, Inspector Montalbano

Stitch'n bitch : the Knitter's Handbook - Debbie Stoller

The City & the City - China Miéville
Mind-bending story about a city divided amongst two nations

The Light Fantastic - Terry Pratchett
An early discworld novel

Rain Gods - James Lee Burke
crime thriller set in Texas, by the great James Lee Burke -- but it's marred by improbable coincidences and much repetition of themes

Ringworld - Larry Niven
science fiction classic I have read three (or four?) times, but not in this millenium. Holds up pretty well, with interesting speculations about the tradeoff between lucky genes and free will

Ringworld Engineers - Larry Niven
after re-reading Ringworld, I wanted to re-read the sequel as well. Less philosophical than the first.

Tripoint - C.J. Cherryh
Maybe the least interesting of the Merchanter novels, marred by emphasis on how being fathered by a rapist had damaged the protagonist Tom Bowe-Hawkins. Nonetheless, compelling.

Foreigner - C. J. Cherryh
The first book of the "Foreigner universe" where human colonists are stranded on a planet inhabited by an alien civilization, the Atevi, who have no feelings of love or affection but an overruling concept of duty and loyalty. The only human character in most of the book is the translator/paidhi Bren Cameron.


Invader - C. J. Cherryh
Second book, where Bren Cameron suddenly has to deal with the appearance of a human space ship in orbit and the reactions to it in both Atevi and human colonial politics

Inheritor - C. J. Cherryh
Third in this series, with more overt action, as war is threatened by conservatives on both sides

Echo Burning - Lee Childs
Jack Reacher. Great modern noir fiction. This one is a little different, set in border Texas with home-grown criminals having nothing to do with Reacher's military past. Probably not the best introduction to Childs' writing if not already a fan, though, too much driving around and griping about the heat.
The Last Olympian - Rick Riordan
A young-adult fantasy/adventure story about the modern-day half-blood children of the Greek gods and their battle to defend Olympus against the powerful TItans. Reads like a movie.

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JOZeldenrust
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by JOZeldenrust » Thu Mar 25, 2010 10:09 pm

Guess I'll join in.

1) F. Bordewijk, Bint
2) M. Pessl, Special topics in calamity physics
3) J. Zwagerman, Duel
4) Euripides, Ifigeneia in Aulis
5) Euripides, Elektra

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JOZeldenrust
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by JOZeldenrust » Mon Mar 29, 2010 6:20 am

1) F. Bordewijk, Bint
2) M. Pessl, Special topics in calamity physics
3) J. Zwagerman, Duel
4) Euripides, Ifigeneia in Aulis
5) Euripides, Elektra
6) Jonathan Safran Foer, Extremely loud and incredibly close

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Mephistopheles
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by Mephistopheles » Tue Mar 30, 2010 7:07 pm

Mephistopheles wrote:Aaaaaaaaand now that my comp is out for nearly a month, I'll probably be reading more often. Soooooooo...

1) The Hunchback of Notre Dame - Victor Hugo
2) The Blood of the Fold - Terry Goodkind
Wow, it's amazing how much one can accomplish in a single weekend with no laptop.

3) The Temple of the Winds - Terry Goodkind
4) A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking
5) The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors - some nobody asshole named Graves
6) Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury
7) Murder in Retrospective - Agatha Christie
8) A Study in Scarlet - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Currently reading: Breaking the Spell - Daniel Dennett

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Mr Calavera
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by Mr Calavera » Wed Mar 31, 2010 5:36 am

Mr Calavera wrote:This will be the first time I've undertaken a book challenge, so here goes. So far I have read:

1) The Autobiography of Bertrand Russell
2) Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
3) Silverthorn by Raymond E. Feist
4) Sharpe's Waterloo by Bernard Cornwell
5) H.M.S. Surprise by Patrick O'Brian
6) Interesting Times by Terry Pratchett
7) Wanting by Richard Flanagan
A lot of study for uni means I have had little time for reading. I had to put down Cancer Ward to read Wanting by Richard Flanagan.

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hotshoe
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by hotshoe » Thu May 06, 2010 9:31 pm

hotshoe wrote:Funny, almost the only post I regret losing from RDnet was the 50 book challenge. So, here is mine:

The Snack Thief - Andrea Camilleri; translated by Stephen Sartarelli
Third in a series of detective novels about a Sicilian detective, Inspector Montalbano

Stitch'n bitch : the Knitter's Handbook - Debbie Stoller

The City & the City - China Miéville
Mind-bending story about a city divided amongst two nations

The Light Fantastic - Terry Pratchett
An early discworld novel

Rain Gods - James Lee Burke
crime thriller set in Texas, by the great James Lee Burke -- but it's marred by improbable coincidences and much repetition of themes

Ringworld - Larry Niven
science fiction classic I have read three (or four?) times, but not in this millenium. Holds up pretty well, with interesting speculations about the tradeoff between lucky genes and free will

Ringworld Engineers - Larry Niven
after re-reading Ringworld, I wanted to re-read the sequel as well. Less philosophical than the first.

Tripoint - C.J. Cherryh
Maybe the least interesting of the Merchanter novels, marred by emphasis on how being fathered by a rapist had damaged the protagonist Tom Bowe-Hawkins. Nonetheless, compelling.

Foreigner - C. J. Cherryh
The first book of the "Foreigner universe" where human colonists are stranded on a planet inhabited by an alien civilization, the Atevi, who have no feelings of love or affection but an overruling concept of duty and loyalty. The only human character in most of the book is the translator/paidhi Bren Cameron.

Invader - C. J. Cherryh
Second book, where Bren Cameron suddenly has to deal with the appearance of a human space ship in orbit and the reactions to it in both Atevi and human colonial politics

Inheritor - C. J. Cherryh
Third in this series, with more overt action, as war is threatened by conservatives on both sides

Echo Burning - Lee Childs
Jack Reacher. Great modern noir fiction. This one is a little different, set in border Texas with home-grown criminals having nothing to do with Reacher's military past. Probably not the best introduction to Childs' writing if not already a fan, though, too much driving around and griping about the heat.

The Last Olympian - Rick Riordan
A young-adult fantasy/adventure story about the modern-day half-blood children of the Greek gods and their battle to defend Olympus against the powerful TItans. Reads like a movie.
The Star Fraction - Ken MacLeod
A political science-fiction novel of a Balkanized UK set in about 2040 AD. But political maneuverings, including the national revolution, are dominated by a deus-ex-machina, an independent AI which has replicated itself everywhere in the computer networks.

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JOZeldenrust
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by JOZeldenrust » Sun May 23, 2010 4:16 pm

1) F. Bordewijk, Bint
2) M. Pessl, Special topics in calamity physics
3) J. Zwagerman, Duel
4) Euripides, Ifigeneia in Aulis
5) Euripides, Elektra
6) Jonathan Safran Foer, Extremely loud and incredibly close
7) Multatuli, Max Havelaar
8) J.K. Oudendijk, William III, stadtholder of Holland, King of England
9) J. de Decker, Goede vrydag ofte Het lijden onses heeren Jesu Christi (Good friday or the suffering of our lord Jesus Christ)

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JOZeldenrust
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by JOZeldenrust » Wed May 26, 2010 7:45 pm

1) F. Bordewijk, Bint
2) M. Pessl, Special topics in calamity physics
3) J. Zwagerman, Duel
4) Euripides, Ifigeneia in Aulis
5) Euripides, Elektra
6) Jonathan Safran Foer, Extremely loud and incredibly close
7) Multatuli, Max Havelaar
8) J.K. Oudendijk, William III, stadtholder of Holland, King of England
9) J. de Decker, Goede vrydag ofte Het lijden onses heeren Jesu Christi (Good friday or the suffering of our lord Jesus Christ)
10) H.S. Haasse, Oeroeg

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JOZeldenrust
Posts: 557
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by JOZeldenrust » Tue Jun 01, 2010 1:18 pm

1) F. Bordewijk, Bint
2) M. Pessl, Special topics in calamity physics
3) J. Zwagerman, Duel
4) Euripides, Ifigeneia in Aulis
5) Euripides, Elektra
6) Jonathan Safran Foer, Extremely loud and incredibly close
7) Multatuli, Max Havelaar
8) J.K. Oudendijk, William III, stadtholder of Holland, King of England
9) J. de Decker, Goede vrydag ofte Het lijden onses heeren Jesu Christi (Good friday or the suffering of our lord Jesus Christ)
10) H.S. Haasse, Oeroeg
11) W.F. Hermans, Among professors

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hotshoe
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by hotshoe » Wed Jun 09, 2010 4:32 am

hotshoe wrote:Funny, almost the only post I regret losing from RDnet was the 50 book challenge. So, here is mine:

The Snack Thief - Andrea Camilleri; translated by Stephen Sartarelli
Third in a series of detective novels about a Sicilian detective, Inspector Montalbano

Stitch'n bitch : the Knitter's Handbook - Debbie Stoller

The City & the City - China Miéville
Mind-bending story about a city divided amongst two nations

The Light Fantastic - Terry Pratchett
An early discworld novel

Rain Gods - James Lee Burke
crime thriller set in Texas, by the great James Lee Burke -- but it's marred by improbable coincidences and much repetition of themes

Ringworld - Larry Niven
science fiction classic I have read three (or four?) times, but not in this millenium. Holds up pretty well, with interesting speculations about the tradeoff between lucky genes and free will

Ringworld Engineers - Larry Niven
after re-reading Ringworld, I wanted to re-read the sequel as well. Less philosophical than the first.

Tripoint - C.J. Cherryh
Maybe the least interesting of the Merchanter novels, marred by emphasis on how being fathered by a rapist had damaged the protagonist Tom Bowe-Hawkins. Nonetheless, compelling.

Foreigner - C. J. Cherryh
The first book of the "Foreigner universe" where human colonists are stranded on a planet inhabited by an alien civilization, the Atevi, who have no feelings of love or affection but an overruling concept of duty and loyalty. The only human character in most of the book is the translator/paidhi Bren Cameron.

Invader - C. J. Cherryh
Second book, where Bren Cameron suddenly has to deal with the appearance of a human space ship in orbit and the reactions to it in both Atevi and human colonial politics

Inheritor - C. J. Cherryh
Third in this series, with more overt action, as war is threatened by conservatives on both sides

Echo Burning - Lee Childs
Jack Reacher. Great modern noir fiction. This one is a little different, set in border Texas with home-grown criminals having nothing to do with Reacher's military past. Probably not the best introduction to Childs' writing if not already a fan, though, too much driving around and griping about the heat.

The Last Olympian - Rick Riordan
A young-adult fantasy/adventure story about the modern-day half-blood children of the Greek gods and their battle to defend Olympus against the powerful TItans. Reads like a movie.

The Star Fraction - Ken MacLeod
A political science-fiction novel of a Balkanized UK set in about 2040 AD. But political maneuverings, including the national revolution, are dominated by a deus-ex-machina, an independent AI which has replicated itself everywhere in the computer networks.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - J.K. Rowling
Well, I had not ever read it, and now I have.

The Illustrated A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking
Having already read A Brief History of Time when it was first published, this was a refresher course, and I really enjoyed the enhancement of the illustrations.

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hotshoe
Posts: 92
Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 6:06 pm
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Re: 50 Book Challenge 2010

Post by hotshoe » Thu Jul 01, 2010 7:52 pm

hotshoe wrote:Funny, almost the only post I regret losing from RDnet was the 50 book challenge. So, here is mine:

The Snack Thief - Andrea Camilleri; translated by Stephen Sartarelli
Third in a series of detective novels about a Sicilian detective, Inspector Montalbano

Stitch'n bitch : the Knitter's Handbook - Debbie Stoller

The City & the City - China Miéville
Mind-bending story about a city divided amongst two nations

The Light Fantastic - Terry Pratchett
An early discworld novel

Rain Gods - James Lee Burke
crime thriller set in Texas, by the great James Lee Burke -- but it's marred by improbable coincidences and much repetition of themes

Ringworld - Larry Niven
science fiction classic I have read three (or four?) times, but not in this millenium. Holds up pretty well, with interesting speculations about the tradeoff between lucky genes and free will

Ringworld Engineers - Larry Niven
after re-reading Ringworld, I wanted to re-read the sequel as well. Less philosophical than the first.

Tripoint - C.J. Cherryh
Maybe the least interesting of the Merchanter novels, marred by emphasis on how being fathered by a rapist had damaged the protagonist Tom Bowe-Hawkins. Nonetheless, compelling.

Foreigner - C. J. Cherryh
The first book of the "Foreigner universe" where human colonists are stranded on a planet inhabited by an alien civilization, the Atevi, who have no feelings of love or affection but an overruling concept of duty and loyalty. The only human character in most of the book is the translator/paidhi Bren Cameron.

Invader - C. J. Cherryh
Second book, where Bren Cameron suddenly has to deal with the appearance of a human space ship in orbit and the reactions to it in both Atevi and human colonial politics

Inheritor - C. J. Cherryh
Third in this series, with more overt action, as war is threatened by conservatives on both sides

Echo Burning - Lee Childs
Jack Reacher. Great modern noir fiction. This one is a little different, set in border Texas with home-grown criminals having nothing to do with Reacher's military past. Probably not the best introduction to Childs' writing if not already a fan, though, too much driving around and griping about the heat.

The Last Olympian - Rick Riordan
A young-adult fantasy/adventure story about the modern-day half-blood children of the Greek gods and their battle to defend Olympus against the powerful TItans. Reads like a movie.

The Star Fraction - Ken MacLeod
A political science-fiction novel of a Balkanized UK set in about 2040 AD. But political maneuverings, including the national revolution, are dominated by a deus-ex-machina, an independent AI which has replicated itself everywhere in the computer networks.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - J.K. Rowling
Well, I had not ever read it, and now I have.

The Illustrated A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking
Having already read A Brief History of Time when it was first published, this was a refresher course, and I really enjoyed the enhancement of the illustrations.
A Dirge for Sabis - Leslie Fish with C.J. Cherryh
Excellent tale of "natural philosophy" and the birth of technology when the empire falls and only the facade of powerful wizardry holds a promise of peace and safety. None of Cherryh's voice is noticeable.

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