Great! Next time around we'll try to read something completely different, so hopefully you can join in.I may be interested in the book club, but I'm not a big sci-fi/futureworld type person, so I may sit this one out. Definitely would be more interested in thread discussion than Vent.
Glad to have you! Currently reading Anathem by Neal Stephenson. If you'd like to join in, feel free! We're reading rhough Part 4 for 2/15 and discussion will begin then. If you're not interested in this book, you can jump in next time.I'm interested.
Haha well if we ever read a book you're already intersted in reading, feel free to join in.I might be, but am unlikely to go hunting out books just because others want to discuss them if they weren't of interest to me already. I'd be more likely to want to discuss stuff that I already have/have read/was contemplating reading.![]()
So I just realized that Ive never been part of a book club and Im not entirely sure what gets discussed when we finish.
Is it just... Whatever members bring up to talk about? Do we analyze character/plot/etc? Or do we just talk about opinions of the book thus far? Is there something I should be looking for as I read?
So I just realized that Ive never been part of a book club and Im not entirely sure what gets discussed when we finish.
Is it just... Whatever members bring up to talk about? Do we analyze character/plot/etc? Or do we just talk about opinions of the book thus far? Is there something I should be looking for as I read?
We create random fan fiction sequels and what ifs, where Buffy and Jack Sparrow have sex with the protagonist.
I just started it today, and it has a lot of math terminology in it. That seems pretty INTJish.I like scifi books, I might read it, but my focus to read books in the last 5 years has been staggering, 1 at best and at 1,000 pages. I used to love chunky books, the chunkier the better, I visited multiple libraries in my once prolific book reading days. I miss those days, I'll try find and read the book. What kind of author would he be INTJ, is the book hard science fiction?
I have multiple unfinished Neal Stephenson novels lying on the shelf next to me. I've cracked them all open for a time.. they're not unread for the hell of it. He's not one of those writers that clicks with me, I guess.
No worries, people have different tastes. I just wanted to know because I always figured that Snow Crash was the easiest read and Diamond Age next. I couldn't imagine either of them being put down halfway. The others are a different story, I could see them disagreeing more with people.
Everyone seemed to love Diamond Age except for me.
I found myself giving up after 25 pages. I found the writing style confusing and disjointed. I know from others that they praised his clear writing style. I always thought I had a large vocabulary but I found myself encountered with several words I've never even heard off all in the first few pages. Which is too bad because I really wanted to like this book. The premise sounded really interesting.
I'm going to still give Anthem a try but don't be too surprised if I back out of it.
P.S. I don't have Vent so I'd prefer a discussion in the forum itself. I am open to downloading Vent if that's what the majority wants to do.
Only if Victor partakes.
Naturallly I accept but only on the condition we forebear from discussing books and instead read them aloud to one another turn and turn about. And if we have enough of us on line at once, we can play the actual characters.
The purpose is to do it rather than talk about it. The purpose is to experience the book. The purpose is to enter a deep shared meditation. The purpose is no less than sacred transformation.
So we avoid futile discussion and enter the crysalis of sound, transforming ourselves, as warm muzzle talks to warm ear, emerging as dancing butterflies.
Naturallly I accept but only on the condition we forebear from discussing books and instead read them aloud to one another turn and turn about. And if we have enough of us on line at once, we can play the actual characters.
The purpose is to do it rather than talk about it. The purpose is to experience the book. The purpose is to enter a deep shared meditation. The purpose is no less than sacred transformation.
So we avoid futile discussion and enter the crysalis of sound, transforming ourselves, as warm muzzle talks to warm ear, emerging as dancing butterflies.