TSF Book Club
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<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="Nepia" data-cid="443997" data-time="1407367578">
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<p>I've got Citizen Soldiers but read it years ago and can't remember what Ambrose said about Hemingway. I've never read Lewis and Clark but I enjoy Ambrose's military books. </p>
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<p>If I remember the Wild Blue controversy it was around him not putting quotations around other writers work but that he did footnote them and provide sources in the endnotes?</p>
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<p>He quoted Hemingway waffling on about some member of the resistance he seemed to nothing but get drunk with and said theres a reason why people read Ernie Pyle 50 years on and don't read Hemingway. I think he meant Hemingways dispatches from the front line because people still read Hemingway. </p>
<p>Thats what it says on wikipedia but it happened in other books too apparently. The Lewis and Clark book was a real disappointment, the band of brothers books were so good and the one about the british glider troops was a cracking read too.</p> -
<p>Duty by Bob Greene,<a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://www.amazon.com/Duty-Father-His-Son-Man/dp/0380814110'>http://www.amazon.com/Duty-Father-His-Son-Man/dp/0380814110</a></p>
<p>Interesting idea for a book, the author after years of trying to meet Paul Tibbets who piloted Enola Gay and dropped the first atom bomb gets not only to interview him but also spend a fair bit of time with him. Along side that are transcripts of tapes his father recorded before he died about his past and time in the army in ww2, the author asks Tibbets his view of the tapes and his dad along with finding out about Tibbets and his past. Tibbets was a pretty interesting guy, met presidents and top generals and hand picked the team to drop the bomb. After the author published an article about Tibbets in the newspaper he worked for he got mail from people who wanted to thank him for ending the war because their dad/grandad was supposed to join the invasion of Japan and the bomb stopped that, oddly also from Japanese people because the govt refused to surrender and it would have destroyed Japan.</p>
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<p>The billy bob tapes.<a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://www.amazon.com/Billy-Bob-Tapes-Cave-Ghosts-ebook/dp/B0082B78CW/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1408417356&sr=1-1&keywords=the+billy+bob+tapes'>http://www.amazon.com/Billy-Bob-Tapes-Cave-Ghosts-ebook/dp/B0082B78CW/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1408417356&sr=1-1&keywords=the+billy+bob+tapes</a></p>
<p>I got this on special and thought it might be interesting and possibly have some mention of what it was like to bonk Angelina Jolie before she resembled Gollums sister.</p>
<p>It was a pretty good read although I'm a bit puzzled about him saying his dad wasn't a very articulate guy when he was a college graduate and a school teacher. I always thought he was an actor trying to be a musician but its actually the other way around, he was a musician first and got very lucky with acting, he also writes and he was talking about this awesome script he and a friend wrote and it sounded a lot like one false move <a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_false_move'>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_false_move</a> which I really liked but didn't realize he wrote, later in the book they changed the title and he explains how it became successful.</p>
<p>Well worth a read, he really really hates twilight and doesn't hold out much hope for the US movie industry making quality films anymore. Reading the shit people say about him on the internet has made him agoraphobic and its interesting to hear his side of the story about the things the media has said about him over the years.</p>
<p>I pretty much finished it in a day, its worth pointing out the lack of any mention of any of Thornton/Jolie sub duvet exploits .</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="JC" data-cid="443723" data-time="1407182273">
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<p>Just read "He's Back!" by Timur Vermes. It's a satire about Hitler falling asleep at the end of WW2 like Rip Van Winkle and waking up in 2011. People think he's a weird impersonator as he rants Downfall-style on cable TV about dogshit etc which encourages him to go into local politics. Clever and actually funny. It manages to address how, if he was such a mad bastard and nobody was actually a Nazi in 30s Germany he managed to get so many people to vote for him and do the bad things he asked. The style's odd, though. Apparently the author was going after the all-over-the-shop style of Mein Kampf. Worth a go though.</p>
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<p>Sounds a great idea! Now if it ever was made into a film do you think an ex-Austrian US politician and Hollywood action hero might be tempted to star?</p> -
<p>I've just finished The Bone Clocks by David Mitchell (the "Cloud Atlas" guy, not the angry comedian). It's very good indeed. It's told from the viewpoint of several people over the course of 60 or so years, 1984 to 2043. Basically narrative realism, but with a sci-fi fantasy plot going on in the background about a battle between 2 groups of essentially immortal people that's going on around us normals. The writing is good enough to have been Booker long listed but it missed the shortlist this week presumably on account of it being a bit bonkers. It has a great character in it who's some kind of really spiteful, self-entitled and horrible AA Gill / Martin Amis hybrid author, into whose mouth Mitchell puts some top-notch rants. Highly recommended.</p>
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<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="dogmeat" data-cid="443960" data-time="1407341269">
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<p>Nepia. It's 40 yrs since I read it but fading recollection suggests it won't reward perseverance</p>
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<p>I read about 40 years too, and am reminded of that book nearly every day when I see somebody's wall-mounted large-screen TV. The book is much more about ideas than the strength of it's prose (and besides, it's a pretty small book). Truffaut is one of my very favorite film directors, but the film adaptation is a mess, although a fascinating mess. (Curiously enough, Bradbury did a damned good job adapting Moby-Dick for the screen.)</p> -
<p>The long patrol <a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://www.amazon.com/The-Long-Patrol-Australia-Timors/dp/1742030157'>http://www.amazon.com/The-Long-Patrol-Australia-Timors/dp/1742030157</a></p>
<p>Its the story of East timor and their struggles with independence , I learnt a fair bit from this book. after Indonesia Australia comes out of it very badly-in particular Gough Whitlam . The governor general did the aussies a favor kicking that massive arsehole out, just an appalling man. Theres an uncorroborated story of John Howard bailing up Bill Clinton at APEC in 1999 and trying to get him to take the initiative in the chaos post referendum and Clinton tens on him and pokes his finger into Howards chest and says "you guys caused this, you fix it". Its pretty hard reading about the needless suffering of these people as various nations shit on them over the years and the future doesn't look particularly bright for them either.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="red terror" data-cid="450315" data-time="1410443919">
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<p>I read about 40 years too, and am reminded of that book nearly every day when I see somebody's wall-mounted large-screen TV. The book is much more about ideas than the strength of it's prose (and besides, it's a pretty small book). Truffaut is one of my very favorite film directors, but the film adaptation is a mess, although a fascinating mess. (Curiously enough, Bradbury did a damned good job adapting Moby-Dick for the screen.)</p>
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<p>Ah crap, I'm not going to bother with the book (if the ideas aren't in a presentable form I'm not reading the bloody thing - I'm not doing Bradbury 101 at Uni) and if the movie's crap that sucks. Looks like I'm just going to have to read the bloody Wikipedia synopsis.</p>
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<p>Out of left field I just read Anthony Bourdain's original biography/warts and all in the restaurant business type book. I don't care about cooking, cooking shows etc (love the food, don't care for how it's made or presented), but man his book was an entertaining read. Made me bloody hungry at times I shouldn't have been.</p> -
<p>My book is now being pirated, because these fuckfaces can't shell out 88c. No, I am not complimented, I just want to take to them with a rusty dagger and lemon juice.</p>
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<p>Please don't ever do this. 99% of authors make shit money as it is.</p> -
<p>ok, so i just finished all the Game of Thrones books.</p>
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<p>The first 4 (well, 3 really) are pretty fucking awesome. But i found the last two to be, well, unnecessary. They are fucking long, and while shit happens, nothing seems to be advancing the plot, it all feels like filler while we wait for the rest of the story to commence. This is of course working off the assumption the author actually knows what the rest of the story is. </p>
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<p>And the problem with being all surprising and killing off the main characters George, is you reach a point where you run out of people to care about, and then why should i keep reading? In what world did you think Barriston Selmy was an interesting enough character to base a few chapters and probably 100 pages on? It's got to a point where each death is greeted less by "wow! really?" to "wow. well, now who is the story about then?".</p>
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<p>The best fantasy saga i have read was the Malazan books. 10 real big fuck off fantasy books, with a thousand characters, and a ton of story arcs. And while main people died, and story arcs sort of disappeared (seriously, what happened to Karsa?) there was always someone to root for, someone you had invested time in. And there was an eventual tie in for some of the arcs. Right now it looks a lot like Martin is painting himself in to a corner, and he's fast running out of hero-figures. </p>
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<p>[spoiler]ok, just in case people are reading who haven't read the books, and don't want it all ruined.<br><br>
In the major centres of the book now, who do we care about? There isn't anyone in Kings Landing. No one in Winterfell. It appears no one at the Wall. Does anyone give a fuck about Meereen? We're all pretty sure at some point they will move from there, and the story will finish in Westeros. Dorne? anyone? Daenerys kind of fucks me off anyway.<br><br>
This whole story is going to be carried by Tyrion isn't it?[/spoiler]</p> -
<p>that's what i did. once i had them all, i read them from the start. It's a mission. </p>
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<p>Everest - The First Ascent: The untold story of Griffith Pugh, the man who made it possible</p>
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<p>Well written and interesting subject. This from Amozon explains it well</p>
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<div>On 29 May 1953, the summit of Mount Everest was finally reached. The achievement brought fame and honours to many involved - except the man who made the ascent possible.</div>
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<div>Now, for the first time, drawing upon previously unseen diaries and letters, rare archive material and interviews, Everest - The First Ascent tells the remarkable story of Griffith Pugh, the forgotten team member whose scientific breakthroughs ensured the world's highest mountain could be climbed. A doctor and physiologist, Griffith Pugh revolutionised almost every aspect of British high-altitude mountaineering, transforming the climbers' attitude to oxygen, the clothes they wore, their equipment, fluid intake and acclimatisation.</div>
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<div>Yet, far from receiving the acclaim he was due, he was met with suspicion and ridicule. His scientific contributions were, quite simply, at odds with old-fashioned notions of derring-do and the gentlemanly amateurism that dogged the sport.</div>
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<div>This insightful biography shows Pugh to be troubled, abrasive, yet brilliant. Eight years in the writing, closely researched, and told with unflinching honesty by Pugh's daughter, Harriet Tuckey, Everest - The First Ascent is the compelling portrait of an unlikely hero</div>
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<p>Made me think about all the other brilliant minds that are behind the praise we heap on those that fulfil the task while ignoring the 'backroom boys'.</p>
<p>There's no doubt that Hillary's doggedness and skill went a long way toward getting to the top. He more than proved afterward that he was a man worthy of being looked up to, but Pugh's contribution in helping him (and Tenzing) make it was immense and made the key difference between Hunt's expedition and those that went before it.</p>
<p>Of course the climbers got the credit but it certainly sad that Pugh's contribution was lost in the clamour and old boys club bullshit.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="mariner4life" data-cid="452781" data-time="1411601602">
<div><br><p>The best fantasy saga i have read was the Malazan books. 10 real big fuck off fantasy books, with a thousand characters, and a ton of story arcs. And while main people died, and story arcs sort of disappeared (seriously, what happened to Karsa?) there was always someone to root for, someone you had invested time in. And there was an eventual tie in for some of the arcs. Right now it looks a lot like Martin is painting himself in to a corner, and he's fast running out of hero-figures. </p>
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<p>Bit I liked there too was Ian C Esselmont started writing add ons that cleared up a lot of stuff - like Night of Knives that tells you what happened just prior to the series starting. I must have read books 1-3 3 or 4 times each as I kept having to re-read to remember WTF was going on. In the end I waited & re-read all 10 in one go, plus about 4 of the Esslemonts. Took about a year.</p>
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<p>After reading Malazan it always makes me laugh whenever anyone says Game of Thrones is complex, has a lot of characters & doesn't hand-hold the reader.</p> -
I remember halfway through Gardens of the Moon I actually checked to make sure I hadn't missed a book
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<p>Barbarians at the gate<a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://www.amazon.com/Barbarians-Gate-The-Fall-Nabisco/dp/0061655554'>http://www.amazon.com/Barbarians-Gate-The-Fall-Nabisco/dp/0061655554</a></p>
<p>A group of really appalling people try and get a hold of two long established companies [who had merged] off the group of appalling people who already own and are trying to buy it themselves so they can be even more wealthy. It happened almost 30 years ago but you can how easily it was for the GFC to occur with deadshits like these in charge of billions of dollars. Well worth a read.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="jegga" data-cid="452848" data-time="1411635398">
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<p>Barbarians at the gate<a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://www.amazon.com/Barbarians-Gate-The-Fall-Nabisco/dp/0061655554'>http://www.amazon.com/Barbarians-Gate-The-Fall-Nabisco/dp/0061655554</a></p>
<p>A group of really appalling people try and get a hold of two long established companies [who had merged] off the group of appalling people who already own and are trying to buy it themselves so they can be even more wealthy. It happened almost 30 years ago but you can how easily it was for the GFC to occur with deadshits like these in charge of billions of dollars. Well worth a read.</p>
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<p>Read Smartest Guys In The Room too - the Enron guys, same sort of thing. I love both those books. Its just utter douche bags behaving like utter douche bags.</p>