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All I've read is The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress. What is a good one to pick up by him?
Of his later work, I like Friday best. Stranger in a Strange Land. The Cat Who Walked Through Walls is a sort of sequel to Mistress. Any or all of the Future History short stories. Any of the juveniles. The target market was teen age boys, but the themes are pretty universal. Heinlein hated authors who wrote 'down' to young people.
 
"The Brewer's Tale: A History of the World According to Beer" by William Bostwick. Picked it up at the local library while I was there with my kiddo getting him some books.
 
Thoughts on books/series for an 11 year old? He just completed the entire Harry Potter series, if you want to base his "reading level" on that for comparison...

We're debating letting him start the Hunger Games series, but I'm not sure if that's too advanced/violent. Reviews on "The Secret Series" are pretty good, but understanding the reading level it's targeted at gives a wide range of age ranges that liked the series, so I don't know what to think.

The Hobbit, then Lord of the Rings. I started in sixth grade and have never stopped reading them.
 
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I'm paraphrasing a book reviewer here: 'When I read The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged, I was sorry I never got to meet Ayn Rand. After reading her biography, I wanted to dig her up and drive a stake through her heart to make SURE!' She was an awful person, with some appalling behavior. That doesn't negate the value of some of her ideas. Others are quite demented. Each of us has to evaluate for ourselves. Which is kinda the key message of all of her books. Judge, and expect to be judged.

Her ideas are polarizing, to be sure. I personally found The Fountainhead to be a much better literary work than Atlas, though. Mainly because the ideological stuff was there, but it was part of the story rather than the story being part of the ideology. But also because she managed to wrap it up in a reasonable length. Atlas didn't need to be anywhere near as long as it was.

But again, my criticism of Atlas isn't the ideology, it's the literary quality. She wanted the book to be her masterpiece, her opus, her tome. And she ended up trying too hard to make it the ideological screed it was, but neglected making it a good story.
 
Thoughts on books/series for an 11 year old? He just completed the entire Harry Potter series, if you want to base his "reading level" on that for comparison...

We're debating letting him start the Hunger Games series, but I'm not sure if that's too advanced/violent. Reviews on "The Secret Series" are pretty good, but understanding the reading level it's targeted at gives a wide range of age ranges that liked the series, so I don't know what to think.
Here's another: Terry Pratchet's Discworld books. They started as a satire on the whole sword and sorcery genre, but took on a life of their own. Sir Terry is no longer with us, but he left 40 plus books for us to enjoy. They weren't written specifically for young readers, but I wouldn't hesitate to give them to kid.

Edit: be prepared for truly outrageous puns. And meeting gods like Anoia, the goddess of things that get stuck in drawers. Or Bilious, the oh god of hangovers.
 
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All I've read is The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress. What is a good one to pick up by him?

Starship Troopers is a really good read. It explores some much different themes than a lot of his later work, particularly as it relates to duty to one's country, to ones fellow enlisted men/women, etc. It's actually on a USMC reading list. The movie [as they often do] completely missed almost all of the philosophical point of the book and was just about killing bugs.

Agreed with Stranger in a Strange Land. This is also one of Heinlein's more seminal works, in my opinion. Moon, Troopers, and Stranger are where he really hits on some of his most interesting ideas about the nature of humanity and how we interact.

Then Methuselah's Children. It's the first in a whole arc of stories involving Lazarus Long and then his family, and a lot of future books in that series incorporate portions of books, characters, etc, from other work. Whether you continue down that path through all the books is up to you, but it's a good one to see if you want to follow that arc.

I do think that Heinlein, in some of those later arcs, got too involved in a world as myth and multiverse / time-travel story. Most were fun to read, though.
 
I'm about 2/3 the way through Stephen King's The Outsider. Not bad. Typical King if you're into him. The first third reads super fast. Lots of storylines weaving together building up to a big event. Then he slows the pace down a bit, presumably to build up to the finale. He brings in a character from the Mr. Mercedes trilogy and there are minor spoilers about that series in this book. I read the first Mr. Mercedes book and really liked that one. I may swing back to them after I finish The Outsider.

I'm also periodically reading Leviathan Wakes by Corey and the first Game of Thrones book by GRRM.
 
Saw Stephen Ambrose’s book about D-Day on my Dad’s shelf and borrowed it. Should be a great read.
 
Ooh, this one was very good - just finished it. Smart physics guy unravels the nature of the multiverse, then attempts to change the past. Mayhem ensues. Two thumbs up! I thought it was very suspenseful and a real page-turner.

Dark Matter: A Novel

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HA! Just finished that about 2 hours ago. Really good! Have you read anything else by him? And as a side note I just started Wild Brews by Jeff Sparrow
 
Born to Run, Bruce Springsteen.

Just finished it and now I understand why he is really the Boss.
Great book.
 
Reading Brilliance right now. It's very cool. Been busy at nights so haven't made much headway, but I hope to crush it this weekend.

It's a little in the future and human variant has evolved - the Brilliants. They are VERY smart. The world has tried to adapt. Some of them are bad :) So far, good writing style, good pace. Will report back when I finish it.

http://a.co/d/d5sfAMi

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Just finished One Second After and started One Year After. Good premise for a book, just not a fan of the execution. Just not big on his writing style but i will read the third novel
 
Let’s see..
I just finished “Radium Girls” by Kate Moore. Story of how women worked painting dials and watch faces during WW1 and 2 not knowing it was giving them radiation poisoning. Very dark story of greed and corruption
Freedom by Jonathan Franzen. Follows a family’s lives through the years.
Both of those were so I dense I started looking for some lighter fare and found “The gentleman bastards series. It is a fantasy series about a group of thieves. A very fun read. I think the bastards series was recommended by someone on this thread a few months ago. So whoever introduced me... thanks!
 
An Army at Dawn.

I know nothing about WWII in North Africa and this is a Pulitzer winning history of just that.

And it’s part one of a three-part series. Should keep me busy for a while.
 
Reading Brilliance right now. It's very cool. Been busy at nights so haven't made much headway, but I hope to crush it this weekend.

It's a little in the future and human variant has evolved - the Brilliants. They are VERY smart. The world has tried to adapt. Some of them are bad :) So far, good writing style, good pace. Will report back when I finish it.

http://a.co/d/d5sfAMi

View attachment 589960

This was pretty good. Solid B on my grading scale. Concept gets an A, but execution a C - plot and pace keep it exciting, but writing style is not fulfilling if you're looking for literature in your pulp fiction as I am.

Reading this now. Love the first few chapters. I kinda like these period dramas, read a lot of them. We'll see.

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Starship Troopers is a really good read. It explores some much different themes than a lot of his later work, particularly as it relates to duty to one's country, to ones fellow enlisted men/women, etc. It's actually on a USMC reading list. The movie [as they often do] completely missed almost all of the philosophical point of the book and was just about killing bugs.

Hard disagree. The movie is a great piece of satire.
 
Let’s see..
I just finished “Radium Girls” by Kate Moore. Story of how women worked painting dials and watch faces during WW1 and 2 not knowing it was giving them radiation poisoning. Very dark story of greed and corruption

Check out The Only Harmless Great Thing by Brooke Bolander. It's a magical realist/sci-fi take on the same subject, but also about elephants.
 
Working my way through this one. It's an anthology, but some stories aren't really short stories, just excerpts from other books, I'm not too happy about that. I start reading a story, I like to finish it. Aside from those entries, most of which, I've already read the other book, I'm liking it. I've always enjoyed the "Lost world" type stories. Regards, GF.

lostworlds.jpg
 
Check out The Only Harmless Great Thing by Brooke Bolander. It's a magical realist/sci-fi take on the same subject, but also about elephants.

I thought that was a joke! Crazy subject matter. If you’ve never watched the video of that elephant being electrocuted, it’s worth a google. It’s not a video for sensitive people though. It’s a silent video, but you watch the elephant die. People were bat **** crazy back in the day. I’m sure in 100 years, they will say the same about us...
Thanks for the tip. I’ll check it out.
 
Reading Lies My Teacher Told Me, by James Loewen. It's not a screed against educators, so the title is somewhat a misnomer. The book deals with history textbooks and how they miss much historical information, and often get it flat-out wrong.

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Reading Lies My Teacher Told Me, by James Loewen. It's not a screed against educators, so the title is somewhat a misnomer. The book deals with history textbooks and how they miss much historical information, and often get it flat-out wrong.

41lPQrN%2BENL._SX324_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
Great book! There's a second volume, called, oddly enough, "More Lies My Teacher Told Me." Look in to how text books are selected to understand why our school books were, and are, so bad.
 
Lately I've read:

Forgive Me: Leonard Peacock (really good book)
Orphan Train
Dolores Claiborne
Cujo
Going Home 2,3
All The Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy
Fight Club
What a Fish Knows
Columbus Day Book 1
Mindstar Rising (if you haven't read Peter Hamilton you should)

Probably one of the better books I've read lately:
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An inspiring story, and enlightening about Google's early days. This books turned out to be a lot better than I thought it would be. I bought the audio version because it was on some kind of sale, the audio version is nice because it's actually read by the author, and he does a good job.

I am stuck in a bad rut right now, trying to find some new things to read. Thinking about reading the Cormoran Strike series, (actually written by J.K. Rowling).

Currently reading this:
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Finally finished Vineland by Thomas Pynchon today after about nine months. His weakest work, I'd say, though I've still got his latest book on my reading list. Meanwhile, I'm on the ninth book of The Wheel of Time series and nearing the end of The Three Body Problem by Liu Cixin in the original Chinese, at which point I have the longer second and third books yet to go...

Candidates for adding into the mix now that Vineland is done include House of Leaves and S/Ship of Theseus by J.J. Abrams and Doug Dorst.
 
Anybody every get well into a book, only to discover they read it before? Argh.

Kindle informs me I'm 24% done. Started sounding VERY familiar last night while reading. Turns out, I read it about 7 years ago (that's when I bought it). The book theme is impoverished Appalachian mountain people. I read a spate of those one year. I guess this was in that list.
 
Just found The Land Of Painted Caves by Jean M. Auel, I thought Shelters Of Stone was the last book in the series. Auel does EXTENSIVE research for each book & it's 7 or 8 years between books, but they're really good! Well, The Valley Of Horses was rather soap opera-esque for the last 1/2 of the book, but other than that, I've been very impressed with the series. 1st book in the series is Clan Of The Cave Bear. It's been so long, I might have to reread Shelters Of Stone before starting The Land Of Painted Caves, the latest & last in the Earth's Children series.
Regards, GF.
 
The tattooist of Auschwiz by Heather Morris
A novel based on real people

The Red Rising series by Pierce
Brown

The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher
 
Reading Madeleine Albright's Fascism: A Warning. Very good book, imo. Also reading, or re-reading, A Time for Trumpets: The Untold Story of the Battle of the Bulge, by Charles MacDonald. The most in-depth book I've yet found on this historic battle. Overlord: D-Day, June 6, 1944, by Sir Max Hastings (he wasn't a "Sir" by the time of this book). I like this author quite a bit. Read his Armageddon, which is the first book I'd read that looks at the end of WWII from East and West, fairly - gives due respect to the USSR's contribution to ending the war. He pulls no punches from either front. I wrote to him in appreciation for the book, and he was kind enough to write back. That got me for life, I'm afraid. I always like his books.

I re-reading a bunch of British books on brewing and cask ale. Cellarmanship, Brewing, Brew Your Own British Real Ale...my wife is about to kill me, as I've built up a mountain again. Haven't even touched Malting & Brewing Science, DeClerck, the Yeast-Hops-Water-Malt series, Pale Ale, IPA.....yet they're there. Proof I'll read them again. Right?
 
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