What are you reading now, playas?
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Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy....
Just a few pages into it at this point. It was actually recomended to me by Ben Nichols of Lucero. Je told me that it affected him so much, he had wrote a half dozen songs based on it and would probably record an acoustic EP of those songs...
I figure that if any book can have that affect on a guy, I should probably check it out.

Just a few pages into it at this point. It was actually recomended to me by Ben Nichols of Lucero. Je told me that it affected him so much, he had wrote a half dozen songs based on it and would probably record an acoustic EP of those songs...
I figure that if any book can have that affect on a guy, I should probably check it out.

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History of the Blues: The Roots, The Music, The People by Francis Davis - A little high-brow and sociological so far, but an interesting analysis of the progression of the form from the Delta and into widespread popularity.
A Man in Full by Tom Wolfe - sort of on hold because it's too big to lug around in my messenger bag and I do all of my reading on the ferry to work now that we have an infant in the house.
Duma Key by Stephen King - Taking it with me to Jamaica as my vacation book, so, technically, I'm not reading it yet.
A Man in Full by Tom Wolfe - sort of on hold because it's too big to lug around in my messenger bag and I do all of my reading on the ferry to work now that we have an infant in the house.
Duma Key by Stephen King - Taking it with me to Jamaica as my vacation book, so, technically, I'm not reading it yet.
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reading two at the moment:
"the nine: inside the secret world of the supreme court": jeffrey toobin; fascinating read about the personalities deciding the highest law in the land
"the undertaking: life studies from the dismal trade": thomas lynch;
an insightful read from an undertaker who also happens to be a poet
"the nine: inside the secret world of the supreme court": jeffrey toobin; fascinating read about the personalities deciding the highest law in the land
"the undertaking: life studies from the dismal trade": thomas lynch;
an insightful read from an undertaker who also happens to be a poet
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The Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael Pollan. As The New York Times Book Review says "thoughtful, engrossing...you're not likely to get a better explanation of exactly where food comes from."
No shit (no pun intended!). I will never touch a chicken nugget again. The book is divided into four sections. The first section is on corn, how U.S. government policy has pushed that since the "70's until it makes up a huge percentage of what the American public eats ("Corn Walking").
Second section, where I am at now, is on organics. Eye opening as well. Pretty amazing what can happen when you simply redefine (or corrupt or blur or whatever) a word.
It sure ain't our grandfather's pastoral farms anymore...but we probably all knew that.
Highly recommended.
No shit (no pun intended!). I will never touch a chicken nugget again. The book is divided into four sections. The first section is on corn, how U.S. government policy has pushed that since the "70's until it makes up a huge percentage of what the American public eats ("Corn Walking").
Second section, where I am at now, is on organics. Eye opening as well. Pretty amazing what can happen when you simply redefine (or corrupt or blur or whatever) a word.
It sure ain't our grandfather's pastoral farms anymore...but we probably all knew that.
Highly recommended.
Unfortunately, I don't know, and my on-line Cambridge distionary of American English doesn't recognize, the meaning of "disambiguating"!sturgeongeneral wrote:i have always been drawn to books and movies involving road trips and journeys. when i was young it was a vicarious method to experience other places without the expense and the time. now that i am able to undertake the actual roadtrips i find the experience to be both cathartic and disambiguating. when traveling one is not defined by their future or their past but simply of the moment. i like that.

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i have always been drawn to books and movies involving road trips and journeys. when i was young it was a vicarious method to experience other places without the expense and the time. now that i am able to undertake the actual roadtrips i find the experience to be both cathartic and disambiguating. when traveling one is not defined by their future or their past but simply of the moment. i like that.
I read that many a year ago. A good book. Relaxing, so should be a nice break from your McCarthy reading. (And I think you just came back from a road trip, so should be perfect for you).sturgeongeneral wrote:a friend just loaned me 'blue highways' by william least heat-moon. the author shares his experiences while traveling the backroads of america and his sense of curiosity about "those little towns that get on a map only because some cartographer has a blank space to fill". places like why, arizona; whynot mississippi; and remote, oregon.
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a friend just loaned me 'blue highways' by william least heat-moon. the author shares his experiences while traveling the backroads of america and his sense of curiosity about "those little towns that get on a map only because some cartographer has a blank space to fill". places like why, arizona; whynot mississippi; and remote, oregon.
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