Last book you read

>last book you read
>current book your reading
>next book you plan to read

just read yo mom's a hoe
currently reading how to fuck yo momma in the pussy even harder!
and I plan on readin' fuckin' yo momma's brains out by this time next week, busta!

Currently reading Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, and it's very gay. I didn't know Hume had presented his arguments in the form of fan fiction.

>Valis
>Against the Day
>Probably gunna read Silence or Animal Farm next. I've also got complete Lovecraft short story thing, so maybe that.

>Siddhartha
>Epic of Gilgamesh
>The Manuscript Found in Saragossa

What I Talk About When I Talk About Running - Murakami

The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle - Murakami

The Trial - F. Kafka

God i don't think ill be able to finish windup bird, it seems everything i'm reading i've read before in his other works, gosh, its like every, every little thing repeats itself over and over again in his novels.
That non fiction about running made me pretty upset too, he goes on and on about the same things, we never get a deep insight, "i couldnt do x" why? "i dont know", "how much did my leg hurt?" "a lot" "why, i dont know" jesus

i'm starting to think i fell for a big meme

>macroeconomics textbook

>business finance textbook

>environmental economics textbook

The Sickness Unto Death
Moby Dick
On Film-making by MacKendrick

>The Recognitions
>Infinite Jest (reread), The Sot-Weed Factor
>Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, Gravity's Rainbow
It's the year of knocking out the big boys

>The Thiry Years War.
>Egil's Saga
>On Hellenism

>Amerika - Kafka
>Adolescent - Dostoevsky; Mansfield Park
>Short stories by Kafka

Stoner
The Crusades: A Very Short Introduction
The Word for World is Forest

>The Castle - Kafka
>The Magic Mountain - Thomas Mann
>The Idiot or Inherent Vice

>Nobody: Casualties of America's War on the Vulnerable
>The Maltese Falcon
>The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

>Dubliners
>Look Homeward, Angel
>The New Testament or Growth of the Soil

How are you enjoying Moby Dick?

>>last book you read
Moby Dick
>>current book your reading
Some comfy Nabokov and retarded Deleuze
>>next book you plan to read
Probably Dante

>Prayer Journal of Flannery O'Connor
>Mason & Dixon
>No idea what next. Probably Europe Central.

>Hong gildong
>2666
>We

>last
The Riddle of the Sands

>current
The Rainbow

>next
Julian

Culture of Critique Ronald MacDonald
Ride the Tiger Ebola
Mein Kampf Daddy

>Bleeding Edge
>nothing
>not sure, if i feel energetic enough probably something by james joyce

> On Conics Book III
> Emile
> Democracy in America

>The Sound and the Fury
>Infinite Jest
>probably Under the Volcano

Didn't meant to quote you, sorry

>Notes from Underground
>The Gulag Archipelago
>Walden

I bet you'd like Abe Kobo, I recommend Secret Rendezvous

I re-read the Deathly Hallows over the past couple days due to a severe case of nostalgia

I have to say that I was a little disappointed in the ending, after all of these years. After all of the buildup over 7 books and the most powerful villain in the book's universe dies due to happenstance

Anyways, I'm going to finish DUNE, finally. I stopped last year because work was insane.

those books really dont hold up after childhood. I wish adults would shut up about them these days

>Siddhartha
>The Citadel of the Autarch
>The Poetic Edda

>"Artemis" by Andy Weir
>"Cold As Ice" by Charles Sheffield
>Most likely "Acceptance" by Jeff VanDerMeer or "Mortal Engines" by Stanislaw Lem

Don't get me wrong, they're absolutely enthralling as a kid, and I'm glad that (prior to the film releases) it encouraged children to read, and get excited about reading - but they're definitely still young adult books. For example I found myself continuously wishing that Ron and Hermoine had more dimension to them, as well as most of the other characters. Still, you'd be hard-pressed to find a kid's book series with more lore than this one.

T-thanks for the you, senpai

The Good Soldier
Don Quixote
not sure, maybe something by Dickens

>Swann's Way
>The Idiot
>Freud: A Life of Our Time

Last read: Brothers Karamazov
Currently reading: Gravity's Rainbow, Don Quixote, and My Struggle
Next read: Moby Dick, Notes From the Underground, The Death of Ivan Ilyich

my dude. Halfway through Brothers Karamazov, and digging it. Had to put it on hold for finals week though, because it's just too damn long. If you want more in the vein of Notes from Underground, check out No Longer Human by Dazai

>The trial
>Leviathan
>The stranger

>Dune
>Les Miserables
>My Secret War: Autobiography of a Spy

I like Les Miserables for its historical value because Hugo excels at capturing the cultural zeitgeist and everything that was going on in France during the restoration, but for some reason the book is not provoking that much of an emotional response in me, and I feel like it probably should.

If you're reading textbooks during the semester you're doing it wrong.

>Work & Days (Hesiod)
>Histories (Herodotus)
>The Peloponnesian War (Thucydides)

>tfw starting with the Greeks

>Faust
>Crime and Punishment and Frankenstein
>Le Morte Darthur

My nigga I need to read some Thucydides. Herodotus is a great read btw, but you know that ofc

Ubik
No country for old man
White Noise

The Crying of lot 49
The Trial
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Klay

The Setting Sun; Osamu Dazai
Slaughterhouse Five; Kurt Vonnegut
Ficciones; Jorge Luis Borges

>My nigga
Shut the fuck up you child

Come now, I was just having some fun in jest. You seem a bit... rustled

>Ego And His Own
>Will To Power
>Stoner

Foucault's Pendulum
Savage detectives
Maybe Master and Margarita

>Nemesis Games
>Generation Kill / What Happened / IT
>One Bullet Away or Babylon's Ashes

I'm very indecisive

>what happened
is it really just complaining or actually good?

>Sirens of Titan
>Complete Sherlock Holmes
>Gulliver's Travels

Already starting Book IX.
Yep, Herodotus flies by fast.

I took about a year to read BK. It was remarkable how long of a period of time I could go without touching it, and yet pick it up and read it as if I had been reading it earlier that morning.

>Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World

I enjoyed it. It was not quite as dreamy as Kafka on the Shore or the Wind-up Bird Chronicle, but I still liked it. I'm a fan of Murakami.

>Animal Farm
I'm only about 30 pages in but so far I'm enjoying it. It's well written, and though the parallels are extremely obvious, it's entertaining enough and short enough that it works. If it was long and drawn out it would definitely be worse

>The Complete Cosmicomics
I'm really looking forward to this one, it'll be my first Italo Calvino book. I think I'm going to like him and his books quite a bit

>Muerte Sin Fin
It's a long poem about God and the intelligence, the shape and the substance, verba and res. A very nice read

>Werther
I like the bucolic elements and seeing how romantic thought starts building but it's too emotional.

>The Nausea
I hope I can finish it this fucking time

Finished: Night School
Started: Cryptonomicon
On deck: Faustus (Marlowe)

Just finished Animal Farm myself. Orwell struggles so much to create 3 dimensional characters that a fable like Animal Farm is the only kind of story his writing style works well for. And it works extremely well for Animal Farm.

>Anabasis
>The Master and Margarita
>Diary of Mad Man

>Stoner
>The Hunchback of Notre Dame
>The American by Henry James

First Blood
The Devil in the White City
Time Out Of Joint

I'm only a few chapters in so I can't say for sure, however it has been less bitching and more of a "we're down but not out" for democrats. Also it seems like she's trying to be as bipartisan as possible, and talk about how much she loves America. I suspect there won't be too much bitching as she doesn't want to come off as petty and sour.

>Light in August
>Infinite Jest
>Ulysses

>Mr. Majestyk
>Bleeding Edge
>Fargo Screenplay

>The apology
>Beyond good and evil
>The social contract/Fire and fury

It's really great. Definitely one of my favourites if not my favourite. Haven't been able to read it recently tho because of school

>To the lighthouse
>El beso de la mujer araña
>lolita

>We Can Build You by Philip K. Dick
>The Teachings of don Juan by Carlos Castaneda
>Galactic Pot-Healer by Philip K. Dick

>nausea
>infinite jest
>the pale king

The sailor who fell from grace with the sea -mishima

The drinker -Fallada

Victoria - Hamsun

>Kafka, the Castle
>Iliad
>maybe Odyssey since it's a 2-in-1, I just hope it's more diverse than Iliad. Not to say Iliad is bad but I'm getting a little exhausted by reading catalogues of one-time characters getting smote through the chin as the bronze spearhead came through the back of their neck severing the tendons as darkness fell over their eyes

Wuthering Heights
Jane Eyre
Dubliners

I know it's entry level and all but I'm enjoying myself, my dudes.

mishima is my nigga

>The Third Reich
>2666
>Dracula

>Harry Potter 1
>Harry Potter 2
>Harry Potter 3
feeling gud

I was pleasantly surprised with how good First Blood was. A very fine western revision

Stoner
Lady Gregory's Complete Irish Mythology
The Silmarillion

the person beneath this post is gay and deserves no (you)

Dracula is actually fucking great. Wish it was discussed here more. Don't expect typical horror, it's more about friendships and loyalty.

>C&P
>The Trial
>Cat's Cradle

Just going through the old top 100 lists

>The Invisible Cities
> Master & Margarita, Gravity's Rainbow
> Stoner

>Eva Luna
>Paradise Lost
>Siddhartha

>catcher in the rye
>revolt against the modern world
>hunger by knut hamsun

tender is the night
women in love
i'm still undecided. maybe reread the red badge of courage

>Eclipse of Reason by Max Horkheimer
>The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde
>The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson

>whatever
>three men in a boat
>the melancholy of resistance

> Moby Dick
> The Good Soldier Svjek
> Heart of Darkness

>No Longer Human
>Kokoro
>The Bell Jar

>Pan my Hamsun
>A new history of western philosophy by Anthony Kenny
>Either Mythology by Edith Hamilton or something by Hamsun

How was the prayer journal?

>Catcher In The Rye
>Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
>Inherent Vice

>Rubicon
>With the old breed
>Gallic Wars

Just finished-inherent vice, Common sense (reread)
Current-foucault's pendulum by Eco, going postal by pratchett.
Next on the pile-wealth of nations (reread) capital by piketty (reread), the future of the mind by Kaku
I also do daily readings from the analects and the works of mencius.
Screw the greeks, i got over that by sophomore year of university.
.

>anti-tech revolution: why and how
>Journey to the End of the Night
>Walden or the communist manifesto

>last book
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
>current book
The Man in the High Castle
>next book
Either Ubik or Frankenstein. I haven't decided.

Antifragile
All quiet on the Western Front
Laughter-Bergson

I read Gulag archipelago last year, and I just finished Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karmazov.

Russia is sadland.

How is Faust? I've heard that outside the original German it just doesn't work

À la recherche du Moyen-Âge- Le Goff

La Serpe - Philippe Jaenada

The Brothers Karamazov - Dosto

Currently reading:
>Brothers Karamazov
>Labyrinths by Borges
>The trial
>heart of darkness(again)
Next up:
>Confessions by augustine
>Gravity's rainbow
>Notes from the underground

>The Witches of Karres - Schmitz
>Narragansett Bay - Bacon
>A Key into the Language of America - Williams

Guess what state I'm from. Hardmode: no Google

Massachusetts