David foster wallace you have only read four books in the first sixteen weeks of the year

>david foster wallace you have only read four books in the first sixteen weeks of the year

How many books have you read so far this year, user?

8

>tfw it's been long enough i'm re-reading
feels comfy like when you find an old sweater you thought you threw out but it's still here and it fits as well as always and smells slightly of your exgf who still loves you but has to live the hell of fucking other people because she lives elsewhere now and you put it on and have a happy day knowing life fulfills you. i think it's about six

if you don't make 52 books a year you're pretty much a non-reader

I'm pretty excited that I've finished as much books as I have this year.

Sex and Punishment...Berkowitz
Nine Stories...Salinger
Chintamani...Premananda
Sculpting in Time...Tarkovsky
Songs of Experience...Blake
Stories of Mukunda...Kriyanananda
Be Here Now...Dass
The Eye...Nabakov
(If we count books of the Bible:
Esther
Job
Psalms
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon)

Feels good

How is sculpting in time? Big fan of tarkovsky and iv been considering reading about him.

Really depends on the books

Exactly, how do these motherfucks on goodreads have about 2,000 books ? I checked a girl I know and she has about 500 books and they're all pulp YA vampire fiction. Quality over quantity.

Why do you even care m8? This isn't really a competition

I don't, I'm just reinforcing the comment I replied to.

With the exception of his father's poems, it's great dude. A lot of fun and education for anyone interested in any medium of art. Highly recommend. (At times t's rather funny too).

10

22 but some of em children's novels cuz I'm takin a class

still, ill catchup over summer

About 11-ish? Currently reading Doctor Zhivago.

Five, all of which I read in January.

I'm so busy, man ;-;

Currently on 12th

Sitting at 20, about to finish one tonight. I read about 450ish pages a week. I'm doing pretty well in that only a couple of them are below 200 pages and a couple (Infinite Jest, War & Peace) are rather long.

>I'm so busy, man ;-;
I know the feeling. I Probably wouldn't have read half the books that I've read this year if it weren't for my god-awful commute times. I absolutely hate the bus, but I figured that I might as well make the most of it and just read.

>(Infinite Jest, War & Peace)
>rather long.
Understatement of the thread.
I'm currently eyeing a copy of War and Peace and I'm pretty sure that it would meet the size requirements for an actual brick.

About 15-20 I'd say.

10...

112 days have passed this year so far, so 112 books. I pretty much just read and cruise for hookers in my super dank Lambo. You ain't shit, OP.

proud of you

12 books

>The Brothers Karamazov (Dostoevski)
>The Perplex Novelist (Chribes)
>The Fall of Madrid (Chirbes)
>Paris-Austerlitz (Chirbes)
>The Stranger (Camus)
>Abel Sanchez (Unamuno)
>The Kingdom of this world (Carpentier)
>Hunger (Hamsun)
>Shipwrecks (Cabeza de Vaca)
>The Forge (Barea)
>Books v. Cigarettes (Orwell)
>The Truce (Benedetti)

Most of them are really short books. I am not proud of myself.

40 something + 3 or 4 novels re-read

In all honesty, though, I've only recently started to read with any commitment, and, at 26 years old, I've probably read less than 400 fiction novels in my entire life (as a kid/teen I exclusively read non-fiction). Even, then, I've found I've reached a point where it has become increasingly difficult to find truly good fiction. Of those 40 stories, only around a quarter were what I would define as worth remembering. These were:

4.5 - 5.0 stars
>Faulkner - Light in August
>Proust - Sodom and Gomorrah

4.0 - 4.5

>Samuel Beckett - Malone
>Thornton Wilder - The Bridge of Sans Luis Rey
>Bulgakov - The Master and Margarita
>Vasily Grossman - Everything Flows
>Steinbeck - East of Eden


3.5 - 4.0
>Dezso Kosztolanyl - Kornel Esti
>Yasunari Kawabata - The Sound of the Mountain
>David Ohle - Motorman
>Tanizaki Junichiro - Some Prefer Nettles.
>Arthur Koessler - Darkness at Noon
>Erich Remarque - All Quiet on the Western Front

If anyone has any recommendations for contemporary authors who are better than those listed, I'd be very interested. So far, most books written from the 70s onwards that I've read haven't really appealed to me.

Correction:

Samuel Beckett - The Unnameable*

19, but most of them are around 200 pages.

13

Michel looks like a sullen goblin.

I stopped reading altogether, what's the point when life is finite

58

4 so far, Infinite Jest, The Trial, Catcher in the Rye, and Dubliners. Currently working on In Search of Lost Time Vol. 2.

6, but that includes the bible and the illiad.

i enjoyed this post

>The Sound of Waves
>Cronica de una Muerte Anunciada
>God and the State

Oh god, I am pathetic.

Book of job ftw

10

Around 50, though I've been reading a lot of art histories this year.

I have a feeling you're the person I recommended Denton Welch and Lars Iyer to some months ago. If I'm mistaken, well, the latter author is contemporary - you might check out his Wittgenstein Jr.
Also, have you read any Iris Murdoch? I think you might appreciate The Sea, the Sea.

4, almost 5

16, 4 of those are Shakespeare plays though. I didn't read anything throughout Jan or Feb because of feels. I started reading classic Children lit to get back in the swing of things.

Now that I've quit Uni and started working I'm actually reading way more than I usually would. I got a Job behind a bar and have plenty of free time. Not having to think about more than turning up to pull pints and pay the tiny bit of rent frees my thinking. I'm currently reading Manly P Hall's Secret Teachings of all Ages to prepare for when I come to philosophers with some backing in occult and hermetic sources. I'm finally getting around to plowing though a list of Philosophical texts and am just waiting for a collection of Aristotle's writings to be delivered.

1.

*checks last years Goodreads challenge*
'Ahhh, 60! I am indeed a reader!'
*sits back with a pipe and a copy of IJ*

12 according to goodreads. Would have guessed fewer

seventeen books consisting of ~4000 pages
btw it's more useful to note down and post the amount of pages you've read since ten rather short novels can be as long as one pynchon

Precisely 30.

This month I have only read Ulysses, however. It's all my university's fault, with those boring and difficul tests. I intend to read one today - a short history of Medieval Portuguese literature.

My goal is to read 100 books this year, which means I should have read at least 50 by the end of June.

I have read 6800 pages during my two-month vacations in January/February, but only 2000 pages since then.

It's depressing.

Not a single one

If we're counting plays then around eight. If not then three: The Waves, A Month in the Country, A Visit from the Good Squad.

Could be worse

I've only read "Notes from the Underground", by Dostoyevsky this year. It's actually the first time I've read a whole book in... over a year, I guess. The last book I read was the last book of the Lord of the Rings trilogy.

I have ADHD and a crippling dopamine addiction. Having been able to read Notes was somewhat of a feat for me, considering I had to deprive myself of my usual sources of entertainment, which are way more appealing than books (to me).

More than any other year at this time. 21 books so far completely read, 2 half-read and 1 a couple of chapters through.

18 books, 8 plays, ~80 essays, 24 short stories

Dunno like 25-30 I'm not counting.

I've read 9 so far but that includes Mason and Dixon and Ulysses, both of which took me a while because I'm relatively old and have started going back to school.

I hope you get things sorted out.

like a million.

bragging topic. lol.

>it took him more than three days to read the Iliad

And I'm currently reading Siddhartha!

in which i daringly combine the 'what have you read so far this year' thread with the 'take a masturbatory picture of your bookcase' thread

I'm a very slow reader and a Veeky Forums noob. I don't spend a lot of time reading, but I just got through The Long Ships. Amazing. I almost cried at the end.

Keep having low standards and you'll never be disappointed!

33

I usually stick to books around 250 pages in length.

It's not the quantity that matters, but the quality. If I remember properly Umberto Eco once said that it's better to have read and re-reread just one book than 1000 books but badly, and he was right; he was, also, the owner of something like 500.000 books.

Oh shit, you read The Long Ships too. What did you think of it?

i really enjoyed it, it was so much fun. it had a perfect balance between the no nonsense violence and slavery and what have you and still having appealing characters and not being too edgy. also it was frequently hilarious
it's so enjoyable and i was sad when it was over.

I felt exactly the same; especially about the humor. The action sequences were also all spectacular. I really felt for Orm in almost every chapter. It's really wonderful. I'll definitely be recommending it to everyone I know.

Didn't he have a separate house just for his books? The absolute madman.

34-36. Some 15.000 pages. I cut my internet time waste to a fifth at the start of the year and read instead.

Thanks for sharing user :)

The Pale King
The Magicians
Paulina and Fran
Gravity's Rainbow
Caves of Steel
As I lay Dying
The Sound and the Fury
Bogleheads Guide to Finance
The Lady's not for Burning
White Noise

So 10 I guess, but it felt like more.

Ah, I forgot
a Canticle For Leibowitz
Time's Arrow
Benjy Franklin's Autobiography

so 13

And Catch 22
So 14

I guess it's kinda pointless if I can't remember which books I've read

How was the pale king? Love true detective and nic.

16 novels, 4 novellas, 9 short stories, 1 Shakespeare play, 3 epic poems, 47 sonnets, and 2 haikus.

Re-read all the Harry Potters
A Study in Scarlet
Everything is Illuminated
SteppenWolf
The Stranger
The Book of the New Sun
Infinite Jest
Cat's Cradle
Wolf in White Van
When You Are Engulfed in Flames
Naked
Moby Dick
Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
A Confederacy of Dunces
Master and Margarita
The Way of Kings

25

Just got to the second part of Don Quixote.

After that I have to read The Baron in the Trees for my book club and then I was either going to read Words of Radiance or start a re-read of The Edge Chronicles.

From what I've read so far:
I'd put A Confederacy of Dunces in my top 10
David Sedaris is an enjoyable author when I want something light
Master and Margarita and Cat's Cradle were a bit of a let down
The Book of the New Sun was great, particularly Sword of the Lictor
The Way of Kings was cool but Sanderson can't write a female character for shit
I read IJ so now I'm cool right?!
In retrospect Sorcerer's Stone and Prisoner of Azkaban are amazing and the rest are just OK.

david foster wallace gives me a hemmorage

""""""low standards"""""

25-29. would be around 45 if I wasn't recently being slammed between work, class, exercise, and my brother's upcoming wedding.

11 books and 37 short stories.

7 books but all in German or French neither of which is my first language

None
Help

Hey, guys. I thought it would be best to ask in--rather than make a--thread:

I'm writing a story, and I'm going into great detail about a song and more specifically, the musical character of the song. I'm using several musical terms which are, naturally, Italian, and I'd just like some opinions on this.

When they're used in music, they are in a present (non-conjugated?) tense.

I feel very strongly that I SHOULD conjugate these musical terms to fit with my writing, but I have doubts that they'll still be musical terms and not just Italian.

(Gonna post this in two or three other threads; cut me some slack mods)

would chill with desu

26 so far OP and around 8k pages

I really enjoyed it. I didn't realize how unfinished it was until I turned the last page and said "what the fuck?"
It's clear that some of the chapters as well we're not finalized, because they come off as more egotistical than most writers end up as. There are also some chapters that are 50 or 100 page long conversations, which are sometimes enjoyable for themselves or a punchline later on but they do tend to meander.

I liked it a lot more than Broom of the System, which I'm reading now and finding not up to par with the rest of Wallace's writing. Which is to be expected, as it was pretty much just his senior thesis. Overall The Pale King is one of the funniest books I've ever read, in part because after watching End of the Tour some of the more conversational chapters feel like Jason Segel talking to me. For some reasons I would smirk a lot at Catch 22 or maybe titter, but PK is a laugh out loud book

Finished the 25th today. Trying to get to 100 this year. Being underemployed and heavily caffeinated helps.

The word count to bait ratio is pretty high here.

If someone asked you about a book you read, I bet you'd respond with "it was good"

one
3 if you count manga

Finished 16 so far, started in February

11. :'(

>Love true detective and nic.
What's that have to do with DFW?

38

wtf is wrong with Veeky Forums

33 so far, but I think at least 4 of those were started in like December

31

Most people here use their time in a 1:10 reading/shitposting ratio.

The Road
The Jungle Book
The Heart of Darkness
Life Inc. by Douglas Rushkoff
Saughterhouse Five
currently on pg 518 of IJ

53

30 books +2000 or so pages in course lit that i didnt account for