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Angury

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Posts posted by Angury

  1. 9 hours ago, willoyd said:

    x

     

    It's interesting that you mention Man Booker prize winners. 

     

    I've recently started reading some of the prize winners and those shortlisted. There are a fair few (although not as many as I first thought) who I just don't 'get' and can't seem to understand why they marked so highly on the judges list. But this is where I find reviews quite helpful. People who did enjoy the book will talk about why they enjoyed it and why, in their opinion, it deserves all the publicity. 

     

    I've noticed that not only has my breadth of reading grown, I am also now more appreciative of different writing styles and can admire works which I would have previously put down. In a way, reviews have given me a new pair of eyes.

  2. On 1/12/2019 at 6:43 PM, Kafka On The Shore said:

    I finished The God of Small Things which was absolutely wonderful. It had been on my shelves for years but for some reason I never got round to it. Absolutely deserving of all the praise. 

     

     

     

     

    Just finished this novel yesterday as well. Absolutely loved it - decided to do a bit of googling around Arundhati Roy and couldn't believe that she hadn't studied English Literature/Creative Writing etc at Uni. Gives me hope.. :P 

     

    I have just started reading Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie. Really getting into the SE Asian flow..

  3. A Discworld series re-read - that sounds like a holiday in luxury to me! I found your reading order interesting - do you read through the series based on when they were published? And if so, is it easy to move from one character to the next? I guess each book can be read on its own, but I've always read them as a sub-series of novels based on characters e.g. the Death Novels, The Witches, The Watch etc. 

     

    Anyway, very comprehensive reading list there - I wish you a joyful reading year!

  4. On 1/2/2019 at 8:29 PM, karen.d said:

    x

     

     

     

    Glad you enjoyed The Wasp Factory - I agree with your comments, I thought it was a very clever commentary on human nature. Looking back, I also find it incredible how Banks was able to create such dark scenes through such simple writing. He really had the reader captivated with his character arc and writing.

     

     

  5. No worries, quite a lot of people read Augury instead - mainly because of Runescape.

     

    I've only read three books so far but it has been a great start to the year. Each one was different yet made me want to read more.

     

    1. Moving Pictures by Terry Pratchett

    I love, love, love Terry Pratchett - he is by far one of my favourite authors. His wit and intellect make his writing so easy to read that you forget just how much talent this man must have had to keep the Discworld series going for so long and at such a high level.

     

    Moving Pictures is definitely one of the top books of the series for me. I've been trying to follow the Chronology found here:

     

    image.thumb.png.f5dd374ec7671276c4014f1f3109bf8e.png

     

    Moving Pictures is start of a new series and imo on par with the Death novels. Great characterisation, cliches that don't come across as cliches (no idea how Pratchett does it) and a plot which holds your attention. Definitely planning on returning to the series again - my next Discworld book will be Feet of Clay (I'm currently on The Watch novels at the moment but was distracted by Moving Pictures instead).

     

    2. Writing at the Margin: Discourse between Anthropology and Medicine by Arthur Kleinman

    Arthur Kleinman is an American Psychiatrist and Medical Anthropologist. He is famous for being part of a group of people who introduced the concept of narratives and culture to medicine i.e. the idea that medicine is made up of more than diagnoses and treatment, and that people present with symptoms and perceive their illnesses based on their culture and societal beliefs. 

     

    Kleinman has a unique way of writing; he is able to combine the clarity of academic style with the creative flow of narrative writing to tell a story. This book is a collection of his essays that he published throughout his career; what makes it particularly interesting is that he is able to reflect back on these essays in the context of new critiques and a changing world. Yet no matter how long ago these essays were written, I find them to be highly relevant to healthcare today.

     

    I am a big admirer of Kleinman and his work, and if I'm ever struggling in my job, I turn to his narratives and remind myself of why I do what I do.

     

    3. The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy

    This is apparently a very popular book that I only found out about recently. I came across this novel while looking for South Asian writers and novels set in India. I noticed that a lot of my reading is very 'Western' and based in Europe. 

     

    I have now found myself a new author to place on my 'Top Authors' list (it is growing far too long now..). Roy's writing is detailed and cinematic; she describes the world of India in an elaborate style while acknowledging the poverty and lifestyles that many people there still lead. 

     

    The novel is focused on the caste system told through the eyes of a pair of young twins. You are already told the end of the story at the very beginning, and spend the rest of the book following the twins as they grow up and begin to realise the reality of the community of which they live in. Roy is a very good story writer; she offers you one piece of the puzzle in every chapter, encouraging you to fill in the gaps but still wanting more. 

     

    For those of you who haven't heard of her, I would highly recommend this novel. And for those of you interested in such things (which I am!), this novel also won the 1997 Man Booker Prize.

     

    It feels rather cathartic having written those three reviews - I feel like I've properly digested those books now and am ready to move on. :P Funny how books can do that to you.

     

    At the moment I am currently making my way through Sylvia Plath's Collection of Poems in chronological order (despite her stereotypical image I enjoy her poetry and her way of writing in general - it's very inspirational) and am about to start reading Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie. I also have Anna Burns' Milkman on my to-read list and plan to buy Normal People by Sally Rooney once it comes out in paperback. It's refreshing to see Northern Irish writers entering the literary world (not that they weren't there before.. *cough* Seamus Heaney).

     

    I am also getting on well with my writing; I am just about to start Chapter 7 of my novel just as it starts to get interesting, and have surprisingly started writing some poetry. This was by no means planned. I basically had some pretty tiring days at work (emotionally) and let them all out on the page. It's amazing how well the words just flow out and tie together when you're not really thinking. 

     

    Anyway, would love to hear everyone's thoughts on the books I've just reviewed.. or the books I'm about to read.. or on life in general! ;) 

  6. Some interesting points raised.

     

    21 hours ago, Hayley said:

     

    Something that I’ve noticed recently (mainly via twitter) is the opinion that people shouldn’t post negative reviews of books. I understand where that opinion’s coming from, because not everyone likes the same books and it you could potentially influence a books sales with a bad review but... I just can’t quite agree with it. As long as you say why you didn’t like it, I think it’s far better to be honest!

     

    I've noticed this in general on forums that I visit. There has been more of a drive towards reducing negative feedback to a topic, even if it is well-meaning and offers some discussion. 

     

    I find reviews are helpful in giving me a general idea of whether the book is something I would enjoy - it's accurate quite a lot of the time. Rather than focusing on one review, I tend to look for a pattern. So if I notice several negative reviews mentioning 'too many details' or the writer 'going on and on' I know it's a book I'll probably like because I enjoy writing that is detailed. 

     

    More recently I've been trying to widen my reading - particularly writing styles. Many of these are books that I find difficult to get going as it's not a type of style that I'm used to reading. But once I read through the reviews and understand what other people enjoy in these types of novels, I become more appreciative of the author, the writing style and the book as a whole.

  7. Since I started using Goodreads I've relied heavily on book reviews. When I come across a new book to read the first thing I do is look through the reviews people have written. If the reviews are awful - not just one or two but a consistent pattern - then it's unlikely I'll pick up the book.

     

    Likewise, if I come across a book that's not really 'my thing' but notice a lot of excellent reviews, I'll probably read it. 

     

    It's only recently I've noticed how detrimental this can be. I've become quite interested in Northern Irish authors and bought a collection in Waterstones. The minute I read through the reviews I was disheartened. Not a nice word to be said about the novels. Despite this, I continued with the reading and was pleasantly surprised to find that the novels were actually well-written and a joy to read. 

     

    I am curious to hear other peoples' thoughts on book reviews. Do they skew your opinion before you've even read the book? Do you use them when you're looking for a new novel to read? Or do you avidly avoid them?

  8. On 12/4/2018 at 7:09 AM, dolly said:

    Hi guys,

    If anyone wants to discuss Dostoyevsky’s “The Idiot”, I’m here:)

    I find it rather unpredictable and gripping, but that’s what goes without saying, I guess.

    This book is also very touching: I can’t imagine how one can feel no sympathy towards Prince Myshkin!

     

    I am just about to start this book. Would you say it is better than Th Brothers Karamazov? I really struggled with that book, and am a bit apprehensive about picking up another Dosteovsky novel..

  9. On 12/31/2018 at 8:24 PM, Hayley said:

    @Angury Personally I would say yes, definitely. All the Dickens novels that I've read have some kind of specific social criticism, but as Dickens was very anti-Utilitarian, they also always have a focus on the importance of the individual. Simple acts of kindness are often shown to have a sort of ripple effect, influencing the way things turn out in a big way. They're hopeful novels, telling us that even though there are terrible things and horrible people in the world, there are also kind and misunderstood people, and that you can make a big difference in the world just by being one of the good people. 

     

    Hard Times is probably my favourite in terms of the social criticism. It mainly looks at why we need imagination and fancy, not just fact and science, but it's also about class imbalances and has a pretty scathing portrayal of nineteenth century divorce laws. 

     

    This is exactly what I was looking for - thanks Hayley!

     

    I will add Dickens to my growing list of books to read.

  10. Any fans of Kaur here?

     

    I only discovered her works recently despite her name being on the New York Bestseller's List twice and her poetry displayed across Waterstones. She has been called the 'Modern Poet' because of her background; she made a name for herself through Instagram and then later self-published while a student at uni. 

     

    I bought her most recent work, The Sun and her Flowers, and really enjoy her writing. It is simple and easy to read but tugs at the heartstrings. What also made her stand out to me is her South East Asian background - something that is much needed in the literary world. 

     

    Here are some examples of her works:

     

    “do not look for healing
    at the feet of those
    who broke you” 

    -

    “Our backs tell stories 
    no books have the spine to carry” 

    -

    “i am not a hotel room. i am home
    i am not the whiskey you want
    i am the water you need
    don't come here with expectations
    and try to make a vacation out of me” 

    -

    “i want to apologize to all the women i have called beautiful
    before i’ve called them intelligent or brave
    i am sorry i made it sound as though
    something as simple as what you’re born with
    is all you have to be proud of
    when you have broken mountains with your wit 
    from now on i will say things like
    you are resilient, or you are extraordinary
    not because i don’t think you’re beautiful
    but because i need you to know
    you are more than that” 

  11. I am very tempted to start reading Dickens this year. From what I've heard about his writing style (verbose & detailed) I think I would enjoy his novels.

     

    Do you guys think his novels are the types of works which stay with you after you've finished them? In other words, do they reflect things about humanity/society that make you see the present world in a different way? 

     

    Perhaps a bit of an odd question, but am very curious!

  12. The Bartimaeus Trilogy by Jonathan Stroud.

     

    Not sure how it's viewed by critics but I'm always surprised at how it's not more popular. It's written in a style that I haven't come across very much (multiple footnotes with another character offering their own opinion to events as they unfold) but works very, very well. It's well-written, funny and offers a plot that is both action-packed and engaging but also makes you think. More importantly, it doesn't play to cliches. 

     

    Would highly recommend. :) 

  13. Thought I'd prepare early for the new year.

     

    I can't believe it's the end of the year. It's refreshing looking back at my old logs and reading through my previous reviews. I notice I didn't write as many reviews during my 2018 log, so that's something I'm going to aim for in the new year.

     

    I'm currently reading Terry Pratchett's Moving Pictures. Every time I feel I'm getting into a reading slog I turn to Pratchett and find my love of novels returning. 

     

    I wish everyone a very happy 2019 filled with joyous books! :) 

  14. Writing Log

     

    Current Projects

    • 1st Novel (Chapter 9)
    • Articles & Creative Writing - Aiming submission to magazines & websites
    • Complete one short story

     

     

    Goals

    • Finish Chapter 6 of 1st Novel
    • Finish Chapter 7 of 1st Novel 
    • Finish Chapter 8 of 1st Novel
    • Finish Chapter 9
    • Submit piece to magazine
    • Write one short story

     

     

    Progress

    • January
      - Chapter 6 completed
      - 3 Poems written
      - Chapter 7 completed
       
    • February
      - The Mechanic completed:
      https://www.angury.co.uk/the-mechanic/
      - Sorry Doctor I'm a Women completed:
      https://www.angury.co.uk/sorry-doctor-im-a-woman/
      - Eating Disorders completed:
      https://www.angury.co.uk/eating-disorders/
      - The Culture of Pain completed:
      https://www.angury.co.uk/the-culture-of-pain/
       
    • March
      - Poem on Eating Disorders submitted to three online magazines.
      - Completed one poem entitled 'Through Her Eyes.'
      - Completed article: 'The Beauty of Sight.'
      - Article on Pain submitted to three online magazines.
      - Writing piece on 'To be Asian' completed:
      https://www.angury.co.uk/to-be-asian/
      - Completed two articles: 'The British Imperialism of Modern Day India' & 'The Asian Doctor.'
      - Finished Chapter 8 of novel.
      - New blog post: 'The First Year of the Rest of your Life':
      https://www.angury.co.uk/the-first-year/
       
    • April
      - Article accepted by Hektoen International Journal:
      https://hekint.org/2019/03/18/the-language-game-of-medicine/
      - Article accepted by British Journal of Psychiatry entitled 'The Language Game in Psychiatry'
       
    • May
      - Completed 3x articles, all of which were posted on my blog.
      - Finished writing essay on the theme 'Secrets of Summer' for an essay competition which has now been submitted.
       
    • June
      - Submitted commentary article on the recent Bawa Garba case for a law journal
      - Wrote 1x creative writing piece on Death & Dying in hospital settings based on a recent night shift:
      https://www.angury.co.uk/the-night-shift/
      - Currently working on 2nd essay for a competition prize on sexuality; I will be writing about Paedophilia.
       
    • October
      - Submitted creative non-fiction essay to a magazine based on the theme of Persistence.
      - Working on final essay on Pardophilia; aim to submit for end of October
       
    • December
      - Submitted article to be published in journal (non-fiction)
      - Entered nonfiction essay competition
  15. To-Read

    Fiction
    • Abe, Kobo - The Woman in the Dunes

    • Adler, Renata - Speedboat

     Amis, Kingsley - Lucky Jim

     Amis, Kingsley - The Old Devils

     Baldwin, James - Giovanni's Room

     Baldwin, James - Go Tell It on the Mountain

     Barth, John - Lost in the Funhouse

     Barry, Sebastian - The Secret Scripture

     Blackmore, R. D. - Lorna Doone

     Becker, Howard - Boys in White

     Beckett, Samuel - Three Novels (Molly, Malone dies, The Unnameable)

    • Berger, John - G.

     Bernhard, Thomas - The Loser

     Bolano, Roberto - By Night in Chile

     Brautigan, Richard - In Watermelon Sugar

     Bukowski, Charles - Ham on Rye
    • Bukowski, Charles - Tales of Ordinary Madness
    • Byatt, A.S. - Possession

    • Calvino, Italo - If One Winter's Night a Traveller

    • Camus, Albert - The Plague

     Chekhov, Anton - Selected Stories
    • Christensen, Kate - The Epicure's Lament

     Danielewski, Mark Z. - The Familiar Volume I

    • Desai, Kiran - The Inheritance of Loss

    • DeWitt, Patrick - French Exit

    • Dostoyevsky, Fyodor - Demons

    • Dostoyevsky, Fyodor - The Gambler and A Nasty Business
    • Dostoyevsky, Fyodor - The Idiot

     Dumas, Alexander - The Count of Monte Cristo

     Duras, Marguerite - The Lover

     Eagleman, David - Sum: Tales from the Afterlives

     Eliot, George - Daniel Deronda

     Eliot, George - Jamaica Inn

     Eliot, George - Silas Marner

     Ellison, Ralph - Invisible Man

     Eugenides, Jeffrey - The Virgin Suicides
    • Faulkner, William - As I Lay Dying

     Faulkner, William - The Sound and the Fury

     Flanagan, Richard - The Narrow Road to the Deep North

     Forster, E. M. - A Passage to India

     Forster, E. M. - Howard's End

     Foulds, Adam - The Quickening Maze

     Gray, Alasdair - Lanark

     Grossman, David - A Horse walks into a Bar

    • Hall, Sarah - Daughters of the North
    • Hall, Sarah - Haweswater

    • Hall, Sarah - Madame Zero: 9 Stories

    • Hannah, Barry - Ray

     Hardwick, Elizabeth - Sleepless Nights

    • Hardy, Thomas - The Return of the Native

    • Hawkes, John - The Lime Twig
    • Hesse, Herman - Journey to the East
    • Hesse, Herman - Narcissus and Goldmund
    • Hesse, Herman - The Glass Bead Game

     Hill, Joe - Heart-Shaped Box

     Ishiguro, Kazuo - The Remains of the Day

     Jackson, Shirley - We have always lived in the Castle

    • Jelinek, Elfriede - Greed

    • Johnson, Denis - Train Dreams

     Jonasson, Jonas - The Hundred-Year Old Man

     Joyce, James - Dubliners

     Joyce, James - Ulysses
    • Kavenna, Joanna - Come to the Edge

     Kavenna, Joanna - The Birth of Love

     Kennedy, A.L. - Paradise

     Kerouac, Jack - On the Road

    • Keyes, Daniel - Flowers for Algernon

     Kundera, Milan - The Unbearable Lightness of Being

     Lacey, Catherine - Nobody is ever Missing

     Lawrence, D.H. - Sons and Lovers

     Le Guin, Ursula K. - The Lathe of Heaven

     Lewis, Matthew - The Monk

     Levithan, David - Every Day
    • Lish, Atticus - Life is with People

    • Lispector, Clarice - The Passion according to G.H.

     Maugham, Somerset W. - The Razor's Edge

    • Marquez, Gabriel - Chronicles of a Death Foretold

     McCarthy, Cormac - Child of God

     McEwan, Ian - Amsterdam

     Mitchell, Margaret - Gone with the Wind

     Mukherjee, Neel - The Lives of Others

     Naipail, V.S. - In a Free State

    • Naryan, R.K. - Malgudi Days

    • Naryan, R.K. - Swami and Friends

     Nelson, Jandy - I'll give you the Sun
    • Nutting, Alissa - Tampa

     O'Brien, Flann - The Third Policeman

     Ondaatje, Michael - The English Patient

     Pynchon, Thomas - Gravity's Rainbow (with a guide!)

    • Quincey, Thomas de - Confessions of an English Opium-Eater

     Raisin, Ross - Out Backward

     Reed, Paul - The One

    • Remarque, Erich Maria - All Quiet on the Western Front

    • Rooney, Sally - Normal People

     Roy, Arundhati - The Ministry of Utmost Happiness

     Saenz, Benjamin - Aristotle and Dante discover the Secrets of the Universe

    • Sartre, Jean-Paul - The Age of Reason

     Saunders, George - Lincoln in the Bardo
    • Singh, Khushwant - Train to Pakistan

     Smith, Betty - A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

     Sorrentino, Gilbert - Mulligan Stew

     Spark, Muriel - The Hothouse by the East River

     Steinbeck, John - Cannery Row

     Steinbeck, John - Travels with Charley

     Tartt, Donna - The Secret History
    • Thackeray, William Makepeace - Vanity Fair
    • Thomas, Michael Ford - Suicide Notes

     Wallace, David Foster - Brief Interviews with Hideous Men

     Walker, Alice - The Color Purple

     Walser, Robert - Jakob von Gunten

     Wharton, Edith - The House of Mirth

     Williams, John - Butcher's Crossing

     Woolf, Virginia - Kew Gardens

    • Vikram, Seth - A Suitable Boy

     Zweig, Stefan - Chess Story
    • Zweig, Stefan - The Royal Game


    Medicine, Psychology & Anthropology
    • Akhtar, Salman - Immigration and Identity

     Amery, Jean - On Suicide: A Discourse on Voluntary Death

     Bartlett, Annie - Forensic Mental Health: Concepts, Systems and Practice

     Bateson, Gregory - Steps to an Ecology of Mind: Collected Essays in Anthropology, Psychiatry, Evolution and Epistemology

     Becker, Ernest - Escape from Evil

     Becker, Ernest - Revolution in Psychiatry: The New Understanding of Man

     Becker, Ernest - The Birth and Death of Meaning: An Interdisciplinary Perspective on the Problem of Man

     Becker, Ernest - The Lost Science of Man

     Bloom, Sandra - Violence: A Public Health Menace and a Public Health Approach
    • Brewer, John D. - The Public Value of the Social Sciences: An Interpretive Essay

     Broyard, Anatole - Intoxicated by my Illness

     Bulgakov, Mikhail - A Country Doctor's Notebook
    • Cantacuzino, Marnia - The Forgiveness Project
    • Carel, Havi - Health, Illness and Disease: Philosophical Essays

     Colt, George - November of the Soul
    • Cooper, Rachel - Psychiatry and Philosophy of Science

     Dalrymple, Theodore - Life at the Bottom: The Worldview that makes the Underclass
    • Diamond, John - C: Because Cowards Get Cancer Too

     Durkheim, Emile - Suicide, a Study in Sociology

     Fulford, K.W.M. - Moral Theory and Medical Practice
    • Gifford, Fred - Philosophy of Medicine

     Goldacre, Ben - Bad Pharma

     Greenberg, Gary - Manufacturing Depression

     Greenfeld, Liah - Mind, Modernity, Madness

     Gupta, Mona - Is Evidence-Based Psychiatry Ethical?

     Jung, Carl - The Essential Jung
    • Kahneman, Daniel - Thinking, Fast and Slow

     Kierkegaard, Soren - The Seducer's Diary

    • Kleinman, Arthur - The Illness Narratives: suffering, healing and the human condition
    • Kleinman, Arthur - Rethinking Psychiatry: from cultural category to personal experience
    • Laing, Ronald D. - Wisdom, Madness and Folly: The Making of a Psychiatrist 1927-57

     Lees, A.J. - Mentored by a Madman
    • Levi-Strauss, Claude - Myth and Meaning: Cracking the Code of Culture

     Levi-Stauss, Claude - Structural Anthropology

     Levine, Michael - Analytic Freud: Philosophy and Psychoanalysis

     Marmot, Michael - The Health Gap: The Challenge of an Unequal World
    • Mishler, Elliot G. - The Discourse of Medicine: Dialectics of Medical Interviews

     Morris, David - The Culture of Pain
    • Ofri, Danielle - What Doctors Feel: How Emotions Affect the Practice of Medicine

     Osler, William - A Selection
    • Osler, William - A Way of Life: An Address to Yale Students, Sunday Evening, April 20, 1913
    • Perry, Sarah - Every Cradle is a Grave: Rethinking the Ethics of Birth and Suicide
    • Phillips, Adam - On Kindness
    • Reynolds, Richard - On Doctoring: Stories, Poems, Essays

     Sanders, Lisa - Diagnosis
    • Selzer, Richard - Letters to a Young Doctor

     Shneidman, Edwin - The Suicidal Man
    • Sigerist, Henry E. - Medicine and Human Welfare (Terry Lectures)

    • Skultans, Vieda and Cox, John - Anthropological Approaches to Psychological Medicine 

     Solowski, Robert - Introduction to Phenomenology
    • Storr, Anthony - The Integrity of the Personality
    • Svenaeus, Fredrik - The Hermeneutics of Medicine and the Phenomenology of Health: Steps Towards a Philosophy of Medical Practice
    • Tallis, Raymond - The Black Mirror: Looking at Life through Death

     Thomas, Philip - Psychiatry in Context: Experience, Meaning & Communities

     Welldon, Estela - Mother Madonna 'lady of the night': The Idealization and Denigration of Motherhood

     Welldon, Estela - Playing with Dynamite: A Personal Approach to the Psychoanalytic Understanding of Perversions, Violence and Criminality

     Wiseman, Boris - Introducing Levi Strauss and Structural Anthropology
    • Woolf, Virginia - On Being Ill


    Philosophy

    • Arendt, Hannah - The Human Condition

     Aristotle - The Art of Rhetoric
    • Aurelius, Marcus - Meditations

     Blackburn, Simon - Think: A Compelling Introduction to Philosophy

     Buckingham, Will - The Philosophy Book
    • Burton, Neel - Plato: Letters to my Son

     Dennett, Daniel - Consciousness Explained
    • Dewey, John - How We Think

     Heidegger, Martin - Basic Writings: Ten Key Essays
    • Jaspers, Karl - Philosophy of Existence

    • Kierkegaard, Soren - The Concept of Anxiety

     Kierkegaard, Soren - Parables of Kierkegaard

     Kuhn, Thomas - The Structure of Scientific Revolutions

    • Gabbay, D.M., Thagard, P., Woods, J. - The Philosophy of Medicine 

     Grayling, A.C. - Thinking of Answers

     McGinn, Colin - The Character of Mind: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Mind
    • Merton, Thomas - Thoughts in Solitude

     Midgley, Mary - Science and Poetry

     Nietzsche, Friedrich - Beyond Good and Evil

    • Plato - Gorgias

     Rescher, Nicholas - Epistemology: AN Introduction to the Theory of Knowledge

     Ricard, Matthieu - Altruism

    • Ricard, Matthieu - In Search of Wisdom: A Monk, a Philosopher, and a Psychiatrist on What Matters Most

    • Russell, Bertrand - The Analysis of Mind

    • Ryle, Gilbert - The Concept of Mind

     Schreber, Daniel - Memoirs of my Nervous Illness

     Smith, Adam - The Theory of Moral Sentiments
    • Tallis, Raymond - In Defence of Wonder and Other Philosophical Reflections

     Walter, Kaufmann - Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre

    • Wittgenstein, Ludwig - Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus

     Wittgenstein, Ludwig - Philosophical Investigations

     Zizek, Slavoj - Trouble in Paradise: From the End of History to the End of Capitalism

     Zizek, Slavoj - Violence: Six Sideways Reflections

    Literature & Writing
    • Barthes, Roland - A Lover's Discourse

     Deutscher, Guy - Through the Language Glass: Why the world looks different in other Languages

    • Eagleton, Terry - How to Read Literature

    • Everett, Daniel - Language: The Cultural Tool
    • Huxley, Aldous - Literature and Science
    • Midgley, Mary - Science and Poetry

     Nabokov, Vladimir - Lectures on Literature

     Ozick, Cynthia - Metaphor & Memory

     Prose, Francine - Reading Like a Writer: A Guide for People Who Love Books and for Those Who Want to Write Them
    • Thomas, Francis-Noel - Clear and Simple as the Truth: Writing Classic Prose

     Woolf, Virginia - A Writer's Diary

    Other
    • Atkinson, Charles Francis - Art and Artist: Creative Urge and Personality Development

     Bingham, Tom - The Rule of Law

    • Bevan, Aneurin - In Place of Fear

     Daston, Lorraine & Galison, Peter - Objectivity
    • Debord, Guy - The Society of the Spectacle

     Botton de, Alain - Religion for Athiests

     Botton de, Alain - Status Anxiety

     Botton de, Alain - The Art of Travel

     Easwaran - The Bhagavad Gita

     Eagleman, Daniel - Incognito

     Goleman, Daniel - Emotional Intelligence

     Gray, John - The Silence of Animals

     Hitchens, Christopher - Hitch-22

     Hofstadter & Sander - Surfaces and Essences

     Lish, Atticus - Life is with People

     Lyotard, Francois-Jean - Postmodern Fables

     Michaelian, Kourken - Mental Time Travel: Episodic Memory and Our Knowledge of the Personal Past
    • Orwell, George - Down and Out in Paris and London

     Orwell, George - Essays
    • Rosseau, Jean-Jacques - Confessions

     Russell, Bertrand - Autobiography

     Tammet, Daniel - Thinking in Numbers
    • Tolstoy, Leo - What is Art?

  16.  

    Angury's Reading & Writing Log 2019

     

    Hola everyone. Welcome to my Reading & Writing Log for this year.

    As a reader I enjoy a variety of genres but you’ll find that my to-read list falls into three broad categories: Fiction, Medicine/Anthropology and Philosophy.
    My to-read list isn’t a list of every single book I want to read (which is several pages long) but just a list of books that are on my radar for the upcoming months. I also aim to post a review for every book I read this year. I invite you to offer your own thoughts on these novels or even suggest something new - my aim is to enter into stimulating discussions  and look at the novels I read in a whole different light - your ideas are very much welcomed!

     

     

    I am also in the process of writing two 'novels,' more as a hobby than anything else. The Writing Log is an attempt to make me accountable and hopefully enjoy the process as well.
     

     

    Currently reading: 

     

     

    Books Read in 2019

    January

    • Moving Pictures by Terry Pratchett (5/5)
    • Writing at the Margin: Discourse between Anthropology and Medicine by Arthur Kleinman (4/5)
    • The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy (4/5)

    • Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie (3/5)

    • Milkman by Anna Burns (4/5)

     

    February

    • Adam Bede by George Eliot (3/5)
    • Wittgenstein: A Very Short Introduction by A.C. Grayling (4/5)
    • A Very Short Introduction to Barthes by Jonathan Culler (4/5)
    • Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Wittgenstein and the Tractatus by Michael Morris (3/5)

    • Tractatus by Ludwig Wittgenstein (2/5)

    • The Routledge Guidebook to Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations by Marie McGinn (5/5)

    • Philosophical Investigations by Ludwig Wittgenstein (4/5)

    • Philosophy of Science: A Very Short Introduction by Samir Okasha (5/5)

     

    March

    • Sum: Tales from the Afterlives by David Eagleman (5/5)
    • Selected Stories by Anton Chekhov (3/5)
    • Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes (5/5)
    • The Color Purple by Alice Walker (2/5)
    • Madame Zero by Sarah Hall (3/5)
    • Collected Stories by Lydia Davis (4/5)
    • Show Them A Good Time by Nicole Flattery (3/5)

     

    April

    • Millionaire Teacher by Andrew Hallam (4/5)
    • A History of Capitalism according to the Jubillee Line by John O'Farrell (5/5)
    • Dignity, Mental Health and Human Rights by Brendan Kelly (2/5)

     

    May

    • Critical Thinking in Clinical Practice by Eileen Gambrill (4/5)
    • Becoming by Michelle Obama (4/5)
    • Pachinko by Min Jin Lee (3/5)
    • The Razor’s Edge by W Somerset Maugham (3/5)
    • Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin (4/5)

     

    June

    • Go Tell it on the Mountain by James Baldwin (4/5)
    • Show Your Work by Austin Kleon (4/5)
    • A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith (4/5)
    • Einsteins Dreams by Alan Lightman (2/5)
    • Black Box Thinking by Matthew Syed (3/5)

     

    July

    • The Overstory by Richard Powers (4/5)
    • Introduction to Psychotherapy by Anthony Bateman (3/5)

     

    August 

    • Orfeo by Richard Powers (4/5)
    • The Echomaker by Richard Powers (4/5)

     

    September

    • Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman (2/5)

     

    October

    • Sims Symptoms in the Mind by Femi Oyebode (4/5)

     

    November

    • Ducks, Newburyport by Lucy Ellman (3/5)
    • Why I'm no longer talking to white people about race by Reni Eddo-Lodge (3/5)

     

    December

    • Psychiatric Interviewing and Assessment by Robert Poole and Robert Higgo (5/5)
    • Twas the Night before Christmas by Adam Kay (4/5)
  17. 14 hours ago, Brian. said:

    Stoner by John Williams

    15790264.jpg


    x

     

    Excellent review - you've mentioned all of the reasons why I love this novel as well. It's difficult to explain to people why this book is so good when the plot sounds so 'simple' but this book has stayed with me even months later.

     

    Glad you enjoyed the book just as much as I did. :) 

  18. On 12/19/2018 at 10:34 PM, Hayley said:

     

     

    Equal Rites.jpg

    Equal Rites by Terry Pratchett

    5/5 - I loved it 

     

    The first of the 'Witches' Discworld books, this one is just as hilarious as the first two Discworld books but also slightly more serious. The first two do feature pretty hilarious social commentary, but I think this is the first Discworld book that has that sensitive, emotional, core that appears in a lot of the later books. When a baby girl (Esk) is mistaken for a boy and accidentally inherits wizard magic it kickstarts a series of events that are often pretty funny. At this point it's necessary to note that, usually in Discworld, women with magical abilities have witch magic (very nature based, practical and often psychological), while men have wizard magic (far more destructive, more science and book based). Wizards are taught to use their magic at the Unseen University... and women have never been allowed in. This basically sets the scene for a bit of a battle of the sexes. The witches think their magic is best, the wizard's disagree and Esk is stuck in the middle. I don't want to say much more about the plot in case of spoilers, but the way Esk grows up with her conflicting abilities in a world that has very set expectations of her is very sensitively done and she becomes a great character. Ultimately, Pratchett makes the point that the world doesn't need one type of magic or the other, it needs both, and it would really help if they worked together. It's a simple yet important point in a book that's also funny, crazy and full of great characters and relationships.

    It's also the first time we get to meet Granny Weatherwax, which is noteworthy in itself :lol:

     

     

    Great to hear you enjoyed Equal Rites. I always turn to the Discworld Series when I don't really want to read anything but am feeling a bit bored. His writing always cheers me up.

  19. On 11/11/2018 at 1:12 AM, muggle not said:

    Books that I have read since the demise of the BCF. :)

     

     

    42. Great Expectations – Charles Dickens - 10/10 (A  re-read)

    43. A Christmas Carol – Charles Dickens - 10/10 (A re-read)

     

     

    What are your thoughts on Charles Dickens? I know his stories are well known but I'm in two minds about reading his works. Would you say his writing is pretty good, or is it mainly the strength of his plots and his characters which makes him so well known?

  20. On 12/2/2018 at 11:00 AM, dolly said:

    Hi Angury!

    So far I have read his “Anna Karenina” (my second favourite), “Resurrection”, “Hadji Murad”, “Childhood”, “Boyhood” and “Youth”. What about you?

    I utterly agree with your words about his writing talent. Personally, I also enjoy the way he includes a lot of philosophy into the stories.

    What other Russian books have you read?

     

    I've read Anna Karenina and The Death of Ivan Ilyich - which is probably my favourite work by Tolstoy.

     

    I've read two of Dostoevsky's works - The Brothers Karamazov & Notes from the Underground and have The Idiot on my to-read list. 

     

    My all-time favourite author is Vladimir Nabokov - when I read his writing I feel like I'm watching genius at work. Have you read anything by him? 

  21. 3 hours ago, dolly said:

    Hello to everyone:)

    I’m Dolly, nearly through a half of my junior year at high school.

    I definitely enjoy reading, especially the classics written by different authors from various countries. My favourite book is, without doubt, “War and Peace” by Count Tolstoy.

    As for other hobbies, I am head over hills in love with Math, and that probably means that it’ll be my uni major, but, who knows..

    Glad to be a part of this forum, guys!

     

    Hi Dolly - welcome to the Forum. 

     

    I too am a big fan of War and Peace. Have you read any other books by Tolstoy? He is probably one of my favourite writers - I find he is particularly good at character development and plot. I think I have a bit of a soft spot for Russian writers.

     

    I look forward to seeing you around the Forum. :) 

  22. On 11/26/2018 at 12:51 PM, ian said:

    Great review! Moby Dick is one of my "didn't finish" books, but your review has made me want to give it another try! I'll also be interested to see your review of Don Quixote.  It's another book on my "read it one day" list, but the size of it has out me off so far.

     

    Do you remember what made you put it down unfinished? I'm curious to hear other peoples' thoughts on the novel as I feel like mine are a bit too positive. :P 

     

    I'm enjoying Don Quixote so far. It's fun to read, great plot and a nice way to relax. Plus, you look clever reading a big book!

     

    On 11/28/2018 at 5:48 PM, Hayley said:

    I really struggled with Moby Dick. It wasn't the whale descriptions that I found difficult to get through though, it was the explanations of the techniques of whaling. I actually can't really remember the descriptions of the anatomy of whales, I am also tempted to give it another try now!

     

    I hope you enjoy Don Quixote, I'll be interested to see if you think it lives up to it's fame! 

     

    Please do give it another try! 

     

    Yes, I was also tempted by the fame around Don Quixote. It's interesting how my perception about a book changes when it's well known and reputable. If Don Quixote were just any old book, I probably wouldn't read it as it's not my kind of thing. But constantly on Top 10 Books lists and rave reviews? Yes please! :P 

     

    On 11/29/2018 at 8:42 AM, willoyd said:

     

    Succinct (you're better at that than Melville!), and great, review!  Completely concurs with my feelings (which is probably why I think it's great!).  I was surprised at how much easier a read it was than I had anticipated, but I do find a lot of the 19th century classics a lot more readable than is often suggested - maybe it's a case of getting one's inner ear in tune to the language?. It's certainly one of my 6-star (favourites) books. 

     

     

     

    I started listening to this as an audiobook in the days I commuted, but it took so long I lost the plot a bit, and so decided to revert to my normally preferred method of actually reading!  I've not done that yet, although I've dipped into it, so I'm already looking forward to your comments!  Which translation are you using?  I've tried a couple, and have plumped for Edith Grossman's - which has had excellent reviews in terms of its faithfulness, whilst balancing the needs of most modern readers with the older language.

     

    Thanks Willoyd, that's lovely to hear. :) 

     

    I agree with you, I often find older books easier and more enjoyable to read. I love the richness of the writing and it makes me feel like I'm reading art. 

     

    I'm using the translation by John Rutherford. I must admit, I've never been that focused on certain translations of booked, I just tend to go for the one with the nicest cover. :P I think the only novel I became concerned over accurate translation was In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust. Now there's a 6-star book!

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