JudasMyGuide
Ancient Mariner
Okay, so my King insanity continues with Night Shift. About three stories in.
Also, I still haven't finished Alasdair MacIntyre's After Virtue, but I'm not complaining - it is a philosophical treatise, so I guess it's understood the reading tempo will be slower. And it's absolutely amazing. (For those not in the know, it's a very significant book on moral philosophy, deconstructing the idea of a "subjective" morality and criticising the current discourse on morality by describing the utter chaos we got into past Enlightenment. That is, people using words they don't understand and lack the logical argumentation for such a long time that actual philosophers - and, well, most people in fact - simply throw up their hands and say "who knows, I'm right, you're right, we can never know the truth," put very simply) He's vicious, yet cool, calm and collected, he has a lot of good arguments and what he says rings true. Though it's not easy to hear (well, read) that.
It's also funny how he begins the treatise by referencing the cult science-fiction story A Canticle for Leibowitz in all but name.
The Malazan Book of the Fallen is also great - I'm in the second half of Gardens of the Moon and I still feel the same - it's really not that hard to get into it. Okay, a lot of characters, a lot of backstory, a unique system of magic and gods… but to be honest, Ellroy's L. A. Confidential and possibly even ASOIAF were much less friendly to a newbie reader, IMHO. At least here three characters don't share the same name (well, some of the characters have several instead, but you must have known that).
It's intriguing and I'm really looking forward to the rest of the series - discovering the huge world is going to be a treat and I also like it's already finished - that is, the fact the author has made up the world and the stories beforehand and then went and wrote it down, coherently and without undue delays (I'm looking at you, GRRM - honestly, the fact he's either unable or unwilling to even deliver the product and the delays keep getting worse - I distinctly remember looking forward to 2016 as the year Winds would come out… yeah, right - made me appreciate the series a bit less. I'm not being "possessive of the author", as Gaiman and others have put it, he's free to do whatever the hell he wants, but I'm also free to not give a damn anymore, especially if I have invested my money and so much of my time into it).
I also continue in my romance with Flannery O'Connor - currently reading A Good Man Is Hard to Find and Other Stories. Not a lot of surprises, but it's refreshing to read a Catholic author who's this cynical.
And from the opposite side of the "Cathspectrum" there's Dom Samuel's De tout coeur - a Trappist abbot's meditations on the Church in the 21st century, about the monastic life and about living in faith in these modern times. Sounds clichéd, but it's a rather good read.
And finally, because I have to return the book asap, I opened C. S. Lewis' Till We Have Faces. I'm 50 pages in and I'm still not sure what to make of it. It's very well written and considering it's freakin' Lewis I presume I'm going to love it in the end, but so far I'm a bit lost.
Yeah, it might be a tad too much. But I have to return some of those books and I got De tout coeur as a penance from my parish priest (while he explicitly said to read it immediately, because of the nature of the act), so I'm trying to do my best
Also, I still haven't finished Alasdair MacIntyre's After Virtue, but I'm not complaining - it is a philosophical treatise, so I guess it's understood the reading tempo will be slower. And it's absolutely amazing. (For those not in the know, it's a very significant book on moral philosophy, deconstructing the idea of a "subjective" morality and criticising the current discourse on morality by describing the utter chaos we got into past Enlightenment. That is, people using words they don't understand and lack the logical argumentation for such a long time that actual philosophers - and, well, most people in fact - simply throw up their hands and say "who knows, I'm right, you're right, we can never know the truth," put very simply) He's vicious, yet cool, calm and collected, he has a lot of good arguments and what he says rings true. Though it's not easy to hear (well, read) that.
It's also funny how he begins the treatise by referencing the cult science-fiction story A Canticle for Leibowitz in all but name.
The Malazan Book of the Fallen is also great - I'm in the second half of Gardens of the Moon and I still feel the same - it's really not that hard to get into it. Okay, a lot of characters, a lot of backstory, a unique system of magic and gods… but to be honest, Ellroy's L. A. Confidential and possibly even ASOIAF were much less friendly to a newbie reader, IMHO. At least here three characters don't share the same name (well, some of the characters have several instead, but you must have known that).
It's intriguing and I'm really looking forward to the rest of the series - discovering the huge world is going to be a treat and I also like it's already finished - that is, the fact the author has made up the world and the stories beforehand and then went and wrote it down, coherently and without undue delays (I'm looking at you, GRRM - honestly, the fact he's either unable or unwilling to even deliver the product and the delays keep getting worse - I distinctly remember looking forward to 2016 as the year Winds would come out… yeah, right - made me appreciate the series a bit less. I'm not being "possessive of the author", as Gaiman and others have put it, he's free to do whatever the hell he wants, but I'm also free to not give a damn anymore, especially if I have invested my money and so much of my time into it).
I also continue in my romance with Flannery O'Connor - currently reading A Good Man Is Hard to Find and Other Stories. Not a lot of surprises, but it's refreshing to read a Catholic author who's this cynical.
And from the opposite side of the "Cathspectrum" there's Dom Samuel's De tout coeur - a Trappist abbot's meditations on the Church in the 21st century, about the monastic life and about living in faith in these modern times. Sounds clichéd, but it's a rather good read.
And finally, because I have to return the book asap, I opened C. S. Lewis' Till We Have Faces. I'm 50 pages in and I'm still not sure what to make of it. It's very well written and considering it's freakin' Lewis I presume I'm going to love it in the end, but so far I'm a bit lost.
Yeah, it might be a tad too much. But I have to return some of those books and I got De tout coeur as a penance from my parish priest (while he explicitly said to read it immediately, because of the nature of the act), so I'm trying to do my best