Alpinfox Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 (edited) recommended Me Talk Pretty One Day - David Sedaris (laugh out loud funny, ) The Island Within - Richard Nelson (brilliant ecopoetic prose) Desert Solitaire - Edward Abbey (better than Monkey Wrench Gang ) Into the Wild - Krakhauer Ishmael - Daniel Quinn (the most poorly written good book ever) The Only Dance There Is - Ram Dass (Oh, I've said too much) The Human Zoo or The Naked Ape - Desmond Morris (Sociology) Catch22 - Joseph Heller (brilliant "pointlessness of war"-type book) The Family of Man - Time Life photography collection (very cool) Bugaboo Rock - Green & Benson (Faster Summer! Faster!) None of Chomsky's political books really stand out as being better than all the rest, but I have some you can borrow if you wish (Prosperous few and the restless many, Media Control: The spectacular achievements of propaganda, 911, maybe some others...) Anything by Ayn Rand, Franz Kafka, John Muir, or Jack Kerouac that you haven't read already And Squid! Maybe it's time to re-read the Iliad SHIT! I totally forgot about Tom Stoppard! Thanks Dru. I got a really cheap copy of the Bugs guide, but I'll look for that other one too. Arcadia - Tom Stoppard (my favorite play of all time) Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead - Tom Stoppard (also rent the movie! ) For the sake of brevity, my top two rec's are: Island Within Arcadia This was my 911th post and I recommended a book titled "911" Edited March 26, 2004 by Alpinfox Quote
Dru Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 hey throw that benson/green bugs guide away and get the real deal by atkinson and piche! more peaks, more routes, better topos etc Quote
Dru Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 oh yeah all you alexandre dumas readers should check out the khaavren books by steven brust. brust is the only moden author i have ever read who writes anything like dumas (by way of tom stoppard...) Quote
Squid Posted March 26, 2004 Author Posted March 26, 2004 No more guide book recommendations! They're all I've read for too long- time to get out and remember what life is like in the subalpine. BTW- AlpineFox- I just picked up The Island Within and enjoying it so far. Quote
Alpinfox Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 Cool! I'll be interested to hear your impressions. BTW: You are welcome to borrow any of the books I listed above. Here's a little something to bring back some fond (?) memories Iliad Quote
Squid Posted March 26, 2004 Author Posted March 26, 2004 Thanks, old bean. Don't know what I'd do without those fond memories of transcribing amphoras. Quote
Bronco Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 Last of the Mohicans is a good read. "The track of the cat" by Walter Van Tilburg Clark is pretty good reading. A very good read is "The climb up to Hell" by Jack Olsen. I'm still looking for a copy of "Death on the Ice" by Cassie Brown. I hear it's a good read, indeed. Anyone read the "Sovereign American's Handbook"? Quote
foraker Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 Dru, I have an old hardbound edition of "Le Comte de Monte Cristo" in French if you want to dare to slog through it. I'm still afraid to because I think I'll be going a page a week... Quote
Dru Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 i have already read comte de monte cristo, three musketeerrs, vicomte de bragelonne, vingt ans apres and the "chicot the jester" serries of dumas but not in french - that'd be too much. i can read vertical mag. cause it has nice pictures but i haven't read french novels since high school Quote
foraker Posted March 27, 2004 Posted March 27, 2004 don't think i've read the vicome de bragelonne or chioct the jester. any good? Quote
Dru Posted March 27, 2004 Posted March 27, 2004 viscomte de bragelonne is part of the man in the iron mask/ 20 years after sequels to 3 musketeers but it is the full meal deal not the abridged 1-bbok volume most people read. chicot the jester is a 2 volume series about one of the henri's jesters. i thought it was pretty good. musketeer type swordplay and so on. Quote
rbw1966 Posted March 27, 2004 Posted March 27, 2004 Hey squid and alpinfox: you boys went to reed too? I was there from 90-92. Quote
Alpinfox Posted March 27, 2004 Posted March 27, 2004 Cool! I graduated in 97, I think Squid graduated in 96. Small world! It sure has changed a lot since I graduated... Quote
icegirl Posted March 27, 2004 Posted March 27, 2004 "The antelope wife" If you like native american folklore it's quite delightful. Quote
Fejas Posted March 27, 2004 Posted March 27, 2004 Celectine Prophecy; The Tenth Insight (sequil) by James Redfield or 2150 by Thea Alexander (oldy, but a goody)... for a little bit of fictional philosophy.... Quote
snugtop Posted April 2, 2004 Posted April 2, 2004 I am reading The Bird Artist, by Howard Norman. Excellent novel. It begins: My name is Fabian Vas. I live in Witless Bay, Newfoundland. You would not have heard of me. Obscurity is not necessarily failure, though; I am a bird artist, and have more or less made a living at it. Yet I murdered the lighthouse keeper, Botho August, and that is an equal part of how I think of myself. Quote
snoboy Posted April 2, 2004 Posted April 2, 2004 Witless Bay, NF is a real place. I have been there. (In case you wondered.) Quote
Bronco Posted April 2, 2004 Posted April 2, 2004 Tools of the Trade, The art and craft of Carpentry by Jeff Taylor Must read if you've spent much time on Jobsites. Quote
snugtop Posted April 2, 2004 Posted April 2, 2004 I was wondering that, actually. Now I'll have to go there! Quote
thrutch Posted April 2, 2004 Posted April 2, 2004 Undaunted Courage Stephen Ambose Great book on the travels of Lewis & Clark. Quote
Thinker Posted April 2, 2004 Posted April 2, 2004 West With the Night, by Beryl Markham a good short read about growing up, flying, elephant hunting, and horse training in British East Africa in the 1920s and 1930s. One gets the impression that Beryl was a remarkable woman who lived a life free of regrets. Quote
kurthicks Posted April 2, 2004 Posted April 2, 2004 A River Lost by Blaine Harden. It's all about the effects, positive and negative, of damming the Columbia and Snake Rivers. Gives you something to think about as you drive down the gorge. Quote
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