The Dapper Gentlemen of Letters discussion

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message 1: by Chris (new)

Chris Martin | 13 comments anyone still interested in doing this?


message 2: by Joel (new)

Joel (lcgiant) | 23 comments Mod
Never lost interest, still waiting on Brian to assign a new book.


message 3: by A.J. (new)

A.J. | 17 comments I'm definitely still interested.


message 4: by Joshua (new)

Joshua (jaysix) | 26 comments I'm still in, too. I'm currently reading "Ready Player One", which people would probably like if they enjoyed Reamde. Now, I will say its a pretty quick read (about 365 pages) and I'm breezing through it pretty easily. However, I would not say this is destined to be a classic of American Literature.


message 5: by Shaun (new)

Shaun Nelson | 18 comments lets crank this shit back up mutherfuckers!


message 6: by GrootRoss (new)

GrootRoss | 6 comments Some suggestions:
Delicious Foods by James Hannaham
Binary Star by Sarah Gerard
Dead Lands by Benjamin Percy
Mislaid by Nell Zink
Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates (okay that one's for me and non-fiction)
The Heart Goes Last: A Novel by Margret Atwood

Admittedly I may be Ronning some choices here.


message 7: by Ron (new)

Ron (ronzonie7) | 20 comments Ross's books look dumb. Isn't there a new Ben Carson booK?

Mislaid by Zink looks interesting.


message 8: by GrootRoss (last edited Oct 22, 2015 02:19PM) (new)


message 9: by Joel (new)

Joel (lcgiant) | 23 comments Mod
I go to Ross for my conspiracy theories not for my books.


message 10: by GrootRoss (new)

GrootRoss | 6 comments Just trying to get a conversation started.

You would prefer another book, a fiction book? Then name the book! I grow tired of asking this so it will be the last time: /where/ is your book choice?


message 11: by Chris (new)

Chris Martin | 13 comments jim butcher has a new steampunk series!!!!!!!


message 12: by Michael (new)

Michael | 1 comments John Scalzi's Old Man's War (and the rest of the series)


message 13: by Paul (new)

Paul Biderman | 5 comments Of the ones listed above Dead Lands is the only one that seems interesting to me.


message 14: by Paul (new)

Paul Biderman | 5 comments BTW I just started reading a book called The Mentor. Author's last name is Monticelli. Seems good so far.


message 15: by Alex (new)

Alex | 1 comments are you guys (gals?) mainly interested in new books?


message 16: by Chris (new)

Chris Martin | 13 comments I wouldn't mind getting something a little older we all 'missed', for sure. That would almost be better in a way; there's more outside vetting, and I'd be more likely to pick up a new book in my normal reading, than going back and finding something I missed.


message 17: by Paul (new)

Paul Biderman | 5 comments From the perspective of someone who lives on a tight fixed income, older books should be cheaper, and therefore easier for me to afford. Plunking down $12-$20+ for a book is not something I can readily do. Actually it doesn't have to be older. Just cheaper. But if you guys pick something I don't want to invest in I can just skip it.


message 18: by GrootRoss (new)

GrootRoss | 6 comments Anybody have any suggestions of older books we should give a try?

I've never read The Handmaid's Tale and feel like I should. I also feel this is a pretty good work for group discussion. I'm guessing it has application today, 30 years after it initially came out.


message 19: by GrootRoss (new)

GrootRoss | 6 comments Since we have a SF crowd, The Long Tomorrow also comes to mind as something I have not but should read. For something which came out 60 years ago, it's probably still an influence for today's Dystopian novels. The author, Leigh Brackett is the co-writer of The Empire Strikes Back and this book is heralded as the first serious science fiction novel of character.

I also doubt most of us have read it. We should.


message 20: by Paul (new)

Paul Biderman | 5 comments I'd be very Interested in The Long Tomorrow. That would be my choice.


message 21: by Ron (new)

Ron (ronzonie7) | 20 comments I'd read that.


message 22: by Joel (new)

Joel (lcgiant) | 23 comments Mod
I'm not interested in choosing the book, I much prefer to complain about the one someone else chooses.


message 23: by Paul (new)

Paul Biderman | 5 comments Started on the long tomorrow. Part of what's interesting so far is that it was written so long ago.


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