The Martian, by Andy Weir
That being said, why are you using camelcase with "re-read"? That's what the hyphen is for.
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The Martian, by Andy Weir
That being said, why are you using camelcase with "re-read"? That's what the hyphen is for.
I didn't quite get into the martian, but project hail Mary... I'm savoring when I have the time and headspace to read it again.
This. So much.
The Martian was the first and to this date only book that I've read and, when I was finished, decided to re-read right away.
Love all Andy Weirs stuff. I've read the Martian four to five times now (lost count) I've also read Artemis twice and am currently re-reading Project Hail Mary.
Even when you know the ending the way there is still always fun another time.
Also I've re-read the Dirk Gently books since I just love Douglas Adams
Les Misérables is easily the best book I've ever read in my entire life. A few years ago I read a shorthened version of it and even then I was fascinated by it. I finished reading the full text two months ago and oh my fucking god this book is the best thing ever written.
I'm Turkish so I read the Turkish translation (will read the full text in English and French when I learn it) and on the back of it, it says something along these lines:
"... Les Misérables is the third and the most majestic collumn of the author's novel trilogy that tells of the society..."
And I completely agree with that. This book is simply timeless. The characters, situations, unjustice, inequalities, all the suffering in it could be applied to any society. This book is real.
The messages that it sends are solutions to topics that seemingly anybody with a functioning brain should be capable of thinking and realizing. And yet, these solutions are ignored and refused because of greed, revenge, bloodlust and most important of all, ignorance.
The main character of the book, Jean Valjean is the embodiment of redemption. His entire arc teaches us how to treat criminals. Some countries today are taking these lessons and applying them. The lessons being; treat them as human, rehabilitate them. The result? They actually do heal and return to society as normal human beings.
And yet you see people against this practice. Those kinds of people are blinded by bloodlust and revenge. They are the same kind of people that were racist, sexist and much more back in the day. The arguments that these people bring don't hold up either. The most common one I see (at least from my perspective) is this:
"You wouldn't react this way if they hurt one of your loved ones!"
The fact that these people don't know anything about me aside, this argument is pointless as it implies that I would be blind to fact and logic when I'm in pain. And while that is true, me being angry over an apple falling onto my head won't make gravity any less real. In other words, so what?
The biggest victims of this mentality are pedofiles. Not the ones that do engage in action. But rather the ones that don't harm anybody are aware of their issue. For instance, if a non-engaging pedo went to a therapist and told them of their issue, what would the therapist do? Call the police of course. And what would that do? Their life would be pretty screwed from that point forward. Assuming they are the non-engaging type, of course. I don't believe this to be the correct attitude towards these kind of cases.
I would also like to dive into other topics that the book covers (and perhaps extend on this one) but it would be way too long for a comment. Thank you anyone reading this far. I would like to hear your opinions on the matter and discuss even!
Asimov's Foundation series (two times polish translation and once original) and The Hitchikerms Guide to Galaxy by Adams Douglas (once in polish, twice original)
The Discworld series, the Culture series by Iain Banks, Tolkien, Illuminatus!, GEB: The Eternal Golden Braid, The Book of Swords...
there is a lot of books i have read more than once. but one stands out over all others, yet there is no storyline to speak of. The C Programming Language by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie.
Me too. But due to the non linear storyline I typically jump around a lot
The Wheel Of Time, by Robert Jordan
The entire series, start to finish, repeatedly. I've read it at least a dozen times since the late 90s when I first discovered it. I'd read the entire series over again whenever a new book in the series was released so the first few books I've read far more frequently.
Then the TV show came out and now I can't bring myself to look at it ever again.
Then the TV show came out and now I can't bring myself to look at it ever again.
I tell people the TV show is what you'd get if you handed the books to the CW's teen soap/drama writers. Yes, it's that bad.
... Are you me?
I have re-read The Lord of the Rings and all of Larry Niven's books (many in the Ringworld universe).
" When Mr. Bilbo Baggins of Bag End announced that he would shortly be celebrating his eleventy-first birthday with a party of special magnificence, there was much talk and excitement in Hobbiton. "
Pretty much all of Discworld but especially the Moist Von Lipwig and Vimes ones.
I just read the 4 Stormlight Archives books this past year (in addition to the novellas) but I’m already itching to reread them.
Anything by Sanderson. His consistency is so, so wonderful. I hate ass-pull macguffins.
Mistborn was amazing for this.
I reread the whole Cosmere last year. It was worth it.
I started reading more when the Reddit API stuff happened. Meant to pick up Mistborn AGES ago at a friend’s behest and then went to Way of Kings after Mistborn Era 1 was over.
Haven’t looked back, and have barely read anything not written by Brando Sando since then.
I got into the Cosmere about three years back. I started with The Way Of Kings just because I had heard Sanderson was good and had an audible credit. Then I learned about the whole Cosmere and flew through the rest of it. I’m up to Words Of Radiance on my first re read before #5 comes out.
I've definitely gone through the Harry Potter series a couple of times at different phases of my life. Definitely had a different experience with every reading. Not always positive, but at this point it's part of the tapestry of my childhood.
Currently there is a Humble Bundle with Cory Doctorow's books. I liked Little Brother and read it twice. Maybe I'm going to read some more of his work.
Excession, by Iain M Banks.
Genar-Hofoen felt the Diplomatic Force officer's kiss through the few millimetres' thickness of the gelfield suit as a moderately sharp impact on his jaw followed by a powerful sucking that might have led someone less experienced in the diverse and robust manifestations of Affronter friendliness to conclude that the being was either trying to suck his teeth out through his cheek or had determined to test whether a Culture Gelfield Contact/Protection Suit, Mk 12, could be ripped off its wearer by a localised partial vacuum. What the crushingly powerful four-limbed hug would have done to a human unprotected by a suit designed to withstand pressures comparable to those found at the bottom of an ocean probably did not bear thinking about, but then a human exposed without protection to the conditions required to support Affronter life would be dying in at least three excitingly different and painful ways anyway without having to worry about being crushed by a cage of leg-thick tentacles.
Gorgeous.
HHGTTG Tue trilogy of 5 I've read through maybe 5 times now. Unfortunately I think the last time was a mistake as I really struggled after the first 2 books and didn't enjoy them like I once had.
I had to look up:
HHGTTG = The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson and Sailing Alone Around the World by Joshua Slocum
Lord of the rings.
Hunt for Red October and Without Remorse by Tom Clancy
Currently re-listening to Debit of Honour
Malazan Book of the Fallen, Gentlemen Bastards series, most of Neil Gaiman's work, The Library at Mount Char, the Baru Cormorant series, Gatsby, Flowers for Algernon, and most of Plath's work - I go back to most of those every few years.
Watership Down.
Also some Philip K. Dick books, like A Scanner Darkly and Eye in the Sky.
But I also enjoyed the Bartimaues trilogy so much when I was somewhat younger.
His Dark Materials trilogy.. still so excellent.
I have reread several books but most of them have several years or decades in between.
Especially Terry Pratchetts' books are better after and worthy of a second read.
I know I'm 8 hours late, but please attach the genre of your books.
The 5 Elements of Effective Thinking by Edward B. Burger and Michael Starbird - Psychology, Self-Help, Study-Help, Non-Fiction. Please, this one. It's short. Even if you aren't a college student anymore. Their other books are also good fun plus maths.
Spy the Lie - Psychology, Self-help, Non-Fiction
Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini - Psychology, Self-help, Non-Fiction
Thank You for Arguing by Jay Heinrichs - Non-Fiction, Rhetoric, Self-Help
Fun:
The Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini - YA Fiction, High Fantasy.
The Guild Codex (Universe) by Annette Marie - Urban Fantasy, Magic, YA
Kate Daniels series by Ilona Andrews - Urban Fantasy, Magic, YA
Mercy Thompson series by Patricia Briggs - Urban Fantasy, YA
Edited to include, almost anything by Tamora Pierce - Fantasy, Low-Magic
My mother would have said:
Little Women, Coming-of-Age and Semi-Autobiographical.
Cassandra Palmer - High-Fantasy, Fiction, Time-Travel, Magic
Twilight - Unhealthy-Female-Romance, Fiction, Fantasy,
To Kill A Mockingbird
Foucault's pendulum by Umberto Eco. Just thinking about it makes me want to read this masterpiece again.
When I was 7, I got brought to the school library and told to pick a book to read over the summer. I picked The Hobbit. I got told no. I Insisted. Read that, then moved on lotr. I then read those I don't know how many more times over the years. As far as I remember, those are the only books I ever bothered to read more than once. Not counting listening to the audio books at work, as well.
The entire series of Culture books by Iain M Banks, they're just phenomenally written.
Others I've reread at least twice:
Frank Herbert's DUNE series
Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash
The Thievesworld anthology series
Alastair Reynolds House of Suns
William Gibson's Jackpot books
I remember the VCR instruction manual.
Otherwise Terry Pratchett's discworld novels and the Hitchhikers guide to the Galaxy (the 3 first ofc).
Harry potter series
The Forever War - Joe Haldeman A fantastic novel on the pointlessness of war, told through the lens of space opera / sci-fi