can we please start a thread for reading and books

Wikidbchofthewst

Well-Known Member
the tower was his insanity for sure the opening of the door at the top could symbolize something he has had from the begining and hasent relized it or refuses to , but then you have to think , if he hadent chased the tower and stopped the breakers the beams would have been broken and then discordia
Yes, if the ends justify the means. But I think that was the point, he couldn't just pursue the Tower, it couldn't be his everything. He needed Eddie and the rest. He needed them or he wouldn't have made it. And you can't force people to do the things they did for him.

I didn't like Rolan much when he let Jake fall. "Go then, there are other worlds than these."
 

Robert520

Well-Known Member
now that i think about it the horn might have been a changing thing in the story , the whole series there are 2 tets each broken with deaths along the way to the dark tower , but he acutally only made it once and pat killed the crimson king so maybe the horn symbolizes peace at last , i didnt like it when jake died either and its really bad cause he really died twice from roland and the man in black when he got pushed into the car. but he did exactly what he had to do every step of the way. reading those book and seeing what roland had to go threw in his life really makes me feel retarded when im down and think mine sucks :/
 

Robert520

Well-Known Member
id look at you like you was a crazy B**** if you was like hey lets go kill robot wolfs with plates , its too bad they couldnt kill something easy with one of those bends o the rainbow
 

Robert520

Well-Known Member
lol :P i kinda felt bad for jake in that book , i mean his friend does get his head blown off right in front of him
 

Wikidbchofthewst

Well-Known Member
At least they were fighting together when it happened, cuz weren't they on bad terms just before? Sucks that his dad was a traitorous bastard. Everyone knows the lowest circles of hell are reserved for liars and betrayers.
 

Leilani Garden

Well-Known Member
I'd love to meet Stephen King and just pick his brain....

About the closet you can get to that is to read his memoir: On Writing: A Memoir Of The Craft.

The first part of the book is about how he came to be a writer. There are some hilarious, but also kind of sad and disturbing, stories of his childhood. Lots of entertaining stories about what sort of stuff he was attracted to, writing projects with his brother, etc. Very entertaining.

The second part of the book is specifically about writing, how he writes, what steps he goes through in creating his stories, how he gets his ideas (which he says it the most frequent question he is asked). This part of the book is pretty much advice to aspiring writers, but it's got loads of info about how he wrote a bunch of his books. If you're a fan of The Stand, for example, he goes into a lot of detail about that one--how he had to change the story while he was writing, because it wasn't working, and how he figured out why it wasn't working--because of the message he was trying to convey about human beings (and what rotten idiots most of us are). He also covers Misery pretty well, Carrie, The Dead Zone, a a few more.

This book is such a great read.

Oh, and there's an essay that was published in Playboy years ago called Why We Crave Horror Movies. He goes into his philosophy about why perfectly civilized human beings need an outlet. Great line from this essay: "If we share a brotherhood of man, we also share a brotherhood of insanity" or something like that. He uses these fantastic metaphors to explain why we are so attracted to horror and scary stories. We have to feed the alligators in our brains. This is one fantastic piece of writing that lets you kind of get into his head. I highly recommend it. Don't know where you'd find it now, but I found it in a textbook for college composition courses.
 

ogrelung

Well-Known Member
I recently was handed a stack of Isaac Asimov books for the first time when I was bitching to a friend about being out of philip K dick books to buy and on a sci-fi binge and I'm hooked. I would have probably read them a long time ago had I known that 'I robot' had nothing to do with 'I robot'.
 
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Wikidbchofthewst

Well-Known Member
I'd love to meet Stephen King and just pick his brain....

About the closet you can get to that is to read his memoir: On Writing: A Memoir Of The Craft.

The first part of the book is about how he came to be a writer. There are some hilarious, but also kind of sad and disturbing, stories of his childhood. Lots of entertaining stories about what sort of stuff he was attracted to, writing projects with his brother, etc. Very entertaining.

The second part of the book is specifically about writing, how he writes, what steps he goes through in creating his stories, how he gets his ideas (which he says it the most frequent question he is asked). This part of the book is pretty much advice to aspiring writers, but it's got loads of info about how he wrote a bunch of his books. If you're a fan of The Stand, for example, he goes into a lot of detail about that one--how he had to change the story while he was writing, because it wasn't working, and how he figured out why it wasn't working--because of the message he was trying to convey about human beings (and what rotten idiots most of us are). He also covers Misery pretty well, Carrie, The Dead Zone, a a few more.

This book is such a great read.

Oh, and there's an essay that was published in Playboy years ago called Why We Crave Horror Movies. He goes into his philosophy about why perfectly civilized human beings need an outlet. Great line from this essay: "If we share a brotherhood of man, we also share a brotherhood of insanity" or something like that. He uses these fantastic metaphors to explain why we are so attracted to horror and scary stories. We have to feed the alligators in our brains. This is one fantastic piece of writing that lets you kind of get into his head. I highly recommend it. Don't know where you'd find it now, but I found it in a textbook for college composition courses.
I've seen his book "On Writing" in the reference section at Borders and Barnes & Noble...but maybe I'll pick it up. I like the way he writes. Even just his introductions, they're pretty amusing. I like the way he writes to "Constant Reader"
 

sarah22

Well-Known Member
hmmm i kinda skipped the 7 pages of the thread...but thought i would post some of my faves...more for the ladies tho i think...lol. but my fave book series is the black jewels by anne bishop...seriously good books...very dark fantasy. if u like harry potter try those. i also really like the twilight series by stephanie meyer. im a big fan of romance/fantasy type books...mmm i love the big tough sexy alpha male types...hehe
 

madmaty

Well-Known Member
My all time favorite book series is The Wheel of time by Robert Jordan its a high fantasy series written so well. however don't start it unless you plan on reading it all the way though not that you wont want to lol there is currently 12 book (11+ a prequel) and the 12th and finial book has been delayed as they needed to get a ghost writer to finish it because Mr Jordan passed away
 

Wikidbchofthewst

Well-Known Member
hmmm i kinda skipped the 7 pages of the thread...but thought i would post some of my faves...more for the ladies tho i think...lol. but my fave book series is the black jewels by anne bishop...seriously good books...very dark fantasy. if u like harry potter try those. i also really like the twilight series by stephanie meyer. im a big fan of romance/fantasy type books...mmm i love the big tough sexy alpha male types...hehe
I started reading the Twilight series since that movie is coming out, and my friend read it and wanted someone to talk to about it. It's pretty good, but the way they fall in love in pretty unrealistic. I mean, once they're a couple it's ok and readable, but HOW they come to be together...not very well written.

Have you ever read the Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon? If not, I HIGHLY recommend it, based on what you said you like :wink: The books are pretty thick, but damn good.
 

sarah22

Well-Known Member
I started reading the Twilight series since that movie is coming out, and my friend read it and wanted someone to talk to about it. It's pretty good, but the way they fall in love in pretty unrealistic. I mean, once they're a couple it's ok and readable, but HOW they come to be together...not very well written.

Have you ever read the Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon? If not, I HIGHLY recommend it, based on what you said you like :wink: The books are pretty thick, but damn good.
cool...i will definitely check it out. i love the way bella and edward fall in love...lol. theres no reason or explanation, they just fall...and i think thats how love should be...yea...im a hopeless romantic...lol
 

newparadigm

Well-Known Member
pikhal and tikhal by alexander shulgin
DMT: the spirit molecule by Rick Strassman
brief history of time by Stephen Hawking
celestine prophecy by James Redfield
 

hopbr4

Well-Known Member
i just saw this we need to bring this thread back to life!!
*Star Wars IV V VI
*In Cold Blood- Capote
*A Peoples History of the United States- Howard Zinn READ THIS BOOK!!
*Animal Farm-George Orwell (1984 aint bad either)
and im reading Huck Finn right now so ill let you know, if i can ever get through it,but hopes are high
 

Mattplusness

Well-Known Member
i want to read the book "the chinese century", it's a new book about how china is and will be the economic powerhouse for the entire century and how it effects our economy and how it influences the work place
 

BongJuice

Well-Known Member
I just finished reading,
Jorge Cervantes book, Marijuana Horticulture Indoor/Outdoor Medical Growers Bible.
I already knew about 50% of what was in Cervantes book. But there were alot things I didn't know about. It's good reading, especially when I'm taking a shit. :-P

I'm now reading Logan Edwards book, "Grow Great Marijuana".
I just started reading it, It looks like most of it is for the beginner. But I do shit alot, and I need something to read while I'm shitting. :-P
 

Leilani Garden

Well-Known Member
Speaking of Spanish writers, has anyone here read One Hundred Years of Solitude?

I can't find my copy of The Little Prince. I love that one, so many great lines, like this one:

Not everyone has had a friend.

awwww

Or

Roses have thorns only for spite.

Good stuff.
 

hopbr4

Well-Known Member
I just finished reading,
Jorge Cervantes book, Marijuana Horticulture Indoor/Outdoor Medical Growers Bible.
I already knew about 50% of what was in Cervantes book. But there were alot things I didn't know about. It's good reading, especially when I'm taking a shit. :-P

I'm now reading Logan Edwards book, "Grow Great Marijuana".
I just started reading it, It looks like most of it is for the beginner. But I do shit alot, and I need something to read while I'm shitting. :-P
i like to read The Far Side comic books when im on the jon.
has anyone ever read The Princess Bride? i love the movie.and i decided i wanted to read the book
 
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