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20 January 2009 @ 10:47 pm
From the already praised Fahrenheit 451, one of many:

It's not books you need, it's some of the things that once were in books. [...] The same infinite detail and awareness could also be projected through the radios and televisors, but are not. No, no, it's not books at all you're looking for! Take it where you can find it, in old phonograph records, old motion pictures, and in old friends; look for it in nature and look for it in yourself. Books were only one type of receptacle where we stored a lot of things we were afraid we might forget. There is nothing magical in them at all. The magic is only in what books say, how they stitched the patches of the universe together into one garment for us.
 
Well, stitching the patches of the universe toghether is plenty of magic if you ask me...
 
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20 January 2009 @ 10:45 pm
Anne Rice: Interview With The Vampire

I have never seen the movie, so I was completely clueless as to what to expect. I liked it a lot, especially the dark mood. I will check out some of the other books of the series, I'm pretty sure of that.

(
Wikipedia)


Neal Stephenson: Cryptonomicon

When someone on my reading list tells me
his updating frequency is going to suffer because he's busy reading some author's latest book, that author's just begging to be checked out. So I did, and I'm glad I have.

I absolutely love Stephenson's use of language and narrative technique. I love his sense humor and I especially dig his quirky, nerdy digressions. His vocabulary is pretty outstanding, too. The story itself got a little too conventional for my liking, especially near the end, but I still enjoyed myself a lot. He's another one I'll come back to, probably a lot sooner than Rice, too.

(Wikipedia)


That's it for 2008, some 80 books in total. Not quite the 100 I originally aimed for (GTA's to blame...), but quite decent nevertheless, I believe. On for 2009 then:


Alan Weisman: Die Welt ohne uns (The World Without Us)

What would happen if mankind were to vanish all of a sudden? How would Earth recover, how long would it take... not really an uplifting experience and not because of the premise either. Boy, we really are good at creating long term problems *sigh*

(Wikipedia)


Susan Kay: Das Phantom (Phantom)

The book expands on the original, Gaston Leroux's The Phantom of the Opera, and aims to make Eric (the Phantom) a more complex character by telling his backstory. It was very much recommended in an online board, and I did like it. Still, I couldn't quite understand the raving reviews at Amazon and the like, which is probably to blame on me failing to read the original first... well, that's bound to happen every once in a while when you prefer just plunging into books instead of doing some research first. Leroux's also on that list of mine now, no harm done :)

(Wikipedia)


Jason Lutes: Berlin. Steinerne Stadt (Berlin. City of Stones)

The first part of a trilogy of graphic novels set in the final, turbulent years of the Weimar Republic. Very political, very personal all the same - very much recommended.

(Wikipedia on the author)





Ray Bradbury:
Fahrenheit 451

Wow!

One of the most amazing books I have read in a long time. It totally blew me away. Most people probably know that it's about a dystopian society where books have been outlawed and are being burnt - that's what I knew.

It is so much more though. It's a thrilling tale, the journey of a character and it contains some wonderful philosophical tangents regarding books, society, people, truth, fear... you name it. The book was first published in 1953, which is both amazing and terrifying as a lot of it rings so very true with what's going on right now. At the same time, it manages to spread optimism even in the face of one of the more gruesome ending's I've read.

The 50 year anniversary edition I read contains an afterword and a coda by as well as an interview with Bradbury, born at different points during those 50 years and reflecting on certain aspects of the book and what has happened since then - a truly great addition.

Can't recommend it enough!!

(Wikipedia)


J.K. Rowling: Die Märchen von Beedle dem Barden (The Tales of Beedle the Bard)

Far too short, but still very enjoyable, especially because of "Dumbledore's" annotations. Very nice addition to the Potterverse. Plus, it's for charity. (Btw. I absolutely loved Rowling's way of saying thank you with the handmade editions...)

(Wikipedia)


Current read is Dan Ariely: Denken hilft zwar, nützt aber nichts (Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions).

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08 December 2008 @ 10:21 am
Books again. It's been a while, so there are a few. My speed has greatly decreased though, thanks to the awesomeness of GTA IV.


Stefan Heym: Die Architekten (The Architects)

Very much an average book. Nothing much to say about it except that I found the characters to be too full of stereotypes for my liking.


Bryan K. Vaughan: Y - The Last Man

Batch has been recommending this comic book series for ages. Rightly so. Yes, there were some storyline weeknesses near the end, but that's really not what this series is all about. The characters are great (355's my favorite), so are the "deeper questions". Very much recommended. If you wanna know more, I strongly urge you to check it out at Batch's Blog. Those entries are German though.

(
Batch's Blog, Wikipedia)


J.R.R. Tolkien:
The Silmarillion
The Hobbit
The Lord of the Rings


I've been meaning to read those again for years, the last (and only) time I had read them being in 2000. And was it ever worth it! Those books were even better than I remembered them to be. And I really did have good memories.

Given that I know the movies pretty much by heart, this also proved to be a very enlightning experience regarding book-movie-transformations. Yes, there are changes, there are a lot of them. There always will be, especially with books of this scope. Still, apart from a few exceptions, the movies manage to capture the essence of the books amazingly well. What really is remarkable is how much of it is so very close to the book, right down to lines of dialogue. Sometimes they are presented in different context, but still work. Need to see the movies again now :)

Last but not least, I still am completely awed by the Silmarillion, there is no other way to put this. So much story, so much background, so much depth - wow.

(Wikipedia on
The Silmarillion, The Hobbit, and The Lord of the Rings)


Eduard Augustin, Philipp von Keisenberg, Christian Zaschke: Ein Mann, ein Buch (i.e. A Man, A Book)

A bestseller in Germany, this book aims to teach everything a man needs to know. Since I happen to live with one of them, I did not want to be at a disadvantage and read it, too ;)


Michael Chabon: The Yiddish Policemen's Union

Great!

My first book of Chabon, but definitely not the last one. It's an Alternate Universe story, in that it has a Jewish state in Alaska that was founded during the Nazi era (
not totally unfounded btw). Since it was just a 'loan', it will be given back to the US in a few weeks (the events take place in 2008). None of the inhabitants know whether they will be allowed to remain in the US afterwards, resulting in a very special mood throughout the book. Ah yes, since so many Jews fled to Alaska instead of Palestine, Israel lost its war of independence in 1948. Meaning, there is no Israel.

Mostly, it's a detective story. But it's also so much more. Plus, I love Chabon's writing style. It's hard to describe. Let's just say that IMDb states there's going to be a movie mady by the Coens in 2010. Let's also add that I believe they're perfect. I'm really looking forward to this.

I'm just going to quote Wikipedia for awards: "The Yiddish Policemen's Union won the Nebula Award for Best Novel, the Locus Award for Best SF Novel, the Hugo Award for Best Novel, and the Sidewise Award for Alternate History for Best Novel. It was shortlisted for the British Science Fiction Association Award for Best Novel."

I so need to get a hold of more of his books!

(
Wikipedia)


Dava Sobel: Längengrad (Longitude. The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time)

I had never thought of the fact that it's really easy to calulate latitude, but - for a long time - was near impossible to do so for longitude. And of course, not knowing where you are can lead to all sorts of nasty things to happen. Like missing your only source of potable water... Which is why a prize of 20.000 £, the equivalent of 3.5 million Euro, was offered by the British Parliament for the solution of this problem.

If you know the date and observe the sun, calculating how far north or south you are is pretty straightforward. To do so for East-West is far more difficult. It boils down to this - you need a clock. An accurate one. That keeps being accurate even if you take it somewhere hot, humid, stormy, ... Also, it should be portable, otherwise - not that useful after all. The guy who finally achieved all of this was called
John Harrison, a self-taught clockmaker.

In any case, that was the solution that worked out in the end, but the book also tells of other proposals being made. Some are fun, some are absurd, some are creative but unworkable - all are interesting. So's the book as a whole. Next time I get to London, I need to go and see at least one of these clocks!


Éric-Emmanuel Schmitt: Monsieur Ibrahim und die Blumen des Koran (Monsieur Ibrahim et les fleurs du Coran / M. Ibrahim and the Flowers of the Koran)

Far too short for my liking. But still very much worth it.

(
Wikipedia)


Dean Wesley Smith: Captain Proton: Defender of the Earth

Oh my. I bought this one for
Robert Duncan McNeill to sign a few years back and finally wanted to read it, too. As expected, it's so bad it's fun again. That's the whole point of Captain Proton after all. However, it also proved to be so bad I couldn't stomach all of it. I'm pretty sure I'm going to return though, I just need some time off first.


Lian Hearn: Tales of the Otori
Across the Nightingale Floor
Grass for His Pillow
Brilliance of the Moon


The trilogy now gone pentalogy is set in a fictional world based on feudal Japan. Which means it's really fascinating in many parts, but also pretty repulsive in others. I'm just not one for ritualized language, taking your life for honor and women being ... somewhat less than men. Still, it makes for a very intersting world, and the books are well written as well. Even though I wasn't overly fond of the end of the original trilogy (far too clean and simple), I still believe those books to be well above average and will check out the other two. No Tolkien though.

(
Wikipedia)


Terry Pratchett: Mort

I've read a few Pratchett's a few years ago, all of them in German, which is discouraged by most of his fans. This was my first English novel. It's nice, really nice, but so far I am not really 'sucked in'. I'm going to keep my eyes open for more anyway.

(
Wikipedia)


Rana Dasgupta: Die geschenkte Nacht (Tokyo Cancelled)

The first book in a very long time I haven't finished. (Proton doesn't count, that one is meant to be unbearable.)

Far too esoteric for my tastes. There's all this weird stuff happening. And I can't seem to recognize the rules behind it. I mean, there's weird stuff in the Lord of the Rings too, but there are rules. They're different from ours, but they're consistent. Here, weird stuff just happens for the heck of it. And when I say weird, I mean weird...

I might give it another try later on - it would be easy to do so because there are different tales, so it doesn't really matter if you can't remember much - but I'm not sure.

(
Wikipedia)


Ernle Bradford: Reisen mit Odysseus (Ulysses Found)

The book is one of
many attempts to place the Odyssey geograhically. Whether or not the author is right, really isn't the point. In any case, I learnt a lot about Ulysses, the Mediterranean, the Odyssey and sailing.


Anne Rice: Interview With The Vampire

My current read. I'm enjoying it a lot.

(
Wikipedia)
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21 July 2008 @ 12:51 am
About time for another one of these. Actually "about time" was about a month ago, which is when I started this entry. Seeing that it's been quite a while since the last one, it's gonna be a long list with few details. I should really make these entries more often... Anyway, here we go:


Lothar-Günther Buchheim: Das Boot (i.e. The Boat)

Very intense. Very scary. Sad. Enraging. Very much recommended.

(Wikipedia entry about the movie)


Ellery Queen: The Greek Coffin Mystery
(German)

Just a classic whodunit, but a really good one. Must remember to read one of these every once in a while, they really are fun.

One major error though - the author obviously had no clue about what exactly red-green color blindness means. Which, in itself, isn't really that bad, I don't even know what exactly was known about this in 1932. But to think it means that people affected by it somehow mistake one for the other? Come on, how's that supposed to happen? Even if "my" green looks like your red and vice versa, I would still learn to use the correct identifiers and, in fact, probably never notice the difference.

Still, it was a good book :)

(Wikipedia)


James McBride: The Color of Water
(German)

The author tells the story of his family, his main focus being on his mother and himself. His white mother grew up as an orthodox Jew, married his father, a black Christian, converted and raised 12 mixed race children in the US of the 1960ies. Very interesting, not too mention impressing.

Hope I didn't step on anybody's toes with the race and religion related terms. I'm not really up to date with current trends of political correctness. Comes with not living in an English speaking country, I guess.

(Wikipedia)


The Bible
(German)

Or rather, the Old Testament, in parts. I've already commented on this earlier.



Alexander Wolkow: Die sieben unterirdischen Könige (The Seven Underground Kings)
(German)

This is part of a series of children books written by Alexander Wolkow that was very popular in the former GDR (or as Wikipedia just told me, the whole Eastern bloc). The first one was pretty much the same as The Wizard of Oz, but Wolkow then goes on to develop the story. Magic Land is repeatedly in danger by witches, Urfin (a carpenter, if memory serves) and Ellie (that would be Dorothy) and her friends and/or relatives need to come to the rescue. I loved pretty much all of these books, so I got somewhat nostalgic when spotting them in my old room at my parents. Instead of rereading all of them I decided to just do my favorite and this was it. Nice trip down memory lane.


William Faulkner: Absalom, Absalom!
(German)

That's one of those I definitely should have written something about a lot earlier. Now, I can only offer this - complicated, not an easy read, but well worth it.

(Wikipedia)


Alan Moore: Watchmen

Recommended by Batch as one of the bestest comics ever. I didn't quite get the hype, but I sure did enjoy the read.
For anything else I refer you to Batch's (German) entry in his blog or good ol' Wikipedia.


Helmut Schmidt and others: Kindheit und Jugend unter Hitler (i.e. Childhood and Youth under Hitler)

As I've said before, this is one topic I am drawn to again and again. Very interesting.

(As an aside - if the English "title" is preceded by 'i.e.' it's just my translation, otherwise it's official.)


Neil Gaiman: Stardust
(German)

Not nearly as great as the movie, in my opinion. Great illustrations though.

If you haven't seen the movie yet, stop reading and go do so. Like, now!

(Wikpedia)


Philip Pullman: His Dark Materials

Nice, but not as special as I was led to believe. Still worth reading though.

(earlier entry, Wikipedia)



Markus Zusak: The Book Thief
(German)

Absolutely wonderful book! It takes place in Germany during WW II (here we go again...), is about a girl that steals books and is told from Death's perspective. It's about growing up, feelings, the general unfairness of life, being true to yourself and, well, books. I urge you to check it out!

(Wikipedia)


Pascal Mercier: Nachtzug nach Lissabon (i.e. Night Train to Lisbon)
(German)

Very philosophical, very moving. About living your life, making changes, and again, being true to yourself. It also touches on Salazar's reign in Portugal, something I knew pretty much zilch about before.

(Wikipedia - German)


Ephraim Kishon: Abraham kann nichts dafür (i.e. It's not Abraham's fault)
(German)

Short, satirical stories. I remembered him as more funny though, so it ended up in the bathroom. There it still resides, but will be finished soon.


Gudrun Pausewang: Die Wolke (Fall-Out)

Inspired by the Super-GAU at Chernobyl in 1986, the novel is about what such an event would be like when happening in Germany.

(Tangent for all of my one non-German readers: GAU is an acronym, meaning Größter Anzunehmender Unfall, Biggest Imaginable Accident. This is what atomic powerplants are designed to withstand without catastrophic consequences. A Super-GAU is an event that goes beyond what TPTB deemed imaginable and thus does lead to all sort of nasty things to happen. In German, the term is also used for all sorts of things that go terribly wrong. Also, in IT there's the derived term of DAU, dümmster anzunehmender User - the dumbest, imaginable user. End of tangent.)

Surprisingly enough, the book is thoroughly depressing. It doesn't just deal with the hard physical consequences, but also tries to illuminate how society would change. Makes me glad, we decided to pay the extra-money charged to get our energy from water power.

(Wikipedia - German)


Isabel Allende: La Casa de los Espíritus (The House of the Spirits)

Political and weird. Rare combination. Good one, too.

(Wikipedia)


Jerry Hopkins: Strange Foods: Bush Meat, Bats, and Butterflies. An Epicurean Adventure Around the World
(German)

Interesting, very much so, though not always very appetizing. In short, there's pretty much nothing that's not considered a delicacy somewhere. The book delves into cultural meanings, gives recipes and makes you question why exactly you consider something to be icky.



Brian K. Vaughan: Pride of Baghdad

Another comic, presented to me by Batch Inc. It's very good, both regarding story and the graphics. For anything else I again refer you to Batch's German entry in his blog or Wikipedia. I really hope to see more of the artist.




Samuel L. Clemens: Tom Sawyer

Another one of my favorite children books. I've been wanting to read this in English for a while now and finally came across a copy. It was even better than I remembered. Now I just need to get my hands on Huckleberry Finn, too.



Hayao Miyazaki: Kaze no Tani no Naushika (Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind)

Seven volumes of good Japanese manga art. A lot deeper than the movie - there's political intrigue aplenty. Made me learn some Japanese phrases. Dòomo arìgatoo!

(Wikipedia)



Fritz B. Simon: Meine Psyochose, mein Farrad und ich. Zur Selbstorganisation der Verrücktheit. (i.e. My psychosis, my bicycle and me. About the self-organization of madness.)

If the title makes you think it's gonna be an easy read of popular science, you'll find you're wrong soon enough. I did. It's not an easy read and I don't actually recommend it to anyone who doesn't have at least some knowledge on psychiatry already. That or someone who's just stubborn and won't give up. It sure made me realize a few things, but the effort it takes is considerable.


Vladimir Nabokov: Lolita
(German)

In all honesty, I was just drawn to this by the scandal surrounding the book. However, I really liked the writing style and will probably get back to that author.

(Wikipedia)



Philip Roth: The Human Stain
(German)

It's really hard to talk about that book without giving too much away. It's about what makes you you, what other people see in you, what you make other people see... It's a definite recommendation.

(Wikipedia)



That's 52 books so far this year - my very much unofficial quest to do 100 in a year is coming along rather nicely :)
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Current Music: Dido
 
 
I finally got around to reading the first book of the His Dark Materials trilogy. I had been rather disappointed by the movie, but liked the book a lot better. (Thanks to Starstuff btw for showing me how to link to the stylish themed instance of an entry rather than the dull white page I've linked to until now.)

I managed to connect the dots a little too quickly for my liking near the end, figuring everything out before Lyra did even though I didn't actually know anything she didn't. Ah, the curse of being overly intelligent. Not to mention modest ;)

I'm quite puzzled at why TPTB decided to leave out the last part of the book when making the movie though. Yes, the movie would have gotten longer (Yes, even longer than 113 minutes, imagine that!), but didn't they see how much better of a cliffhanger the book's ending is? And how the frak can anyone miss that? I just have to quote JMS on that one, even though he of course was raving scholarly discussing a different, though similarly astounding decision:

"I mean, there’s actually a kind of awe that sets in when you begin to really understand the extent of the stupidity involved...the same kind of stunned, silent reverence that comes when you finally see the Mona Lisa up close, or the first time you hear Ode to Joy performed by a live orchestra. The sheer majestic perfection of it sends you to your knees with the realization that this is not just common stupidity, it’s a Mount Everest rising into the clouds...a level of stupidity so monumental that it actually acquires horizontal perspective, like a train disappearing into the distance."

JMS, Babylon 5 - The Scripts of J. Michael Straczynski, Volume 3

There, can't possibly put it any better than that. As a matter of fact, the two issues are rather closely related: JMS is rejoicing over "the decision by PTEN [the network that originally aired B5] to delay the final episodes of each season until the start of the subsequent season." There goes the cliffhanger...

Anyway, I actually meant to give a quote from the book itself and we're getting to it. You might or might not have read my little comment-almost-turned-essay explaining why I was reading the Bible. I'm sorry if you don't know German and give this short version of what I said as an offering of peace: religion has influenced human history, art and whatever for thousands of years, so you can't hope to understand all of these without knowing anything about religion. Or, and this is where we finally get to the point, dear readers:

Lyra: "[B]ut it en't true, is it? Not true like chemistry or engineering, not that kind of true? There wasn't really an Adam and Eve?

[...]

Lord Asriel: "[T]hink of Adam and Eve like an imaginary number, like the square root of minus one: you can never see any concrete proof that it exists, but if you include it in your equations, you can calculate all manner of things that couldn't be imagined without it."

Beautiful!
 
 
I've been reading the Bible recently. Well, OK, not the Bible, but annotated excerpts. Contrary to what my dear, good friends would probably tell you, reading the Bible without at least some knowledge about the world it was created in is pretty much useless. Which is why the book I am reading, concentrates on selected verses and comments them extensively, placing them in historical, sociological, political, ... context. It was worth reading for all the things I learned about Babylonians, Egyptians, Phoenicians, Assyrians, Greeks and about a gazillion other cultures alone. By the time the Romans appeared they had me thinking along the lines of 'And just who do you think you are, upstarts? Do not meddle in the affairs of the Old Ones!' How's that for a change of perspective? ;)

Anyway, if I ever get told just how inherently violent Islam is again, I now know what to answer. I knew before that the Old Testament's God isn't exactly someone you'd like to be your buddy, but I was still surprised by some of my findings, namely:

(If you're German happens to be better than your English and you don't feel like reading the King James translation, just scroll down a little.)

[6] If thy brother, the son of thy mother, or thy son, or thy daughter, or the wife of thy bosom, or thy friend, which is as thine own soul, entice thee secretly, saying, Let us go and serve other gods, which thou hast not known, thou, nor thy fathers;
[7] Namely, of the gods of the people which are round about you, nigh unto thee, or far off from thee, from the one end of the earth even unto the other end of the earth;
[8] Thou shalt not consent unto him, nor hearken unto him; neither shall thine eye pity him, neither shalt thou spare, neither shalt thou conceal him:
[9] But thou shalt surely kill him; thine hand shall be first upon him to put him to death, and afterwards the hand of all the people.
[10] And thou shalt stone him with stones, that he die; because he hath sought to thrust thee away from the LORD thy God, which brought thee out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage.
[11] And all Israel shall hear, and fear, and shall do no more any such wickedness as this is among you.
[12] If thou shalt hear say in one of thy cities, which the LORD thy God hath given thee to dwell there, saying,[13] Certain men, the children of Belial, are gone out from among you, and have withdrawn the inhabitants of their city, saying, Let us go and serve other gods, which ye have not known;
[14] Then shalt thou inquire, and make search, and ask diligently; and, behold, if it be truth, and the thing certain, that such abomination is wrought among you;
[15] Thou shalt surely smite the inhabitants of that city with the edge of the sword, destroying it utterly, and all that is therein, and the cattle thereof, with the edge of the sword.
[16] And thou shalt gather all the spoil of it into the midst of the street thereof, and shalt burn with fire the city, and all the spoil thereof every whit, for the LORD thy God: and it shall be an heap for ever; it shall not be built again.
(Dtn 13,6-16)

Special service for my German readers:
[13.7] Wenn dich dein Bruder, deiner Mutter Sohn, oder dein Sohn oder deine Tochter oder deine Frau in deinen Armen oder dein Freund, der dir so lieb ist wie dein Leben, heimlich überreden würde und sagen: Laß uns hingehen und andern Göttern dienen, die du nicht kennst noch deine Väter,
[13.8] von den Göttern der Völker, die um euch her sind, sie seien dir nah oder fern, von einem Ende der Erde bis ans andere,
[13.9] so willige nicht ein und gehorche ihm nicht. Auch soll dein Auge ihn nicht schonen, und du sollst dich seiner nicht erbarmen und seine Schuld nicht verheimlichen,
[13.10] sondern sollst ihn zum Tode bringen. Deine Hand soll die erste wider ihn sein, ihn zu töten, und danach die Hand des ganzen Volks.
[13.11] Man soll ihn zu Tode steinigen, denn er hat dich abbringen wollen von dem HERRN, deinem Gott, der dich aus Ägyptenland, aus der Knechtschaft, geführt hat,
[13.12] auf daß ganz Israel aufhorche und sich fürchte und man nicht mehr solch Böses tue unter euch.
[13.13] Wenn du von irgendeiner Stadt, die dir der HERR, dein Gott, gegeben hat, darin zu wohnen, sagen hörst:
[13.14] Es sind etliche heillose Leute aufgetreten aus deiner Mitte und haben die Bürger ihrer Stadt verführt und gesagt: Laßt uns hingehen und andern Göttern dienen, die ihr nicht kennt,
[13.15] so sollst du gründlich suchen, forschen und fragen. Und wenn sich findet, daß es gewiß ist, daß solch ein Greuel unter euch geschehen ist,
[13.16] so sollst du die Bürger dieser Stadt erschlagen mit der Schärfe des Schwerts und an ihr den Bann vollstrecken, an allem, was darin ist, auch an ihrem Vieh, mit der Schärfe des Schwerts.
[13.17] Und alles, was in ihr erbeutet wird, sollst du sammeln mitten auf dem Marktplatz und mit Feuer verbrennen die Stadt und alle ihre Beute als ein Ganzopfer für den HERRN, deinen Gott, daß sie in Trümmern liege für immer und nie wieder aufgebaut werde.
(Dtn 13,7-17)

(Btw, if you're of the really attentive sort, you're probably asking yourself why the verse numbers in Luther and King James are different. If you find out, be sure to let me know, as I have no frakking idea.)

Now, what exactly is so remarkable about these verses? They don't just describe God getting really pissed off like the stories of Sodom and Gomorrah or the Great Flood. No, they tell people to judge their neighbours. By killing them. Sharia anyone?

Now, just for the record, I do not believe that either Christianity or Islam are inherently violent. I just can't stand those Christians who with their 'holier than thou'-attitude condemn other people's religion based on a few verses while gracefully ignoring the dark pieces of their own book.

As for my reading, I've finished the Old Testament last night and am going to take a break before reading the New one.
 
 
28 April 2008 @ 11:15 am
OK, someone's gonna kick my sorry ass for that entry as I obviously ignored the FedCon mantra and wrote about something else. Sorry, but I was in a bit of a hurry and this was much quicker...

The last of these entries was pretty long, partly owing to many consultations with various doctors and the associated time spent waiting. Now, visits to the hospital do not make for a shorter entry. I'm gonna include the language version I read, if it wasn't the original, for the sake of completeness.


Christoph Wagner: Fast schon Food. Eine Kulturgeschichte des Fast Foods. (i.e. Almost food. A cultural history of fast food)

Fast food reading, too. Interesting, quick read, that's not gonna leave much of a lasting impression.


Daniel Defoe: Robinson Crusoe
(German)

At least that's what I thought I was reading. I last read it as a child and liked it a lot, but this time around everything seemed very rushed. Turns out my little adored children's book actually is a "slightly" abridged version. Which is actually mentioned somewhere
in tiny, tiny letters. Gagh, I hate that. If I wanted to just get a quick overview I'd head for Wikipedia right away, not read something like that. I mean, I don't like watching cut movies either, it's just ... wrong. Special kind of hell, people, special kind...


Miguel Cervantes: Don Quixote
(German)

That one certainly wasn't abridged, including both parts, and took me only *looks it up* two months to complete. In my defense, I read the following three books as quick in-betweens in that time.

I'd recommend it to anyone interested in books that were really influential, there certainly are much harder reads than this one. All you need is patience and/or the ability to quickly "scan" pages (while I certainly can do the latter I don't really like to if it's supposed to be fun reading) as Mr. Cervantes really enjoys being quite elaborate. I'd also advise you to get yourself an annotated edition as there are lots and lots of references to what were current issues at the time that will not make much sense to the average reader without some explanation.

Also, the second part is rather different from the first one, so if you are having trouble getting into it, you might want to try and read a summary of part one and then see if part two is more your cup of tea.

That being said, I doubt I am ever going to read it again, even though I am glad I did.


Isaac Asimov:
Foundation
Foundation and Empire
Second Foundation

Neat, very neat indeed. These have been on my to do list for ages and I finally got around to ticking them off. It took some getting used to the style - anytime you get to really know somebody, that particular period suddenly is over and there are different characters. Which is realistic for a story spanning a thousand years (more or less that is, Mr. Issac "The Cheater" Asimov), but for somebody as fond of good characters as me, it's not exactly thrilling. I also had some trouble adjusting to the central idea of psycho-history as I just don't buy the world working that way, but if you do or manage to put aside that disbelief it certainly makes for one hell of a good plot device. I'll be on the look-out for more of that saga.


Peter Høeg: Frk. Smillas fornemmelse for sne (Smilla's Sense of Snow)
(German)

I liked the beginning of the story a lot, I also liked the middle, I liked the style even better, I kinda felt cheated by the ending. Minor spoiler: Make everything appear like a "normal" thriller and I'll expect a "normal" thriller ending not some kind of scifi stuff. Not that I am opposed to scifi (as if you'd have believed that...), but I don't really like mixing genres without some kind of advance warning. If I want to read scifi, I'll get one of those, but don't make it turn scifi somewhere in between. Yeah, I'm strange like that.


Douglas Adams / Terry Jones: Starship Titanic
(German)

Entertaining, but really, really weird. Even for me ;) Not a must-read, I'd say.


Alexander von Schönburg: Die Kunst des stilvollen Verarmens. Wie man ohne Geld reich wird (i.e. The Art of being poor and stylish. How to get rich without any money)

Another quick read for in-between as I don't really need a lot of tips for being happy without money. Sure, there are things besides food and rent and stuff you really need it for *cough*FedCon*cough*, but - fortunately - I also happen to have a lot of hobbies that are cheap or even basically free. Which might become really useful some time, if - as the author and many experts predict - our general wealth will be rapidly declining. Ah well, we'll see soon enough.


Khaled Hosseini: The Kite Runner
(German)

Wonderful. A touching story, not too sentimental, spanning a long time, with just some information on what happened in Afghanistan aside from "The Taliban" and "Bin Laden". Not much, but it might just be enough for me to actually be able to sort future info on the country into the right boxes in my overwhelmed and disorganized brain *g*

It's not really a fun read - too many really sad things happening for it to be - but still manages to give a hopeful message. Definitely recommended!


Stephen King: The Green Mile

I'm not exactly a King fan - I'm not too fond of overly gory stories - but I had heard lots of good things about this one. I liked it a lot. Not exactly a masterpiece (in my book, mind you), but definitely worth reading.


Lastly, my current read:

Lothar-Günther Buchheim: Das Boot

I don't believe there's any need to explain that one.
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09 February 2008 @ 12:32 am
I've just had a splendid idea. I'll just tell my arm to go f*ck itself and finally post about the books I've read since the last time. (Assuming I can actually come up with something after all this time.) And then go to bed. By tomorrow hopefully I'll have been forgiven my transgression...


Walter Kempowski: Alles Umsonst (i.e. All for Nothing)

We're back in East Prussia at the end of WWII. It probably would be a good idea to get going, but the Russians aren't really going to get there, are they? Also, it might be quite an adventure to hide a communist fleeing from the Nazis. The book is depressing in just how incapable most of its protagonists are in coping with the harsh realities of their lives. And because the title really sums it up very well.


Jared Diamond: Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed

Very interesting! The effects of different structures of societies, climate, friendly or aggressive neighbours and so on are analyzed with the help of increasingly complex case studies.


Albert Camus: The Plague

I didn't exactly love Camus' prose. Somehow, it was too...distant, clinical - I can't really find the right word. I did love his philosophical tangents though. They're definitely worth reading the book.


Oliver Schütte: "Schau mir in die Augen, Kleines" Die Kunst, gute Dialoge zu schreiben
(i.e. "Here's looking at you, kid." The art of writing good dialogue)

A christmas present by my flatmate. I pretty much devoured it and it will not be the last time I read it.


Charles Frazier: Cold Mountain

Recommended by the author of USA Erklärt (USA Explained), a very popular blog in Germany. The author is American, married to a German, lives near Berlin and tries to explain all^Wsome of the small and big oddities in US life. It's educating and it's fun, perfect combination.

The book itself was very good in both language (I did go for English) and content. I just can't remember anything in particular right now *rolls eyes*


Wladimir Kaminer: Ich bin kein Berliner
(i.e. "I am no Berliner")

Another friend, another Xmas present. A lot better and funnier than the one about gardens.


Richard Conniff: The Natural History of the Rich: A Field Guide

We're all just monkeys after all, so what if you try and analyze human behavior as you would with a horde of chimpanzees? You'd get a book like this one. A good read, as long as you remember to take its sometimes over-generalizing assertions with a grain of salt.


Leonie Swann: Glennkill

One morning, a flock of sheep discovers their shepherd has been killed. They decide to find out what happened. You'll never see sheep with the same eyes again... I also liked the puzzle's solution, it's rather unusual.


John Irving: The World According to Garp

Awesome. For more details go here.


Wilhelm Busch's Collected Tales, Part I

They're a important part of Germany's cultural heritage. They're observant and witty. They're fun. They're a must.


Alois Theodor Sonnleitner: Die Höhlenkindertrilogie
(i.e. The Trilogy of the Children of the Caves)
  • Die Höhlenkinder im heimlichen Grund (i.e. TCotC in Secret Valley)
  • Die Höhlenkinder im Pfahlbau (i.e. TCotC in stilt houses)
  • Die Höhlenkinder im Steinhaus (i.e. TCotC in the stone house)
I last read these as a child, maybe 15 years ago. Some time during the 17th century Peter and Eva are two children growing up in the Alps with Eva's grandmother (Ahnl) and grand-uncle. When Ahnl is being suspected of being a witch, they flee for the Secret Valley, a big valley sourrounded by high mountains and only reachable through a narrow canyon. In their fear they attempt to get through although it has started raining. Both adults die and the children are left alone, without any tools, the canyon now blocked by stones. They manage to survive by practically re-inventing everything they already knew, thereby going through humanities technological development on fast forward.

The prose is somewhat dry and certainly not the best I've ever read, but the content is fascinating to say the least. I loved it as a child, and I now understood much of it a lot better.

These also happen to be the books my mother used to trick me into learning Fraktur, a typeface that has been used in German books until the 1940s. (Though until a few minutes ago it was only known as "old typeface" to me *g*). Anyway, my mom just read me the first few chapters until she had me hooked and then left me to read the rest on my own. Amazingly effective, I might add.


Alice Walker: The Color Purple

Whew, the slang... but it was well worth the effort. I even did get a happy ending :)


Cornelia Funke: Tintenblut (Inkspell
according to Wikipedia, literal translation would be Inkblood)
Cornelia Funke: Tintentod (Inkdeath)

Volume two and three of the Inkheart trilogy. I liked the first one a lot, loved the second one and was a little disappointed by the third. I might be imagining things, but it all seemed to be written with the movie already in mind. Also, the story somehow lacked a clear direction, somehow it just appeared to meander along. It wasn't actually bad, by no means, I just had expected more. (Not a Xmas present by the way, but a birthday present.)


William Goldman: Which Lie Did I Tell? More Adventures in the Screen Trade

The title says it all. William Goldman talks about his adventures as an author in Hollywood. Again, this is both entertaining and fun. There also is a script he wrote just for this book and gave to other screenwriters to tear apart. I haven't yet read that part as I intent to do some tearing on my own first and I don't really feel like that at the moment.


Carlos Ruiz Zafón: La sombra del viento (The Shadow of the Wind)

Beautiful prose, lots of tension, a book (as part of the story, that is), a mysterious author, love, politics, war - it's great. Don't want to spoil it so I'll leave it at that. Very much recommended.


Grundrechte-Report 2007. Zur Lage der Bürger- und Menschenrechte in Deutschland (i.e. Report on human rights 2007. About the situation of civil rights and human rights in Germany)

Another Christmas present by yet another friend. It might as well have been called "Things you didn't really want to know about but absolutely should." Some of it is unbelievable :(


Ted Hughes: Tales of the Early World

Short, creative tales about God creating the world. Let's just say that not all went according to plan. The book was quoted in Inkdeath, and I have to admit the quote had me expecting more. At least two of the stories were great though.


And, finally, my current read:


Richard Powers: The Time of Our Singing

I've only read about one quarter so far, so I can't really say much except that I enjoy it. Topics include music, racism, mixed marriages, and the history of the US in the 20th century. The author decided to not go chronological which takes a little getting used to, but so far has proven to be quite effective.


Whew, that's it. Shorter than I wanted it to be, but a lot longer than certain body parts of mine would have preferred.



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When I posted about the movie Hotel New Hampshire (HNH) a while ago, somebody (you know who you are...) advised me to read the book, 'directly after reading "Garp" '. So, Garp, it was. Thanks a bunch, I absolutely loved it.

It's quite bizarre, which - after that movie - wasn't much of a surprise. It's actually quite similar in tone, and even some themes, to HNH. Appearantly Irving has some favorite topics (also not much of a surprise because, really, don't we all?) and according to Wikipedia both Garp and HNH get full score on those.

I particularly liked Irving's writing about writing. If you don't know the book, it tells the tale of T.S. Garp's life who becomes a writer. In doing so Irving includes Garp's first short story and chapters and outlines from his novels. (One of them's called The World according to Bensenhaver.) What's so great about this, is that you can see Garp's life and experiences reflected in them. Sometimes the connection is quite clear, sometimes it's more vague, sometimes it's really just the overall mood. Since, for some strange reason, I assume Irving knows about that stuff, I enjoyed these parts immensely.

My arm still hurts btw., so I'll cut this short by just treating you three quotes:

He [Garp] wrote once that a novel was "only a place for storage - of all the meaningful things that a novelist isn't able to use in his life."


Of course, apologies are rarely acceptable to true believers - or to anyone who believes in pure good, or in pure evil.


The world is comic to those who think and tragic to those who feel.

The last one is an (acknowledged) paraphrase of Horace Walpole. His quote also happens to be my sig at an online board right now.

There was one more quote I wanted to give, but appearantly my bookmark wasn't quite as impressed as I was.


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26 November 2007 @ 10:42 am
According to Stephen King books are "uniquely portable magic" (Wikiquote, unsourced). Here then is my newest category, covering - surprise, surprise - books. The first name I came up with was "The Quilling Fields", but appearantly I am not morbid enough to actually use that. I still like it though.

Anyway, as I've said before, I have been real busy reading recently and therefore present a list of books I have finished within the last 5 to 6 weeks or so.


Karen Armstrong: The Battle for God: Fundamentalism in Judaism, Christianity and Islam

A rather dry but also enlightening read. I'm still far from being an expert on the topic, but have gained some very interesting insights nevertheless.


Peter Jurasik & William H. Keith, Jr: Diplomatic Act

The book was mentioned in the Wikipedia article about the movie Galaxy Quest as containing roughly the same theme. To some extent that's true, but I found it to be more serious than the movie. The end very much seemed like a typical action plot, but I still did enjoy the earlier parts (very... different aliens, misunderstandings...) a lot. A good, light read.


Michael Degen: Nicht alle waren Mörder
(i.e. Not everyone was a  Murderer)

An autobiographical book about a childhood in Nazi Berlin. Despite being Jewish, Degen and his mother managed to survive. Nazi Germany is one of the topics I find myself drawn to again and again. The setting of Berlin is particularly interesting since I know the city better than pretty much any other aside from my home town.


Stanislaw Lem: Solaris

SciFi and Fantasy are another favorite topic. High time to read some of the classics, too. This one was... well... strange. Or, more precisely, it started out strange and became progressively stranger by the minute. Near the end I kinda got lost. If the book had started out like that I probably wouldn't have finished it.


Tim Flannery: The Eternal Frontier: An Ecological History of North America and Its Peoples

I have known that the Americas have a very particular climate for a long time, but didn't realize just how different it was. I also knew that horses were brought there by the Spanish conquistadors, but not that they originally developed there, but later became extinct in that part of the world. I also didn't know dogs were an American "invention". The book covers lot of ground, both concerning North America in particular and the general mechanics of evolution and is a very interesting read.


Kurt Tucholsky: Schloß Gripsholm. Eine Sommergeschichte. (Castle Gripsholm)

I've been fond of Tucholsky since school. His poems were witty, heavily sarcastic and a very much welcome change from more aloof writings I was constantly bombarded with. I can enjoy those too, but I cannot write pages and pages of essays about them. Ergo, in school, they were a constant pain in the ass. Tucholsky's Krieg dem Kriege on the other hand got me a spectacular grade. My point being, I really like him. (Pretty much the same goes for Erich Kästner btw.) Castle Gripsholm was everything the poems were and more. Good read.


Patrick Süskind: Das Parfum: Die Geschichte eines Mörders (Perfume
: The story of a murderer)

This was one of the books that everyone but me appeared to have read already. (In Germany, that is.) Rightly so. I enjoyed it immensely, even though it was downright creepy at times. I particularly enjoyed the language, leading me to my next book:


Thomas Mann: Buddenbrooks - Verfall einer Familie (Buddenbrooks, the subtitle meaning The Decay of a Family)

Thomas Mann is my mother's favorite author, which is why I first started reading this book quite a few years ago. Appearantly I was much too young at the time as I found it to be spectacularly boring and didn't get far. Lots of descriptions and not much happening most of the time. Kinda like Perfume. Since I enjoyed the latter so much I decided to give the Buddenbrooks another try. Suffice to say, this definitely isn't going to be my last book by Th. Mann. I'm particularly impressed he managed to write a book like this in his early till mid-twenties. The books doesn't read anything like it.


Wladimir Kaminer: Mein Leben im Schrebergarten (i.e. My Life in a typical German vegetable garden)

Kaminer is a satirical writer. He was born in Moscow and moved to Berlin in 1990. I've read two of his former books and liked his humour a lot. This one, however, couldn't keep up at all. I'm not sure whether that is because of me or him changing.


Harper Lee: To Kill a Mockingbird

Racism is another one of my "favorite" topics. The book's funny, sad, strange, witty, insightful, full of tension... a good one.


Hans Graf von Lehndorff: Ostpreußisches Tagebuch (i.e. East Prussian Diary)

The book covers the author's experiences in East Prussia in the years 1945 till 1947. It was given to be by my mother when I started asking a lot of questions regarding the experiences of her mother who had grown up there and had to flee in 1945. I still remember her and know I loved her dearly, but she died when I was only 6 or 7, so I never got to talk to her about these things. It must have been a really beautiful country though.


At the moment I'm reading Hape Kerkeling's Ich bin dann mal weg. Meine Reise auf dem Jakobsweg. The author is a well-known German comedian and describes his journey on the Way of St. James.
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