Ask HN: What Are You Reading?

12 points | by ImPleadThe5th 5 days ago ago

42 comments

  • bodantogat 4 days ago

    I mostly read science fiction and fantasy, and I’ve just started Alien Clay by Adrian Tchaikovsky. It follows a scientist sentenced to a prison camp on a planet teeming with bizarre lifeforms. So far, it hasn’t drawn me in the way Children of Time did, though I’m only about a quarter of the way through.

    • bodantogat 4 days ago

      Oh and also listening to an audiobook - Mythos by Stephen Fry. Liking it so far.

      • mattmanser 4 days ago

        I loved some of his fiction, but haven't got past the first chapter of that book.

  • carlnewton 3 days ago

    For some reason I've been really enjoying stories with endless and well described repeating rooms. Borges' Library of Babel got me started, I have just finished Susanna Clarke's Piranesi - which was so wonderfully described, I don't know if I'll find anything to beat it. I'm now on A Short Stay in Hell by Steven L. Peck, which outright mentions Borges' novel. If anyone has any similar recommendations I'd love to hear them.

  • card_zero 5 days ago

    I read The Whispering Mountain by Joan Aiken and was struck by similarities to Pratchett, for instance the part where the main character heroically defeats monsters in a wood by using knowledge gleaned from an old encyclopedia that he carries everywhere, and how he ſpeakſ like thiſ when reading aloud from it, and the part about underground camels in Wales. It references The Far-Distant Oxus at one point, which I want to read (a pony adventure story written in 1937 by teenagers).

    (I know the long s wasn't really used at the ends of words, that was just a hurried example.)

  • ryanchants 4 days ago

    I'm always reading a few books across a categories.

    Fiction: Reaper's Gale, book #7 of the fantasy series Malazan Book of the Fallen.

    Non-fiction(history): Denmark Vesey’s Garden: Slavery and Memory in the Cradle of the Confederacy

    And then I'm dabbling in a few books around the math behind and practical hands-on machine learning/deep learning.

  • defrost 5 days ago

    Rereading Bliss by Peter Carey after opening a 45 year old box o' books from a back shelf in the shed.

    It's a red pill fable for marketing directors (and other threads are pulled).

    Later adapted for film, it saw 400 viewers walk out on it when screened at Cannes... most likely when the fish hit the floor. - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ifR7tsVT_-Y

  • omosubi 4 days ago

    Civilisations by kenneth clark - an art critic tries to understand western civilization through the "book" of its art.

  • andyjohnson0 5 days ago

    Cormac McCarthy's Border Trilogy. As with some of his other work, the punctuation can be a challenge and the prose can sometimes border on the ponderous, but I'm enjoying it. Currently about half way through.

    • gaws 4 days ago

      Listen to the audiobooks. They help distinguish which characters are speaking.

      • andyjohnson0 4 days ago

        I have a Random House audiobook version of the trilogy read by Brad Pitt. His Spanish pronunciation isn't great (although better than mine) but I enjoy his quiet voice and slightly careworn delivery. It's abridged, though, and I wanted to read the whole work.

        The Recorded Books recordings of The Road and No Country for Old Men narrated by Tom Stechschulte are very good too.

    • wara23arish 4 days ago

      reading Blood Meridian now, honestly it just flows for me.

      I grew up reading arabic and sentences are just feel longer so maybe thats why Im not struggling with it.

  • random_moonwalk 4 days ago

    Fiction: It by Stephen King

    Non-Fiction: The Spy and the Traitor by Ben MacIntyre. It's about the KGB spy-turned-MI6 agent Oleg Gordievsky and reads like a thriller.

  • ValtteriL 5 days ago

    Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre (1923)

    • kratom_sandwich 5 days ago

      How do you like it?

      • ValtteriL 5 days ago

        I'm 3/4 through it.

        It's been quite entertaining to read how he went from picking off bucket shops to going bust on Wall Street and how he proceeded from there. Old-fashioned writing that goes straight to the point.

        His art-like approach to speculation is refreshing after spending time on /r/quant. I cannot say if any of his high-level speculation wisdom hold water anymore, though.

        Would recommend!

  • abhijat 4 days ago

    Just finished Dreadnought and started Castles of steel by the same author, Robert K. Massie.

  • cafard 4 days ago

    A Reading of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit by Quentin Lauer

    Augustine's Confessions

    Last fiction: Nice Job by David Lodge

  • chairmansteve 5 days ago

    Post Soviet Britain by Abby Innes. Excellent so far (70 pages in).

    Crossing the Unknown Sea by David Whyte. Also excellent. Nearly finished it.

  • jorisboris 5 days ago

    Just finished Casino Royale by Ian Fleming

    • gaws 4 days ago

      Have you read any of John le Carré's books?

      • jorisboris 3 days ago

        Yes, I’ve read the spy who came in from the cold, and i tried to read a perfect spy

        I liked the first one but its very raw and dark, no glitter and glamour

        I quit the second one, part of the book are flashback scenes and I had a hard time staying concentrated, i forgot why exactly i didnt like those scenes

    • lberk 5 days ago

      How did you like the book (compared to the movie)?

      • jorisboris 4 days ago

        I like the old world charm

        The book was written in the 50s, its way slower than the movie (though still a short read). Some things from the movie plot are the same

        I love details like how difficult it was to get something communicated across a border only 75 years ago

  • aosaigh 5 days ago

    "Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History", about our first civilisations.

  • shawn_w 5 days ago

    Currently: Moby-Dick and Termination Shock. (That the former gets brought up a lot in the latter is a coincidence.)

  • whatamidoingyo 4 days ago

    I'm reading The Inner Citadel by Pierre Hadot for the second time. It's full of gems.

  • kapilkaisare 4 days ago

    Simmons, Dan. The Terror

    I'm about 50 pages in, and am entranced with the prose.

  • chistev 5 days ago

    On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century by Timothy D. Snyder

  • agcat 3 days ago

    Designing data intensive applications

  • SMAAART 5 days ago

    Ideaflow: The Only Business Metric That Matters, by Jeremy Utley

  • precompute 4 days ago

    The Night Land by William Hope Hodgson.

  • alberto_ol 5 days ago

    Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

    • badpun 5 days ago

      Me too! I'm about 40% through.

  • constantinum 4 days ago

    War and peace - third attempt

    • mattmanser 4 days ago

      It's really good. A story that still pops into my mind occasionally today. As a Brit I'd never really thought about Napoleon's invasion of Russia. The retreat in the book is evocative and really left an impression.

      But I read it when I had far more free time than now.

      • constantinum 3 days ago

        Getting past 200 pages is the tough part. Hope I’ll get through. Also, getting used to so many characters with unfamiliar Russian names is slowing things down. Let's see.

        Any tips and tricks for reading the magnum opus? Would help!

        • mattmanser 3 days ago

          Now that you mention it, I also struggled with that to begin with. My penguin edition had a dramatis personae list at the start that I ended up referring to a few times. Rare for me to use them. So, a crib sheet if your edition doesn't.

          There's a sequence with the boys out on the town which helped me cement each of the main male protagonists images in my head. Fairly early on I think. Pierre + Andrei being main characters, Nikolai (the younger) and Antole being the rest of that group.

          I also I ended up classifying the characters into three generations, the young men/woman, the older parents, and the younger children.

  • jus3sixty 5 days ago

    “How Can I Help” by Linda Hand

  • BOOSTERHIDROGEN 5 days ago

    How to get along

  • chistev 4 days ago

    I'm favoriting this for later.