Tildes Book Club - Have you started Pnin by Vladimir Nabokov?
I've only just barely started. I'm looking forward to this one.
I've only just barely started. I'm looking forward to this one.
I've started but it's a reread for me.
Hello book club readers!
This month we are reading a classic, the Metamorphosis by Kafka. How is it going? Have you started?
I'm finishing up some other books but will start soon. I've never read this one and I'm looking forward to reading it.
Happy February readers. This month we are reading The Truth by Terry Pratchett. This one focuses on the newspaper business of Ankh Morpork and Pratchett himself had worked as a journalist.
Have you found the book? Have you started? Do you plan to join us this month?
We'll be discussing We are Legion at the end of November.
This month, I've been busy and also trying to finish Orbital by Harvey before my loan period finishes. (It's an e-book loan on Libby and I can't get an extension.) So I haven't started quite yet.
Our discussion at the end of October will cover The Poisoners Handbook. Are you making progress?
I found this nonfiction discussion of the New York City coroners office and the early days of effective forensic toxicology to be a real page turner. I started on the first and I finished it last week. I'm looking forward to our discussion, later this month.
We'll be discussing this collection of stories at the end of the month. Have you found the book? Are you making progress? I'm still in the middle of the first story which seems long to me.
I'm about a third of the way through the book. We will discuss the week of August 25.
My (used) book just arrived today and I am on page 25.
I'm going to finish this weekend. We will discuss in the second half of next week.
Our read for the end of May is A People's Future of the United States. How's it going? Did you find the book?
This is just to check in and ask how you are progressing with our April book, Elder Race by Adrian Tschaikovsky.
Wes asked this question a few days ago as a comment in the schedule, but I thought it might be worth reaching everyone. We will be discussing Born a Crime next week. How is it going?
Happy New Year friends and fellow readers. In approximately two weeks we will be discussing Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson.
How's it going? I got started just after Christmas and it was such a tense fast paced book that I finished within a week.
Our next book discussion will be about Kindred by Octavia Butler. Have you started? How is it going? I'm looking forward to discussing with you all.
I've had competing responsibilities, so I'm only about 25 percent of the way through. The premise is intriguing and I'm looking forward to seeing how it plays out. What about you?
This is a slower read than I was expecting and I am about halfway through. How about you all?
I'm not going to commit to a specific day yet but I'm planning to have the discussion post up before March 15.
Those participating will discuss Cloud Atlas starting the first week of March. This is an opportunity to check in about obstacles or progress.
Several users expressed interest in reading Roadside Picnic after I recommended it in another (now deleted) topic about the movie it inspired, Stalker by Andrei Tarkovsky, which in turn inspired the S.T.A.L.K.E.R. videogame series. So I thought this would be the ideal opportunity to create a Pop-up Book Club event about it to encourage others to join us in reading it, so that we can all discuss it afterwards.
My description of the book from a previous comment that enticed the others to read it:
The basic premise was really unique and interesting, too. Without giving too much away, it's a story of Alien "invasion" only when the Aliens visited Earth, instead of doing any of the standard scifi trope stuff, the event was basically like that of a Roadside Picnic to them. That is to say, they showed up, barely noticed the humans who were tantamount to ants to them, did whatever Alien travelers with incomprehensibly advanced technology do when taking a quick pitstop on another world, and left a bunch of trash behind when they left. The story is about "stalkers" that venture into the exceptionally dangerous wasteland left behind by the Aliens in order to recover their trash (also usually exceptionally dangerous, but also exceptionally powerful) in order to sell it on the black market.
IMO, it's a very good classic scifi novel, and also a relatively short one too (only 224 pages) which makes it ideal summer reading, and ideal for this sort of thing since it’s not a huge commitment. I think this could be fun, so if you feel like joining in, please feel free to. I will also be rereading the book to refresh my memory of it, and roughly a month from now I will make a follow-up topic so we can have the discussion.
The book is available on paperback at Amazon for $15, or on Kindle for $10, but your own local retailer or library might also have a copy. The Strugatsky brothers are both long dead though, so you can always pirate it relatively guilt free if you can't find it elsewhere.
p.s. If there is a decent level of interest, and this goes well, maybe we can even make this a regular thing. :)
Edit: For all the latecomers, don't worry if you don't read the book in time for the Discussion topic. You can always join in once you finish. Tildes Activity sort, and "Collapse old comments" feature should keep the topic going for as long as people are still replying.
Let me know if you're interested by leaving a comment and I will ping you when the Discussion topic gets posted.