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Nexian Book Club Options
 
adam
#1 Posted : 11/14/2015 7:15:41 PM

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I believe that the Nexus has a lot of avid readers with a diverse interest in literature therefore I am proposing we begin a book club.

I think the way to start is to open the thread up for suggestions and then narrow it down to 9 choices, set up a poll and vote on the book. I am thinking we can all read along together and decide on the pace once we have selected the book.

I recently bought Wizard of the Upper Amazon by Bruce Lamb so I submit that for my first choice.

The book doesn't have to be in any specific genre.

Please list your first pick!
 

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The Traveler
#2 Posted : 11/14/2015 7:18:49 PM

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Good one!

I would recommend a book that was recommended to me by none less than Enoon: To Your Scattered Bodies Go.

It is not only Sci-Fi but also mostly a philosophical journey into many possibilities that makes you ponder. And I wonder where yours would lead your mind with this one.


Kind regards,

The Traveler
 
dreamer042
#3 Posted : 11/14/2015 7:21:10 PM

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I'd like to suggest a group reading and discussion of Left in the Dark.
Row, row, row your boat, Gently down the stream. Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily...

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Al-Wasi
#4 Posted : 11/14/2015 8:30:53 PM

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Great idea. I will sit bakc and wait to vote
That moment when you wonder if this time you went too far....

Obviously everything discussed here is the fictional accounts of someone with an out there imagination. I mean really could any of these tales be real?
 
universecannon
#5 Posted : 11/14/2015 8:39:24 PM



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dreamer042 wrote:
I'd like to suggest a group reading and discussion of Left in the Dark.


+1

(here is the newer version)

We could likely even get the author involved in the discussion depending on how busy he is.




<Ringworm>hehehe, it's all fun and games till someone loses an "I"
 
adam
#6 Posted : 11/16/2015 12:46:47 AM

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Hello Fellow Nexians,

I am thinking I will keep this open for submissions for one more week, this way everyone who wants to participate should get a chance to suggest a book. I will begin the voting next Sunday! We will discuss the pace that we will read the book at once the voting has finished.

Any suggestions on how we will run the book club are welcome.

Thank you,

adam
 
#7 Posted : 11/16/2015 12:54:55 AM
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Finnegans Wake
- James Joyce

Three Halves of Ino Moxo : Teachings of the Wizard of the Upper Amazon
- Cesar Calvo

Both are very dense and multi-domensional in reading. Two of my favorites. They will send your mind inside out, no question there. Very happy
 
Godsmacker
#8 Posted : 11/16/2015 1:16:18 AM

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Although it's probably been read and digested by many here, I must toot Melville's horn and recommend Moby Dick to those interested in grand adventure novellas. The story can be interpreted six ways from a sundaze on the south pacific seas. In fact, the book itself severely influenced my own writing style and stands strong as one of the most prolific/greatest works of literature I have experienced in my lifetime. I embarked on Ishmael's adventure when on the tale end of an MDMA experience and, need not say, I was profoundly addicted to the adventure from the get go. I knew where the tale would lead but the text in itself was rich beyond compare. The shadow of death which permeates the prose hooked me from the get go; the battles, adventures, backstories and philosophies presented and dissected with respect to the white spectre of death on the horizon sends shivers through my spine even now as I contemplate my own experience reading it. It's influence in my own outlook on life and writing style has been as profound as some of my deeper LSD experiences and in some cases even deeper. From the beginning to the end, I felt a cold presence send shivers down my spine as, knowing what was on the horizon, I was swept along with the tides of time accross the seas and into death's icy maw lurking in the depths below. Even if you read it years ago, I would still highly recommend re-reading it as my own outlook has changed with the years.

Another great series would have to be the hitch-hikers trilogy by Adams. It also had a profound influence on my fictional style and helped me better address the theme of grand intergalactic adventure writings (very very hyperspatial in all regards).
'"ALAS,"said the mouse, "the world is growing smaller every day. At the
beginning it was so big that I was afraid, I kept running and running, and I was glad
when at last I saw walls far away to the right and left, but these long walls have
narrowed so quickly that I am in the last chamber already, and there in the corner
stands the trap that I must run into." "You only need to change your direction," said
the cat, and ate it up.' --Franz Kafka
 
TGO
#9 Posted : 11/16/2015 4:36:04 AM

Music is alive and in your soul. It can move you. It can carry you. It can make you cry! Make you laugh. Most importantly, it makes you feel! What is more important than that?

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Magicians of the Gods by Graham Hancock.

I have been waiting to read this book for a little while now and I finally had the chance to order it. It will arrive tomorrow. I don't know if this should be counted as an official entry since I haven't actually read it but I have heard good things about this book.
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One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish

 
adam
#10 Posted : 11/16/2015 5:25:14 AM

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The Grateful One the book does not need to be one you read, rather one you would like to read (again/for the first time).
 
TGO
#11 Posted : 11/16/2015 5:27:21 AM

Music is alive and in your soul. It can move you. It can carry you. It can make you cry! Make you laugh. Most importantly, it makes you feel! What is more important than that?

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adam wrote:
The Grateful One the book does not need to be one you read, rather one you would like to read (again/for the first time).


Ah, yes! Silly me! Well, an official entry it is then! Thanks Adam!

Smile

Edit: BTW, I love this idea of having a Nexian book club. It is a superb idea!
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One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish

 
anon_003
#12 Posted : 11/16/2015 6:20:33 AM

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The Naked Lunch by William S Burroughs.
Once in a while, you get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right.
 
slewb
#13 Posted : 11/16/2015 6:35:37 PM

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Jitterbug Perfume was a pretty mindblowing read for me.
 
Nitegazer
#14 Posted : 11/16/2015 7:55:33 PM

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I've been resisting, but can't any longer....


The Windup Bird Chronicle - Haruki Murakami
Veniss Underground - Jeff Vandermeer
His Master's Voice - Stanislaw Lem (I've read it, but would gladly do so again; a jem)
 
DoingKermit
#15 Posted : 11/16/2015 8:42:29 PM

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The Grateful One wrote:
Magicians of the Gods by Graham Hancock.

I have been waiting to read this book for a little while now and I finally had the chance to order it. It will arrive tomorrow. I don't know if this should be counted as an official entry since I haven't actually read it but I have heard good things about this book.


I went to Graham Hancocks lecture last month, which he had to do completely unrehearsed because David Pearce ran off 5 minutes before he was supposed to go on. After the talk, they were selling Magicians of the Gods and I managed to buy it and get it signed by the man himself. I am going to start reading it once I finish "Wind, Sand, and Stars" by Antoine de Saint-Exupery, which won't take long as it's quite short.
 
332211
#16 Posted : 11/16/2015 8:51:45 PM

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Harry Browne:
How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World

 
Metanoia
#17 Posted : 11/17/2015 5:15:49 AM

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Tattvamasi wrote:
Finnegans Wake
- James Joyce

I second this. I picked this up again recently after trying to read it once when I was much younger. I'd absolutely love to see a discussion about this book Smile
 
Pandora
#18 Posted : 11/18/2015 10:05:05 PM

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Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke. It's what this world desperately needs.
"But even if nothing lasts and everything is lost, there is still the intrinsic value of the moment. The present moment, ultimately, is more than enough, a gift of grace and unfathomable value, which our friend and lover death paints in stark relief."
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#19 Posted : 11/18/2015 11:36:03 PM
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Metanoia wrote:
Tattvamasi wrote:
Finnegans Wake
- James Joyce

I second this. I picked this up again recently after trying to read it once when I was much younger. I'd absolutely love to see a discussion about this book Smile


Yeah, it's a very dense book. Tough to read. It's like one story being told through simultaneous experiences. There's a 'Finnegans Wake Wiki' that I have spent many hours on trying to understand thousands of words and sentence fragments. Razz

It's written in really thick idiosyncratic language, not to mention so many of the words and sentence fragments are of Joyces own creation and completely self-made words.

Very psychedelic though. Actually found about about it through an old Mckenna lecture.
 
TGO
#20 Posted : 11/19/2015 1:07:14 AM

Music is alive and in your soul. It can move you. It can carry you. It can make you cry! Make you laugh. Most importantly, it makes you feel! What is more important than that?

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DoingKermit wrote:
The Grateful One wrote:
Magicians of the Gods by Graham Hancock.

I have been waiting to read this book for a little while now and I finally had the chance to order it. It will arrive tomorrow. I don't know if this should be counted as an official entry since I haven't actually read it but I have heard good things about this book.


I went to Graham Hancocks lecture last month, which he had to do completely unrehearsed because David Pearce ran off 5 minutes before he was supposed to go on. After the talk, they were selling Magicians of the Gods and I managed to buy it and get it signed by the man himself. I am going to start reading it once I finish "Wind, Sand, and Stars" by Antoine de Saint-Exupery, which won't take long as it's quite short.


Wow, that is amazing! My copy arrived as scheduled on Monday and I plan to crack it open tomorrow! Smile
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One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish

 
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