The Official Read this Good Book Thread

Standing at the Scratch Line by Guy Johnson

"From Publishers Weekly
In the 30 years this lengthy debut novel spans (1916-1946), much blood is spilt and few lessons learned. The macho misadventures of its larger-than-life protagonist LeRoi Boudreaux Tremain-?aka King?drag the reader from the trenches of WWI to 1940s San Francisco, by way of Harlem and New Orleans. King, who whets his appetite for violence when he takes part in a family feud at the tender age of 14, makes a career as a killing machine and underground entrepreneur. Discovering a taste for shedding blood and a hatred for "American Whites" during combat with the all-black 369th Regiment in the fields of Alsace-Lorraine, King returns home to do battle with the mob, the KKK and law enforcement agents everywhere. Sometimes an avenging angel, sometimes merely an implacable force, King kills as briskly as the hero of a John Woo flick, only without the balletic grace. The glamour of his exploits?in killing, gambling, bootlegging and real estate?dissipates, however, when King's family starts to fall apart. His wife, Serena, undoes him through two illegitimate sons. One, LaValle, is conceived when she sleeps with a white racist sheriff to enable King's escape from captivity; the other, Leroy, is King's child by a New York woman, whose whereabouts Serena discovers but conceals from King. Leroy, left to grow up in an orphanage, causes a "curse" to descend on the family. The book unravels with tragedies of the domestic sort (deaths of relatives, miscarriages, car accidents), which, though cheapened by their frequency and a rather hokey voodoo cast, are somewhat appealing, if only as a break from incessant mayhem. Although Johnson succeeds in dramatizing the forces of prejudice and poverty, is perhaps an impossible task to sustain King's righteous rage, virtually a one-note performance, over so many pages. "


Yo I couldn't pu this book down, and when you're done with this, there is a sequel (Echoes of a Distant Summer)
 
'Tao Teh Ching' by Lao Tzu.


"Synopsis:
One of the Chinese classics most widely known by Westerners, the Tao Teh Ching is a series of insightful comments on life and nature. Part poetry, part paradox, always forceful and profound the Tao Teh Ching has been leading its readers to expand their view of life since it was written over 2,000 years ago. John C. H. Wu has done a remarkable job rendering this difficult and subtle text into English while retaining the freshness and depth of the original. This edition is complemented by Chinese text on facing pages."


A very good philosophical book.
 

Synful*Luv

Well-Known Member
Staff member
The Precher's Son By: Carl Weber

It's not religious and preachy and I promise you that it's damn good, there's a twist at the end that will have you amazed
 
Salman Rushdie - The Satanic Verses

i was supposed to read it but only got up to chapter 3 with a very vague understanding of the book because it was way over my head.
still managed to get an 80% on the presentation
but, i was told that it is a great novel
 

stefanwzyga

Well-Known Member
Ghetto_Ghost said:
Salman Rushdie - The Satanic Verses

i was supposed to read it but only got up to chapter 3 with a very vague understanding of the book because she was way over my head.
Damn what a thicko!!
Only joking.





Roy keanes biography is pure class!!

Beckham's is bollocks!!
 

Cooper

Well-Known Member
The_One said:
My FAVOURITE book of all Time:
Perfume, a story of a murderer
i jus finished reading it for the 18th time tonight. BRILLIANTLY WRITTEN
It's by Patrick Suskind
A good book. Well writen as well...but not as good as I thought it'd be (esp. after your recommendation), not totally sure what it was, maybe some of the plot, and the way in which it developed. Can't fault the writing tho, esp. the way in which he describes the settings.
 

Salar

The One, The Only
© said:
A good book. Well writen as well...but not as good as I thought it'd be (esp. after your recommendation), not totally sure what it was, maybe some of the plot, and the way in which it developed. Can't fault the writing tho, esp. the way in which he describes the settings.
haha, i do go on about this book heaps. But after i read a book i analyse and analyse the book to pieces. FInd out philosophical meanings, symbolisms and just deep down itty gritty stuff that you usually do in high school when you read. Everybook has a passageway into the writers mind and there are generally deeper meanings in books than when you just read it. Take for example all the books you analysed in school, Great expectations, Othello, Lord of the flies Pride and Prej, etc. The reason i liked this book so much was because the deeper meaning in the book, the symbolism and the main characters hatred and disgust for man kind captured me like no other book.

See i'm a shakespear fan not only because of the fact that he was a great story teller/play writer, but because each and every story had a deeper and more intrguing meaning than the one you generally see when you gaze upon the story. That's what makes his plays fascniating, the meanings they derive from it, and what they ignore.

Ah, i don't know if you understand.

Right now i'm reading a few books,
The power of one - Bryce Courtenay
How dark can a soul become - Sonya Hartnett
Conversation with god, book 3
and Plato's Synopsis
 
Could anyone here recommend a specific biography on both Frank Sinatra and Leonardo da Vinci? I plan to read one on both, but they both have multiple biographies and I keep hearing different reviews of them so I was wondering if anyone has read one and could tell me if it was any good?

Thanks in advance :thumb:
 
The Coldest Winter Ever by Sista Soulja -- Off the hook!

Also:
The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius

I have a couple others but can't think right now.
 

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