Book Recommendations
I stumbled through a website that was a list of books recommended by certain celebrities, mostly actors and writers, peak creative people. I was interested, at first, but then, I decided that there’s as much a place for my own list. Books I recommend.
Better yet, as a test, these are books I’ve bought, given away, and bought again. In some instances, I’ve read, and reread digital copies, and while I have the hardbacks in my library, and predictably, I still buy and give them away.
Perhaps the best measure is the number of books I’ve got that I’ve bought a second or even third time to either replace a ghost version or given as gifts.
In no particular order?
Started the “cyberpunk” movement, or is accredited thusly. In itself, a remarkable novel, and there’s an energy, a special kind of drive not always present in latter novels. First of a trilogy, too. Introduced us to the world inside the machines. My personal history is deep in Austin archives, as I bought this from a friend at the old Bookstop (bookstore) in what was North Austin, loved the book, sent it to friend to read, and then years later, another bookstore owner had a signed edition, like my old one, marked on sale for over a grand. Great book in itself, and my personal history doesn’t fade when reading — and rereading — the novel as a classic work. Recommended repeatedly by an old friend, and then, when I finally read it? There are bits and pieces of the material that have stuck with me, ever since. A singular scene, deep in the bowels of the novel, has helped shape my world view, ever since. I’m not a Beat Poet fan, but I liked what they did. I’ve got, maybe three print copes of the poem, one in an anthology of modern poetry, another in Ginsberg’s collected works, and finally, a facsimile edition of the original, “Howl and other Poems.” There’s also the first part done as a graphic novel, and the mp3 version of Ginsberg reading the poem. Important historical document — a snapshot of the modern world. As much as the world has changed? It was — HST was legend living larger than life — but this book had an energy unfounded in other literature. Over the years, I’ve mined passages for brief spotlights on what it was, what it means, and what it is now, and in many cases, the author was weirdly prescient about the role of media in our lives. I keep a replica copy with its original Ralph Steadman cover. Strictly astrology-related? Serial observations?
Book Recommendations
Book Recommendations
Book Recommendations
astrofish.net/books