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The book i burned today is...

#21 User is offline   The .303 bookworm 

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Posted 09 December 2006 - 11:30 AM

Orcs
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#22 User is offline   Tattooed Hand 

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Posted 09 December 2006 - 08:36 PM

I give them to thrift stores. I can't burn books. It's against my programming.
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#23 User is offline   The .303 bookworm 

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Posted 09 December 2006 - 08:57 PM

Tattooed Hand;143305 said:

I give them to thrift stores. I can't burn books. It's against my programming.

Don't worry, I'm sure no one here would actually burn a book (Tis a metaphor).
Hell I'm not sure if I'd even burn "Mein Kampf" (I would however gladly piss on it then mock it as hatemongering filth before using it as an example of propganada, racism and the power of misusage of the written word)
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#24 User is offline   Valgard 

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Posted 10 December 2006 - 12:24 PM

Well gookind does make useful kindling and also if you run out of toilet paper it definately has some added benefits (not to rough ;)) (it isn't like you could read the books or anything).
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#25 User is offline   councilor 

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Posted 11 December 2006 - 01:28 PM

I would like to nominate the masses and masses of D&D books, as well as the dragonlance books. when the revolution comes, they will be banned by holy writ, and cast into the lakes of sulfur, brime or just fire, whichever is handy.
Question:

Does being the only sane person in the world make you insane?

If a tree falls in the woods and a deaf person saw it, does it make a sound?
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#26 User is offline   Whelp 

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Posted 11 December 2006 - 02:09 PM

councilor13;143683 said:

I would like to nominate the masses and masses of D&D books, as well as the dragonlance books. when the revolution comes, they will be banned by holy writ, and cast into the lakes of sulfur, brime or just fire, whichever is handy.

Don't be too critical - the original Dragonlance trilogy was readable enough, if you consider that they were written from PnP modules...
But 99% of the rest is crap.
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#27 User is offline   Grimlock 

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Posted 11 December 2006 - 02:17 PM

I tortured myself through the first Goodkind book. After a year or two, I tried the second book. Two pages into it I returned it to the library...
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#28 User is offline   councilor 

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Posted 11 December 2006 - 02:21 PM

yes, i also want to kick in the crown of stars series. i mean ye gods, what the hell impelled me to read all seven of those damn books? i swear, my curiosity will be death of me one day...
Question:

Does being the only sane person in the world make you insane?

If a tree falls in the woods and a deaf person saw it, does it make a sound?
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#29 User is offline   Abyss 

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Posted 11 December 2006 - 06:48 PM

Wingrove's Chung Kuo, books 7 and 8. Following the brilliance of Books 1-6, a study in author self-destruction. Mere burning wouldn't have satisfied me. I needed to burn them, then bake the ashes into bad cookies and give them to homeless people so that the books might be shat through drug and alcohol abused rectae back into the earth from which the trees which were sacrificed to produce them grew from and thus somewhat make amends on behalf of humanity for this afront to the universe.

I felt similarly about Lustbader's Ring of Five Dragons. Only i'm too lazy to bake.

Goodkind makes my eyes bleed, but he makes bestseller lists, so i blink my crimson agony in relative silence.

- Abyss, has no strong feelings on the subject, really.
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#30 User is offline   caladanbrood 

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Posted 11 December 2006 - 06:55 PM

Hal Duncan's Vellum - Just so damn hard to read.

Oh, and Micheal Cobley's Shadowgods series. Kind of like Erikson, except truly awful.
O xein', angellein Lakedaimoniois hoti têde; keimetha tois keinon rhémasi peithomenoi.
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#31 User is offline   Darkwatch 

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Posted 11 December 2006 - 08:24 PM

The Dragon Queen by Alice Borchardt (Wouldn't brun it, but would curse it to the depths to never rise again, where it has no name.)

Anything by Hélène Brodeur. I would burn the books, then burn the ashes, then burn the ashes ashes, then destroy whats left in Sulfo-chromic acid... Then shoot the acid into the sun. Collapse the sun into a black hole, then blow up the black hole.
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#32 User is offline   McLovin 

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Posted 11 December 2006 - 08:54 PM

Lokivorous;143793 said:

Oh, and Micheal Cobley's Shadowgods series. Kind of like Erikson, except truly awful.


If it's truly awful, then it's not like Erikson. Shame on you! ;)

*casts Storm of Negative Rep at Brood*
OK, I think I got it, but just in case, can you say the whole thing over again? I wasn't really listening.
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#33 User is offline   Tsundoku 

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Posted 12 December 2006 - 02:56 AM

Karsa Orlong;143042 said:

A book that i'd burn is Harlequin's Dance by Tom Arden. It's simply crap-tastic.


Amen. I tried so hard to read it after reading some kind reviews, but gave up halfway through. Actually manages to out-melodrama Janny Wurts and out-waffle Jordan and Donaldson. Utterly pointless drivel. ;)

On the plus side I only spent $2 on it at a secondhand store, and held off getting the other 4 Orokon books.

Cheers,

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#34 User is offline   Falco 

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Posted 12 December 2006 - 05:58 AM

Wurts...eeeurrgh. Good addition to the burn pile. How many trees have died to allow that rubbish to be printed. Turgid, adolescent melodrama (thanks Sombra, great description).
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#35 User is offline   Aptorian hardass 

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Posted 12 December 2006 - 11:43 AM

Earthsea eat fire??
She writes in a strange calm good way, definatly not eat fire..
Rather "choke at your words..."

But thats just an oppinion!

avete
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#36 Guest_flysplicer_*

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Posted 13 December 2006 - 04:30 AM

J. V. Jones, pure and utter tripe. and I agree about McKiernan...the very thought of his writing makes my eyes bleed...Dear God make the hurting stop
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#37 User is offline   caladanbrood 

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Posted 13 December 2006 - 07:12 PM

longhorn;143836 said:

If it's truly awful, then it's not like Erikson. Shame on you! ;)

*casts Storm of Negative Rep at Brood*

Well, as in the same ideas... armies, empires, same kind of setting as MoI, PoVs from gods and soldiers, and not really anyone in between.
O xein', angellein Lakedaimoniois hoti têde; keimetha tois keinon rhémasi peithomenoi.
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#38 User is offline   McLovin 

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Posted 13 December 2006 - 07:25 PM

All right, then...

*tries to cancel Storm of Negative Rep*

*Storm backfires and destroys Longhorn's rep instead*
OK, I think I got it, but just in case, can you say the whole thing over again? I wasn't really listening.
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#39 User is offline   Tattooed Hand 

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Posted 13 December 2006 - 07:59 PM

The .303 bookworm;143309 said:

Don't worry, I'm sure no one here would actually burn a book (Tis a metaphor).
Hell I'm not sure if I'd even burn "Mein Kampf" (I would however gladly piss on it then mock it as hatemongering filth before using it as an example of propganada, racism and the power of misusage of the written word)


Racist hate literature is valuable as teaching material, as long as you approach it critically. I have students read Lord Cromer (the incredibly racist colonial governor of egypt) alongside some of the current US administration's writings on Iraq to look for similarities in language, rhetorical devices and binary logic.

A book to be dumped for me is the boring useless variety. Mein Kampf is a useful book in so far as the ideas contained therein were the culmination of decades of European racism that resulted in one of the largest horrors of the 20th century. How this was made to seem reasonable to so many people must not be forgotten. In my opinion it needs to be taken very seriously. :folken:
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#40 User is offline   Tif the Barber Boy 

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Posted 14 December 2006 - 05:25 AM

Tattooed Hand;144444 said:

Racist hate literature is valuable as teaching material, as long as you approach it critically. I have students read Lord Cromer (the incredibly racist colonial governor of egypt) alongside some of the current US administration's writings on Iraq to look for similarities in language, rhetorical devices and binary logic. :folken:


What? Lord "the empire is a career" Cromer? Well that is rather clever! A gentlemanly capitalist if ever there was one.

Here's a book to chuck in the trash: Niall Ferguson's 'Empire'!

How about a course in which students read Ferguson's 'Colossus' alongside Cromer's criticism of his opponents in Britain as "do-gooders who did not understand the realities of the exercise of imperial power". To top of the reading list, how about Balfour & Robert Kaplan? ;)
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