LitPunx! Used book/comic hauls
Found a little book shack by my anger management class that has three rack outside that are pay what you want. I decided to give a dollar a book because he had such a great selection.
Louis L'Amour was a cowboy writer that wrote a ton of books. This is his memoir. I read about 20 pages so far and its great. Its basically a cowboy telling you what books he was reading as he tells his life story. He was a western union carrier, A seaman in the south sea, a boxer and of course a cowboy. He encourages people to read and how to learn and enjoy learning. Its a beautiful biography and is lifting my spirits. Going to switch off of Dostoevsky The Double to read this cause Dostoevsky was making me feel weird, even though it is really good. Dostoevsky feels like my inner fears and anxieties. L'Amour makes me feel like an old cowboy has taken a personal interest in me and wants to share all his favorite books to help me on an adventure, and he hopes I learn something along the way. Prehystarical Pogo in Pandamonia Is unbelievable. This collection was released in 1967 and it is some of the best comic-strip art I have every seen. If you like Bone or Calvin and Hobbes or just art in general this is a great.book. Ive just flipped through it but Im super stoked on it. Mickey Spillane's is fun. I read his Tiger Mann story which I liked in a weird Libertarian Capitalist sort of way. This is a Mike Hammer book which he is more famous for. I not sure I'm in the mood for it right now but I'm glad I picked it up. Pygmies and Dream Giants looks fucken awesome. Its part anthropological part spirit journey crazy writing. release in 1957 the author went in the jungles of the Philippines to live with headhunting pygmies to figure out what it means to be a modern man. I think this will be my lunch break book.
Louis L'Amour was a cowboy writer that wrote a ton of books. This is his memoir. I read about 20 pages so far and its great. Its basically a cowboy telling you what books he was reading as he tells his life story. He was a western union carrier, A seaman in the south sea, a boxer and of course a cowboy. He encourages people to read and how to learn and enjoy learning. Its a beautiful biography and is lifting my spirits. Going to switch off of Dostoevsky The Double to read this cause Dostoevsky was making me feel weird, even though it is really good. Dostoevsky feels like my inner fears and anxieties. L'Amour makes me feel like an old cowboy has taken a personal interest in me and wants to share all his favorite books to help me on an adventure, and he hopes I learn something along the way. Prehystarical Pogo in Pandamonia Is unbelievable. This collection was released in 1967 and it is some of the best comic-strip art I have every seen. If you like Bone or Calvin and Hobbes or just art in general this is a great.book. Ive just flipped through it but Im super stoked on it. Mickey Spillane's is fun. I read his Tiger Mann story which I liked in a weird Libertarian Capitalist sort of way. This is a Mike Hammer book which he is more famous for. I not sure I'm in the mood for it right now but I'm glad I picked it up. Pygmies and Dream Giants looks fucken awesome. Its part anthropological part spirit journey crazy writing. release in 1957 the author went in the jungles of the Philippines to live with headhunting pygmies to figure out what it means to be a modern man. I think this will be my lunch break book.
Re: LitPunx! Used book/comic hauls
Here is today's haul. The Goodwill I went to didn't really seem to have comic books or manga or anything like that, but that's ok. I stopped by the park and read for about an hour, but Florida is Florida and it rained.
This book, in particular, has been a lot of fun to read so far. The ghostwriter has a good eye for action scenes, but his dialogue is nothing special. In the prologue, in fact, during the first scene of the book we get this gem:
The dialogue is mostly exposition, and that's ok for a fun, action-oriented book like this.
This book, in particular, has been a lot of fun to read so far. The ghostwriter has a good eye for action scenes, but his dialogue is nothing special. In the prologue, in fact, during the first scene of the book we get this gem:
Curtis later goes on to defect to North Korea with all of the US' nuclear information because his wife is a bitch--no, really, they imply that.'Spare me the clichés, Curtis,' she slurred. 'You may be America's top rocket scientist, but you're a failure as a husband.'
The dialogue is mostly exposition, and that's ok for a fun, action-oriented book like this.
Re: LitPunx! Used book/comic hauls
excellent finds! Invisible Man by Ellison is on my reading list.
Re: LitPunx! Used book/comic hauls
The covers are awesome on those Mack Bolan books. also >SIEGEhayden wrote: ↑Wed Jun 19, 2019 12:41 amHere is today's haul. The Goodwill I went to didn't really seem to have comic books or manga or anything like that, but that's ok. I stopped by the park and read for about an hour, but Florida is Florida and it rained.
This book, in particular, has been a lot of fun to read so far. The ghostwriter has a good eye for action scenes, but his dialogue is nothing special. In the prologue, in fact, during the first scene of the book we get this gem:Curtis later goes on to defect to North Korea with all of the US' nuclear information because his wife is a bitch--no, really, they imply that.'Spare me the clichés, Curtis,' she slurred. 'You may be America's top rocket scientist, but you're a failure as a husband.'
The dialogue is mostly exposition, and that's ok for a fun, action-oriented book like this.
- containercore
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Re: LitPunx! Used book/comic hauls
Not pictured (because my phone's dead) History of Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle, The Eighteenth Century Background by Basil Willey and Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino (part of the gift bundle for my friend).
- Ol'TwoSpoons
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Re: LitPunx! Used book/comic hauls
Bro top right book is from pizzagate
Case closed, enjoy jail.
Case closed, enjoy jail.
- containercore
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Re: LitPunx! Used book/comic hauls
Nō.Ol'TwoSpoons wrote: ↑Fri Jul 12, 2019 8:02 pmBro top right book is from pizzagate
Case closed, enjoy jail.
Re: LitPunx! Used book/comic hauls
The millennial Nixon reader aesthetic discovered/demonstrated by Don in that other thread is very interesting and flavorful. Am I alone in finding it powerful? Just on an aesthetical and sensory level. The instant mental implications of a millennial guy appreciating Richard Nixon are very sudden and cause the mind to rush through all the vague, novel social subtleties attached: the styles, the hierarchies, beauties, eras, dramas, humor, etc., swimming and stewing together into the inspecific, inconcrete, primordial, cosmic, fundamental feeling of "an aesthetic".
Re: LitPunx! Used book/comic hauls
I agree, Nixon is held up as a villain by the cultural forces that would paint up with the same brush so why not see what he has to say.FTdotgov wrote: ↑Sat Jul 13, 2019 1:05 pm
The millennial Nixon reader aesthetic discovered/demonstrated by Don in that other thread is very interesting and flavorful. Am I alone in finding it powerful? Just on an aesthetical and sensory level. The instant mental implications of a millennial guy appreciating Richard Nixon are very sudden and cause the mind to rush through all the vague, novel social subtleties attached: the styles, the hierarchies, beauties, eras, dramas, humor, etc., swimming and stewing together into the inspecific, inconcrete, primordial, cosmic, fundamental feeling of "an aesthetic".
Re: LitPunx! Used book/comic hauls
Fuck man Im jealous of those Noh plays you read em yet any worth while From what i read in the past noh is a lot less palatable than kabuki the latter tends towards the working class and societal struggles embodied in individualscontainercore wrote: ↑Fri Jul 12, 2019 7:56 pmbookhaul.jpg
Used bookstore nearby had a bunch of neat stuff, wish they'd had volumes I & II of the Louis XIV book tho because now I have to track those down.
books2.jpg
Bought two copies of The Magus since one's a gift for a friend but ended up with one copy of the revised 70's edition (red) and a copy of the original 1965 edition (green) so I guess I have to find some one to trade with to get the updated version.
Not pictured (because my phone's dead) History of Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle, The Eighteenth Century Background by Basil Willey and Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino (part of the gift bundle for my friend).