What are you reading?

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What are you currently reading for leisure?

I'm looking for recommendations for books that has nothing to do w/ admissions boosting, MCAT related, textbooks, but rather something that you felt was a very good piece of work. The only requirement is that you felt this particular book was completely awesome.
 
I really enjoyed the Culture series (you don't really have to read them in order) by Iain Banks. It's about a post-scarcity world with superintellient machines basically running a near-utopia, and snapshots of situations that they / their agents deal with.
 
What are you currently reading for leisure?

I'm looking for recommendations for books that has nothing to do w/ admissions boosting, but rather something that you felt was a very good piece of work. The only requirement is that you felt this particular book was completely awesome.

Haha, I'm sure its not up any of you guys alley or even interests, but I'm reading a book again that I read about once a year. Its called Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why by Laurence Gonzales.

Publishers Weekly said:
When confronted with a life-threatening situation, 90% of people freeze or panic, says Gonzales in this exploration of what makes the remaining 10% stay cool, focused and alive. Gonzales (The Hero's Apprentice; The Still Point), who has covered survival stories for National Geographic Explorer, Outside and Men's Journal, uncovers the biological and psychological reasons people risk their lives and why some are better at it than others. In the first part of the book, the author talks to dozens of thrill-seekers-mountain climbers, sailors, jet pilots-and they all say the same thing: danger is a great rush. "Fear can be fun," Gonzales writes. "It can make you feel more alive, because it is an integral part of saving your own life." Pinpointing why and how those 10% survive is another story. "They are the ones who can perceive their situation clearly; they can plan and take correct action," Gonzales explains. Survivors, whether they're jet pilots landing on the deck of an aircraft carrier or boatbuilders adrift on a raft in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, share certain traits: training, experience, stoicism and a capacity for their logical neocortex (the brain's thinking part) to override the primitive amygdala portion of their brains. Although there's no surefire way to become a survivor, Gonzales does share some rules for adventure gleaned from the survivors themselves: stay calm, be decisive and don't give up. Remembering these rules when crisis strikes may be tough, but Gonzales's vivid descriptions of life in the balance will stay with readers.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

This book changed the way I think from mounting hiking to shadowing trauma surgeons 🙂
 
Dead Until Dark and The Hunger Games. I've not gotten far enough into either to know whether or not their really great, but Dead Until Dark seems fun.

There's this 12 book series, Cirque du Freak by Darren Shan, that I am absolutely in love with. They're definitely not novel material, and purely for-fun reading. If you want, PM me and I can e-mail you all the books in PDF format.
 
Debt of Honor and Executive Orders by Tom Clancy
Not easy, quick reads by any means but very good.

Freakonomics is a fun easy read and the sequel just came out Super Freakonomics

The Robert Langdon series (angels and demons, davinci code, lost symbol) by Dan Brown

Seize the Night is also a random sci fi one that's pretty good
 
Haha, I'm sure its not up any of you guys alley or even interests, but I'm reading a book again that I read about once a year. Its called Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why by Laurence Gonzales

This book changed the way I think from mounting hiking to shadowing trauma surgeons 🙂

I am in the queue for this one at my local library - I love this sort of stuff. earlier this year I read a book that I think is in a similar vein: The Unthinkable: Who Survives When Disaster Strikes - and Why (author: Amanda Ripley). fascinating.

I'm currently reading Servants of the Map (by Andrea Barrett). short stories, linked in a way, about explorers, botanists, medical ppl and other types of scientists. most of the stories take place in the 19th century. I highly recommend it; her writing is engaging and even though it's fiction, I feel like I'm learning something useful while reading it
 
I like classics, but I read just about anything.

Most recently, I've read (or reread) the following:

1984 (Orwell)
Brave New World (Huxley)
The Andromeda Strain (Crichton)
Angela's Ashes (McCourt)
Three Cornered World (Souseki)
Oh, The Places You'll Go! (shut up, I LIKE Dr. Seuss)
Antigone (Sophocles)
 
I am in the queue for this one at my local library - I love this sort of stuff. earlier this year I read a book that I think is in a similar vein: The Unthinkable: Who Survives When Disaster Strikes - and Why (author: Amanda Ripley). fascinating.

I'm currently reading Servants of the Map (by Andrea Barrett). short stories, linked in a way, about explorers, botanists, medical ppl and other types of scientists. most of the stories take place in the 19th century. I highly recommend it; her writing is engaging and even though it's fiction, I feel like I'm learning something useful while reading it

Deep Survival is worth the wait, or pick it up at your local B&N for like $12 or so. I'll have to look into The Unthinkable, that sounds good as well as the other, thanks.
 
I'm rereading Lord of the Rings. After that, "Hot, Flat, and Crowded" by Thomas Friedman.
 
"The House of God" by Samuel Shem. It was recommended by my doctor of all people. Good read, supper funny, and happens to be medically relevant. In fact, I believe the author did a pod-cast on here not too long ago.
 
What are you currently reading for leisure?

I'm looking for recommendations for books that has nothing to do w/ admissions boosting, MCAT related, textbooks, but rather something that you felt was a very good piece of work. The only requirement is that you felt this particular book was completely awesome.

Mountains beyond Mountains by Tracy Kidder.
 
Finishing up "The Hour I First Believed" by Wally Lamb

Been trying to get through the thick biography "Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life"

and lastly, since I read in 3's I'm finishing up "Health Care at Risk: A Critique of the Consumer-Driven Movement" by Timothy Stoltzfus Jost.

Also, just ordered from Amazon "The House of God" (got sick of people talking about it), "And the Band Played On," and "Five Patients"
 
Running with Scissors by Augusten Burroughs. It's a memoir written by a guy with the most disfunctional family EVER. I don't want to give too much away, but it was outrageous and I enjoyed every page of it. He has a sequel, Dry, in which he writes about his alcoholism. It follows his ups and downs and relationships with the people around him. Quality stuff.
 
Today I read

Life Under Glass: The Inside Story of Biosphere 2

and

Going Higher : Oxygen, man and the mountains
 
"The House of God" by Samuel Shem. It was recommended by my doctor of all people. Good read, supper funny, and happens to be medically relevant. In fact, I believe the author did a pod-cast on here not too long ago.

I started reading this book because I heard such incredible things about it, but I just couldn't get into it. 🙁 I couldn't make myself get used to the writing style, it rubbed me the wrong way. The content was great but the style sort of ruined it for me. Hope you enjoy it, though!
 
i just finished "complications" it was absolutely fascinating. im reading the house of god, which is great as well
 
I like classics, but I read just about anything.

Most recently, I've read (or reread) the following:

1984 (Orwell)
Brave New World (Huxley)
The Andromeda Strain (Crichton)
Angela's Ashes (McCourt)
Three Cornered World (Souseki)
Oh, The Places You'll Go! (shut up, I LIKE Dr. Seuss)
Antigone (Sophocles)

👍 x infinity and beyond, seriously. He doesn't use quotation marks around dialogue, which is confusing at first, but the flow is impeccable. Did you know McCourt died in July of this year!? I saw a sign in the bookstore over the summer saying 1930-2009 and I almost cried. That's how much I love that man.

"The House of God" by Samuel Shem. It was recommended by my doctor of all people. Good read, supper funny, and happens to be medically relevant. In fact, I believe the author did a pod-cast on here not too long ago.

One of my top 3 books, along with Angela's Ashes (see my review above). I laughed, cried, and everything in between. I secretly have a crush on the Fat Man. Well, secret no more...
 
Books I've recently read, am reading, or think you should read:

The Virtue of Selfishness by Ayn Rand
Better: A Surgeon's Notes On Performance by Atul Gawande
The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell
A Case of Need by Michael Crichton
Next by Michael Crichton
The 4 Hour Workweek by Tim Ferriss
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen Covey
Strength In What Remains by Tracy Kidder
How Doctors Think by Jerome Groopman
The Truth About The Drug Companies by Marcia Angell
The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down by Anne Fadiman
Pathologies of Power by Paul Farmer
Doctors: The Biography of Medicine by Sherwin Nuland
On Doctoring by Richard Reynolds
Blink by Malcolm Gladwell
The Cigarette Century by Alan Brandt
When the Air Hits Your Brain by Frank Vertosick
An Inconvienient Truth by Al Gore
Powerful Medicine by Jerry Avorn
Fast Food Nation by Eric Schlosser
Complications by Atul Gawande
The End of Poverty by Jeffrey Sachs
 
I started reading this book because I heard such incredible things about it, but I just couldn't get into it. 🙁 I couldn't make myself get used to the writing style, it rubbed me the wrong way. The content was great but the style sort of ruined it for me. Hope you enjoy it, though!

It is a bit different...but most great books are IMO.
 
Especially if you're from the South, then I recommend reading "Praying for Sheetrock." The book is a work of non-fiction but is written like a novel. It explores the civil rights movement in rural Georgia during the 1970's and 1980's. It's the most recent book I've read and has become one of my favorites.
 
It is a bit different...but most great books are IMO.

Oh, sure, I'm not hating on his style. It just wasn't for me. 🙂 Shakespeare isn't for everyone either, but that doesn't mean people who don't appreciate his style don't like great literature!
 
I just starting reading Power Ambition Glory by Steve Forbes and John Prevas.
 
I guess I might as well list some of my favorite books as well:

The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (of mice and men is great as well)
1984 by George Orwell
Naked Lunch by William Burroughs
The Invisible Man By Ralph Ellison
A Tale of Two Cities Charles Dickens
On the Road Jack Kerouac


These are all considered "classics," and I would have to agree.
 
Crap. I was plaqued by indecision prior to this post, but now I really can't decide.

:laugh:
 
Oh, sure, I'm not hating on his style. It just wasn't for me. 🙂 Shakespeare isn't for everyone either, but that doesn't mean people who don't appreciate his style don't like great literature!

I must admit that I hated reading Shakespeare at first, but once I got used to the older English it was great.
 
I just starting reading Power Ambition Glory by Steve Forbes and John Prevas.

This sounds interesting. I'm really into the CEO, business, power suit, type of books. How do you like the book so far?
 
i just finished "complications" it was absolutely fascinating. im reading the house of god, which is great as well

I'm thinking about getting "Better" by Gawande for my Orlando plane ride.

Also recently finished "Into the Wild," which was awesome.

I would also love to re-read the Dark Tower series by Stephen King but it's seven books that are all very long and I just don't have that much time.
 
👍 x infinity and beyond, seriously. He doesn't use quotation marks around dialogue, which is confusing at first, but the flow is impeccable. Did you know McCourt died in July of this year!? I saw a sign in the bookstore over the summer saying 1930-2009 and I almost cried. That's how much I love that man.



One of my top 3 books, along with Angela's Ashes (see my review above). I laughed, cried, and everything in between. I secretly have a crush on the Fat Man. Well, secret no more...


i love mccourt. he spoke in my hometown, it was incredible.

he doesn't use quotes a la james joyce, who was one of his favorite authors i believe.

i like 'tis best, then angela's ashes, then teacher man.


dubliners (joyce) is a fav, but i most recently finished wolfe's I Am Charlotte Simmons. i did not like it, but not because it wasn't good writing. more because i think wolfe sucked at writing like an 18y/o girl.
 
The James Bond series. I've read four of them so far...awesome series. 😎
 
This sounds interesting. I'm really into the CEO, business, power suit, type of books. How do you like the book so far?


Really interesting so far. They give parallels from "leaders of the ancient world" to many top CEOs today, like the similar leadership strategies, challenges, and conventional wisdoms.
 
i like 'tis best, then angela's ashes, then teacher man.

I must disagree. Disagreement starting now...

A's Ashes was by far the best. I enjoyed 'Tis a lot too, but not as much. I HAD to buy Teacher Man as soon as it came out (damn you hardback prices!), but was very disappointed, to the extent that I didn't even finish it. Maybe I'll start it again and finish it over break...but not before reading A's Ashes again!
 
I'm thinking about getting "Better" by Gawande for my Orlando plane ride.

Also recently finished "Into the Wild," which was awesome.

I would also love to re-read the Dark Tower series by Stephen King but it's seven books that are all very long and I just don't have that much time.

I read "Better" by Atul Gawande, which was great. I'm now reading "Complications," also by Atul Gawande, which I'm really liking so far, actually!

Aside from medicine-related books, I adore fantasy books by authors like Robert Jordan (The Wheel of Time series) and pretty much any philosophical authors (Ayn Rand being a biggie, and then my fave classic phisosophers...Nietzsche, Aristotle, Plato, etc).

My favorite novel of all time has to be The Lord of the Rings series by J.R.R. Tolkien!! 🙂👍 Great read.
 
Oh my god billy collins is my hero


...that would be all in caps but the forum doesnt like that
 
I'm glad reading for fun has brought us all closer together. 🙂
 
If anybody else likes reading medical narratives for fun, here are some good ones:

White Coat
Intern Blues
On Call
Complications
Hot Lights, Cold Steel

And two good books about ebola and small pox stuff are Preston's The Hot Zone and The Demon in the Freezer.
 
Mountains beyond Mountains by Tracy Kidder.


Great Book! I read that going into my Freshman year, helped motivate me to work hard in pre-med studies.

Currently reading A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole. Won a Pulitzer. Its the most bizarre book I've picked up.
 
No one has mentioned it and I cannot believe it! lol

I would definitely recommend Harry Potter =] I'm still on Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and I have yet to be disappointed with it or with any of them at that. If you have a few months, I would suggest reading all seven of them. hehe.
 
Currently reading A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole. Won a Pulitzer. Its the most bizarre book I've picked up.

I LOVE this book. it is in my top 3 favorite books of all time (so far).

oh, and cos I know y'all are dying to know the other two:laugh:: The Remains of the Day, by Kazuo Ishiguro, and All Quiet on the Western Front, by Erich Maria Remarque
 
Winter break is an awesome time to catch up on leisurely reading! Just finished By The River Piedra I Sat Down and Wept by Paolo Coehlo and Passing by Nella Larsen. For anyone who reads Passing, be warned that at the end of the introduction they spoil the ending of the book! I was kinda irritated cuz i had a feeling they were going to but kept reading anyway. I'd recommend both books though!
 
some short stories that are friggin' awesome and surrealistic:

after the quake by Haruki Murakami
 
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