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Richard Reyes

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Posts posted by Richard Reyes

  1. On 2/6/2024 at 8:54 AM, NoahLutz said:

    East of Eden could be the best novel I’ve ever read.  I’ll hold off crowning it the champ until I reread it in a year or two.  I’m most of the way through Of Mice and Man, and it’s good, but just so much less universal and ambitious.  Perhaps I shouldn’t have started with the best.  

    IMHO, as highly regards John Steinbeck is I still hold that he is underrated. East of Eden and Grapes of Wrath are two of the greatest novels every written in any language at any time in history. Truly, that great. 

    • Like 2
  2. I read 78 books in 2023. Favorites were (in no particular order):

    Hail Mary - Andy Weir

    Now is Not the Time to Panic - Kevin Wilson

    Horse - Geraldine Brooks

    All of the Expanse novels - James S. A. Corey

    The Daredevils - Gary Amdahl

    The Great Alone - Kristin Hannah

    Somebody's Fool - Richard Russo

    I Have a Few Questions for You - Rebecca Makai

    The Bee Sting - Paul Murray

    • Like 2
  3. Just finished Crook Manifesto by Colson Whitehead. Great prose with a fun sense of humor but missing any ambitious literary vision (and that's okay). Just started I Have some Questions for You by Rebecca Makkai. 100 pages in and I already like it way more than her last book which was a Pulitzer Prize finalist but I though was a dud. 

  4. Recently finished Home Front by Kristin Hannah. My second novel by her. Good book. Currently reading I Am Death, two novellas by Gary Amdahl. This is my third Amdahl book this summer. On deck I've got a Milan Kundera loaded on the Kindle because I realized I have only read one Kundera and should probably read more. 

    • Like 1
  5. On 5/27/2023 at 8:09 PM, TheAccountant said:

     I will be curious if you think this is good or not.  I read one review of it and it seemed to be a very interesting read.

    It was good. His research and insights are thorough. His paths to improvement are reasonable. "Evicted" was very person centered as he followed people trying to survive on poverty wages and told their stories. This one was more idea centered so lacked the same magnitude of engagement. I'd recommend reading Evicted first and then this one afterwards. 

    • Like 1
  6. Poverty, By America   -   Mathew Desmond.

    Time for some non-fiction. His previous book, Evicted, is one of the most eye-opening books I've ever read. Work hard, work smart and still live in poverty. 

     

    • Like 1
  7. Leviathan Wakes by James S. A. Corey.

    Also known as book one of The Expanse. Not sure if I want to read the entire series. So far book one is too much like the show. I'm hoping for deviation from the tv show but I fear I'll have to keep going and going until I reach that point. 

  8. Below is a link to a pdf of my Rush novel. I am providing it free to read and share. I've realized it's not going to make me rich and famous or win a National Book Award (LOL!) so now I'm just giving it away. 

     

    Link deleted. Sorry.

     

    (Buyer beware: You get what you pay for (!)(?)

  9. Under rated: Ceiling Unlimited, Didacts and Narpets (I know, not really a song but I like it alot), Far Cry (I know most people like the song but I think it deserves to stand alongside their best work).

    Over rated: Most of Snakes and Arrow (except above and the instrumentals).

  10. Hi,

     

    I wrote a novel about going to a Rush concert in 1980. Most of the book is set in the parking lot of the concert hall because, you know, you have to get there early for a general admission show if you want to get close to the stage. The book is loaded with bright stuff for the uber Rush fans such as references to deep cuts, a discussion about the misprinted lyrics on Permanent Waves, a “street theater” production based on 2112, philosophical musings about the Fear sequence, and so on.

     

    And then things get weird. The boundaries between the real and the unreal collide when a necromancer weaves a snake kaiju out of threads of fear. Limelight is used to create sci-fi weaponry. Exotic energy shatters the boundaries between realms of the multiverse. The characters spiral through a timeless space to a strange immortal place. What strange place, you ask? How about a remote world of barren landscape save for the giant floating brain beneath a royal blue sky.

     

    Meanwhile, our heroes wrestle with their own inner demons related to race, religion, friendship, and love.

     

    You can purchase a copy exclusively through Amazon.

     

    GENERAL ADMISSION by Richard Reyes

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