Movie Theater Recommend books

I was able to get all the way through Cormac McCarthy's "All the Pretty Horses" but wasn't liking the style and punctuation. Seemed it was done just to be odd and didn't really add anything of value. Maybe that's just me.
 
I am only about 3 chapters into this and it is being quite the hard read. Not because it is poorly written or anything it just pisses me off so much, my blood pressure keeps getting so high I can't focus on the words and need to set it down.

This is fair warning this shit will piss you off to no end.

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Just finished this one from Kurt Schlichter. It is fiction, but it is based on some current and very recent real events. It does get a little far fetched in a couple of spots, but for the most part is a believable portrayal of possible events. Not a bad read.
 
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Just finished this one from Kurt Schlichter. It is fiction, but it is based on some current and very recent real events. It does get a little far fetched in a couple of spots, but for the most part is a believable portrayal of possible events. Not a bad read.
About to finish it as well. Spot on review but I'll add, I think if an Qct 7th style event happened here, a few different twists would play out as well.
 
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I’ve read or listened to most of Mark Goodwin’s books. They are prep for end of the world with some fairly well thought out Revelations, rapture and tribulation explanations woven in. Looking for something similar by another author.
 
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I did not read this, but listened to it going to and from work. I got audible a little bit ago and had not really used it. This one was a free book, they have LOTS of free stuff, most of the "classics" are free.

Listening has some advantages over reading, for example I had no idea how to say his name. It is pronounced See moe for the first name, and High Ha for the last name. The guy reading it did a very good job with the names of the Finnish cities and areas so I think he is a speaker of the language, but there was no accent, if anything there was a tiny bit of a british accent, but not much.

A pretty good book, learned some things, one being I knew he was shot in the face, but I did not know it was an exploding bullet. How that did not kill him I have no idea. It sounds like he was a very private man, and did not like to talk of his war time experience, common with people that really did something. I have noticed the more quiet you are about it the more of a bad ass you are.

I would suggest this book to another, it was pretty good, and it seemed pretty short.

I think I might like this audible thing, as reading is starting to really bother my eyes. I can't sit and read like I once could, my eyes start to hurt.
 
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I have done quite a bit of reading this year waiting for a bionic hip and now in recovery. I thought back to a Jim Corbrtt book I read in high school titled "Man Eaters of Kumaon" and decided to see if Amazon has it which they did for the princley sum of 2 bucks. This lead to more of his books and then to Kenneth Anderson that came after him killing man eating tigers and panthers in India. Anderson make a point that a leopard was called a panther in India but Corbett used each name. Corbett started in the very late 1800's where travel was mostly by walking with some limited train travel available. By Anderson's time roads were more numerous and he drove a Studebaker car to many of his hunting sites and then feet came into play. 25 miles hikes were a regular thing to each and sometimes they would do it again the nest day. I walked a lot in my younger years but never close to 25 miles in one day. I have been impressed with the skill, daring, knowledge, and stamina of these two men. Elephants, bears, and snakes are dealt with also plus detailed descriptions of the terrain and their methods used to lure their quarry. Neither was a braggard and admitted to how frightened they were at times. Good stories if you are interested in highly skilled hunters persuing more skilled animals than they were and living to tell the tales. All that separated them was the hunter's abilities to out think the man eaters.
 
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I did not read this, but listened to it going to and from work. I got audible a little bit ago and had not really used it. This one was a free book, they have LOTS of free stuff, most of the "classics" are free.

Listening has some advantages over reading, for example I had no idea how to say his name. It is pronounced See moe for the first name, and High Ha for the last name. The guy reading it did a very good job with the names of the Finnish cities and areas so I think he is a speaker of the language, but there was no accent, if anything there was a tiny bit of a british accent, but not much.

A pretty good book, learned some things, one being I knew he was shot in the face, but I did not know it was an exploding bullet. How that did not kill him I have no idea. It sounds like he was a very private man, and did not like to talk of his war time experience, common with people that really did something. I have noticed the more quiet you are about it the more of a bad ass you are.

I would suggest this book to another, it was pretty good, and it seemed pretty short.

I think I might like this audible thing, as reading is starting to really bother my eyes. I can't sit and read like I once could, my eyes start to hurt.
I got this as an e-book and am now into Part II. Good read - though names and some words are difficult for this English-only reader to get. Glad I got the e-book - it has photos of Simo and maps pertinent to the text. I was surprised how small he was - I'd guess no more than 5'-4" or so, but large on toughness.

Good recommendation,@fpgt72 !
 
I have done quite a bit of reading this year waiting for a bionic hip and now in recovery. I thought back to a Jim Corbrtt book I read in high school titled "Man Eaters of Kumaon" and decided to see if Amazon has it which they did for the princley sum of 2 bucks. This lead to more of his books and then to Kenneth Anderson that came after him killing man eating tigers and panthers in India. Anderson make a point that a leopard was called a panther in India but Corbett used each name. Corbett started in the very late 1800's where travel was mostly by walking with some limited train travel available. By Anderson's time roads were more numerous and he drove a Studebaker car to many of his hunting sites and then feet came into play. 25 miles hikes were a regular thing to each and sometimes they would do it again the nest day. I walked a lot in my younger years but never close to 25 miles in one day. I have been impressed with the skill, daring, knowledge, and stamina of these two men. Elephants, bears, and snakes are dealt with also plus detailed descriptions of the terrain and their methods used to lure their quarry. Neither was a braggard and admitted to how frightened they were at times. Good stories if you are interested in highly skilled hunters persuing more skilled animals than they were and living to tell the tales. All that separated them was the hunter's abilities to out think the man eaters.
I have a 1946 copy of that Corbett book on my shelves, paid a whole $10 for it over 30 years ago.
 
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I read in the early '50's as my high school library had it. It was like reading it for the first this time. Corbett was a tough son-of-a-gun with nerves of steel. It hard to imagine someone doing the things he did and managing to remain alive. Anderson was the same except travel was somewhat easier in his era.
 
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ANY THING written by Elmer Kelton. He wrote fiction based on Texas history and athough having had a session in grade school and in high school I learned things I did not get in the school courses. Lots of people consider Louie L'amour to be the best in the western genre but IMO Kelton surpasses him. I consider "Stand Proud" to be his best of the 1800's events and " The Man Who Rode Midnight" for a modern day novel.
 
Ill update my list as Im always reading new ones
CIA Rogues and the Killing of the Kennedys by Patrick Nolan
This is hands down the best book I've ever read, the amount of research and knowledge that was poured into this book was insane. I'm gonna go with Oswald and Sirhan Sirhan we're definitely Patsys, they got fuck by the good ol CIA.
Sandworm by Andy Greenberg
Tracers In The Dark by Andy Greenberg
A Burgulars Guide To The City by Geoff Manaugh
New Confessions of an Economic Hitman by John Perkins, this is in a round about way connected to the CIA Rogues book I mentioned above, EXTREMELY eye opening.
Reports From Hell by Chas Smith, awesome book and the story telling style is fantastic.
Relentless Strike by Sean Naylor.
 
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Just finished "Pamwe Chete" by Ronald Reid-Daly which I found to be very interesting. Now onto Fireforce by Chris Cocks as I bought them as a pair. I just now need to find a copy of Ronald Reid-Daly's Selous Scouts: Top Secret War in good condition for a reasonable price.
 
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I bought a bunch of books from Hastings when they closed shop. I still have a few unread ones and am currently reading "the Battle at the Moons of Hell, Book 1 by Graham Sharp Paul, a sci-fi writer that I have never read before. I am half way through and it's good enough I am going to scour Amazon to see if I can find more books in the series. I have always been a sci-fi nut.
 
The Survivalist Series by: A. American.

Post EMP attack a man finds himself stranded outside of Tallahassee, FL. He must get home to Eustis.
I admit I listened to the audio books. However the guy tells a good story while maintaining balance between technical and fantasy. Does that make sense?
 
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Just finished this one;

Tells the story of Ernest Shackleton’s doomed attempt to be first explorer to the North Pole aboard the Endurance, which sunk after being crushed by ice-pack. Some amazingly thorough research went into this book, with extensive reference and quotes from the crew’s notes and diary’s. I was surprised at how much I took from the book from a leadership perspective. Adverse conditions can bring out the worst in some people, but Shackleton’s decisions managed to keep the crew intact, saving every one of his men, 128 days after leaving the majority of them, voyaging with a skeleton crew in a small boat to seek help through grueling weather conditions. Tough men in tough times.
 
I read killers of the flower moon ,by David Grann, hadn't seen the movie so no spoiler there. I enjoyed it , it was about the murders of the Osage Indains back in the 1920's very interesting read , I picked it up in the Austin Airport before a 10 hr flight to Anchorage for something to read on the long ass flt.
 
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I’m getting started with Killers of The Flower Moon, as an E book. It is good. Just finished The Wager, also a David Grann book. I’m impressed with amount detail and research he must have done on both of these books. I like his style of writing and will likely look for more of his books.
 

The Dictator's Handbook: Why Bad Behavior is Almost Always Good Politics​

A perfect explanation of power structures and imho a must read.
 
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A few to get you started -

Ryan schow - population zero series, sunset on America series, dark days of the after series.

Terry Hayes - I am pilgrim

Brad Thor - Scott Harvath series

Vince Flynn - Term Limits

Jack Carr - terminal list series

Sal Mayweather - the American experiment

Tara Ellis, Mike Kraus - Flashpoint

Angery American - Coming Home series and Charlie’s requiem series

William R Forstchen - One second after. (Excluding 5 years after)

Frank Herbert - Dune series

Andy Weir - Project Hail Mary

Michael Malice - The Anarchist Handbook

Andrzej Sapkowski - Witcher series

Murray Rothbard - anatomy of the state

Lysander Spooner - No Treason

Smedley Butler - War is a Racket

Franky Schaeffer - Addicted to mediocrity

George Orwell - 1984

Aldous Huxley - brave new world

Frank Viola - Pagan Christianity

John Lovell - The Warrior Poet way

Francis Schaeffer - A Christian manifesto

God - NASB 1995 Bible
 
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“A Time For Trumpets”, Charles B. McDonald. Totally researched examination from someone who was a companycommande in The Battle of the Bulge. Interviewed hundreds including German POw’s and Officers, scoured field notes and messages of both sides. Large appendix, and notations.
As a 101 vet of a different war, it was an amazing read.
Also suggest “Nuts” by Vinnie Speranza, known to many, even if you’ve just seen his videos jumping in Normandy and Holland in later years.
 
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I'm about a third way through "In the Heart of the Sea" by Nathaniel Philbrick. This is a good read and view into the 1820's world that used whale oil as main commodity in daily life. Detailing how the whales were hunted, killed, and oil 'harvested'.

The main crux of the book will be the survival of the crew after the sinking of the Essex - I'm just getting there now.

I guess this was made into a film ~ 2015. The book is better with maps and details of the voyage. I got this as an Ebook....a whole $1.99.

UPDATE: finished and this is a good detailed account of survival, death, and cannibalism. The epilogue gives a closure to events and crew afterwards and is worth reading.
 
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I've been reading this one I picked up at a flea market booth. It's about a downed Air Force navigator in Vietnam.

I'm about halfway through it and it's pretty good. It turns out this was made into a movie in 1988 with Gene Hackman. I'll have to see if I can find it on Netflix or Tubi.
 
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I've been reading this one I picked up at a flea market booth. It's about a downed Air Force navigator in Vietnam.

I'm about halfway through it and it's pretty good. It turns out this was made into a movie in 1988 with Gene Hackman. I'll have to see if I can find it on Netflix or Tubi.
There is a follow-up book, or maybe you would call it a companion, called "The Rescue of BAT-21" which is really excellent. It goes deeper into the entire rescue operation and all the units that were involved. Well worth the read.
 
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