Sunday, September 11, 2011

September pleasure reading

Last week I read the first book in the Hunger Games series by Suzanne Collins (the book is also called The Hunger Games).  This series has come highly recommended to me from various friends, so I thought I would check it out (plus I was able to borrow it from one of my friends, score!)  I read the entire thing in one night.  Seriously.  I started around 8 and I stayed up until 1 to finish it.  This was bad seeing as how I am already missing out on sleep, and should have gone to sleep around 10 that night, but that’s okay.  I need to learn to pace myself with reading books that are part of a series (ex: reading the first 6 HP books in the span of a week, knowing there were only going to be 7 books) and despite the really depressing content of the books, it was hard to put it down.  I guess it’s like HP in that there’s a main character who everyone is rooting for and even though you know that (s)he’s not going to lose (because that would make the entire series lame), you still want to see how it turns out.  Anyway, the book was a quick read, but also enjoyable.  I’m looking forward to borrowing the second and third books in the series!


Yesterday I finished a book called Rising Sun by Michael Crichton.  This was not as good as the other books I’ve read by him, but that’s okay.  They can’t all be winners.  It was sort of interesting because the premise of the story is about the US and its business relationship with Japan.  I’m not sure how accurate his information is (but I’m assuming quite accurate because he includes references) but it makes me want to understand more about our economy and our trade laws with other countries.  I’m not sure how we expect to turn our economy around if we continue to buy things made in China over things made in the US, but I really would like to know more about those sorts of relationships.  I only had to take basic macroeconomics in undergrad, so my exposure to those sorts of things was quite limited.  Back to the story: to me (at least) the murderer was really obvious from the beginning.  Still well-written, but I’d recommend Congo and Sphere before I’d recommend Rising Sun.


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