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Books: Latest books you are reading |
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Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 16 Jun 05 - 07:07 PM Day before yesterday I finished the current book, and discovered that I had nothing unread on hand. So, panicked lest I have withdrawal symptoms, I searched shelves and cabinets and discovered a treasure I had forgotten I owned: Smith of Wootton Major, by J.R.R. Tolkien. This is no 1,300 page behemoth like LOTR, but one of Tolkien's delicious fairy tales--not just for children, either! I gobbled it down yesterday, weeping (I blush not to say it) at the appropriate places, laughing where indicated, and always marveling at Tolkien's masterful storytelling. I couldn't go to sleep last night before finishing it. This morning I was faced again with withdrawal symptoms, so back to the bookcases. Another treasure I'd forgotten I had: All I really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten, by Robert Fulghum. Smash best-seller back in the 80s, and for good reason. Fulghum's book comprises many short articles/stories, two to four pages each in length, containing "Uncommon Thoughts on Common Things". Though I had read it say 25 years ago, only the first little article, which provides the book's name, rings bells of recollection, but Fulghum's penetrating and simple insights and delightful style are a pleasure to (re)visit. If you haven't read All I Really Needed before, I urge that you go buy it, or run do not walk to your library for it. As a matter of fact, if you have read it, go buy it or run do not walk to your library for it and reread it! It's that good. Simplicity and delight. Simplicity and delight. Laughter. Tears. Simplicity and delight. (You might just gather that I like both these books.) Dave Oesterreich |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: Peter Kasin Date: 17 Jun 05 - 12:56 AM Recently finished two books. "Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson," by Geoffrey C. Ward. A biography of the heavyweight boxing champion and a portrait of America's attitudes on race in the early 20th-century. Ward is an exceptional writer. "Songs of the Gorilla Nation," by Dawn Prince-Hughes. Autobiography of an anthropologist who is autistic; how she learned socialization through her contacts with a family of gorillas at the Seattle zoo. A total eye-opener about gorillas, and about Asperger's Syndrome. Chanteyranger |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: GUEST,.gargoyle Date: 18 Jun 05 - 12:11 AM Sam Clemmons (aka Mark Twain) Life on the Missippi
Sincerely,
I resolved 20 years ago to work through the "classics" as a voracious reader I pledged to read them all....a couple "Oprah" recommendations were tossed in by friends but they have never measured up to "Classic Status."
Sincerly, |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: Le Scaramouche Date: 18 Jun 05 - 06:10 PM BTW read on some website that one of those Laurie R. King books has the rev Baring-Gould as a main character. |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: Firecat Date: 18 Jun 05 - 08:14 PM Talking In Whispers by James Watson. It's about a boy who gets on the wrong side of the Chilean Junta. |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: sixtieschick Date: 18 Jun 05 - 08:29 PM " The Moor," by Laurie R. King, features the Reverend Sabine Baring-Gould, author of "Onward Christian Soldiers" and grandfather of Sherlock Holmes's "biographer," W.S. Baring-Gould. The plot centers around Dartmoor, the setting of Conan Doyle's "The Hound of the Baskervilles." Big fun. King is a scholar-geek of all manner of esoterica, which she uses to great effect in her mysteries. Miriam |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: GUEST Date: 19 Jun 05 - 05:56 AM "Uprising, 1944" by Norman Davies, a book about the Warsaw Uprising against the Nazis (not to be confused with the equally courageous Warsaw Ghetto Rising of 1943). The Polish Resistance rose against their oppressors only to be betrayed by their, so-called, allies. This book has confirmed my suspicions that all statesmen who engage in geopolitics are really psychopaths who couldn't give a toss about the chaos and suffering that they cause. |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 19 Jun 05 - 06:27 AM The Art Of Happiness by the Dalai Llama. Recommended to me by one of mys sons. No, this isn't a variation of the Bluebird Of Happiness written by Art Thieme. Jerry |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: Shanghaiceltic Date: 19 Jun 05 - 07:29 PM Hooray my copy of Mao:The Untold Story got past Customs & Snoopers. Started reading it last night, cannnot put it down. |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: Little Hawk Date: 19 Jun 05 - 10:02 PM The Poles were betrayed by everybody, and they ended up with the highest per capita casualty rate in WWII. |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: Amergin Date: 19 Jun 05 - 10:04 PM The final book in Stephen King's Dark Tower saga.... |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: GUEST,Blind DRunk in Blind River Date: 19 Jun 05 - 10:15 PM "HOw to Get Sex in Sudbury on a Saturday Night" by Uriah Cringeworthy. This book is useless, eh? I read it and tried every thing just like the guy said, eh? Nothin' worked. I want my flippin' money back! - BDiBR |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: GUEST,.gargoyle Date: 19 Jun 05 - 11:24 PM Moved on from Ol Nat -- to Samuel Langhorn Clemmons Life on the Missippi a delightful read - humorous and educating. If you have ever canoed/kyaked rivers/streams the section on "reading the river" will be very visual. Landlubbers are clueless.
Sincerely, |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: robomatic Date: 20 Jun 05 - 01:34 AM From the East Side of the pond: "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime" Mark Haddon An autistic person attempts to solve an apparent crime. "The Kite Runner" by Khaled Hosseini Insight into Afghani life in modern times. |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: GUEST Date: 20 Jun 05 - 01:38 AM October |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: Peter Kasin Date: 20 Jun 05 - 03:52 AM I read The Kite Runner last April, robomatic, and loved it. What a fine book that is. Highly rcommended. Chanteyranger |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: 42 Date: 20 Jun 05 - 07:20 AM Well, after avoiding the Da Vinci Code forever because of all the hype, a friend lent me a copy. How disappointing - I guessed all the clues before the characters and ended up feeling quite proud of myself. It's a pretty good yarn if you like detective stories. Probably make a decent movie. I'll stick to Ruth Rendell though. j |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: jacqui.c Date: 05 Jul 05 - 11:27 AM Just started 'The Mists Of Avalon" by Marion Zimmer Bradley. |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: Le Scaramouche Date: 05 Jul 05 - 11:53 AM Captain Blood. |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: The Fooles Troupe Date: 05 Jul 05 - 10:44 PM Howard Goodall's "Big Bangs - the story of 5 discoveries that changed musical history" - follows on from the original BBC TV doco. Very good for both musos & non-musos in explaining some very basic things in western music & why they are so, and why this makes western music different from other types such as Oriental & Arabian, etc. Random House ISBN-0-7011-6932X |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: LilyFestre Date: 05 Jul 05 - 10:53 PM I'm reading something called Weeping on Wednesdays...some kind of English mystery novel....I'm not liking it. It's one of those books where I think to myself....give it some time...it will start to click together.....it will....sooon...I swear....AW CRAP WHY DID I WASTE MY MONEY ON THIS USELESS PIECE OF CRAP?!?!!?!?!? Tjhan I thihnk...ahhhh yes.....the church is havihg that lovely event called a yard sale....I can get rid of it, hopefully someone else will find the book to be a steal and the church makes a little cash for my blundering efforts in picking out a good book. Not that I do this but sometimes I am much more drawn to the cover of a book tnan to it's insides. I think the covers should be all the same.....yeagh....that way I don't end up with a wonderful cover and a boring book. :P Michelle |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: John Hardly Date: 05 Jul 05 - 10:54 PM Odd Thomas, Life Expectancy -- Dean Koontz Garden Of Beasts -- Jeffrey Deaver |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: *Laura* Date: 06 Jul 05 - 07:13 AM 'The Handmaid's Tale' - Margaret Atwood very good - but as the review on the back says - I only hope it's not prophetic!! xLx |
Subject: RE: BS: Latest books you are reading From: belter Date: 06 Jul 05 - 01:46 PM The other week I read a couple of books from Ann McCafree's Pern series. The Skies of Pern, and Narilka's Tale. I admire her ability to tell a story from the point of view not only of someone else, but of someone from an entirly different culture. But does it seam like her nonconformist are always bad guys? Then I read a Falling Stars by Michael Flynn. Its a nearterm futcher sci-fi about efforts to save the world from astroids sent by aliens. It was a fairly realistic, and interesting story, but it started very slow with political manuvering to get funding. (no noubt a neccesary evil), and ended slow. |
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