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Books: What Are You Reading?

Wesley S 02 Mar 06 - 12:22 PM
Alba 02 Mar 06 - 12:19 PM
ranger1 02 Mar 06 - 11:33 AM
kendall 02 Mar 06 - 10:12 AM
Diva 02 Mar 06 - 09:45 AM
number 6 02 Mar 06 - 09:25 AM
Wesley S 02 Mar 06 - 09:10 AM
GUEST,Cats 02 Mar 06 - 06:33 AM
katlaughing 02 Mar 06 - 03:35 AM
GUEST,Dewey 02 Mar 06 - 01:20 AM
katlaughing 01 Mar 06 - 11:48 PM
GUEST,snarky 22 Jan 06 - 09:39 PM
Bill D 22 Jan 06 - 05:46 PM
Auggie 22 Jan 06 - 03:28 PM
Lonesome EJ 22 Jan 06 - 11:26 AM
Big Al Whittle 22 Jan 06 - 07:32 AM
open mike 21 Jan 06 - 03:01 PM
bobad 21 Jan 06 - 02:42 PM
Charmion 21 Jan 06 - 02:33 PM
ranger1 21 Jan 06 - 01:22 PM
DougR 21 Jan 06 - 12:42 PM
em gunyou halaas 20 Jan 06 - 03:30 PM
fat B****rd 20 Jan 06 - 02:31 PM
kindaloupehackenweez 20 Jan 06 - 02:25 PM
Gurney 20 Jan 06 - 12:12 AM
SINSULL 19 Jan 06 - 08:57 PM
number 6 19 Jan 06 - 08:39 PM
autolycus 19 Jan 06 - 06:52 PM
Deda 18 Jan 06 - 10:52 PM
Wesley S 18 Jan 06 - 04:46 PM
Lonesome EJ 18 Jan 06 - 03:24 PM
alanabit 18 Jan 06 - 03:14 PM
Arne 18 Jan 06 - 02:39 PM
DougR 18 Jan 06 - 02:35 PM
GUEST,Joe_F 17 Jan 06 - 11:43 PM
Amos 17 Jan 06 - 01:19 PM
Skipjack K8 17 Jan 06 - 01:14 PM
GUEST,petr 16 Jan 06 - 05:04 PM
GUEST 16 Jan 06 - 07:52 AM
GUEST,Noddy 16 Jan 06 - 04:20 AM
GUEST,noddy 16 Jan 06 - 04:13 AM
GUEST,Noddy 16 Jan 06 - 04:04 AM
Ron Davies 15 Jan 06 - 11:08 PM
Ron Davies 15 Jan 06 - 11:00 PM
Amos 15 Jan 06 - 10:43 PM
Jerry Rasmussen 15 Jan 06 - 08:43 PM
Deda 15 Jan 06 - 07:32 PM
Big Al Whittle 14 Jan 06 - 10:10 PM
David C. Carter 14 Jan 06 - 10:45 AM
Rapparee 14 Jan 06 - 09:45 AM
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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Wesley S
Date: 02 Mar 06 - 12:22 PM

Ranger 1 - I've read most of the Robert Parker books too. Have you read the Paridise series ? There was a TV with Tom Selleck aired a little while ago. It wasn't too bad considering.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Alba
Date: 02 Mar 06 - 12:19 PM

The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion.
and
Night by Elie Wiesel.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: ranger1
Date: 02 Mar 06 - 11:33 AM

Recently finished "Carnivorous Nights", a non-fiction book about the search for the extinct Tasmanian Tiger by three Americans (two naturalists and an artist). Amusingly written and very informative about a variety of subjects. I am now extremely curious about several species of Australian mammals that I never knew existed before.

Currently reading "Cold Service" by Robert B. Parker. I've been hooked on the Spenser series since I was in high school.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: kendall
Date: 02 Mar 06 - 10:12 AM

The Darwin Awards. Hard cover, wicked funny.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Diva
Date: 02 Mar 06 - 09:45 AM

The Horsieman Duncan Williamson and Red Rowans and Wild Honey by the late Betsy Whyte both smashing books about the traveller way of life..am in middle of essay on what it means to be a traveller


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: number 6
Date: 02 Mar 06 - 09:25 AM

The DaVinci Code by Robert Scheaffer, mainly because i read the Holy Blood, Holy Grail by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln some years back. My interest has been raised by the legal proceedings currently in the courts involving the two books.

sIx


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Wesley S
Date: 02 Mar 06 - 09:10 AM

V for Vendetta by Alan Moore. In time for the movie to come out.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: GUEST,Cats
Date: 02 Mar 06 - 06:33 AM

Boudica - Dreaming the Hound. It's the third in the Manda Scott series about Boudica. An excellent read ~ difficult to put down. You do need to know a bit about the tribes though, so refer to the maps if you don't know where who was.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: katlaughing
Date: 02 Mar 06 - 03:35 AM

Currently working through The Mother Tongue. Almost every other page is marked for something I want to refer back to! Thanks, Secret Santa!


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: GUEST,Dewey
Date: 02 Mar 06 - 01:20 AM

The Kabala. Zen, and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenence. Donald Trump: The Art of the Deal.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: katlaughing
Date: 01 Mar 06 - 11:48 PM

Just recently finished Michael Crichton's "State of Fear." Wow, a novel with a bibliography and cites. And, an eye-opener which makes me want to investigate some of his data regarding global warming, etc. I highly recommend it.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: GUEST,snarky
Date: 22 Jan 06 - 09:39 PM

bailey white has my old banjo. bad karma attached to that transaction, but not her fault... about to read Temple of my Familiars by alice hoffman


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Bill D
Date: 22 Jan 06 - 05:46 PM

I'm re-reading a book I thought I had lost....one of the more cutting, important books I have encountered....

Arthur Herzog's "The B.S. Factor- The Theory & Technique of Faking It in America"

since he wrote so many other things, like "The Swarm", this little gem never got much notice, I'm afraid.

He simply, and as humorously as the topic allows, explains with examples how we are being inundated with ads, language and ersatz 'answers' that have radically changed how we understand our very culture. Obfuscation and hypocracy have become so insideous that we barely realize that there ever was an alternative!.........and this book is 30 years old!


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Auggie
Date: 22 Jan 06 - 03:28 PM

"Night" by Elie Wiesel.

Wiesel's 1960 classic, revived thanks to Oprah's Book Club (of all things) is a memoir of his time in Auschwitz. Certainly not a book to bring a smile to your face, but also one not easily put down. Nor is it one easily forgotten once finished.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Lonesome EJ
Date: 22 Jan 06 - 11:26 AM

Gurney

I think of Rutherfurd as England's James Michener. He takes the story of England from the collapse of the land-bridge connection to France to the present. Although the story has a broad scape, the segments are interesting with a slight soap-opera overtone, but I ahve to say I enjoyed all three books you mentioned immensely.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 22 Jan 06 - 07:32 AM

No I'm Twyford Junction.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: open mike
Date: 21 Jan 06 - 03:01 PM

the mud cat light bulb changing thread...
200!


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: bobad
Date: 21 Jan 06 - 02:42 PM

'they can't hide us anymore' by Richie Havens

Reliving the 60s and 70s U.S. music scene.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Charmion
Date: 21 Jan 06 - 02:33 PM

Just finished "The Lighthouse" by P.D. James, a Christmas prezzie from my brother. Odd how the murder victim in her books is generally somebody who needs killin', but the murderer is almost worse. And the Great Detective's subordinates are much more interesting than he is!


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: ranger1
Date: 21 Jan 06 - 01:22 PM

Just finished "Dry" by Augusten Burroughs and "Sleeping at the Starlite Motel" by Bailey White. I seem to be in a non-fiction period at the moment, subject to change without notice, though.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: DougR
Date: 21 Jan 06 - 12:42 PM

Unless I missed it, no one is reading "State of War," by James Risen. I'm shocked! Bush haters might find some more crap to throw at Bush if they read this book. So far, though, Risen seems to be "after" the CIA.

DougR


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: em gunyou halaas
Date: 20 Jan 06 - 03:30 PM

'Drop City' by T.C. Boyle

A novel about Alaska, hippies, communes and woods living. Sucks you right in.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: fat B****rd
Date: 20 Jan 06 - 02:31 PM

Cool Hand Luke by Donn Pearce who actually worked on a road gang and got himself a part in the film.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: kindaloupehackenweez
Date: 20 Jan 06 - 02:25 PM

:"A million Little Piece". Which Opera has been given the highest of recommendation. First chapter starts with a poor dude at the lowest of rock bottom, on a plane, not knowing how he got there or where he's going. Only to find his parents at the airport. They drive him to there cabin in/or around Niagra Falls, New York. Am looking forward to the next chapter of this possible, "Hollywood Horror".
Does he over come his additive ways and past.?????


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Gurney
Date: 20 Jan 06 - 12:12 AM

'Sarum', by Edward Rutherford. It is a historical novel, but stretching from the earliest settlers to 1985. That is, the earliest settlers in what became Salisbury, which means that England is still connected to Europe when it starts. It follows families. I'm up to the year 1553, and there are more than 1300 pages!
I've read his 'Forest', about the New Forest (planted in the 11c), and 'London', which have the same format. They are sort of history books, but not as we learned at school!


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: SINSULL
Date: 19 Jan 06 - 08:57 PM

Autobiography of Donovan, a Christmas gift. A bit of self indulgent nonsense but a fun trip thru the 60s and 70s.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: number 6
Date: 19 Jan 06 - 08:39 PM

"On a clear Day you can see General Motors" .. by Jack Wright

sIx


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: autolycus
Date: 19 Jan 06 - 06:52 PM

Always got any number started.
Finished Waugh's Scoop and Haddon Curious Incident..., both enjoyable, both rather overrated in my opinion.
Nearly finished Fritz Perls Gestalt Therapy Verbatim (fascinating).
Recently started Lao Tse's Tao Te King (now that's a revolutionary one),The Therapist's Use of the Self (Rowan & Jacobs) and Academy Zappa (Proceedings of a Zappa Conference, edd. Watson & Leslie).

If this is a thread drift too far, forget it, but I'd be very interested in how people decide what to read, given the indigestibly vast amount to choose from. With me , it's work-related, been-meaning-to-for-....,serendipity, recommendation,feeling like it, it's the first one I see, duty,etc.etc.

On the other hand, sometimes I just can't decide, as tho' I've never read a book and don't know to begin.

Auto.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Deda
Date: 18 Jan 06 - 10:52 PM

I enjoyed "The curious case of the dog in the night-time" a LOT, and also "The Kite-Runner." Highly recommend them both. One of the great joys of my last year is that I've gotten back into reading a steady stream of good fiction, and I'm very impressed with the quality of fiction that's being written & read currently. (I got my late-life BA just over 10 years ago, and did some graduate work, and reading gradually kind of became "work" -- and sometimes about as dry as eating sand. Then I started selling a few books on-line, and re-discovered reading for FUN, FUN, FUN!)


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Wesley S
Date: 18 Jan 06 - 04:46 PM

"The Curious Case of the Dog in the Night-Time" by Mark Haddon. It's a murder mystery written from the viewpoint of a 15 year old boy with Asperger's Syndrom.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Lonesome EJ
Date: 18 Jan 06 - 03:24 PM

Currently, "Team of Rivals", Doris Kearns Goodwins' biography of Lincoln and his cabinet. Fascinating view of a great man who surrounded himself with powerful, intelligent men of dissenting opinions. Very ironic in comparison with the current occupant of the White House. I am simultaneously reading "Tales of the Alhambra" by Washington Irving. I don't mean I'm reading both at exactly the same time, by the way.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: alanabit
Date: 18 Jan 06 - 03:14 PM

I finished "Captain Corelli's Mandolin" about a week ago. A friend had sent it to me just before Christmas. I loved it. It is possibly the best love story I have ever read. I am told the film is ghastly kitsch, so I had better stay away from it. I don't usually like love stories anyway. They generally make me cringe.
I am now reading "In Sheep's Clothing", by George K. Simon Junior. He thinks he has some strategies for recognising and dealing with manipulative people. We shall have to see!


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Arne
Date: 18 Jan 06 - 02:39 PM

"Flight of the Iguana", by David Quammen.

Just finished "The Kite Runner", by Khaled Hosseini. That's an incredible book.

After that, back to James Bamford's "Body of Secrets" (about the NSA), and A. Zee's "Fearful Symmetry"....

Cheers,


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: DougR
Date: 18 Jan 06 - 02:35 PM

Ebbie: "Truth and Duty"? You primarily favor fiction? :>)

DougR


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: GUEST,Joe_F
Date: 17 Jan 06 - 11:43 PM

Correspondence, 1964-1966, with an admirable man, now dead.

--- Joe Fineman    joe_f@verizon.net

||: The business of politicians is not leadership but compromise. Leadership is the business of martyrs. :||


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Amos
Date: 17 Jan 06 - 01:19 PM

I recently finished hearing "Collapse" on CD, during my commute time. I enjoyed it very much, and admire Diamond's analyses of elements. I wish Bush would listen to it, maybe while cutting brush in Texas.


A


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Skipjack K8
Date: 17 Jan 06 - 01:14 PM

'Sail like a champion' by Dennis Connor (I suspect ghost-written by the erudite Michael Levitt). It gives me a lot of scientific background about stuff I've worked out for myself over the years, and a lot of new stuff I want to try.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: GUEST,petr
Date: 16 Jan 06 - 05:04 PM

just finished Ride of the Second Horseman, by Robert O'Connell
(about the birth and death of war)

specifically how war began with the split between agriculturalists and pastoralists (who began to raid agricultural settlements apprx 4000 bc)
which led to building walls around cities and later developed into warfare between agricultural states.. and how war served a kind of function that may be becoming irelevant in the modern world..

last nights fun.. which Ive just started and am enjoying.

also reading the Collapse of Globalism by John Ralston Saul.

(Amos, you may enjoy Jared Diamonds 'Collapse' if you like Guns Germs Steel)


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: GUEST
Date: 16 Jan 06 - 07:52 AM

I am trying to read the books on the "Canada Reads"list. So far I have read two and both are just wonderful books, especially The Three Day Road by Joseph Boyden. The best novel about World War 1 that I have ever read. The other book I am reading also has to do with the Great War, Deafening by Frances Itani is also a beautifully written boo. I also just finished A hilarious book called "Cooking With Frenet Branca" by James Hamilton Paterson.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: GUEST,Noddy
Date: 16 Jan 06 - 04:20 AM

it was G.J.F. Dutton and the book was/were "the ridiculous mountains" and "nothing so simple a climbing"
Next time I will pay more attention.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: GUEST,noddy
Date: 16 Jan 06 - 04:13 AM

I tell lies W.E. Bowman wrote "The Ascent of Rum Doodle"


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: GUEST,Noddy
Date: 16 Jan 06 - 04:04 AM

Just finished "learning to Breath " by Andy Cave and two books by C. F. Dutton.
Andy cave's book is an easy read about his life coming from a miner to become a top class climber. My copy is signed by the author and a friend of mine gets a mention in it.

Dutton' books were a collection of short stories about the Doctor, the Apprentice and the author and their climbing adventures or should that be misadventures. Very funny. He also wrote "The Ascent of Rum Doodle" which is more of the same and is a must!

Currently reading about treking in NZ for my trip their next year and hoping to get a few gigs for my lady wife while we are there.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Ron Davies
Date: 15 Jan 06 - 11:08 PM

Oh yes--bootlegger-- is also glossed over, it appears--I'm reading between the lines to see how much of that comes out here.

And the developments leading up to the 1960 election are also fascinating--and complex.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Ron Davies
Date: 15 Jan 06 - 11:00 PM

Hostage To Fortune by Amanda Smith. She's a granddaughter of Joseph P Kennedy; the book is letters to and from him--to his family, businesssmen, political figures and others. What an amazing person--and a worm. Anti-Semetic, bosom buddy of Joe McCarthy, stock manipulator, philanderer (book seems to gloss over this last one), clearly a defeatist as US Ambassador to the UK-- (seemed to look for reasons to retreat to Fortress America and let England sink or swim without even Lend-Lease. Blamed FDR for the death of his first-born--after supporting him in 3 campaigns, in 1944 called him a bastard. And this is all in letters he himself wrote, as collected by his granddaughter.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Amos
Date: 15 Jan 06 - 10:43 PM

"The World is FLat", essays on the changes wrought in our civilization in the current century and where they might be leading, by Thomas Friedman.

Good read.

A


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Jerry Rasmussen
Date: 15 Jan 06 - 08:43 PM

Eyes Of Discovery... a book I go back to read every once in awhile... don't know if it's even in print in more... was published by Dover. It's a collection of the earliest known written descriptions of American as it was discovered and explored. From memory. one of my favorite sections of the book is a description of the discovery of the Grand Canyon. The discoverer had no concept of scale, and started climbing down into the canyon to refill his canteen. It was a longer haul than he counted on.

The book fascinates me as a first-hand account of American in its pristine state.

Jerry


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Deda
Date: 15 Jan 06 - 07:32 PM

Just finished a wonderful historical novel by Iain Pears called "An instance of the fingerpost" (set in 17th century Oxford, and includes John Locke among its cast of characters, a sort of mystery involving various conspiracies, the religious biases in England after the death of Oliver Cromwell and the restoration of the monarchy) and have started a more contemporary fictionalized memoir called "The Color of Water" -- which starts off well. I'm also reading "Blink" by Malcolm Gladwell, which I have to go find a copy of (I started reading someone else's & want to continue it). It's a fast read and full of interesting information and interpretations. I was also reading "the Way," about kabbalistic Judaism, but put it aside months ago and haven't gotten back to it. I think the kabbalah is very interesting, but this is a pretty superficial treatment of the subject.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 14 Jan 06 - 10:10 PM

an article about lowden guitars in Guitarist magazine, but its not engrossing and I keep going back to Ian Rankin. I've started it three times.

if anybody has read the article all the way through and thinks it has something in there, I should know - let me know.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: David C. Carter
Date: 14 Jan 06 - 10:45 AM

The Great Hunger-Cecil Woodham-Smith.The eighteen-forties potato famine in Ireland.Blundering stupidity,tragedy and of course,courage.


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Subject: RE: BS: What Are You Reading?
From: Rapparee
Date: 14 Jan 06 - 09:45 AM

The Great Influenza, the author of which I forget. Scarier than all hell, especially the parts about the US governement. And, I fear, prescient.


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