What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
- Clinton Huxley
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
I'm now reading The Silent Companions by Laura Purcell, another of those women.
"I grow old … I grow old …
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
http://25kv.co.uk/date_counter.php?date ... 20counting!!![/img-sig]
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
http://25kv.co.uk/date_counter.php?date ... 20counting!!![/img-sig]
Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
Michelle Obama's "Becoming", very entertaining, funny, hilarious at times!
- Sean Hayden
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
I took a break from slogging through a book on Russian dependence on oil to read Full House by Stephen Jay Gould. It's a much better book.
Imagine that. I guess it's only coincidental that you'd already be the perfect citizen in the ideal world you're selling.
- pErvinalia
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
I'm obsessed with India at the mo. Just finished Shantaram (a fantastic 900 page book), and now reading A Fine Balance. Started reading The Age of Kali, but it was too depressing.
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"The Western world is fucking awesome because of mostly white men" - DaveDodo007.
"Socialized medicine is just exactly as morally defensible as gassing and cooking Jews" - Seth. Yes, he really did say that..
"Seth you are a boon to this community" - Cunt.
"I am seriously thinking of going on a spree killing" - Svartalf.
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
The movie was better than most SF offerings, they did leave a lot of the humor in -- but the book was better. However, the movie didn't lag as far behind the book as most movies do their books. I saw the movie first (they showed it on the bus trip back home after failing to see the eclipse by ninety fucking seconds), and then the audiobook so I could "read" it at work. I do like Andy Weir's style; I should pick up some of his other work.
"The ships hung in the sky in much the same way that bricks don't." -- Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
I am with you buddy! India really has the potential to be a super-power! I keep gravitating towards the Indians in Zurich, there are so many of them here, all with top education!pErvinalia wrote: ↑Wed Jan 30, 2019 2:28 amI'm obsessed with India at the mo. Just finished Shantaram (a fantastic 900 page book), and now reading A Fine Balance. Started reading The Age of Kali, but it was too depressing.
My husband studied Indian Studies (Linguistics) but focused on the Dravidian minority languages in the South. He went there for months on end to interview nomads about languages that have only 6000 speakers. There is no application for this kind of studies outside universities, and Europe is also not the best place for this either, compared to US, so useless studies overall, but oh, so fascinating!
- JimC
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
I'm re-reading some of the detective novels by Reginald Hill.
Nurse, where the fuck's my cardigan?
And my gin!
And my gin!
- Tero
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
A book on mass extinctions. I will give a class, maybe, in Sep. It will be just two sessions. My talk and slides, second session the movie on dinosaurs and the asteroid. I think it was a US outfit, not BBC. It's in the mail, have not reviewed it for usability.
https://karireport.blogspot.com/
International disaster, gonna be a blaster
Gonna rearrange our lives
International disaster, send for the master
Don't wait to see the white of his eyes
International disaster, international disaster
Price of silver droppin' so do yer Christmas shopping
Before you lose the chance to score (Pembroke)
International disaster, gonna be a blaster
Gonna rearrange our lives
International disaster, send for the master
Don't wait to see the white of his eyes
International disaster, international disaster
Price of silver droppin' so do yer Christmas shopping
Before you lose the chance to score (Pembroke)
Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
Mythology by Scott Lewis
- Sean Hayden
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
I just finished The Turn of the Screw by Henry James for a studies in fiction course I'm taking. Dear god, what is wrong with people! How is this considered necessary reading? My poor mind, my poor, poor mind.
Imagine that. I guess it's only coincidental that you'd already be the perfect citizen in the ideal world you're selling.
- Clinton Huxley
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
I'm on The Three Musketeers, The Moonstone and Patrick O' Brian's The Yellow Admiral.
All novels by dead fellows.
All novels by dead fellows.
"I grow old … I grow old …
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
http://25kv.co.uk/date_counter.php?date ... 20counting!!![/img-sig]
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
http://25kv.co.uk/date_counter.php?date ... 20counting!!![/img-sig]
- Sean Hayden
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
Amazon sent me a free audible credit so I picked up Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Robert Sapolsky.
I don't know if I'll like listening to a book, but it was free so I'm going to find out.
I don't know if I'll like listening to a book, but it was free so I'm going to find out.
Imagine that. I guess it's only coincidental that you'd already be the perfect citizen in the ideal world you're selling.
- Svartalf
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
I recently started Throy, by Jack Vance... wondering if that was not a mistake because I read the first two books of the trilogy so long ago that I don"t really remember what went on before.
Embrace the Darkness, it needs a hug
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PC stands for "Patronizing Cocksucker" Randy Ping
- Sean Hayden
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
--torture, I'd give up my country's most sensitive secrets to make it stop.
Felman, S. (1977). Turning the Screw of Interpretation. Yale French Studies, (55/56), 94.The existence of the story is thus assured only through the constitution of a narrative chain, in which the narrators relay the story from one to the other. The story's origin is therefore not assigned to any one voice which would assume responsibility for the tale, but to the deferred action of a sort of echoing effect, produced--"after the fact"--by voices which themselves re-produce previous voices. It is as though the frame itself could only multiply itself, repeat itself: as though, in its infinite reproduction of the very act of narration, the frame could only be its own self-repetition, its own self-framing.
Imagine that. I guess it's only coincidental that you'd already be the perfect citizen in the ideal world you're selling.
- JimC
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Re: What are you reading now? (Chapter 2)
Sounds very, very post-modern...
Nurse, where the fuck's my cardigan?
And my gin!
And my gin!
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