What are you reading in general?
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- Dragonlily
- Lord
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Remnant sale at Powell Books this week. I stopped in after the dentist & got 4 books. The irresistible one was THE RAG & BONE SHOP, about Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, and a girl. So now I have 2 paper books and an ebook (sci fi romance) going at once. 

"The universe is made of stories, not atoms." -- Roger Penrose
Just finished Cloud Atlas by Mitchell. I can't praise this book highly enough. Mitchell aims for the stars (or clouds?!) with this novel, and in almost every way he has succeeded. Like most brilliant novels, its daunting at first. There are 6 different stories interlocking, each set in a different time with an appropriate prose style. Challenging reading.
This book will be a classic. Run out and grab a copy, and start reading now!
Phew. Ok, now I'm reading Zodiac by Stephenson.
This book will be a classic. Run out and grab a copy, and start reading now!

Phew. Ok, now I'm reading Zodiac by Stephenson.
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- Immanentizing The Eschaton
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Reading Robert Ardrey's The Hunting Hypothesis. Truly excellent, an anthropological treatise on the role of hunting in the evolution of man.
I forgot the book at home today, otherwise there would be quotes sprinkled across the Watch.
Kins, don't know if you've read this, (or if you visist the Library, but it's very good, if a touch dated. Would love to see an updated edition...fascinating nonetheless.
--A
I forgot the book at home today, otherwise there would be quotes sprinkled across the Watch.

Kins, don't know if you've read this, (or if you visist the Library, but it's very good, if a touch dated. Would love to see an updated edition...fascinating nonetheless.
--A
- Dragonlily
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Icebound by Dean Koontz
(Started Monday and now at the halfway mark - p. 212)
Kind of a different style for Koontz; no horror, no monsters or supernatural stuff.
Just suspenseful.
More of a Tom Clancy story to me.
(Started Monday and now at the halfway mark - p. 212)
Kind of a different style for Koontz; no horror, no monsters or supernatural stuff.

Just suspenseful.
More of a Tom Clancy story to me.

Have you hugged your arghule today?
________________________________________
"For millions of years
mankind lived just like the animals.
Then something happened
that unleashed the power of our imagination -
we learned to talk."
________________________________________
If PRO and CON are opposites,
then the opposite of PROgress must be...
_______________________________________
It's 4:19...
gotta minute?
________________________________________
"For millions of years
mankind lived just like the animals.
Then something happened
that unleashed the power of our imagination -
we learned to talk."
________________________________________
If PRO and CON are opposites,
then the opposite of PROgress must be...
_______________________________________
It's 4:19...
gotta minute?
Just finished reading
"The Art of mending" by Margaret Berg
for our library book club this month.
Ugh...
I do not recommend this book at all...
Usually when I read a book, I hate for it to end. I become so attached that it is like losing a dear friend when I come to the last page.
This book was so terrible that I read it all in one day, and could not wait until it was over.
Now I am reading "1776" by David McCullough.
He is a one of my favorite authors, ever.
I loved his biography of John Adams and can not praise it enough.
Julie
"The Art of mending" by Margaret Berg
for our library book club this month.
Ugh...
I do not recommend this book at all...
Usually when I read a book, I hate for it to end. I become so attached that it is like losing a dear friend when I come to the last page.
This book was so terrible that I read it all in one day, and could not wait until it was over.
Now I am reading "1776" by David McCullough.
He is a one of my favorite authors, ever.
I loved his biography of John Adams and can not praise it enough.
Julie
“This is Our Bleeping City” - David Ortiz
- Dragonlily
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just finished Midnight Tides. needs Bonehunters. 

you're more advanced than a cockroach,
have you ever tried explaining yourself
to one of them?
~ alan bates, the mothman prophecies
i've had this with actors before, on the set,
where they get upset about the [size of my]
trailer, and i'm always like...take my trailer,
cause... i'm from Kentucky
and that's not what we brag about.
~ george clooney, inside the actor's studio
a straight edge for legends at
the fold - searching for our
lost cities of gold. burnt tar,
gravel pits. sixteen gears switch.
Haphazard Lucy strolls by.
~ dennis r wood ~
have you ever tried explaining yourself
to one of them?
~ alan bates, the mothman prophecies
i've had this with actors before, on the set,
where they get upset about the [size of my]
trailer, and i'm always like...take my trailer,
cause... i'm from Kentucky
and that's not what we brag about.
~ george clooney, inside the actor's studio
a straight edge for legends at
the fold - searching for our
lost cities of gold. burnt tar,
gravel pits. sixteen gears switch.
Haphazard Lucy strolls by.
~ dennis r wood ~
- duchess of malfi
- The Gap Into Spam
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Finished up the short story anthology I've been slowly reading, finished up Gabaldan's Outlander.
I am now trying to make up my mind which of two books that a friend passed on to me I should read first. One is a mystery book set in ancient Rome, and the other is a mystery book set in Japan under the Shoguns. Both look pretty interesting.
I am now trying to make up my mind which of two books that a friend passed on to me I should read first. One is a mystery book set in ancient Rome, and the other is a mystery book set in Japan under the Shoguns. Both look pretty interesting.

- Dragonlily
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- variol son
- The Gap Into Spam
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Deadhouse Gates by Stephen Erikson. I am three qarters of the way through and then I have Going Postal by Terry Pratchet, and The Man who Risked his Partner and The Man who Tried to Get Away waiting on my dresser. Yay me. 

You do not hear, and so you cannot be redeemed.
In the name of their ancient pride and humiliation, they had made commitments with no possible outcome except bereavement.
He knew only that they had never striven to reject the boundaries of themselves.
In the name of their ancient pride and humiliation, they had made commitments with no possible outcome except bereavement.
He knew only that they had never striven to reject the boundaries of themselves.
- duchess of malfi
- The Gap Into Spam
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- Location: Michigan, USA
The book set in ancient Rome is called A Murder on the Appian Way and is written by Steven Saylor. The two books set in Shogunate Japan anre called The Pillow Book of Lady Wisteria and Black Lotus and are written by Laura Joh Rowland.Dragonlily wrote:Authors, Duchess? I know several of the Roman mystery series. And if the Japanese one is by I.J. Parker, I recommend it sight unseen.