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Posted: Tue Oct 10, 2006 7:48 pm
by Waddley
Alynna Lis Eachann wrote:I love that book.
Yup, me too

Don't care if accountings of his life are 100% accurate, I take things with a bucket of salt anyway. But his horse training methods are proven and that's what's amazing.
I'm back to trying to get through the Bothers Karamazov. It's good, I know its good, I even like it a lot, but it's just so hard to read. I don't even know why. We'll see if I can make it more than 70 pages this time. (Think I got to 67 last time)
Posted: Tue Oct 10, 2006 8:44 pm
by sgt.null
I loved the Brothers Karamazov. I read it one summer under a tree near my apartment. very enjoyable.
Posted: Tue Oct 10, 2006 9:01 pm
by Waddley
I don't know why it's being so difficult for me... or maybe I'm being for it. Either way, I'm going to finish it this time. Really. Promise

Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 6:18 am
by Wyldewode
I am reading the following:
Actively reading daily:
The Illearth War
In the process of reading:
Linguistics (teach yourself)--Jean Aitchison
When Am I Going to Be Happy? (How to Break the Emotional Bad Habits That Make You Miserable)--Penelope Russianoff, Ph.D
The Dim Sum of All Things--Kim Wong Keltner
Lewis Agonistes--Louis Markos
I have a huge stack waiting to be read when I finish these.
~Lyr
Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 1:10 pm
by A Gunslinger
I am about midway throgh GAP 1: Gap into conflict. Agnus is a sick MF.
Posted: Fri Oct 13, 2006 3:32 pm
by I'm Murrin
To fill some time today, I picked up a copy of Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce at the SU market for £2. Read a little bit of it while we waited for the pressure to drop in the chamber.
Posted: Sun Oct 15, 2006 6:32 am
by sgt.null
i am re-reading the skeleton of my novel. it rests in a large tupperware type container. i really need to give it form.
Posted: Sun Oct 15, 2006 6:02 pm
by Trapper
The Secret Hunters by Sir Ranulph Fiennes.
Fiennes claims it's not really a novel, that it's 95% memoirs he found decomposing in a hut on the Antarctic peninsular in 1995, left there by a Canadian hunter of Nazi war-criminals who had stayed there the previous year.
The
real author is presumed to be dead.
The personal accounts of the Holocaust and the Rwandan genocide are horrific.
Posted: Mon Oct 16, 2006 9:32 pm
by danlo
That looks fascinating. I just finished an incredibly uplifting book that talks of a way I plan to attempt following called The Four Agreements: A Toltec Book of Wisdom by don Miguel Ruiz. The Toltecs never disappeared, we simply can't see them.
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 5:54 pm
by duke
I'm ploughing through David Mitchell's new novel "Black Swan Green". It has been dubbed "the British Catcher in the Rye", and so far it is living up to that call. Mitchell rocks!

Posted: Sun Oct 22, 2006 3:23 am
by Damelon
I picked up on ebay a couple of weeks ago the biography of Francis I, First Gentleman of France, written by Francis Hackett in 1935. Francis was the first "renaissance" King of France, who ruled at the time of King Henry VIII. It was he who had the Mona Lisa brought to France, along with Leonardo da Vinci, himself. Leonardo was said to have died in the arms of Francis, though that story's probably a stretch.
Posted: Fri Nov 10, 2006 12:14 am
by Damelon
I finished reading yesterday Augustus by Anthony Everitt, a biography of Rome's first emperor. Augustus comes across as very determined. If you crossed him, even if you were family, you were in big trouble. Yet he devised a political solution to the constant civil wars of the years before Julius Caesar's death that survived for centuries.
I read the prologue for Persian Fire during my lunch hour today. Persian Fire a book on the Greek-Persian wars, was written by Tom Holland, who also wrote the excellent book Rubicon on the Roman Civil Wars. It looks like that will be my next purchase.
Posted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:11 pm
by Loredoctor
The Oxford History of the British Empire: The Nineteenth Century as well as The Demon Haunted World.
Posted: Thu Dec 21, 2006 3:34 pm
by Dragonlily
THE ROAD TO A HANGING, a cowboy western in which a former slave survives all kinds of vicissitudes. It's billed as YA, but there is too much cheating, lying and backstabbing for it to be wholesome children's fare.
Posted: Tue Jan 02, 2007 10:55 pm
by Loredoctor
Das Boot. Great book.
Posted: Wed Jan 03, 2007 12:15 am
by A Gunslinger
I am reading Barack Obama's "Audacity of Hope" Good stuff so far...look for a critique in the tank SOON.
Posted: Wed Jan 03, 2007 4:19 am
by Lord Mhoram
The Venture of Islam, Vol. 1, Marshall G.S. Hodgson
Posted: Wed Jan 03, 2007 5:46 am
by Ramen
For the moment I´m rereading the Aubrey/Maturin-series (20 books) from Patrick O´Brian. Even if I´m no sailor, I love the books for the art with which they are written.
"The best historical novels ever written."—Richard Snow, The New York Times
Posted: Fri Jan 05, 2007 12:12 pm
by Damelon
I've been reading The Sea Runners, by Ivan Doig. It's a novel, set in the early 1850's and based on a true story. It's about four men, indentured workers in today's Sitka, then part of Russian Alaska. Tired of their lot, they escape by canoe, with the aim of paddling to Oregon.
Posted: Sat Jan 06, 2007 6:03 am
by Wyldewode
Poemcrazy--Susan Goldsmith Woolridge
Poetry Handbook--Mary Oliver
And my friend from work is making me read Sam's Letters to Jennifer by James Patterson. I take it to read in waiting rooms when I am with my clients.
STILL in the process of reading:
Linguistics (teach yourself)--Jean Aitchison
When Am I Going to Be Happy? (How to Break the Emotional Bad Habits That Make You Miserable)--Penelope Russianoff, Ph.D
The Dim Sum of All Things--Kim Wong Keltner
Lewis Agonistes--Louis Markos