Well, as I started reading it, I noticed that I'm not big on the man's writing style. It seems to me as though he's trying to force a popular science tone but doesn't really know how to do it properly. For another, I looked at the table of contents, where each number is listed, and they're mostly not numbers. They're letters, and not all those letters have an actual definable number value. And numbers don't stick well in my head anyway. Reading a page or two on would mean having to refresh my memory. So I've switched to The Pluto Files, which has numbers, but I don't have to remember them.
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Gillian
"Now everyone was giving her that kind of look UFOlogists get when they suddenly say, 'Hey, if you shade your eyes you can see it is just a flock of geese after all.'"
"You can't erase icing."
"I can't believe it doesn't work! I found it on the internet, man!"
The Trial of Joan of Arc by Don Nardo.
Don't let your reality checks bounce. ~MeI'll tell you in the next life, when we are both cats.
The Trumpet of the Swan, by E B White!
Couldn't resist. Before passing it over to my baby.
E B White and James Thurber...oh, such graceful writers. I love them.
Grekiska by Eva-Carin Gerö (it's a book about Greek language and culture)
Just received (but hadn't yet started) "Bringing Down the House" (nonfiction), after a recommendation from a coworker. It's about a group of MIT students who took Las Vegas for a ride with card counting, disguising themselves to get back in after being thrown out for card counting, going to the wrong casino and getting beat up and their money "stolen back" for card counting, etc.
I'm always reading more than one book at a time. It's fun, but it makes for slow-going. Anyways...
Current: Nicholas and Alexandra, by Robert Massie.
World War II: Bombers over Japan (Time-Life Books).
Immediate Future:
Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said, by Phillip K. Dick.
The Reformation, by Patrick Collinson.
Re-reading Marusek's Counting Heads, so I can start on his recently-released sequel.
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"Dumb all over, a little ugly on the side." -- Frank Zappa
"Your right to hold an opinion is not being contested. Your expectation that it be taken seriously is." -- Jason Thompson
"This is really very simple, but unfortunately it's very complicated." -- publius
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Don't let your reality checks bounce. ~MeI'll tell you in the next life, when we are both cats.
I often have three or four books open. I get disinterested easily and am not willing to admit it. Maybe half the time, I'll pick up a half-read book and continue.
Reading has become difficult for me in the last few years. I can't seem to read more than twenty or so pages at a sitting. It doesn't help that my eyes are failing.
Actually, I'm less likely to read more than one book at a time than I used to be, though technically, I suppose I still do it--I'm reading The Pluto Files for myself. I'm reading Blood Rites, by Jim Butcher, aloud to Graham. And he listens to audio books when we aren't watching something--at the times when, left to myself, I'd listen to music.
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Gillian
"Now everyone was giving her that kind of look UFOlogists get when they suddenly say, 'Hey, if you shade your eyes you can see it is just a flock of geese after all.'"
"You can't erase icing."
"I can't believe it doesn't work! I found it on the internet, man!"
If you liked Castles, you'll probably want to read Dreadnought, although I found the latter to be a little tiresome at points. Still, I'm glad I read it. Dreadnought deals with the events and personalities leading up to the first world war. You'll learn plenty about Bismark, for instance, and the relationship between Queen Victoria and her grandson, Kaiser William II. That was all fascinating to me as I was fairly ignorant of that time period prior to reading the book. The tiresome part is that you will be told much more than perhaps you wanted to know about every player on the scene: all the British prime ministers and German chancellors and all the supporting cast.
Castles of Steel is also about personalities of course, particularly the British admirals, but because it also gets into the war strategy, it was more interesting to me.
Currently re-reading Good Omens by Pratchett & Gaiman; I'd forgotten how much I enjoyed it...
Finished The Hundred Days and now moving on (although backwards in time) to The Commodore. Both by Patrick O'Brian.
Waiting in the wings is David McCullough's 1776, the Illustrated edition. Lots of maps, period artwork, pull outs, copies of letters from Abagail to John, George to Martha, etc. Making history come alive...sort of...
I'm reading Bio of a Space Tyrant vol 3: Politician by Piers Anthony. Found it in a used book store. I had read the previous volumes years ago. Never did get to this one though.
Just started reading Little Pancho: The life of tennis legend Pancho Segura. Everybody speaks of Pancho Gonzales, but Pancho Segura was a great player too. Gonzales' first name was actually Riccardo and Segura's was Francisco. But both were called Pancho, the name white Americans in the 50's gave to anyone South of the border. Segura didn't mind. Gonzales did. Segura integrated better, Gonzales remained a rebel deeply resentful of the class snub. Segura was short and bow-legged, Gonzales was tall and athletic. Great book for tennis nuts like me...![]()
I was reading a book I found on clearance for a dollar at the Half Price Bookstore, the First Book of Swords, by Fred Saberhagen, and didn't realize that it was part of a series until I got to the "end" and nothing was resolved. Now I'll have to look for the Second Book of Swords, etc.
Nick
The Rise of True Crime: 20th-Century Murder and American Popular Culture, by Jean Murley.
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Gillian
"Now everyone was giving her that kind of look UFOlogists get when they suddenly say, 'Hey, if you shade your eyes you can see it is just a flock of geese after all.'"
"You can't erase icing."
"I can't believe it doesn't work! I found it on the internet, man!"
RE Geonuc:
Thanks for the capsule review.That's about what I figured; though I find Bismarck and Wilhelm II fascinating historical characters, I think I prefer my straight-up military campaigns.
I really enjoyed that series! I read those a good 20 yrs. ago.
Finished all the 'Hutch' novels by Jack McDevitt, now reading "Dies the Fire" by S.M. Stirling. It's the first in a series about the goings on in the Willamette Valley and a part of Idaho (it's following two separate groups of people) after a strange phenomenon causes a worldwide electrical blackout (think world-wide permanent EMP). Gunpowder burns too slow to push a bullet, so guns don't work anymore either. Pretty entertaining so far, though it does require a suspension of reality with the whole 'no electricity AND no guns' thing--though that's the case for a lot of sci-fi...
Also reading school texts about software documentation and document design.