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Thread: What are You Reading?
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01-31-2014, 11:02 PM #241
Reave the Just and Other Tales by Stephan R. Donaldson
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01-31-2014, 11:33 PM #242
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01-31-2014, 11:35 PM #243
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01-31-2014, 11:45 PM #244
Just finished re-reading "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil" which, having recently visited Savannah, seemed like the appropriate thing to do.
Next up: the new Ian Rankin, "Saints of the Shadow Bible"
It was in original condition, faded red, well-worn, but nice.
This was and still is my favorite combination; beautiful, original, and worn.
-Neil Young
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01-31-2014, 11:49 PM #245
- Join Date
- Jan 2011
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- Roseville,Kali
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Thanked: 2027The monument men,a great read.
CAUTION
Dangerous within 1 Mile
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01-31-2014, 11:53 PM #246
Still reading Ulysses.
Just out of curiousity, anyone here belong to Goodreads.com? It's a pretty good site. You select books you've read and rate them and after 20 ratings it starts
suggesting books they think you might be interested in, based on your ratings. You can also select books you'd like to read which also contributes to their
suggestions for you. I've read some books based on their suggestions that I probably would've never thought of.
John
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The Following User Says Thank You to kerryman71 For This Useful Post:
MickR (02-01-2014)
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02-01-2014, 05:23 AM #247
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- Jun 2010
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- Brisbane/Redcliffe, Australia
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Thanked: 983'The English Gypsies and Their Language' by Charles Godfrey Leland. I got this one from the Gutenburg Project as a free ebook. Plenty of stuff there to keep me reading for the rest of my days I think, but I might have to change the pace a bit and go on to a bit of fiction for my next read. Maybe something a little more modern as well. I've been reading books written a century or more in the past of late.
I'm also going to have to check out Goodreads.com now that John has mentioned it...
Mick
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02-01-2014, 04:40 PM #248
Mick,
I read mostly older books myself. I go to another site, abebooks.com to buy them. I try to get the book as close to its original publication date as possible,
within reason. Some of the books sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars. I try to keep it under $20. I have several that are 100 years old or older.
I tell people that the books I like to read are the ones kids cringed about when they told us we had to read them in school!
John
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The Following User Says Thank You to kerryman71 For This Useful Post:
MickR (02-03-2014)
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02-01-2014, 06:05 PM #249
I love my Nook, but only because I'm a pilot and it can be difficult to carry around two or three books at a time on the road without them getting destroyed. I decided well over a year ago that I'm going to start reading through the Bible and have tried to do at least one chapter a day since. I started with the New Testament and finished that and moved to the Old Testament. I just finished Acts yesterday and started Romans. I also just finished cool blue tomb by Paul kemprecos. He helps write some of Clive Cussler's books. It was a good beach style read. I'm about to read Kill Devil Hill by Harry Combs with Martin Caidin. It's about the early history of the Wright Brothers.
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02-01-2014, 07:45 PM #250
When you're finished that, you can move on to one of my favorite reads, "Commentaries", by Julius Caesar, make sure you get his commentaries regarding the conquest of Gaul (modern day France and more), and then of course the Roman Civil War, his fight against the famous Roman General Pompey...interesting to read about a couple of characters who had a part in the war, as allies and enemies, some Egyptian dame named Cleopatra and a Roman dude named Marc Anthony....