What are you reading? II

What are you reading? II

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Gothenburg

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11 Nov 21

I can't find the original thread.

I'm reading Malin Thunberg Schunke: De Rättslösa (translated Those without rights), 2020.
Associate Professor in Criminal Law at the University of Uppsala. She holds an LLD in Criminal Law (Uppsala University) and an LLM in Criminology and Criminal Justice (King`s College, London). Her research interests lie in national and international criminal law particularly EU judicial cooperation in criminal matters and human rights.

Gothenburg

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11 Nov 21

To you who thumbed this down - why don't you come up with something better then?

SRB

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11 Nov 21

@torunn said
To you who thumbed this down - why don't you come up with something better then?
Probably somebody who fell foul of international law and resented her book ever since. What's got you reading the law??

Fighting for men’s

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@torunn said
To you who thumbed this down - why don't you come up with something better then?
I wouldn’t take any notice of thumbing down Torunn

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11 Nov 21

@torunn said
I can't find the original thread.

I'm reading Malin Thunberg Schunke: De Rättslösa (translated Those without rights), 2020.
Associate Professor in Criminal Law at the University of Uppsala. She holds an LLD in Criminal Law (Uppsala University) and an LLM in Criminology and Criminal Justice (King`s College, London). Her research interests lie in national and international criminal law particularly EU judicial cooperation in criminal matters and human rights.
I'm currently reading books by friends/followers on Twitter. A mixed bag. πŸ™‚

Gothenburg

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11 Nov 21
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@relentless-red said
Probably somebody who fell foul of international law and resented her book ever since. What's got you reading the law??
πŸ™‚ It's not the law - it's fiction with the legal situation within EU as background. She focuses on some of the people who don't belong anywhere, many of them paperless and very poor, and the huge gap between those who have and those who have nothing. And what might happen if you don't follow the rules and there is nobody to help you.

Fighting for men’s

right to have babies

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(Among a couple of others)
I’m revisiting ‘The Challenger Sale’
By Matthew Dixon and Brent Adamson

SRB

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11 Nov 21

@torunn said
πŸ™‚ It's not the law - it's fiction with the legal situation within EU as background. She focuses on some of the people who don't belong anywhere, many of them paperless and very poor, and the huge gap between those who have and those who have nothing. And what might happen if you don't follow the rules and there is nobody to help you.
Do you recommend it?

I've got Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy waiting to be read after you recommended it ages ago. I decided to read: Call for the Dead; A Murder of Quality; The Spy Who Came in from the Cold and The Looking Glass War first which I know you suggested skipping, but they were okay and nice to see how his books developed. Not quite in the same league as The Night Manager and The Tailor of Panama though, which I read years ago and couldn't put down.

Gothenburg

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@relentless-red said
Do you recommend it?

I've got Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy waiting to be read after you recommended it ages ago. I decided to read: Call for the Dead; A Murder of Quality; The Spy Who Came in from the Cold and The Looking Glass War first which I know you suggested skipping, but they were okay and nice to see how his books developed. Not quite in the same league as The Night Manager and The Tailor of Panama though, which I read years ago and couldn't put down.
I don't think it has been translated to English, but I wouldn't recommend it anyway. Her strength is her focus, experience, knowledge of the world where the story takes place but I wouldn't say she is a very good writer.

John Le Carré on the other hand... πŸ™‚

chemist

Linkenheim

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11 Nov 21

@torunn said
I can't find the original thread.

I'm reading Malin Thunberg Schunke: De Rättslösa (translated Those without rights), 2020.
Associate Professor in Criminal Law at the University of Uppsala. She holds an LLD in Criminal Law (Uppsala University) and an LLM in Criminology and Criminal Justice (King`s College, London). Her research interests lie in national and international criminal law particularly EU judicial cooperation in criminal matters and human rights.
Thread 165183

Gothenburg

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@ponderable said
Thread 165183
Thank you, Ponderable, great to have! πŸ™‚

chemist

Linkenheim

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@torunn said
Thank you, Ponderable, great to have! πŸ™‚
Now we can refer to it πŸ˜‰ and the new thread may thrive...

I am reading:

Hartmut Radebold / Werner Bohleber / Jürgen Zinnecker (Eds.)
Transgenerationale Weitergabe kriegsbelasteter Kindheiten

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@torunn said
Thank you, Ponderable, great to have! πŸ™‚
He has detailed files 😊

Gothenburg

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@divegeester said
He has detailed files 😊
Ponderable always has the answers. πŸ™‚

Fighting for men’s

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@torunn said
Ponderable always has the answers. πŸ™‚
His files are detailed.