What are you reading? II

What are you reading? II

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Treat Everyone Equal

Halifax, Nova Scotia

Joined
04 Oct 06
Moves
600572
05 Oct 22
2 edits

The post that was quoted here has been removed
Kevin,

Please try and stick to the Thread Topic? There are enough people that get away from the Topic being discussed, yes I myself have been guilty in the past. This also has nothing to do with the Thread Topic. Please listen, you are not in good standing right now!

-VR

Joined
06 May 15
Moves
27444
06 Oct 22
2 edits

chemist

Linkenheim

Joined
22 Apr 05
Moves
656760
09 Oct 22

Margaret Atwood: Blind Assassin

Gothenburg

Joined
11 Mar 16
Moves
27061
10 Oct 22

Deon Meyer: The Woman in the Blue Cloak (2019)

Gothenburg

Joined
11 Mar 16
Moves
27061
17 Oct 22

Lucinda Riley: The Murders at Fleat House (2022)

chemist

Linkenheim

Joined
22 Apr 05
Moves
656760
17 Nov 22

I have finished "Achtsam morden" by Karsten Dusse, a funny book

Gothenburg

Joined
11 Mar 16
Moves
27061
17 Nov 22

Antony Beevor: Berlin - The Downfall 1945

Gothenburg

Joined
11 Mar 16
Moves
27061
05 Jan 23
1 edit

Denis Mukwege: The Power of Women: a doctor's journey of hope and healing (2021). Nobel Peace Prize winner 2018.

Jack Torrance

Overlook Hotel

Joined
04 Feb 11
Moves
46944
05 Jan 23

Herman Melville: Moby Dick

chemist

Linkenheim

Joined
22 Apr 05
Moves
656760
08 Jan 23

I have read

Matt Ruff: 88 Names

A really interesting book novel set in the online gaming world.

Treat Everyone Equal

Halifax, Nova Scotia

Joined
04 Oct 06
Moves
600572
08 Jan 23

I mainly look at the pictures. 🙂

-VR

Joined
06 May 15
Moves
27444
09 Jan 23
1 edit

I wish I could say. Despite having two or three thousand books in my house, I'm actually not much of a reader, and in recent years all my reading has been on the internet -- not books or even magazines (I miss big magazine racks).

Recently I did go to a local library branch and checked out some slim books and a collection of short pieces, hoping to retrain the skill of reading from paper:

Two books by Thich Nhat Hanh (The Energy of Prayer and Enjoying the Ultimate)
Two translations by Stephen Mitchell (Tao Te Ching and Bhagavad Gita)
A collection by Vladimir Nabokov (Think, Write, Speak)

So those are some things I would read if I could (or at least I thought so a few days ago when I was at the library). I'd also like to catch up on some pulp-era and New-Wave-era science fiction, as well as some books on qigong and Taoism.

Too many interests and too scattered, though.

Gothenburg

Joined
11 Mar 16
Moves
27061
09 Jan 23

@kevin-eleven said
I wish I could say. Despite having two or three thousand books in my house, I'm actually not much of a reader, and in recent years all my reading has been on the internet -- not books or even magazines (I miss big magazine racks).

Recently I did go to a local library branch and checked out some slim books and a collection of short pieces, hoping to retrain the skill o ...[text shortened]... iction, as well as some books on qigong and Taoism.

Too many interests and too scattered, though.
Enjoy one at a time, you may not like all of them.

chemist

Linkenheim

Joined
22 Apr 05
Moves
656760
16 Jan 23

I have just finished

Ernst Peter Fischer: Vom Staunen in der Welt: Was Wissenschaft möglich macht und was nicht

being amazed in the world, what is enabled by science and what not (my translation of the title)

A really nice observation on how science is conceived and some good suggestions for change (which will be ignored).

Gothenburg

Joined
11 Mar 16
Moves
27061
06 Feb 23

Arnaldur Indriðason: The Quiet Mother (2019)