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What Are You Reading? - My Quarterly Survey
3/29/11 | MplsSteve

Posted on 03/29/2011 9:52:18 AM PDT by MplsSteve

Hi everyone! It's time again for my "What Are You Reading?" thread.

As you know, I consider Freepers to be among the more well-read of those of us on the Internet. I like to find out what all of you are reading these days.

It can be anything...a technical journal, a NY Times best seller, a classic work of fiction, a trashy pulp novel. In short, it can be anything.

However, please do not defile this thread by posting "I'm reading this thread". it became really unfunny a long time ago.

I'll start. I'm about 15% of the way thru "Henry Clay: The Essential American" by David & Jeanne Heidler. Many books have been written on Henry Clay but this one seems to be the most comprehensive. At times, the authors can be a little long-winded - but all in all, it's a good book about one of the giants of the early 19th Century.

Well, what are YOU reading?


TOPICS: Books/Literature; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: bestsellers; bookclub; bookreview; books; godsgravesglyphs; literature; magazines; pages; readinglist
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To: MplsSteve
"Cochrane" (David Corningly)
"AD 381" (Charles Freeman)
"The End of Faith" (Sam Harris)
"The Essential Lewis and Clarke" (Meriweather Lewis)
and..."Rules for Radicals" (Saul Alinsky)
61 posted on 03/29/2011 10:21:50 AM PDT by Logic n' Reason
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To: MplsSteve

“Deconstructing Obama” by Cashill


62 posted on 03/29/2011 10:22:07 AM PDT by Yaelle
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To: MplsSteve

The Silmarilion - Tolkein

3rd reading. last time read was in 1998. It’s one of those books that produces different thoughts each time you read it. Very Biblical IMO.


63 posted on 03/29/2011 10:22:14 AM PDT by Explodo (Pessimism is simply pattern recognition)
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To: MplsSteve

The Tender Bar by JR Mohringer.


64 posted on 03/29/2011 10:23:02 AM PDT by Hildy
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To: MplsSteve

I just finished “The Inner Circle” by Brad Metzler and an oldie “Hammer of God” by Arthur C. Clarke.

Not sure what I’m going to read next, maybe the thread will give me some good ideas.


65 posted on 03/29/2011 10:23:05 AM PDT by Betis70 (UConn!)
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To: MplsSteve

1.) Goodbye To A River; John Graves, 1960 just finished- twice.

2.) Off the Beaten Trail: William Edward Syers, 1970 just started


66 posted on 03/29/2011 10:24:07 AM PDT by urtax$@work (The only kind of memorial is a Burning memorial !)
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To: MplsSteve

Kartographer’s Preparedness Manual


67 posted on 03/29/2011 10:25:00 AM PDT by Larry - Moe and Curly (Loose lips sink ships.)
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To: MplsSteve

In the middle of “Fires of Heaven” by Robert Jordan (yes, reading Wheel of Time... again)

Reading “Moralia” by Plutarch as my current philosophy book

Just finished an amazing book by Lori Gottlieb called “Marry Him: The Case for Settling for Mr. Good Enough”

My Bible and Devotionals as always

Usually a couple of cheap pulp novels on the side as well


68 posted on 03/29/2011 10:25:02 AM PDT by Anitius Severinus Boethius
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To: MplsSteve

“Chronicles of Narnia” with my 6 year old.


69 posted on 03/29/2011 10:27:19 AM PDT by ZGuy
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To: MplsSteve
Just finished Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption, a wonderful biography of Louie Zamperini - juvenile delinquent, Olympic runner, B-24 bombardier, prisoner in Japanese POW camps for over 2 1/2 years, and convert to Christ who returned to Japan with a message of forgiveness. One of the best "regular Joe" biographies I have ever read.

Just started The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, the story of a black woman who, unbeknownst to her and her family, donated cervical cancer cells to science shortly before her death. From that small sample, scientists around the world cultured so many tissue samples for use in research that if you could pile all of the "HeLa" cells ever grown onto a scale, they’d weigh more than 50 million metric tons — more than 100 Empire State Buildings. Fascinating stuff.

70 posted on 03/29/2011 10:27:52 AM PDT by DryFly
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To: Mich Patriot
I love DeMille. Along with everything else at which he excels (plot, character development, history, description, sense of place), he's really funny.

Lee Childs is somewhat similar, although without so much humour as DeMille. His main character, though, is fascinating.

71 posted on 03/29/2011 10:29:20 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: MplsSteve
A few chapters into Les Misérables. I have a Nook on order and I was looking through some classics to load on it. I was comparing translations and that $#*($#( book dragged me in again.

And as always I have a copy of a full set of Sherlock Holmes stores to read one of the stories if I have nothing else to do.

If you asked tomorrow I would have said "What Would the Founders Say?: A Patriot's Answers to America's Most Pressing Problems" by fellow Freeper LS. Books & Co. is hosting a book signing and I plan on picking up a copy and saying hi to Dr. Schweikart.

72 posted on 03/29/2011 10:29:28 AM PDT by KarlInOhio (Washington is finally rid of the Kennedies. Free at last, thank God almighty we are free at last.)
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To: MplsSteve
“Unknown Soldiers” by Neil Hanson.

Exceptional work.

73 posted on 03/29/2011 10:29:29 AM PDT by starlifter (Pullum sapit)
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To: MplsSteve
Fiction: Louise Perry The Cruelest Month. My 4th in the Chief Inspector Gamache series. Good escapist stuff.
74 posted on 03/29/2011 10:31:23 AM PDT by Wyatt's Torch (I can explain it to you. I can't understand it for you.)
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To: DryFly

My husband just read the Zamperini bio. It’s on his Kindle, though, so I’ll have to get the dead tree version from the library.


75 posted on 03/29/2011 10:31:47 AM PDT by Tax-chick (Nadie me ama como Jesus.)
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To: ScreamingFist

“Most of the posters here are either liars or duller than a rope.

Why would you say that?”

I was wondering the same thing - what would be the point of looking up obscure book titles and authors and posting notes about them on this thread? Honestly.

I have recently discovered Bill Bryson, humorist, and reading a few of his books. African Diary, A Walk In The Woods, and I’m A Stranger Here Myself.

He can be very funny but he does have an ugly edge to him, a la Andy Rooney. One of the many who love the results of a Christian culture but like to insult Christianity from time to time.

He can go for several chapters without doing so, so I read and occasionally laugh out loud, but, his nasty layer does disturb the total enjoyment.

The best one so far has been I’m a Stranger Here Myself, but, he does make ignorant comments about gun control in it.


76 posted on 03/29/2011 10:32:00 AM PDT by Persevero (Homeschooling for Excellence since 1992)
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To: Retired Greyhound

:) And evidently, a “mind like a steel trap”, as one of my English teachers often said.


77 posted on 03/29/2011 10:32:10 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: Tax-chick

Every parent should have to read this book and get control over their child’s worldview. It is vital.

I doubt that England can be saved with the worthless generation that the Englishman has spawned. They allowed their media and schools to destroy the morality of their children and they abdicated parenting thinking it unimportant, when that is the most important for the survival of any culture.

The Marxist/socialists have destroyed the natural family and patriarchy—forced women out of the home so children’s minds and worldview formation was left up to the immoral, marxist state whose aim is to destroy cultures so they can create “a redesigned in the image of man” godless—man is just an animal—state.. so they are masters over idiot slaves.


78 posted on 03/29/2011 10:32:43 AM PDT by savagesusie
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To: ScreamingFist

Re #59:

Fiction far outsells nonfiction. Even if you take into account that FReepers are more political than the your average reader in the U.S. you still have a ratio of nonfiction over fiction on this thread that’s a little hard to swallow.

I’m reminded of the book A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking. It was a best seller yet, according to even the publisher, most people who bought it never read it or only read a small portion before they put it on their bookshelves and went back to their Stephen King or Diana Gabaldon.


79 posted on 03/29/2011 10:34:33 AM PDT by Artemis Webb (What, if not a bagel and coffee, confirms the existence of a just and loving God?)
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To: Carlucci

Going to read it—thanks! Sadly, I have relatives that I need to give it to for Christmas....LOL


80 posted on 03/29/2011 10:36:19 AM PDT by savagesusie
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