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What are you reading? (VANITY)

Posted on 11/08/2004 7:13:24 PM PST by armed_and_ready

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To: armed_and_ready
Right now, I'm reading the Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 Transport and Routing Guide. I have a couple of Ringworld novels to catch up on when I get home.
21 posted on 11/09/2004 9:16:38 AM PST by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: armed_and_ready

"False Memory" by Dean Koontz.


22 posted on 11/09/2004 9:19:00 AM PST by Muzzle_em
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To: armed_and_ready

My ideas of pleasure reading run the gamut from anthropological novels to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, from Economics textbooks to Shakespeare.

I'm not terribly exciting.

I like hearing what others like to read, however.


23 posted on 11/09/2004 9:19:14 AM PST by cleochatra (Forget world peace--visualize using your turn signal)
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To: armed_and_ready
Re-re-re-reading W.E.B. Griffin's Brotherhood of War Series

and

Then re-re-re-reading The Corps Series

And then re-re-re-reading his other series.

He has a new series starting in December

Remarkable books.

24 posted on 11/09/2004 9:26:14 AM PST by N. Theknow (DU, Michael Moore, Hollywood, etc. are all dogcrap on the Shoe Of Life)
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To: armed_and_ready

Alexander Hamilton and the Growth of the New Nation by John C. Miller.

The History of Political Philosophy- Leo Strauss

Just finished The Third Terrorist- Jayna Davis

The Year of the Rat- Timberlake


25 posted on 11/09/2004 9:39:10 AM PST by justshutupandtakeit (Public Enemy #1, the RATmedia.)
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To: armed_and_ready
Wow, a lot of heavy reading in this group.
And quite a few history nuts, I see.

TS

26 posted on 11/09/2004 10:12:49 AM PST by Tanniker Smith (Random Childhood Memory #8: "We can rebuild him. We have the technology.")
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To: armed_and_ready
I recently read Grant and Twain: The Story of a Friendship That Changed America by Mark Perry. It was fun to read and difficult to put down. The subtitle may be a bit extravagant, but the author's point is taken that the friendship of these two giants did change the American literary scene. Grant's influence on Twain was instrumental in Twain finding his way to finish the second part of Huckleberry Finn; Twain's influence on Grant got those memorable memoirs into print at the right price for Grant's survivors, and at the right time. (Grant died a few days after completing them).
27 posted on 11/10/2004 3:49:17 PM PST by GretchenM
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To: armed_and_ready
I agree with the other poster who recommended A Matter of Character by Ronald Kessler. It's very unpretentious and gives the most balanced view of George W. Bush I've read.

Other enjoyable, recent reads:
Bias by Bernie Goldberg (wish he didn't have so much cussin' in it)

When Hell Was in Session by Jeremiah Denton

My Early Life by Winston Churchill

Making Waves by Michael Reagan

Unfit for Command by John O'Neill and Jerome Corsi (still excellent to be read even after Senator Kerry's defeat, as he remains a political force in this country)

I loved this one: Reckless Disregard by Lt. Col. Buzz Peterson

Franklin and Winston by Jon Meacham

Angel in the Whirlwind: The Triumph of the American Revolution by Benson Bobrick

28 posted on 11/10/2004 4:03:47 PM PST by GretchenM
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To: armed_and_ready

"Benjamin Franklin" by biographer Walter Isaacson
A very easy to read narrative of the most interesting of our Founding Fathers...

My next book is:
David McCullogh's "John Adams"

Then I have a Rober E. Lee bio I haven't touched, then Jeff Head's fifth and final Dragon's Fury..

I can also recommend:
Ted Bells' HAWKE and ASSASSIN
Brad Thor's Path of the Assassin and Lions of Lucerne, entertaining stories to fly by...
Ted's "God, Guns and RockNRoll" was also quite enjoyable...

I have way more books to read than time to do it, plus I need new glasses I guess...

G


29 posted on 11/10/2004 4:10:38 PM PST by GRRRRR (I'm not saying anything, just saying, ya know?)
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To: armed_and_ready
I'm finishing some froth: Mountain Magic, a collection of stories by David Drake, Eric Flint, Ryk E. Spoor and Henry Kuttner; I have not yet blown tears away following the defeat of the King. Once I've finished, I am promised to a new (to me) book by Daniel Dennett, Freedom Evolves. Dennett has a very libertarian approach to philosophy and epistemology -- I've been hooked since Darwin's Dangerous Idea and Elbow Room! There's an okay review by Kenan Malik and another at the Houston Chron that originally appeared in the Philadelphia Enquirer. I am gradually setting my notes into a blog at Paper Frigate. Vanity or not, if we don't share where good ideas (or bad ones) come from, we aren't really communicating.
30 posted on 11/19/2004 4:10:31 PM PST by dr_pat
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To: armed_and_ready
The Fabric of the Cosmos, by Brian Greene. Then I have all those gigantic tomes by Neal Stephenson on the stack. I was hooked by The Cryptonomicon. Plus the Da Vinci Code (read Angels and Demons) and:

Fluke : Or, I Know Why the Winged Whale Sings by Christopher Moore;
The Mathematical Universe, by William Dunham;
Euler, the Master of Us All, by William Dunham;
Human Accomplishment, by Charles Murray;
Prime Obsession, by John Derbyshire;
The Nobel Prize, by Burton Feldman;
Remarkable Mathematicians, by Joan James;
Korolev, by James Harford;
e, the Story of a Number, by Eli Maor;
The Discovery of Dynamics, by Julian Barbour (I didn't understand his other book either);
The Golden Ratio, by Mario Livio

...among others.

I generally take a break by reading some Jack Vance or re-reading some of Lord Dunsany [whose prose has never been equalled by anybody.

--Boris

31 posted on 11/22/2004 4:41:14 PM PST by boris (The deadliest weapon of mass destruction in history is a Leftist with a word processor)
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To: boris
Thanks for the referral to e, The Story of a Number, which I had not run into yet. I'll have to dig it up!

I'm assuming that the previous BBB (baffling book of Barbour's) was The End of Time. That is one of those books that gives you the quite spurious feeling that you have understood something really esoteric. Then you try to put it together with concepts for which you DO have a solid grasp, and you realize it was a slipperier concept than you thought.

I blog books, including Fluke and The Crytonomicon.
32 posted on 12/06/2004 6:36:22 PM PST by dr_pat (DON'T ever take it easy - if it comes easy, take it TWICE!)
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To: dr_pat
I read Barbour's book twice--and still did not understand it. I sent him a list of questions, which I wish had been covered by his book. Some which I recall involved music--which is tightly bound to time--and also that the concept of 'time capsules' seems circular in that it seems to require a 'meta time', or instruction pointer, which selects the time capsules in a particular sequence. This "meta time" is therefore (in my mind) precisely what we call time, only once removed.

I asked several more questions.

I got a reply: "The questions you pose are deep. I hope someday soon to have the time to begin to answer them." (pun unintended). I suspect it was from a bot; if I had suggested that time was composed of gouda cheese, I would have gotten "The questions you pose are deep..."

--Boris

33 posted on 12/06/2004 7:57:14 PM PST by boris (The deadliest weapon of mass destruction in history is a Leftist with a word processor)
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To: boris
Ah! Now I see - Barbour's bot is Eliza, who (which?) famously responded to the expanded expletive M-F with "Tell me more about your mother."

If you had asked Barbour about gouda, you would probably have received the same cheesy answer...
34 posted on 12/07/2004 7:55:36 AM PST by dr_pat (Life is sexually transmitted.)
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