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Book(s) You are Reading
Vanity Thread
| 1/28/2019
| Me
Posted on 01/28/2019 5:41:19 PM PST by Republic_Venom
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To: AFreeBird
Pike Logan is going after Nazi gold.
I need more Gabriel Allon!!
41
posted on
01/28/2019 6:51:05 PM PST
by
GRRRRR
(Make America Greater Than Ever Before!)
To: Republic_Venom
The complete series by Vince Foster.
The complete series by Brad Thor.
I am currently reading Indian Country.
To: Gil4
I really enjoyed it as well.
43
posted on
01/28/2019 6:54:39 PM PST
by
deadrock
To: Republic_Venom
Mary Chesnut's Civil War,The Children of Pride.Sarah Morgan, The Civil War Diary of a Southern Woman, Brokenburn, The Journal of Kate Stone 1861-1868
44
posted on
01/28/2019 6:55:45 PM PST
by
robowombat
(Orthodox)
To: Republic_Venom
The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher.
Codex Alera, also by Jim Butcher.
45
posted on
01/28/2019 6:57:15 PM PST
by
onona
(It is often wise to allow a person a graceful path.)
To: Lysandru
46
posted on
01/28/2019 6:57:58 PM PST
by
Pelham
(Secure Voter ID. Mexico has it, because unlike us they take voting seriously)
To: Republic_Venom
Most of my reading is the Bible or theological works. My recreational “reading” is almost all audio books. My favorite authors:
Daniel Silva (Gabriel Alon series)
Lee Child (Jack Reacher series)
Clancy / Greaney - Carrying on the Jack Ryan (and Ryan Jr.) series has been divided up among a few authors, but the Mark Greaney ones are the best of them, plus his Grey Man series is very good (except for a bit more bad language than I prefer)
Alex Berenson (John Wells series)
Louise Penney (Armand Gamache series)
Michael Connelly (Mickey Haller and Harry Bosch series)
Older, but still worth listening:
John Le Carre (Mostly the George Smiley series)
47
posted on
01/28/2019 7:00:33 PM PST
by
Gil4
(And the trees are all kept equal by hatchet, ax and saw)
To: Republic_Venom
Wildfire by Kurt Schlichter.
Kurt is learning his craft as a novelist - much improved writing. Constant action.
48
posted on
01/28/2019 7:02:44 PM PST
by
Some Fat Guy in L.A.
(Still bitterly clinging to rational thought despite it's unfashionability)
To: Republic_Venom
My friends have been posting about, The Ballad of the Green Berets on Facebook. I became interested in learning more so I ordered 3 books about SSgt Barry Sadler and The Green Berets. I have learned a lot about both. I really enjoyed Robin Moores book about them. He was allowed to join in the training the Green Berets go through. It takes a very special person to become one.
49
posted on
01/28/2019 7:03:13 PM PST
by
MamaB
(Heb :13:2)
To: Republic_Venom
Some books I have started reading or will be reading shortly:
LA Noir: The Struggle for the Soul of America's Most Seductive City by john Buntin (New York; Harmony, 2009)
A story that juxtaposes the growth of organized crime in Los Angeles during the twentieth century with the career of William H. Parker, a policeman who crusaded against crime and eventually became the city's police chief. I am listening to the audio version. The haunted wood : Soviet Espionage in America - the Stalin Era by Allen Weinstein and Alexander Vasiliev (New York: Random House, 1999)
The story of Soviet espionage in the US that used documents from the KGB archives during the brief period that they were open to Western scholars.
Ten Ways to Destroy the Imagination of Your Child by Anthony Esolen (Newburyport, Mass.: Intercollegiate Studies Institute, 2014)
An argument for traditionalist methods of child rearing and education. This book is hard to find in libraries, but I am about to read an online version at a local academic library.
Trump Aftershock by Stephen Strang (Lake Mary, Fla.: Front Line, 2018)
I just got this book last week.
To: Republic_Venom
Im writing a book of my own for work purposes, and most of my reading is associated with that. But one book I did recently read that some people outside my arcane specialty might like is The Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality from the Stone Age to the Twenty-First Century. The author, a Stanford historian, meticulously documents using both modern economic data and evidence from human fossils going back thousands of years that inequality has always been with us, perhaps because of something basic in human nature once humans are in society. Occasionally major crises, for example epidemics or massive war, lower inequality, but it always goes back up. Very thought provoking (to me) in terms of whether reducing inequality is a good thing, yet full of evidence that as inequality gets out of hand, bad things happen.
To: AFreeBird
Anne might want to add her own name into the title. ROTFL!
To: Pelham
Reading is so... last century. Audible Audiobooks... I agree, but the basic 1 per month plan is all I can afford from Audible. I go through 1-2 per week. My local library has two audiobook services with free checkouts. The selection is good, not great, and you have to wait a while for best-sellers to become available. The selection for classics is very good. (Overdrive and RB Digital)
53
posted on
01/28/2019 7:10:21 PM PST
by
Gil4
(And the trees are all kept equal by hatchet, ax and saw)
To: Republic_Venom
Thanks a Lot, Mr. Kibblewhite - Roger Daltrey
54
posted on
01/28/2019 7:11:36 PM PST
by
dfwgator
(Endut! Hoch Hech!)
To: abishai
I have that book in paperback.
55
posted on
01/28/2019 7:14:57 PM PST
by
rdl6989
To: Republic_Venom
William Tecumseh Sherman, In the Service of My Country.
56
posted on
01/28/2019 7:16:45 PM PST
by
rdl6989
To: Republic_Venom
The Miracle of Mindfulness by Thich Nhat Hanh.
57
posted on
01/28/2019 7:17:56 PM PST
by
bertmerc1
(Conservative Buddhist)
To: Republic_Venom
Re-reading the Horatio Hornblower series by the great C.S. Forester.
58
posted on
01/28/2019 7:18:07 PM PST
by
cld51860
(Volo pro veritas)
To: Republic_Venom
Taleb’s The Black Swan ( and imo any of the other books in his Incerto Series)
In the same vein: Mandelbrot’s Misbehavior of Markets
Kahneman” Thnking fast and slow.
Khannas Connectography
Aiken’s The cyber effect
59
posted on
01/28/2019 7:19:01 PM PST
by
Katya
(lacking in the feelings department)
To: Republic_Venom
Ben-Hur, Lew Wallace
Exodus: God, Slavery and Freedom, Dennis Prager
Interesting reading of those weekly parshas during Shabbos.
60
posted on
01/28/2019 7:21:47 PM PST
by
onedoug
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