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Book Worms Club: Not tech.

waht ya read in the month or so.

         

caine

12:30 am on Sep 29, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



For me its three books.

1. Universe in a Nutshell - Steven Hawkings -> excellant read - M-theory (the theory of everything) Rocks what ever the heck it is, but the scope if you can dig spatial non primia fascia stuff is overwhemly intellectual. Recommended Strongly

2. 11th Commandment - Jeffrey Archer -> run of the mill spy thriller - not bad - read every Fredrick Forsythe book published at the time by 15 - there's better.

3. The Making of a Philsopher - Martin McGinn -> I studied philosophy at uni - i wish i had this book while writing some of my papers, would have made my life alot easier. Recommend it, good introduction to thinking about thinking, reasoning and language - have to presume it would be heavy in area's for people not used to reading philosophy (had to re-read a couple of paragraphs) but worth it.

Next on the Agenda - Ulyssee's - James Joyce -> i think it was a directory about a sentence that is 69 pages long that made me buy it, it certainly looks like a journey.

What about yourself? Any recommedations or crticisms!

Fiver

4:41 pm on Oct 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Just started Ulysee's < slow with a capital oooohhhhhhhww

heh, you should pick up a copy of Finnegans wake. A prof at my uni was doing a project of transferring Joyce's works to the net, so we got a little lecture on it once. Apparently about 40% of the words are completely made up.

open it up to a random page and just try to read. Give it a page, and you'll have to decide what the rest of us have "is it the best book ever written, or is it a complete joke?"

truly hard to tell.

Ally_Cat

5:26 pm on Oct 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I'm reading through "Four Past Midnight" for the third time. Pulp reading really, but it helps me fall asleep at night! ;)

claus

5:41 pm on Oct 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>> about 40% of the words are completely made up

*lol* that would be a perfect read for me then :):)

juniperwasting

6:14 pm on Oct 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Nick, thanks for the tip on Pattern Recognition, new Gibson is cause for celebration!

Currently I am reading:
"Everything you know is wrong" a guide to dis-information.
"Jailbird" ~ Vonnegut
"The Cluetrain Manifesto" (again)

Rockintom

6:52 pm on Oct 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I'm making my way through book nine of the Robert Jordan "Wheel of Time" saga with number ten waiting on the shelf.

bcolflesh

7:07 pm on Oct 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



"Everything you know is wrong" a guide to dis-information.

I got this for $1 out of a box in an antique store last year - it's great.

bunltd

10:19 pm on Oct 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Lately I've read:

by Bujold - Miles Errant (three previous books combined in chronological order - fun read) Waiting for more Vorkosigan stories. Also waiting for more of David Weber's Honor Harrington. Read the latest in the series a bit ago - and was left hanging.

Life Matters & First Things First both by Merrill - serious but practical look at balancing your life.

Stacks of books about homeschooling: theory, advice, curriculum - you name it.

Aside to you Potter fans: We've read all the Harry Potter books too - :)

LisaB

TheDoctor

11:00 pm on Oct 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



heh, you should pick up a copy of Finnegans wake...

open it up to a random page and just try to read.

That's they way I read it. I think it's beautiful like that. The composer John Cage read it like that as well - I heard a him say that in a radio interview - so that makes three of us.

A friend, who has read it all the way through, says that the way to do it is to read it out loud. He claims it makes sense that way.

AAnnAArchy

1:08 am on Oct 4, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Right now I'm reading Angels & Demons. After that, when they get here, I'll be reading Wordplay and Inversions. I'm determined to figure out how to make ambigrams.

Next, waiting on the shelves - the rest of Dan Brown's books, Augusten Burrough's two and Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris.

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