We can't do it Shooting star, then we'd have to live without chocolate!
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or move closer to a chocolate grower.....
Has anyone mentioned World War Z by Max Brooks? I couldn't put it down, and I don't normally read horror. It was more than the usual horror story.
Also anything by Nelson DeMille - great smart-aleck characters running around solving crimes, sometimes even saving the world.
Some of Victoria Moran's books - I especialy loved Creating a Charmed Life
Sensible, Spiritual Secrets Every Busy Woman Should Know.
http://www.victoriamoran.com/books.html#book2 Wish I still had it - I loaned it to someone...:(
I've hoarded boxes and boxes of books in my 59.9 years, and a few years ago started parting with them. With the forests coming down so fast to make wood and paper products, resulting in the loss of habitat for wild birds and animals, I decided to get my paper hoards back into circulation. What good will it do me to hang onto them until they fall apart? That description fit nearly every book I had obtained from age 5 through about 25. The glue and bindings had gone bad. They went to Goodwill in the hopes that someone will take them anyway. The newer books, purchased from age 25 + were in better shape and went to the Literacy Council's annual book sale.
I figure by putting them back in circulation I'm reducing the demand for new paper products just a little bit and reduce the impact on the environment of my reading habit.
I hung on to a few favorites, and yup, I keep buying books; but now I pass them on when I've read them a few times. Well, most of them :) And I now buy a lot of books at the used book stores, thrift stores, and garage sales, whereever I can find them. When you pass books on, other books start coming your way too. I hung on to those boxes of books through so may years and moves, and you know what - I find that I didn't need them and don't even miss them.
I've turned over a new leaf!
Anything by Barbara Kingsolver, fiction or non-fiction. Michael Pollan's last two (The Botany of Desire and The Omnivore's Dilemma); I haven't read anything else of his. Water for Elephants, for any fiction reader.
I just finished Kite Runner. I could not put it down, it was that good.
LOVE Barbara Kingsolver's essays. "High Tide In Tucson" is high on my list. I haven't read "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle" yet, but I sure want to!
Right now I'm re-reading "Going Postal" by Terry Pratchett.
Hey, does "Biology for the Radiologic Technologist", "Radiologic Positioning", and "Human Anatomy and Physiology" count? At least for the next week and a half. Then it is "Bicycling" for the next month.
I'm currently re-reading The Ethical $lut. It is the Dec. selection for my bookclub amazingly enough.
eta - had to edit because the board didn't like the S-word
Ha! I just finished Pratchett's latest, "Making Money." I thought it was one of his satirical best, on a par with "The Truth."
"Animal, Vegetable" is really beautiful, and if you ever run across a copy of Kingsolver's book about the women in the copper mine strike, that's worth reading, too.
Yes they absolutely count! :D So, when do you graduate? Congrats on making it into the program. Only the best of the best become xray techs. I could be biased though. :rolleyes: :p
Actually, I am in the Dune series. My partner loves it and has me reading them. I'm at the end of book 2 and am hooked. Very Sci-fi.
I read Dune way back in my early 20's. Loved it then, not sure if I'd like it now or not.
KG, you would still love Dune. We fans periodically reread it.
And I have an extra copy of The Kite Runner. PM me if you want it--I'd be happy to send it, and it is a really wonderful book.
I haven't read any Dune in about 20 years...
I still think about it sometimes. I was very into Dune when I was late teens/early 20's, I wonder if reading it now I'd get something else out of it.
There are several books like that I should got look into again.
Since it's getting cold outside I'm getting into reading mode big time. Just started L'Affaire by Diane Johnson. I'm not sure if I like it yet, I know she has a whole series of similar books out...has anyone else read her work??
I've read all of Diane Johnson's books and enjoyed them. They are the kind of books that are good for a rainy afternoon.
Recently, I read "Septembers in Shiraz" (I think that's the title) by Dena Sofer. It was beautiful. The story, the writing. Just one of those books you don't want to end.
Ann Packer's new book is pretty good. I didn't enjoy it as much as her first one, though (Diving Off CLauson's Pier?--i'm so bad w/titles. LOL).
Xrayted,
May 2009. We start clinicals this summer, but went shadowing this past week. I was excited to see a myelogram.
I forgot to mention what may be the best book ever - Middlesex. Just an amazingly constructed and often funny tale, completely unpredicatbale, and uplifing in an odd way. There are some tough war scenes at the beginnning, and definitelly some violence, but amazing twists and turns. The plot is breathtaking.
Especially if you are in your 40's 50's or 60's and from Detroit, you will really enjoy it, although that is hardly all that it's about. Lots to do with growing up Greek, and gender issues too.
Riveting - good reason it got the Pulitizer.
Holy smokes! I just re-read Middlesex. I LOVED it both times I've read it. I worked for Barnes and Noble for nearly four years (my husband still does), so we have LOTS and LOTS of books in our home. I love Wally Lamb and I read any historical fiction I can get my hands on. I just read this book called The Historian, it was fantastic. (I love vampires too, anything kind of sordid is my guilty pleasure. Just not romance novels. That's going too far.) And Neil Gaiman is a fantastic author. American Gods really changed the way I thought about other religions. Okay, I'm rambling now. I have loved to read since the time I was really young. I'm trying to get on the ball and read things that are more "academic", as I'm hoping to start grad school next fall.
Some passages are reminiscent of Carl Sandberg. Very good read.
The Lost is a non-fiction account of a historian that sets out to find what happened to relatives lost in the Holocaust. It is an intensely personal book, that really grabs you. Sorry I can't give the author's name (Daniel Somebody), as I loaned it to my boss as soon as I finished it. Just read Fannie Flagg's Can't wait to get to Heaven, it was a lot of fun. Hampton Sides' Blood and Thunder is a combination biography of Kit Carson and history of the Southwest, with emphasis on the defeat of the Navajo. That is a chunk of history that was largely skipped in my American History class, that was too busy with the business & politics of the eastern part of the country. Simon Schama's Rough Crossings brought a new view of Revolutionary history. The British promised black Americans freedom for serving in their army. Of course, they didn't get it, and the British reneged on salaries, etc. But that little fact was never mentioned in American history either, nor in 1776, which is also an excellent read. Anything Erik Larson writes is great, he really gives a feel of what everyday life was like in the period he is writing about. I think Isacc's Storm is my favorite. I'm currently reading John Grisham's non-fiction, The Innocent Man . It is pretty good, although very scary and sad. I'm a big fan of Elizabeth George, she is about due for another, and I won't be able to wait for it to come out in paper.
I agree - also about Elizabeth George (those are my dessert books) - I assume you have read PD James mysteries? Henning Mankel (Swedish) is also great.
Blood and Thunder sounds right up my alley, I will put it on my Hanamas list.! I read a lot about the history of NYC, and The Island at the Center of the World, about Dutch NY is my all time favorite. Also Low Life by Luke Sante, is about turn of the century NY, although I wonder a bit about some of his interpretations of events. Did you read In the Heart of the Sea - the true story Moby **** is based on? Very New England.
Quality Fiction wise, The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenager is also great - sad, but very strong writing. A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers is good - it's a biography but it reads like fiction (parts of it may actually be fiction!).
Currently re-reading some classics, which I'm teaching next semester in a class on belief and non-belief in Victorian literature: On the Origin of Species (OK, not strictly *literary* but important to the Victorian world view), Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Hound of the Baskervilles, Peter Pan, The Picture of Dorian Grey, and of course, my favorite Victorian page-turner: Dracula.
And I've been asked to write a review for a local paper on Carl Hiassen's Sick Puppy. Hiassen is an entertaining and inventive Florida writer who comes up with some wonderfully convoluted plots and characters, and who usually throws in an environmental agenda, underlying the twists and turns of action. I find his books great for downloading to the iPod for long road trips.
Absolutely addicted to books! After signing up at paperbackswap.com, I've opened myself up to other genres and I'm amazed at how much I love all types of genres.
Recent faves:
The Historian - Elizabeth Kostova (loved it, couldn't put it down, loved all the travel, history, etc. I even passed on a ride to finish reading)
The Sparrow - Mary Doria Russell (a book I would have never read if I didn't expand my horizons, kept me completely captivated, looking to read the sequel next)
Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon (took me a little while to get into, but then I was hooked, plus it's about a book!)
The Golden Compass - Phillip Pullman (ok, I've already read this a few times, but had to reread before the movie release).
Reading "Communist Manifesto" right now.
It's my goal to read as many of the banned books available on the Free Books app as I can.
Granted the thing was written in the 1800's, but I was floored by the way women are assumed to be mere chattel, possessions to be shared in common among men. Here's this book, going on and on about upper class and lower class, and giving power back to the oppressed lower class... and they didn't even see the same "struggle" as it applied to women at the time. Women weren't citizens, they were means of production to be owned in common... like tractors.
One of Marx's arguments is that this would prevent prostitution. If men could have any women they wanted any time they wanted there would be no need for prostitution.
Ummm... but what if the woman didn't want that? Oh, wait, I forgot that she has all the rights to self-determination of a tractor.
Fascinating stuff.
At the same time I'm also reading the very dark set of short stories by Jack London "When God Laughs." Some of those stories can certainly be read as critiques of bourgeois society a century ago, and it's fun to see if one can apply the Manifesto to stories in Laughs.
I really like the Free Books app: http://appshopper.com/books/free-books The "banned books" category is full of good stuff.
I'm reading the Journals of Lewis and Clark.
Gosh, I really love their descriptions of the places they are going through. Independence MO-that is where they spent their first 4th of July. I think that is pretty cool.
Then all of the snakes, deer, elk and soon to come buffalo. Let alone all of the timber that must have been in the Missouri at the time. I wish I could transport myself back to the 1800's (or 1800-1840ish) to see what this country was like before it bacame an asphalt and concrete jungle. There is not a whole lot out there on the women and how they survived. Perhaps I'm looking in the wrong place.
After I finish this, there is an Indian account that was puiblished for the 100 year anniversary that I want to read. Then perhaps The Oregon Trail, Santa Fe Trail..etc.