Sheesh, Uly. We've all known name-droppers. You're the first photo-dropper I've ever encountered.ulysses5019 wrote:My avatar buddy recommended his book, "Things I Overheard While Talking to Myself".
What are you reading?
- silvercamaro
- Dog's Best Friend
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- mrkelley23
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Actually, I still use some of those videos in class.ulysses5019 wrote:Did you ever watch Scientific American Frontiers with Alan Alda?I'm just reading textbooks and incredibly underinformed lab reports.
Tomorrow starts my night class at Alcoa. That will be more bearable.
They were among the best digests -- Nova is almost always a single topic, but SAF tackled 4 or 5 topics per episode.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman
- Catfish
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My brother was on one of these shows (unless Alda narrated another science series). It was about reconciliation behavior among monkeys.mrkelley23 wrote:Actually, I still use some of those videos in class.ulysses5019 wrote:Did you ever watch Scientific American Frontiers with Alan Alda?I'm just reading textbooks and incredibly underinformed lab reports.
Tomorrow starts my night class at Alcoa. That will be more bearable.
They were among the best digests -- Nova is almost always a single topic, but SAF tackled 4 or 5 topics per episode.
Catfish
- Vandal
- Director of Promos
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Finished:
Lottery by Patricia Wood (outstanding)
Saving Faith by David Baldacci
The Pacific Between by Raymond Wong
4th of July by James Patterson
Now up:
The Choice by Nicholas Sparks - not really my genre but I'm trying to expand
After that:
A Stuart Woods novel, not sure which one
You can't write if you don't read...
Lottery by Patricia Wood (outstanding)
Saving Faith by David Baldacci
The Pacific Between by Raymond Wong
4th of July by James Patterson
Now up:
The Choice by Nicholas Sparks - not really my genre but I'm trying to expand
After that:
A Stuart Woods novel, not sure which one
You can't write if you don't read...
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- Beebs52
- Queen of Wack
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- gotribego26
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- gotribego26
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I'm trudging through "The Black Swan" - a follow up to "Fooled by Randomness" by Nassim Nicholas Taleb. Great books - about our lack of understanding of random events - "Balck Swans" are huge random events (ala 9/11, 1987 stock market crash).
The title comes fromt he fact that until they starting sending convicts to Australia, Englishmen thoguht all swans were white. They were surprised by Black Swans in Australia.
It all ties into the Bertrand Russel quote below - we are not good at anticipating or accepting random events.
Journalists are really bad at this - they have an almost pathological need to explain (and place blame for) the inexplicable.
The title comes fromt he fact that until they starting sending convicts to Australia, Englishmen thoguht all swans were white. They were surprised by Black Swans in Australia.
It all ties into the Bertrand Russel quote below - we are not good at anticipating or accepting random events.
Journalists are really bad at this - they have an almost pathological need to explain (and place blame for) the inexplicable.
- dodgersteve182
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- MarleysGh0st
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I'm reading Tomorrow the World: In which Cadet Otto Prohaska Carries the Habsburg Empire's Civilizing Mission to the Entirely Unreceptive Peoples of Africa and Oceania, by John Biggins. Don't you just love the subtitle?
This is a prequel to the series he started with A Sailor of Austria, in which Prohaska is the captain of an Austrian U-Boat in WWI. This prequel is very rare in hardcover, but was just reprinted as a trade paperback by a small publishing firm right here in Ithaca. I, however, bought it at a nice discount from Amazon.
And I'm listening to the audiobook The Republic of Pirates: Being the True and Surprising Story of the Caribbean Pirates and the Man Who Brought Them Down by Colin Woodard.

This is a prequel to the series he started with A Sailor of Austria, in which Prohaska is the captain of an Austrian U-Boat in WWI. This prequel is very rare in hardcover, but was just reprinted as a trade paperback by a small publishing firm right here in Ithaca. I, however, bought it at a nice discount from Amazon.

And I'm listening to the audiobook The Republic of Pirates: Being the True and Surprising Story of the Caribbean Pirates and the Man Who Brought Them Down by Colin Woodard.
- Vandal
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Time to catch up...
Finished:
The Choice by Nicholas Sparks
The Camel Club by David Baldacci
Timeline by Michael Crichton
Obedience by Will Lavender (debut novel - very good!)
Started: Rum Punch by Elmore Leonard (not my style at all, returned it to the library unfinished. Ack!)
Young Adult Novels:
Keeping The Moon by Sarah Dessen
Currently Reading:
A Year Down Yonder by Richard Peck
Finished:
The Choice by Nicholas Sparks
The Camel Club by David Baldacci
Timeline by Michael Crichton
Obedience by Will Lavender (debut novel - very good!)
Started: Rum Punch by Elmore Leonard (not my style at all, returned it to the library unfinished. Ack!)
Young Adult Novels:
Keeping The Moon by Sarah Dessen
Currently Reading:
A Year Down Yonder by Richard Peck
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I'm reading The Camel-toe Club, Shooting the Moon, and A Night Down Yonder.Vandal wrote:Time to catch up...
Finished:
The Choice by Nicholas Sparks
The Camel Club by David Baldacci
Timeline by Michael Crichton
Obedience by Will Lavender (debut novel - very good!)
Started: Rum Punch by Elmore Leonard (not my style at all, returned it to the library unfinished. Ack!)
Young Adult Novels:
Keeping The Moon by Sarah Dessen
Currently Reading:
A Year Down Yonder by Richard Peck
I guess we have similar taste.
- Sir_Galahad
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- MarleysGh0st
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Are we reviving this thread instead of starting a new one with same title? Okay...
This is embarrasing. I'm still reading (or not reading) Tomorrow the World: In which Cadet Otto Prohaska Carries the Habsburg Empire's Civilizing Mission to the Entirely Unreceptive Peoples of Africa and Oceania, by John Biggins. I haven't been sitting down with a book, much, lately.
My audiobook listening has branched out since I got my MP3 player. Now I listen to one audiobook on CD when I'm in the car and another on the MP3 player while I'm walking or working out at the gym. Currently, these two are Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next: First Among Sequels and Terry Pratchett's Making Money.
This is embarrasing. I'm still reading (or not reading) Tomorrow the World: In which Cadet Otto Prohaska Carries the Habsburg Empire's Civilizing Mission to the Entirely Unreceptive Peoples of Africa and Oceania, by John Biggins. I haven't been sitting down with a book, much, lately.

My audiobook listening has branched out since I got my MP3 player. Now I listen to one audiobook on CD when I'm in the car and another on the MP3 player while I'm walking or working out at the gym. Currently, these two are Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next: First Among Sequels and Terry Pratchett's Making Money.
- MarleysGh0st
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- gsabc
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Working on two:
The Groucho Papers by Stefan Kanfer, a collection of writings by Julius Marx, including some script excerpts from the movies and radio shows.
Who Hates Whom: Well-Armed Fanatics, Intractable Conflicts, and Various Things Blowing Up, A Woefully Incomplete Guide by Bob Harris (of J! and Trebekistan fame). Why all the wars, and whose ox is being gored by whom, etc. (A quick chorus of "National Brotherhood Week" and I'm outta here).
The Groucho Papers by Stefan Kanfer, a collection of writings by Julius Marx, including some script excerpts from the movies and radio shows.
Who Hates Whom: Well-Armed Fanatics, Intractable Conflicts, and Various Things Blowing Up, A Woefully Incomplete Guide by Bob Harris (of J! and Trebekistan fame). Why all the wars, and whose ox is being gored by whom, etc. (A quick chorus of "National Brotherhood Week" and I'm outta here).
I just ordered chicken and an egg from Amazon. I'll let you know.
- hf_jai
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Promise not to laugh? I'm reading the first book in the second Warriors series. I think it's called The Vision [EDIT: it's titled The Sight], or something like that. My copy is up in the bedroom. I know they're childish, but they're fun too.
I just finished Variable Star, which is a novel written by Spider Robinson from an outline found in the estate of Robert Heinlein. It wasn't earth-shatteringly great, but not bad either. Worth the time it took to read, but probably not worth replacing the copy that Ricky chewed up.
Thanks to whoever recommended the Sarah Dunant novels. They sound right up my alley.
Oh yeah, I'm listening to an unabridged version of Water for Elephants that I downloaded from audible.com. Haven't gotten far enough along to know whether I recommend it or not.
I just finished Variable Star, which is a novel written by Spider Robinson from an outline found in the estate of Robert Heinlein. It wasn't earth-shatteringly great, but not bad either. Worth the time it took to read, but probably not worth replacing the copy that Ricky chewed up.
Thanks to whoever recommended the Sarah Dunant novels. They sound right up my alley.
Oh yeah, I'm listening to an unabridged version of Water for Elephants that I downloaded from audible.com. Haven't gotten far enough along to know whether I recommend it or not.
Last edited by hf_jai on Fri May 16, 2008 7:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Catfish
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I'm on 345 of 448 e-mail installments of Don Quixote from www.dailylit.com.
I'm about halfway through Schulz and Peanuts by David Michaelis. Today I received the new James Frey novel (really this time) Bright Shiny Morning. Whatever the provenance of his other two books, I thought they were fabu reads.
I just finished listening to The Queen's Fool by Phillipa (or is it Philippa?) Gregory, and tomorrow I will start the audio book of Lamb by Christopher Moore, my second-favorite book of all time.
I'm about halfway through Schulz and Peanuts by David Michaelis. Today I received the new James Frey novel (really this time) Bright Shiny Morning. Whatever the provenance of his other two books, I thought they were fabu reads.
I just finished listening to The Queen's Fool by Phillipa (or is it Philippa?) Gregory, and tomorrow I will start the audio book of Lamb by Christopher Moore, my second-favorite book of all time.
Catfish
- tanstaafl2
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Downtown by Ferrol Sams. It is a bit odd. Perhaps his dotage is finally showing through.
If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you. This is the principal difference between a dog and a man.
~Mark Twain
Some people are like a Slinky. They are not really good for anything, but you still can't help but smile when you shove them down the stairs...
~tanstaafl2
Nullum Gratuitum Prandium
Ne Illegitimi Carborundum
Cumann na gClann Uí Thighearnaigh
~Mark Twain
Some people are like a Slinky. They are not really good for anything, but you still can't help but smile when you shove them down the stairs...
~tanstaafl2
Nullum Gratuitum Prandium
Ne Illegitimi Carborundum
Cumann na gClann Uí Thighearnaigh
- ontellen
- FNGD Forum Moderator
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You might as well start laughing now. I am reading Barbara Walters' Audition. I can't put the damn thing down. I have been mesmerized by TV since my Grandpa got one in 1953 when my Grandma died. The first show I ever saw was I Love Lucy.
She really takes me back to so many things I had forgotten about.
Just so I don't look like an idiot, before this I read The 6th Target by James Patterson, Love in the Time of Cholera, The Glass Castle and Pillars of the Earth.
Is that family in the Glass Castle nuts or what? Just when you think it can't get any worse, it does. I thought Angela's Ashes was bad they top them by a long shot, especially when you read the ending.
She really takes me back to so many things I had forgotten about.
Just so I don't look like an idiot, before this I read The 6th Target by James Patterson, Love in the Time of Cholera, The Glass Castle and Pillars of the Earth.
Is that family in the Glass Castle nuts or what? Just when you think it can't get any worse, it does. I thought Angela's Ashes was bad they top them by a long shot, especially when you read the ending.
- cindy.wellman
- LOLOLOL
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Finished: Stephenie Meyer's Twilight series and ordered Breaking Dawn.
Reading: Jillian Michaels, "Making the Cut" and Gilbert Morris, "The Honorable Imposter"
I'm still trudging through the Bible. (said in an affectionate way, of course) As much as I like to read, it wasn't until I borrowed the study/learning NIV Bible that Eric (dh) was using for his Old and New Testament classes that I was able to read it. I really enjoy the study version because of all the background and additional information it provides.
Reading: Jillian Michaels, "Making the Cut" and Gilbert Morris, "The Honorable Imposter"
I'm still trudging through the Bible. (said in an affectionate way, of course) As much as I like to read, it wasn't until I borrowed the study/learning NIV Bible that Eric (dh) was using for his Old and New Testament classes that I was able to read it. I really enjoy the study version because of all the background and additional information it provides.
- marrymeflyfree
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- Location: the couch
No bambino yet-o. We are 5 days over. Well, officially 6 now that it is midnight. House arrest. Purgatory. Considering the first due date was May 1st, our psyches are now 16 days overdue.MarleysGh0st wrote:MMFF traditionally starts these threads. That reminded me that she hasn't posted here since Monday.
Perhaps MMFF Jr. has finally decided to come out and play?
We've been taking 2 or 3 walks every day, but the never ending rain today put the kibosh on that....so we went bowling instead. After the inevitable "so you brought your own bowling ball, eh?!" jokes, I discovered that I bowl much better pregnant than I ever did not-pregnant. Well, there were only a handful of attempts, but still. I broke 100 in all 4 games! WOo hoo!
- 10 Pound Balls
- Merry Man
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marrymeflyfree wrote:No bambino yet-o. We are 5 days over. Well, officially 6 now that it is midnight. House arrest. Purgatory. Considering the first due date was May 1st, our psyches are now 16 days overdue.MarleysGh0st wrote:MMFF traditionally starts these threads. That reminded me that she hasn't posted here since Monday.
Perhaps MMFF Jr. has finally decided to come out and play?
We've been taking 2 or 3 walks every day, but the never ending rain today put the kibosh on that....so we went bowling instead. After the inevitable "so you brought your own bowling ball, eh?!" jokes, I discovered that I bowl much better pregnant than I ever did not-pregnant. Well, there were only a handful of attempts, but still. I broke 100 in all 4 games! WOo hoo!
Breaking 100 is my specialty.
Breaking your water.... you should try my friend 16 pound balls next time.....
- silvercamaro
- Dog's Best Friend
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Alas, it won't be the last time this child doesn't show up exactly when you expect him. You'll know exactly what I mean in 13-15 years.
I do hope he or she decides to make an appearance soon, though, for your sake. Let's try this:
HEY, BABY! We're having a good time out here in the world. Too bad you're missing all the fun stuff. Plus, we have this marvelous substance called FOOD. You'd love it, but we don't deliver, so you'll have to come try it for yourself. Or not. If you don't show up, don't blame us if we finish up all the yummies.
I do hope he or she decides to make an appearance soon, though, for your sake. Let's try this:
HEY, BABY! We're having a good time out here in the world. Too bad you're missing all the fun stuff. Plus, we have this marvelous substance called FOOD. You'd love it, but we don't deliver, so you'll have to come try it for yourself. Or not. If you don't show up, don't blame us if we finish up all the yummies.
- MarleysGh0st
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Sorry you're still waiting for the big day, MMFF.

Hmmm. It occurs to me that giving birth in a bowling alley might be a great game show audition hook!marrymeflyfree wrote: We've been taking 2 or 3 walks every day, but the never ending rain today put the kibosh on that....so we went bowling instead. After the inevitable "so you brought your own bowling ball, eh?!" jokes, I discovered that I bowl much better pregnant than I ever did not-pregnant. Well, there were only a handful of attempts, but still. I broke 100 in all 4 games! WOo hoo!

- Catfish
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I just love The Glass Castle. I bought the audiobook and listen to it repeatedly. It's amazing those kids survived. The author is on my short list of people I admire most.ontellen wrote:Just so I don't look like an idiot, before this I read The 6th Target by James Patterson, Love in the Time of Cholera, The Glass Castle and Pillars of the Earth.
Is that family in the Glass Castle nuts or what? Just when you think it can't get any worse, it does. I thought Angela's Ashes was bad they top them by a long shot, especially when you read the ending.
Catfish