What is currently on your Night Stand/ What are you reading?

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RecluceMage
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Post by RecluceMage »

Jordon got really repetitive in my opinion, and I never made it past the 7th one, and only read the 7th one because I felt I should, not because I liked it,

magicfan241
I think just about everything Jordan puts out is repetitive.
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mrdude
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Post by mrdude »

magicfan241 wrote:
I wager you will get to the 5th or 6th book before getting bored.

Jordon got really repetitive in my opinion, and I never made it past the 7th one, and only read the 7th one because I felt I should, not because I liked it,

magicfan241
I'll give him a chance yet but I don't frosee me reading up to the 7th any time soon, I rarely read series books strait through, I probably will read a good 10 books or so before i wander back into the thrid after this one.
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Kahrey
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Post by Kahrey »

I'm working on Thicker Than Water by Maggie Shayne. Not particularly my style or whatever, but I'm reading it anyways.
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Ghost
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Post by Ghost »

Just finished The Killing Star by Charles Pelligrino and George Zebrowski, it was excellent - I might just post a linked review.
If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animating contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you,
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Post by Darb »

Relatavistic bombs are one of Charlie's pet obsessions ... we saw JMS & Harlan Ellison tip their hats to that in an episode of "Babylon 5" (the one where the Centauri bombed the Narn homeworld with railgun-propelled iron asteroids) :thumb:
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Post by rosene »

I just started Of Mice and Men by Steinbeck. So far so good! :thumb:
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Echus Cthulhu Mythos
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Post by Echus Cthulhu Mythos »

I remember studying that book a few years ago in school.
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Post by Kahrey »

Now I'm reading Running With the Demon by Terry Brooks. Very good so far :thumb:
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Post by rosene »

I am now reading Animal Farm by George Orwell, and lovin' it!
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Post by Aunflin »

Animal Farm...another book I need to re-read. :thumb:
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laurie
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Post by laurie »

My 6th grade math teacher spent the final 10 minutes of class each day reading Animal Farm to us. We all thought it was like The Wind in the Willows, only a lot funnier. :lol: Hey, we were only 11 !!

When I read it myself a few years later I was :shock: to discover what it was really all about......
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Post by Echus Cthulhu Mythos »

That was another book I studied in school a few years ago. :mrgreen:
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Post by Evaine »

I remember getting terribly upset about Boxer's death in Animal Farm when it was read to us at school, though I didn't understand what Orwell was doing with the book at the time.

Wind in the Willows, I think, has one of the saddest lines in literature. Toad and the others are in the canary coloured caravan, and Toad makes a dismissive comment to Rat "Always talking about your old River."
Rat says "I'm not always talking about the River!" and adds quietly "But I think about it - I think about it all the time."
when the floppy-eared Spaniel of Luck sniffs at your turn-ups it helps if you have a collar and piece of string in your pocket.
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Post by Edge »

Read Terry Pratchet's 'A Hat Full Of Sky' today. Like everything he writes, it's brilliant!
It's a metaphor of human bloody existence, a dragon. And if that wasn't bad enough, it's also a bloody great hot flying thing.
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Post by Echus Cthulhu Mythos »

OK SPOILER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! - Animal Farm




Evaine wrote:I remember getting terribly upset about Boxer's death in Animal Farm when it was read to us at school, though I didn't understand what Orwell was doing with the book at the time.
I remember when Boxer was sent off to the glue factory. My mate said "Well, he had a sticky end then, didn't he." I love horrible puns. :mrgreen:








END OF SPOILER![/b]
Last edited by Echus Cthulhu Mythos on Fri Aug 27, 2004 8:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.
The penis mighter than the sword.
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Ghost
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Post by Ghost »

Evaine wrote:I remember getting terribly upset about *****'s death in Animal Farm when it was read to us at school, though I didn't understand what Orwell was doing with the book at the time.

That is a terrible spoiler for those who haven't read Animal Farm. :roll:
If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animating contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you,
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Post by rosene »

Yes it is! AAHHHH! I wish I hadn't read that!!!! Oh well, I guess I'm warned now :cry:
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Post by laurie »

Evaine, you should edit it out of your original post.
Last edited by laurie on Fri Aug 27, 2004 10:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife." -- Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice

"So where the hell is he?" -- Laurie
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Post by Echus Cthulhu Mythos »

Whoops, and I suppose I am a bit at fault here too. Sorry.


[edit] Hmm, it wont let me delete that post...
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Fiachra
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Post by Fiachra »

Just started David Malouf's "Remembering Babylon"
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Post by Tripolie »

A third of the way through "The Gunslinger".
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Post by ChoChiyo »

I just finished reading "Friend to Dragons, Brother to Owls." It was excellent. I could hardly believe it was the author's first novel.

The thing that I was most intrigued by was the idea that the main character could only communicate by quoting things she had heard. That would be a very difficult thing to do--finding the quote that matches what you have to say. Whoa.

I also liked the idea of the homeless people banding together and using the Jungle Book as their bible--sort of..."We be of one blood, you and I."

I just finished listening to Bill Clinton's autobiography on tape. That was excellent as well.
I am a poor, wayfaring stranger
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In that bright land
To which I go
Edge
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Post by Edge »

CC - that sounds quite like an episode of Star Trek TNG - I wish I could remember the title - where they encounter a race who communicate entirely by referencing & quoting past events. It was pretty cool.

Enjoyed Pterry's 'Hat Full Of Sky' so much I read it again today. Now re-reading LEM's 'Magic Engineer'.
It's a metaphor of human bloody existence, a dragon. And if that wasn't bad enough, it's also a bloody great hot flying thing.
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Post by ChoChiyo »

I remember that episode. Picard and the other ship's captain were on the surface of a planet battling some creature to facilitate their communication. They spoke only in metaphors. It was also cool.

It's funny that you mention that episode because I was just thinking about it the other day. I can't remember the names of the two people the other captain referenced, but it was like "So-and -so and so-and-so when they were together on the something-or-other." It was just floating through my head while I was cleaning the bathroom.
I am a poor, wayfaring stranger
Wandering through this world of woe
But there's no sickness, no fear or danger
In that bright land
To which I go
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wolfspirit
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Post by wolfspirit »

I just got a couple books out of the library:

Two to facilitate the fact that I run my personal web stuff offboth linux and windows:

PHP 5 Web development
ASP, ADO, XML (I already know and understand XML)

The third one is for fun:

Dante's Equation (fantasy) by Jane Jensen. Excellent read so far.

magicfan241
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