What are you reading now?Re: What are you reading now?I also read Tab Hunter's autobiography.
I'm in love!!!
Re: What are you reading now?Law, no ones here done said nothin' 'bout "The Help" wrote by Kathryn Stockett? Da Help, it be good book! Hear tell gone be movie soon. If'in you be's from da South, o' even you's not, you gots to read Da Help. Make yo' eyes see things differnt ways, affer you done readin'.
Re: What are you reading now?I'm on Game Of Thrones which is amazing and just bought the next 2 more to come. This could take a while
Re: What are you reading now?Morbidly enough I'm reading 2 books on the Rape of Nanking. I've just seen a movie called: John Rabe, about a Nazi living in Nanking who helped save 1,2 hundred thousand Chinese from the Japanese. Knowing how movies expand the truth I like to read up on historical issues. In his case the story is largely true. The irony of a Nazi saving people from genocide intrigues me.
Re: What are you reading now?I read Sammy Hagar's autobio. Eddie Van Halen isn't presented well in the narrative. Another genius musical talent on the brink...
Re: What are you reading now?I just finished reading "In the Garden of Beasts" by Erik Larson, which is primarily about the U.S. ambassador to Germany beginning in 1933 and his daughter. He'd been a history professor at the University of Chicago and didn't have diplomatic experience. I think that it is probably better than his previous best seller "Devil in the White City" because it is more compact, and given the time frames, is about an era most readers would be more familiar with. They are both great and readable books.
Now, in need of lighter fare, I'm reading "Harry Truman's Excellent Adventure - The True Story of a Great American Road Trip," by Matthew Algeo. I'd never heard of it, but spotted it during the last days of Borders Book Store.
Re: What are you reading now?For some reason I slipped into re-read mode; sometimes the goldie-oldies on the shelf just look too enticing. Banged out Krakauer's Into Thin Air (shudder); now on Dr. Dean Edell's Eat, Drink & Be Merry.
Re: What are you reading now?Been awhile. I did finish the "Girl with...." series, and watched the movies. Pretty good stuff, for the genre. In the last week I ran through the latest Tanenbaum and Paterson books. One night reads (actually 1.5 for Tanenbaum). Right now, I am halfway through "Rebecca". Saw the Hitchcock movie, the novel (novella?) is pretty good. When we were up for our Ashland duty, I picked up a mystery book at a used book store in Jacksonville. The lead was "The Big Sleep". The Bogart movie was pretty true to the story (as was The Maltese Falcon"). They didn't futz around with the masters in the old days. There are storys by Sayers, Marsh usw. I haven't looked ahead, but it has given me more than $1.50 worth of pleasure. Hell, I even found Ulysses, so maybe I get some culture amidst the trash
Re: What are you reading now?I have been browsing vintage NGs..love the ads.
I have a complete (minus Oct 1928) collection of National Geographics, courtesy of my late mother-in-law, whose husband gave her a lifetime subscription as a wedding present in 1916. I have been a subscriber since 1955 and she gave me her 1916-55 collection.
Re: What are you reading now?
Doesn't that large a collection have enough concentrated mass to form a black hole?
Re: What are you reading now?given the weight of the average issue of NG, we're talking blackholes squared.
Re: What are you reading now?They are in six issue pre-labeled file boxes, designated Xmas gift from my sister-in-law, and only occupy four 48", six shelf book cases. Haven't weighed them but they are in a 2nd floor guest room and the floor hasn't collapsed. Yet.
Re: What are you reading now?The C Programming Language, ANSI C Edition by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie.
Ritchie and the C language seemed like equally eternal elder statesmen of the technology world to the young student. Now only one of them remains. The book is one of the rare breed that you can read at any level of experience and competence in the subject and still benefit from it.
Re: What are you reading now?Steve Jobs bio by Walter Issacson - book is great. Explains well what a genius Jobs really was, but does not pull any punches and pictures him as a complete jerk with almost no people skills.
Also Mickey Mantle bio by Jane Leavy - one of the great lines ever in there - "Mickey Mantle's aura had an aura." Also Knocking on Heaven's Door by Lisa Randall
Re: What are you reading now?Rereading Kon-Tiki, which I haven't read since junior high (or maybe even elementary school; it's a hardback dated 1951). Some of the science/anthropology is a bit laughable now, but it's nonetheless a compelling read. (The K-T is gone, of course, but did get to see Heyerdahl's subsequent Ra in the museum in Oslo a couple of years back)
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My parents got NG from further back than my memory goes (54, on a good day) and I remember they occupied many feet of our den's wall-length shelves (at least 6'-x12' of bookcase). I have no idea what happened to them all after my parents' deaths in the 80s.
Re: What are you reading now?Money Ball. A friend gave it to me a few years and I put it on the shelf. The buzz about the movie made me read it. Really enjoying it.
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What a great choice to read. Should be fun. Couple years ago I re-read Alice in Wonderland and loved it.
Re: What are you reading now?Am about to read in order the life stories of...
Paul McCartney James Dean Marlon Brando Robert Mitchum Janis Joplin James Cagney George Raft Willie Nelson
Re: What are you reading now?Rereading the long version of The Count of Monte Cristo. It is VERY LONG, but good. Always loved the story. The book, beyond the imprisonment, has very little to do with the most recent theatrical version.
Re: What are you reading now?Has long been a dream of mine to get my French skills up to the point where I could read Monte Cristo in the original, but alas....
I'll not be rereading the copy I have, that's for sure. Hardback published in London, I believe in the 1890s, and I'm not exaggerating when I say it's in 5-point type. Nearly blinded me even when I was a lad with 20-20.
Re: What are you reading now?Monte Cristo is Mrs Pego's alltime favorite book, for me Dumas' best, better than the Three musketeers. While dating, we saw a movie version with Jean Marais in the leading role (made in the 50ies, IIRC)
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Get an e-reader. You can adjust the font size as fits your needs. Plus, you can get a copy of that book very cheap.
Re: What are you reading now?Picked up A Beautiful Mind by Nasar (made into the movie by the same name). The people that show up in one five-page sequence was amazing. It was interesting to read that he was only a close also-ran in the Putnam competition (he was not a pure problem solver of 'short' problems.
Just after I read that section I got a shock when I talked with a women my wife and I know reasonably well. Her son went to West about 5 years ago (graduated), although he took most of his classes at the University of Wisconsin. Turns out he won the Putnam in his first year at MIT.... and then he won it again the next year.... and then he won it again the next year.... and then he won it again the next year. One of six or seven that have done that feat. I would be interested in hearing what people like Conor Dary think, since they have a better background for assessment. I just finished reading Paradigms Lost: Images of Man in the Mirror of Science by Casti (1989). Interesting if a little bit of an unusual book. He brings in Noam Chomsky and grammar, origins of life, intelligent life in the universe, AI, ... I also read The Making of the Atomic Bomb (Rhodes), probably the best/most interesting book I have read in several years The Canon (Angier), worth the 280 pages Lonely Hearts of the Cosmos (Overbye) on Astronomers/Cosmologists [Good] Black Holes & Time Warps (Kip Thorne) [very good, long but worth it, and he knew a number of the Soviet scientists and has things to tell from that source] This is your Brain on Music (Levitan), which I recommend to the numerous posters interested in music and the mind The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt (Morris), a bit dated now but quite good, and something completely different, for those of you with talented kids: The Overachievers (Robbins), a bit more popular culture but woven well by one from a few years past her own high school years.
Re: What are you reading now?I'm almost finished with David McCullough's "The Greater Journey". David McCullough is an excellent writer and I love history (you might have guessed). This book follows various famous Americans in Paris from the 1820's to the 20th Century. Many Americans came to Paris to study art, history, medicine, etc. because Paris was the best place to learn at that time. A good example is Samuel F.B. Morse who went to Paris to work on his painting. Morse was an excellent artist who loved to paint. Later (to make money) he "invented" the telegraph. Many interesting stories in this work.
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I'm guessing I'm gonna be a Luddite when it comes to e-readers. There's nothing quite like the smell and feel of book.
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Second the luddite movement.
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C'mon, GH. Can't you go another step and rid yourself of just one more e-gadget?
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While I agree that the look and feel of a book is desired and comforting at times, I enjoy having an e-reader (NOOK) as I can take an almost unlimited number of books anywhere I want to go, not to mention being able to change the way it reads (font, point size, etc.) if I so choose. That comes in handy frequently, though I still do by some books in paper form as well.
Re: What are you reading now?
One of the great books I have ever read. It was followed by a sequel called Dark Sun - or effectively the Making of the Hydrogen Bomb. That was also great, but still not quite as good as the original.
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Until 1 month ago, I agreed with you. Then I got both an iPad and a Kindle. They are amazingly easy to use (prefer the iPad), and I'm not sure now I'll ever read another "popular" book in hardcopy form. Some of the arcane Olympic and track and sports stuff I get is not available in those formats so will still get hardcopies of those.
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I met Rhodes when he had just begun this book & it was interesting getting a sense of his excitement about the subject. He lived 2 blocks from me at the time and his wife was a close friend of my wife's. It IS a real classic of history writing.
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That was me before I developed a number of hand/wrist problems two years ago. Managing books with my mitts is now a problem, whereas the use of the Kindle could not be much easier. In anticipation of the upcoming publication of volume four, my current read is volume three of Robert Caro's seriously epic and most-excellent bio of LBJ, easily the best written bio I've come across. Note that I thought pretty much the same thing about Taylor Branch's three-volume MLK bio, until I got to volume three. That last volume was unreadable.
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Speaking of which, has anyone else tried to read the Autobiography of Mark Twain that just got published last year? Samuel Clemens was an AWESOME writer, humorist, and social philosopher, but Holy Mackerel, his autobio is absolutely unreadable. It's just random remembrances and misanthropic rants. I will not be getting the next volume of it.
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I have Dark Sun on the bookshelf to read in the not-too-distant future. Unfortunately I read too slowly and get waylaid by wasting too much time on the computer (getting better at that even though my presence here would indicate the contrary (I am leaving more thread unread these days). This thread is by far my favorite, at least in the Things Not T&F (although there are so many T&F ones, not sure which I would list ahead of this one). One of the reasons is probably that I get to see other sides of posters that provide different perspectives on the people behind the nyms.
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