Book Worms

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MissS
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Re: Book Worms

#41

Post: # 6146Unread post MissS
Sat Jan 11, 2020 10:09 am

Worth you are so right. Thanks for the correction!

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worth1
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Re: Book Worms

#42

Post: # 6153Unread post worth1
Sat Jan 11, 2020 11:14 am

With a little imagination and some research you will find Antarctica means, "No bears.
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Re: Book Worms

#43

Post: # 6164Unread post arnorrian
Sat Jan 11, 2020 12:40 pm

A free translation would be "opposite of near the bear", with bear being the constelation of Big Dipper.
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Re: Book Worms

#44

Post: # 6165Unread post peebee
Sat Jan 11, 2020 12:45 pm

PlainJane wrote: Mon Dec 16, 2019 7:23 pm Reading Ad Hoc At Home, because I love to read cookbooks.
Also reading The Farthest Shore in the Earthsea series. (Ursula K. Le Guin)
The Earthsea series is next on my list. How do you like it so far?
Maybe not in the exact same genre but I did enjoy The Handmaidens Tale. Don't have HBO so I decided to read what the fuss was about. Glad I did.
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Re: Book Worms

#45

Post: # 6185Unread post arnorrian
Sat Jan 11, 2020 3:44 pm

I read the Earthsea books many years ago. I liked them a lot. If you do too you should try her Hainish Cycle books. The Dispossessed is one of my all-time favorites, and The Left Hand of Darkness is awesome too.

The Handmaid's Tale tv show (runs on Hulu) covers the book with its first season, with original material further on. It's one of the best current tv shows. At moments it's very brutal, but also cathartic. The flashback scenes describing how Gilead came into existence are heartbreaking.

Atwood released recently a follow-up to The Handmaid's Tale, called The Testaments. It includes some elements of the show's narrative.
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Re: Book Worms

#46

Post: # 6213Unread post MissS
Sat Jan 11, 2020 9:49 pm

worth1 wrote: Sat Jan 11, 2020 11:14 am With a little imagination and some research you will find Antarctica means, "No bears.
That is not quite so in this book. But that is the Wow in this one. There is a side of this one that is true fiction. The end of this book just amazes you.
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Re: Book Worms

#47

Post: # 6230Unread post PlainJane
Sun Jan 12, 2020 6:45 am

peebee wrote: Sat Jan 11, 2020 12:45 pm
PlainJane wrote: Mon Dec 16, 2019 7:23 pm Reading Ad Hoc At Home, because I love to read cookbooks.
Also reading The Farthest Shore in the Earthsea series. (Ursula K. Le Guin)
The Earthsea series is next on my list. How do you like it so far?
Maybe not in the exact same genre but I did enjoy The Handmaidens Tale. Don't have HBO so I decided to read what the fuss was about. Glad I did.
The Handmaidens Tale was gripping. Really penetrated my brain. I plan to pick up the sequel once it’s out in paperback. (I guess I should check; it may already be out.)
I loved the Earthsea series. She’s my second fav SciFi writer after Heinlein. Orson Scott Card is good, too.
Another really entertaining book I’ve read recently is Artemis by Andy Weir (who wrote The Martian).
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Re: Book Worms

#48

Post: # 6231Unread post PlainJane
Sun Jan 12, 2020 6:47 am

arnorrian wrote: Sat Jan 11, 2020 3:44 pm I read the Earthsea books many years ago. I liked them a lot. If you do too you should try her Hainish Cycle books. The Dispossessed is one of my all-time favorites, and The Left Hand of Darkness is awesome too.

The Handmaid's Tale tv show (runs on Hulu) covers the book with its first season, with original material further on. It's one of the best current tv shows. At moments it's very brutal, but also cathartic. The flashback scenes describing how Gilead came into existence are heartbreaking.

Atwood released recently a follow-up to The Handmaid's Tale, called The Testaments. It includes some elements of the show's narrative.
Agree! Agree!

So, you’ve read The Testaments? Good? Letdown?
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Re: Book Worms

#49

Post: # 6232Unread post PlainJane
Sun Jan 12, 2020 6:52 am

Back to my food obsession, a friend turned me on to this.
There is both a book and a Netflix series, which I’ve already binge-watched.

https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainme ... ix/572731/
“Never try to outstubborn a cat.”
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Re: Book Worms

#50

Post: # 6239Unread post SeanInVa
Sun Jan 12, 2020 8:07 am

Got stuck in the middle of the Wheel of Time series - somewhere around book 6 or 7. This series went from exciting to... 1,000 pages of boring. Think I have all the books now - need to revisit.

Started the Runelords series and just finished the first book last night, and picked up the rest of the Earthking series at a second hand book store for cheap.
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Re: Book Worms

#51

Post: # 6242Unread post arnorrian
Sun Jan 12, 2020 8:22 am

PlainJane wrote: Sun Jan 12, 2020 6:47 am
So, you’ve read The Testaments? Good? Letdown?
Not yet, I'm rereading Dune, I'm on the book 3 of 8 now.
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Re: Book Worms

#52

Post: # 7161Unread post imp
Mon Jan 20, 2020 8:33 pm

Been listening to a book, it's sometimes so hard to listen to because of the events, but it is very good. Historical about Thurgood Marshall , called "Devil In The Grove" by Gilbert King.
Together, trees make an ecosystem that tempers the extremes of heat & cold, stores lots of water, & makes a lot of humidity. In this environment, trees can live to be very old. To get to this point, the community must remain intact no matter what.

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Re: Book Worms

#53

Post: # 10776Unread post worth1
Sun Feb 16, 2020 4:36 pm

I have been re-reading the Lincoln Myth.
Worth
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Re: Book Worms

#54

Post: # 10783Unread post Nan6b
Sun Feb 16, 2020 4:49 pm

What is it about, Worth?

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Re: Book Worms

#55

Post: # 10786Unread post pepperhead212
Sun Feb 16, 2020 5:08 pm

The only books that I read are cookbooks. There are probably a half dozen or so of gardening books in my collection, and a number of woodworking books, from my early years, but probably 98% are cookbooks. And I really need to build a third bookcase...
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Re: Book Worms

#56

Post: # 10789Unread post worth1
Sun Feb 16, 2020 5:29 pm

Nan6b wrote: Sun Feb 16, 2020 4:49 pm What is it about, Worth?
It is a book by Steve Berry.
The main characters are Cotton Malone, Cassiopeia Vitt and his old boss Stephanie Nelle of the Justus department and several others including President Danny Daniels.
Cotton Malone is a retired agent for the so called Magellan billet that lives in Copenhagen and owns a book store.

There is a series of stories with these people in it.
Not saying everything is true but things mentioned in the book are.
Like Texas Vs White and the White Horse prophesy.

Here is the synopsis of this one.
September, 1861: All is not as it seems. With these cryptic words, a shocking secret passed down from president to president comes to rest in the hands of Abraham Lincoln. And as the first bloody clashes of the Civil War unfold, Lincoln alone must decide how best to use this volatile knowledge: Save thousands of American lives? Or keep the young nation from being torn apart forever?

The present: In Utah, the fabled remains of Mormon pioneers, whose 19th century expedition across the desert met with a murderous end, have been uncovered. In Washington, D.C., the official investigation of a international entrepreneur, an elder in the Mormon church, has sparked a political battle between the White House and a powerful United States senator. In Denmark, a Justice Department agent, missing in action, has fallen into the hands of a dangerous zealot – a man driven by divine visions to make a prophet’s words reality. And in a matter of a few short hours, Cotton Malone has gone from quietly selling books at his shop in Denmark to dodging bullets in a high-speed boat chase.

All it takes is a phone call from his former boss in Washington, and suddenly the ex-agent is racing to rescue an informant carrying critical intelligence. It’s just the kind of perilous business that Malone has been trying to leave behind, ever since he retired from the Justice Department. But once he draws enemy blood, Malone is plunged into a deadly conflict – a constitutional war secretly set in motion over 200 years ago by America’s Founding Fathers.

From the streets of Copenhagen to the catacombs of Salzburg to the rugged mountains of Utah, the grim specter of the Civil War looms as a dangerous conspiracy gathers power. Malone risks life, liberty, and his greatest love in a race for the truth about Abraham Lincoln —- while the fate of the United States of America hangs in the balance.
Worth
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Re: Book Worms

#57

Post: # 10792Unread post Nan6b
Sun Feb 16, 2020 5:44 pm

Wow! That's a lot of action! Interesting.

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Re: Book Worms

#58

Post: # 10795Unread post worth1
Sun Feb 16, 2020 6:15 pm

Nan6b wrote: Sun Feb 16, 2020 5:44 pm Wow! That's a lot of action! Interesting.
I dont have all of them but quite a few.
Stopped buying books when I stopped flying.
Books are hard to find in stores anymore and expensive.
I refuse to read and or have a battery operated book.
You cant give it away loan it out or anything.
I have books that are over 100 years old.
Worth
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Re: Book Worms

#59

Post: # 10805Unread post Nan6b
Sun Feb 16, 2020 8:30 pm

Libraries are cool.

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Re: Book Worms

#60

Post: # 10807Unread post pondgardener
Sun Feb 16, 2020 9:28 pm

Nan6b wrote: Sun Feb 16, 2020 8:30 pm Libraries are cool.
And many regional libraries have access to a lot of audio and digital material that is being paid for, at least in my area, by property taxes. So you might as well use it, you may be pleasantly surprised.
It's not what you gather, but what you scatter, that tells what kind of life you have lived.

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