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25 new of 58 responses total.
twenex
response 14 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 18:15 UTC 2007

Re: #8. What a koinkidink! I have that edition of that book. It's dog-eared
pages usually lie abandoned (but much-loved, all the same) on my Computing
Bookshelf.
twenex
response 15 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 18:16 UTC 2007

Re: #3. My mum got that book for Xmas.
slynne
response 16 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 19:47 UTC 2007

resp:3 I enjoyed that book a lot. If you want to know what they did 
wrong with the dog, get Cesar's Way (also a good read). 

bru
response 17 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 19:48 UTC 2007

I am curently reading "Beka Cooper, Terrier" by Tamora Pierce.  It is an 
interesting novel about a young girl who decides to become a member of the
watch in an alternate medeviel setting.  They call the law enforcement "dogs"
and she earns the appelation of terrier because of her persistence.

The setting is well constructed, and the story line interesting even if you
do have to get past the archaic words she uses all you mots, coves, and 
gixies need to read this novel.

Also I am about to start on "Good Omens" by Pratchett and Gaiman.
mcnally
response 18 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 19:57 UTC 2007

 I recently re-read "Good Omens"..  I had it in a stack of paperbacks I'd
 bought from the library for $0.50 and set aside for when I ran out of 
 other books and the weekend before this last one I was too sick to go to
 the library and pick out some new reading material so I dipped into the
 paperback pile.  It didn't seem as funny as the first time I read it,
 years ago, but it's still quite entertaining.
edina
response 19 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 20:02 UTC 2007

There was talk of making it into a movie, with Terry Gilliam at the 
helm, but I think it's been pushed to the back of the shelf.  Pity. 
That's a combination (Pratchett/Gaiman/Gilliam) that would be a lot of 
fun to watch.
tod
response 20 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 20:06 UTC 2007

I'm 1/4 of the way through "My Life" by Prez Clinton.  I recently read:
"The evil that men do: FBI profiler Roy Hazelwood's journey into the minds
of sexual predators" by Stephen G. Michaud with Roy Hazelwood
and "Made in Detroit: a south of 8 Mile memoir" by Paul Clemens
twenex
response 21 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 21:06 UTC 2007

Re: #20. How would Gaiman (I presume of the Neil variety) fit in?
jadecat
response 22 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 21:47 UTC 2007

resp:7 Sounds interesting. I'll have to see about getting it from the
library.
mcnally
response 23 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 21:47 UTC 2007

 re #21:  he probably wouldn't fit in with the Clinton biography,
 the Detroit memoir, or the sexual predator profiles.  Assuming
 that you meant to refer to #19, Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett
 wrote "Good Omens" together, relatively early in both their 
 careers.
jep
response 24 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 21:56 UTC 2007

re resp:13: I liked "The Drawing Of The Dark" pretty well but haven't
read a lot of other books by Powers.
twenex
response 25 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 22:02 UTC 2007

Re: #23. Hahah, yes quite right. I must have been thinking of some other
Pratchett book, then, because (a) I thought he was sole author and (b) I have
not read any co-authored by him.
tod
response 26 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 22:48 UTC 2007

re #23
LOL
mary
response 27 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 22:58 UTC 2007

_Mountains Beyond Mountains_, by Tracy Kidder is my current read.  It's 
this month's book club choice.  It's also the 2007 Ann Arbor Reads 
selection.  The author was in town last week and gave a talk about writing 
this book and his relationship with Dr. Paul Farmer, the person behind the 
highly successful world-wide Partners in Health medical outreach program, 
and the subject of _M B M_.  It's fascinating look at a brilliant man and 
the global problem of providing health care for all.  

mcnally
response 28 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 23:24 UTC 2007

 re #24:  Try "The Anubis Gates" if you can find a copy.  Or, if you like
 pirates, "On Stranger Tides" is really good, too, though hard to find.
tod
response 29 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 23:29 UTC 2007

re #27
The audio version is actually in my county library queue.  It will be a
welcome 4 discs compared to the 42 discs for the Clinton book.
twenex
response 30 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 30 23:53 UTC 2007

Re: #27. I have read Kidder's "The Soul of a New Machine," about Data
General's attempt to build a competitor to Digital Equipment Corporation's
VAX, which I enjoyed immensely. Another of those "dry, factual" books which
turns out to be rather a good read. It is also (as of the published date of
the blurb on my copy) the only book about computers ever to win a Pulitzer
Prize. I would be interested to know whether MBM matches up (if you have read
both).
slynne
response 31 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 00:24 UTC 2007

I got a couple of good finds from the free book room at work today. I 
havent read them yet but probably will this weekend:

_Translation Nation: Defining a New American Identity in the Spanish 
Speaking United States_ by Hector Tobar. The blurb on the back of the 
book says "Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Hector Tobar takes us on 
the definitive tour of the Spanish-speaking United States -- a parallel 
USA. 40 million strong, that is transforming the American Dream, 
reinventing the American community, and redefining the experience of 
American immigrant in unprecedented and unexpected ways. Translation 
Nation rises, brilliantly, to meet one of the most profound shifts in 
American identity in the last two hundred years."

_Lipstick Jihad: A Memoir of Growing Up Iranian in America and American 
in Iran_ by Azadeh Moaveni. I dont have time to copy the blurb on the 
back of this one because it is longer. It looks like there will be some 
discussion about feminism in Iran though which is a subject I find 
interesting. 
mary
response 32 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 14:58 UTC 2007

Re: #30  The only other Kidder book I've read is _House_, which I remember 
enjoying quite a bit.  So I can't make that comparison, sorry.
other
response 33 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 17:28 UTC 2007

Incendiary - by Chris Cleave

Compelling novel written as a letter to Osama bin Laden by a
working-class London housewife whose husband and son were killed by a
suicide bomber at a football game.  Really enjoyed it.
twenex
response 34 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 18:02 UTC 2007

Re: #32. Oh well, it was worth a try, thanks anyhow.
richard
response 35 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 18:52 UTC 2007

"Another Bullshit night in Suck City" by Nick Flynn.  Nick is a close 
friend of my sister's who lives in upstate NY, and has published novels 
and poetry of some repute.  I got a copy of this particular book when I 
was at his and his girlfriend's house over the holidays. This is his 
memoir of the time he was volunteering as a caseworker in a homeless 
shelter in Boston and how one of the homeless guys who turned up at the 
shelter turned out to be his long lost father.  Its a true story of the 
parallells and contrasts of his life and his father's.  A wonderful 
read and my personal favorite ever title for a book.  
albaugh
response 36 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 20:25 UTC 2007

I had finished Wicked in the fall.  So Santa brought me The Wizard of Oz
(dusted that off over the holidays) and Son of a Witch, which I have begun.
kingjon
response 37 of 58: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 21:02 UTC 2007

I'm in the middle of Charles Williams' _Outlines of Romantic Theology_. It's
very good, but typical Williams, so it would be nearly impenetrable to only
casual inspection.

(Williams, born 1886, died 1945, is the third member of the "Big Three" of the
Inklings, the other two being C.S. Lewis and Tolkien.)
tsty
response 38 of 58: Mark Unseen   Feb 14 09:02 UTC 2007

english first; but not only
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