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PostPosted: Fri Jul 27, 2007 10:11 am 
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I haven't read Of Mice and Men yet. I will tho.

What's on that bear's face by the way? Looks like a scar.

Right now I'm reading The Double Bind by the same guy who wrote Midwives. I'm having a hard time getting into it.


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 15, 2007 3:14 am 
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Finished Hurin's children; okay, but most of the story was told before. Besides, there was no shooting.

Just started "Guns, germs and steel'; looks like a good read.


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 15, 2007 8:15 am 
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Iowanic wrote:
Finished Hurin's children; okay, but most of the story was told before. Besides, there was no shooting.

Just started "Guns, germs and steel'; looks like a good read.



It does and it is on my list as well. I have about a years worth of reading on the shelves now and just ordered some more.

I just finished "1945" and "MacArthur's War" both on the invasion of the Japanese home islands. The first postulated the success of the coup and the second a failure of one of the atomic bomb tests that took out most of the researchers and delayed the program past any useful date.

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PostPosted: Wed Aug 15, 2007 8:40 am 
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Providences of Night by William Gay.


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 15, 2007 8:46 am 
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What is that book about, Grace?


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 15, 2007 9:12 am 
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Iowanic wrote:
What is that book about, Grace?


William Gay is my favorite new author (altho he's only new to me). His style of writing is almost poetic/lyrical like nothing you've ever read. I find myself going back & re-reading passages and savoring the way he describes things. Very thought provoking and doesn't insult your intelligence like wishy washy writers that are a dime a dozen these days. He's extremely gifted this guy. Anyway, I read his other book, The Long Home twice.


Here's an excerpt from Amazon review:

In his second novel, Provinces of Night, William Gay re-creates the oppressive, evocative atmosphere of the American Deep South that he first explored in his debut novel, The Long Home. Against the backdrop of rural Tennessee in the 1950s, our teenage protagonist, Fleming Bloodworth, finds himself alone in the family home after his father, Boyd, abandons him to hunt down and kill his wife's lover. At the same time, Fleming's grandfather decides to return to his family after 20 years of self-imposed exile. He returns to discover that his remaining two sons, Warren and Brady, are in turn an alcoholic womanizer and a Bible-quoting fantasist who enjoys putting curses on his enemies.

This is a self-consciously big novel in the Southern tradition that could easily have buckled under the weight of its own ambition. Instead, Gay pulls it off with ease, presenting us with a stream of unforgettable characters. While the central themes of love, loyalty, and forgiveness are explored seriously and sensitively, the finely wrought prose is also sprinkled with moments of genuine humor as Gay proves that he's not afraid to gently mock his gang of Southern eccentrics. This is a wonderful novel and a worthy successor to the tradition it so obviously admires. --Jane Morris, Amazon.co.uk --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 15, 2007 9:37 am 
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XXMag wrote:
I know Wayne is into Harry Turtledove. I recently finished "Fort Pillow". Have you read it? It's historical fiction and not his usual alternate-history or sci-fi. I enjoyed it, though certianly not my favorite of his. I also recently finished his "American Empire" trilogy. I can't wait to start "Settling Accounts".



I have not read Fort Pillow, but I did just finish the last of the whole series of alternate civil war books (including the American Empire). the last grouping is called Settling Accounts and it was all goooood!!!

Also Robert Conroy has some good books, 1862, 1901, and 1945 (which I just finished as well) but it is not a series.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 01, 2007 7:40 am 
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Wayne:
Have you had a chance yet to read 'Guns, germs and Steel'? If so; what'd ya think? I found it most fascinating!


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 01, 2007 7:57 am 
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Iowanic wrote:
Wayne:
Have you had a chance yet to read 'Guns, germs and Steel'? If so; what'd ya think? I found it most fascinating!


I have it but it has not made it to my stack to read now. The weather is a little cooler and I can get some yard work done without melting so I have a lull in my reading. I also have a bathroom remodel coming up which is already sucking away time. Some frined dragged me off to look at houses this weekend to "get ideas" on the master bath. I have already ordered the new shower, picked up the Italian tile, the tub is in place and all that is lacking is for my wife to decide on the vanity top, paint color for the untiled areas and light fixtures. I found the light fixtures that would work, but after buyting the tile without her I have to let things slow to a crawl again. :lol: :lol:

Once she found out the deal I got on the tile an the fact it looked better than anything else she ahd looked at prior she got over it. Once I drew out the plan for the installation she was happy with the colors too. The only thing about the looking at the bathrooms was the tile I had was better looking than that in all of the houses we saw, with the exception of one in the 3 million plus range. They had the same tile in one of the master baths ... same color combination and all.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 01, 2007 8:04 am 
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Wow, is you busy! Fall is here and I keep telling myself I need to do some 'finish up' yard work but I'm no fan of yard work, so it get delayed.
When you get to Guns, germs and steel, let me know. I've got a hypothetical to run past us all.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 01, 2007 8:13 am 
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Iowanic wrote:
Wow, is you busy! Fall is here and I keep telling myself I need to do some 'finish up' yard work but I'm no fan of yard work, so it get delayed.
When you get to Guns, germs and steel, let me know. I've got a hypothetical to run past us all.


Sure, but the next book in the que is the Midway Inquest. I finished the eyewitness accounts of Leyte Gulf and have to see what this one has. I will probably hit the Sci-Fi after that. I'll get Guns, Germs, and Steel out and put in in the stack so I do not forget.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 01, 2007 11:42 am 
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Some of the funniest deliberately bad opening paragraphs of would be novels.The Bulwer-Lytton literary parody contest is a yearly contest that seeks to find the worst deliberately terrible opening paragraphs to novels. It was named after Victorian novelist Edward George Earl Bulwer-Lytton (1803-1873), who originated the phrases “the pen is mightier than the sword,” and “pursuit of the almighty dollar.” He also opened a novel in 1830 with those now famous words that Snoopy plagiarized for years, “It was a dark and stormy night.”



Here are some of the best worst bad novel beginning paragraph entries in the 2006 contest.



David loved Marisela’s voice, which was like fresh honeydew melon wrapped in fine prosciutto, and pierced with a round, teal gourmet toothpick, set on a Lenox Fruits of Life serving plate upon a mahogany table in a brilliantly sunlit (albeit in need of redecorating) dining room, but he wasn’t very fond of anything she said.

Stephen V. Masse
Medford, MA



The sun, which much resembled the yolk of a sunny-side up egg, set over the slight hill like a cheerio falling off the back of a spoon when a spoon is upside-down on a table and a cheerio is set on top of it.

Katrina Medoff
Wilmington, DE



When he heard the woman upstairs scream, the Maytag man’s heart thumped in his chest like an off-balance washer full of heavy bath towels.

Linda Shakespeare
Elk Grove, CA



Gray hung over the morning like a gauze bandage, the kind you wrap loosely over an oozing wound to keep it covered but still let air in, but the eastern sky reddened slowly, like the first signs of blood poisoning moving up an arm.

Russ Winter
Janesville, MN



Despite the vast differences it their ages, ethnicity, and religious upbringing, the sexual chemistry between Roberto and Heather was the most amazing he had ever experienced; and for the entirety of the Labor Day weekend they had sex like monkeys on espresso, not those monkeys in the zoo that fling their feces at you, but more like the monkeys in the wild that have those giant red butts, and access to an espresso machine.

Dennis Barry
Dothan, AL



Our story begins with Raul, gently stroking Priscilla’s raven hair, gazing into her coal-dark eyes, eyes that reminded him of the blackness of the inside of a size 11 1/2 D shoebox, which in turn reminded him he needed to get his Bass Weejuns re-soled before that job interview next week with the owner of the janitorial service.

Gordon Bassham
Andover, KS



Sylvia leaned seductively back in her chair and downed the shot of cheap gin that Brad had poured for her, and speculated once again that, even if it did taste like something you’d rub on a horse, it had the pleasant side effect of softening Brad’s facial symmetry which had always reminded her of the collapsed, pocked surface of a cheese quiche that’s been cooked at too high a temperature.

Janna Harris
Littlerock, CA



He loved her like no other, their romance developing quickly, like the rapid growth of farm swine which grow from 2 to 4 pounds daily until they’re fully grown and put to market for slaughter, or like the rapidly growing cells that produce moose antlers until they fall off in early spring, and suddenly Bill sensed the imminent doom of his romance lying in wait.

Jeremy Perreaux
Sarnia, Ontario



Like a baleen whale inhaling krill–a collection of small marine crustaceans of the order Euphausiacea–or an anteater sucking up Formicidae– characteristically having wings only in the males and fertile females and living in colonies that have a complex social organization–her lips sought out mine in a passionate kiss.

Michael J. Sheehan
Cedar, MI



“Send a message back to Command Central on Earth and ask for their advice, which we will be able receive immediately even at this great distance, thanks to the ingenious manipulation of coherent radiation through a Bose-Einstein condensate and the bizarre influence of the Aspect effect, which enables us to impart identical properties to remotely separated photons,” Captain Buzz told the feathered Vjorkog at the comms desk, “and tell them our life-pod is going to explode in eight seconds.”

Christopher Backeberg
KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa



Cheralynn posed before the unblinking mirror, panting weakly, as her private surgeon hovered around her, tightening the straps on her custom-made girdle, and it dawned on her for the first time in her pampered, overindulged 49 years, that it was only a matter of time before she would succumb to Furniture Disease, and her chest would fall into her drawers.

Tracey MacDonald
Antigonish Nova Scotia



Butch glared balefully across the saloon at Tex, who had been stone dead since the scorpion he had unwittingly sat on had bitten him on the butt some half an hour or so ago, little suspecting that this was going to be his toughest staring contest since the one against old Glass-eyed Juan, during the great sand-storm of ‘42, at the height of the Arizona conjunctivitis epidemic.

Geoff Blackwell
Bundaberg QLD Australia



Page topic: Really funny bad, terrible and awful beginning sentences and paragraphs to fake bad novels: A contest for which this sentence very nearly qualifies, he said, with a somber tone like that a cello makes, when it splashes into the water after being dropped into the water before it splashed.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 01, 2007 2:04 pm 
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I'm currently re-reading "The cat who could read backwards".. I love that series.

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 13, 2007 10:39 pm 
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If you get the chance, please read the books by Gervase Phinn a school inspector. They are hilarious and based on his real -life experiences as a school inspector in the Yorkshire Dales.
Lokk up Amazon books for details.
:lol: :lol: :lol:


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PostPosted: Sat Oct 13, 2007 11:02 pm 
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Such heavy reading... Just curious has anyone lightened up and read any of the Harry Potter series.


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