July - September issues of National Geographic, to brush up on some of the environmental issues that have been sprouting up lately. I'll take their word for things way ahead of crap publications like Time, which are now not a whole lot different than People Magazine, with a politics section in the middle.
Book-wise I'm currently going back and thumbing through various chapters of books I bought in the past but didn't read cover-to-cover:
Great Thinkers of the Western World
Scientific American Desk Reference
How Things Work (looks like a kiddie book, but you can learn a ton from it)
It was a pretty kick-ass trilogy.</strong><hr></blockquote>
Sure was. But I couldn't help but think he (Brooks) set himself up to write another trilogy very soon with the ending to Morgwar. You know what I mean?
Comments
as an ebook
Soul Mountain by Gao Xingjian
Love in the Time of Cholera by Garcia Marquez
I Am One of You Forever by Fred Chappell
and I'm listening to Snowcrash by Neal Stephenson (got it through audible.com and I'm listening to it on my iPod. Way cool.)
I read a lot because I stopped watching t.v. and AI's been boring enough lately to give me lots of free time after work.
Book-wise I'm currently going back and thumbing through various chapters of books I bought in the past but didn't read cover-to-cover:
Great Thinkers of the Western World
Scientific American Desk Reference
How Things Work (looks like a kiddie book, but you can learn a ton from it)
Etc.
-Mike
Principles of Biochemistry by Lehninger...
The Dragon Reborn by Robert Jordan (for the 5th or 6th time)...
Blueflame
[ 09-07-2002: Message edited by: Blueflame ]</p>
<strong>Terry Brooks- "Morgawr."</strong><hr></blockquote>
Just read that too. Couldn't wait till it came out on paperback so I sprung for the (costly) hardcover. Ah well.
<strong>A non-fiction book called "The Tipping Point."</strong><hr></blockquote>
sharp fellow that malcolm. see <a href="http://www.gladwell.com" target="_blank">www.gladwell.com</a> for more wise words
--
most in last 2 months... not in particular order...
the lord of the rings trilogy - jrr tolkien
cosmicomics (short fiction about life before the universe began) - italo calvino
faster: the acceleration of almost everything - james gleick
current reading:
guns, germs, and steel (the fates of human societies) - jared diamond
pending or bumped reading list:
the code book (the science of secrecy from ancient egypt to quantum cryptography) - simon singh
darwin's ghost (origin of the species revisited) - steve jones
the cambridge quintet: a work of scientific speculation - john casti
hermits: the insights of solitude - peter freeman
actually a pretty good book, I even read it in English because there were no others...
<strong>
Just read that too. Couldn't wait till it came out on paperback so I sprung for the (costly) hardcover. Ah well.</strong><hr></blockquote>
It was a pretty kick-ass trilogy.
Franny and Zooey, jd salinger
A primates memroir, robert sapolsky
Arturo Perez-Revere's _The Club Dumas_;
Jonathan Israel's _The Dutch Republic 1447-1806_;
_The McGraw-Hill 36-Hour Accounting Course; and
John Julius Norwich's _History of Venice_.
<strong>
It was a pretty kick-ass trilogy.</strong><hr></blockquote>
Sure was. But I couldn't help but think he (Brooks) set himself up to write another trilogy very soon with the ending to Morgwar. You know what I mean?