Name the last three books you have read...

Discussion in 'In the Media' started by Sir Nose, May 12, 2009.

  1. Bliss

    Bliss Well-Known Member

    Are you a speed reader??! :smt104 Holy shyt, woman...!:prayer:
     
  2. 4north1side2

    4north1side2 Well-Known Member

  3. TheHuntress

    TheHuntress Well-Known Member

    lol! Yeah, kind of. I can read super fast. Those books werent very long, either, so they're easy to digest. :)
     
  4. Ra

    Ra Well-Known Member

    Yeah it's the same around here. He hasn't written anything new in quite awhile now. It use to be you could go into any bookstore here and find pretty much any of his books. Now it's lucky if you see one or two of his books on the shelves. I don't know what the deal is with that. I know that it isn't because he's become unpopular, because people still get his books quite regularly from one or two secondhand bookstores we have here when they have them available.
     
  5. velkrum

    velkrum Restricted

  6. Aspe4

    Aspe4 New Member

    Griftopia by Matt Taibbi

    The Politician by Andrew Young

    Game Change by John Heilemann and Mark Halperin
     
  7. satyr

    satyr New Member

    Reading this too.

    All The Devils Are Here - Bethany McLean
    Marxism and Literary Criticism - Terry Eagleton
     
  8. jaisee

    jaisee Well-Known Member

    The Alchemist - Paulo Coelho
    The Isis Papers - Dr. Frances Cress Welsing
    Black Skin, White Masks - Frantz Fanon
     
  9. TreePixie

    TreePixie New Member

    Currently working my way through "The Secret History of the Mongol Queens - How the Daughters of Ghengis Khan Rescued His Empire" by Jack Weatherford.

    Last few were

    "American Creation" Joseph J. Ellis

    "Something Written in the State of Denmark - An Actor's Year With the Royal Shakespeare Company" Keith Osborn

    "The Writer's Tale - The Final Chapter" Russell T Davies & Benjamin Cook

    "First Family - John & Abigail Adams" Joseph J. Ellis

    "The First World War" John Keegan
     
  10. vanilla2chai

    vanilla2chai New Member

    People here read? lmfao
     
  11. TheHuntress

    TheHuntress Well-Known Member

    Audio books are reading, right? ;) lol j/k
     
  12. TreePixie

    TreePixie New Member

    LOL! I don't read as much as I used to, because, as stupid as it sounds, holding a book sets off back spasms. Another reason I want an iPad.
     
  13. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    Kindle app
    kobo app
    nook app

    You can read as much as you'd likemy friend. I swear by these.
     
  14. vanilla2chai

    vanilla2chai New Member

    I am a Kobo girl and I love it. Makes those huge 1000+ page books so easy to manage.
     
  15. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    Kobo for my tablet is awesome
    kindle for my phone and ipod touch

     
  16. qnet

    qnet New Member

    I think you'd like the Ipad. I'm not sure how it would be for your spasms because, it weighs a little bit more than a paperback.

    My last three books:
    The FairTax Book
    The Gunslinger
    In the heart of the sea.
     
  17. Blacktiger2005

    Blacktiger2005 Well-Known Member

    Excellent philosophical books for the martial artists.

    -Song of a Water Dragon by Norman S. Track. It's a true biography of He Yi An, a Chinese Daoist born amidst the shift from imperial to modern China. His life steeped in centuries old beliefs, ceremonies and practices collides with the rise of Communism (much like here in America today) and his frenzy attempts at modernization and the rejection of superstitious traditions (parallels the black experience in America today).

    -Musashi's Book of Five Rings: The Definitive Interpretations of Miyamoto Musashi's Classic book of strategy by Stephen F. Kaufman, Hanshi 10th Dan Black Belt. An excellent guide into the thinking of the greatest warrior japan ever known. Explains the full message Musashi's martial strategy that can be employed in everyday life from the boardroom to sites like this one in the new reality of living.

    -The Wandering Taoist by Deng Ming Dao. True story of Kwan Saihung a solidary Taoist who traveled China and experienced it's rapid social change outside of the sect (Zhenyi-Huashan Sect) he was the only member to have dared to do so. In spite of the turmoil chinese society was going through, spirituality is seen as possible even in the darkest of times.
     
    Last edited: Sep 3, 2011
  18. stiletoes

    stiletoes Well-Known Member

    The Atlas of Iowa

    Polkas for Dummies

    A Guide to Lint Collecting
     
  19. Mighty Quinn

    Mighty Quinn New Member

    I've been paying more attention to Foucault's History of Madness. I bought it earlier last year but never got around to reading it like I should. This is by far my longest read. Excluding the foreword and endnotes it comes to roughly 575 pages.
     
  20. TheHuntress

    TheHuntress Well-Known Member

    Today I read Where You Left Me by Jennifer Gardner Trulson.

    Seriously, a great book. I highly recommend it.

    This is the description from Amazon:

    Lucky—that’s how Jennifer would describe herself. She had a successful law career, met the love of her life in Doug, married him, had an apartment in New York City, a house in the Hamptons, two beautiful children, and was still madly in love after nearly seven years of marriage. Jennifer was living the kind of idyllic life that clichés are made of.

    Until Doug was killed in the attacks on the World Trade Center, and she became a widow at age thirty-five—a “9/11 widow,” no less, a member of a select group bound by sorrow, of which she wanted no part. Though completely devastated, Jennifer still considered herself blessed. Doug had loved her enough to last her a lifetime, and after his sudden death, she was done with the idea of romantic love—fully resigned to being a widowed single mother . . . until a chance encounter with a gregarious stranger changed everything. Without a clue how to handle this unexpected turn of events, Jennifer faced the question asked by anyone who has ever lost a loved one: Is it really possible to feel joy again, let alone love?

    With unvarnished emotion and clear-eyed sardonic humor, Jennifer tells an ordinary woman’s extraordinary tale of unimaginable loss, resilience, friendship, love, and healing—which is also New York City’s narrative in the wake of September 11. Where You Left Me is an unlikely love story, a quintessentially New York story—at once Jennifer’s tribute to the city that gave her everything and proof that second chances are possible.

    Where You Left Me- Amazon
     

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