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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/21/2009 10:34:17 PM   
SimplySubmissive


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omg, I love that series! I just finished it again, because a new one is coming in the fall/winter...yeah!!! I met the author, had her sign Fiery Cross.

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/21/2009 11:04:33 PM   
DesFIP


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Best book I've read lately is Michael Chabon's Gentlemen of the Road. Not a false step in it.
Also like People of the Book, can't remember the author, but the plot has some obvious devices that don't ring true.

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/21/2009 11:05:04 PM   
childoftheshadow


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Currently reading - A Kiss of Shadows by Laurell K. Hamilton. A quick easy read.

All time favorite, read it once a month or so - Welcome to the Monkey House by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. A collection of short stories. My father read it to me when I was young and I've managed to kill about 10 copies of it since then through over use (reading until they fall apart).

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/21/2009 11:14:42 PM   
ChasingOblivion


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I just started "The Mystery of Grace," by Charles de Lint. I've read anything of his that I could get my hands on since I was 14. He's a truly exceptional fantasy writer from Canada, although I'm always surprised how few people in the states have heard of him. 

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/21/2009 11:15:23 PM   
Vendaval


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de Lint is a wonderful author and I have read several of his books.

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/22/2009 12:34:41 AM   
pixidustpet


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quote:

ORIGINAL: childoftheshadow

Currently reading - A Kiss of Shadows by Laurell K. Hamilton. A quick easy read.

All time favorite, read it once a month or so - Welcome to the Monkey House by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. A collection of short stories. My father read it to me when I was young and I've managed to kill about 10 copies of it since then through over use (reading until they fall apart).


heh.  i'm on my third copy of stephen king's "the stand".  and my second copy of shogun, for the same reasons.  no, i cant imagine HOW they fell apart! 

kitten

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/22/2009 5:02:13 AM   
ChasingOblivion


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Vendaval

de Lint is a wonderful author and I have read several of his books.


Glad you agree. Do you have a favorite book of his?
If I had to pick a favorite it would have to be "Someplace to Be Flying."

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/22/2009 5:11:46 AM   
sirsholly


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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/22/2009 6:52:21 AM   
ranja


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I've just read Catherine Millet... you might know i thought was ace
before that i read The Bolter by Frances Osborne... very enjoyable too
and i just started Anastasia by Peter Kurth...so far promising

I like books about women

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/22/2009 8:48:58 AM   
MsFlutter


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'Knock Wood' by Candace Bergen
'The Wrong Kind of Money' by Stephen Birmingham

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/22/2009 8:59:46 AM   
GreedyTop


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The Stand is one of my all time favorite books

Narnia Chronicles (well, most anything by C.S. Lewis, actually...)

J.D. Robb "Death in..." series
and of course NOra Roberts, especially the Clans series (why doesnt anyone ever write stories about the Campbells in a positive way, dammit??)

David Baldacci is fun, as is Brad Thor.

Dean Koontz Odd Thomas books

James Patterson Maximum Ride books


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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/22/2009 9:51:08 AM   
CallaFirestormBW


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Ok, these are what I'm reading now, or have planned to finish before September.

Skin-Trade
I haven't started this one yet, but I've been following Anita Blake (Laurel K. Hamilton) since the first book. The storytelling has disintegrated a bit in the previous two books, so I'm hoping that this one restores some of Anita's 'rawness'.


French for Dummies (used in concert with a class and Rosetta Stone-French 1&2) This is an adjunct to my French Language classes. So far, it's pretty banal and I've already moved beyond it with my Rosetta Stone -- definitely a very base 'starter' look at French, but the exercises are fun.


"Fantasy and Science Fiction" June/July issue While not a book, this small-format mag has a number of really incredible pieces, including some nice novella-length works from authors I'll be seeking out in the future.

Practical Cheesemaking  I'm just getting started with this book as well. So far, it is a very well detailed look at the process and science of cheese-making, not in an academic manner, but very pragmatically. I've started making some soft cheeses and had them come out very successfully, and I'm looking forward to doing some of the more complicated hard cheeses this winter.

Charcuterie I've always loved charcuterie (the creating and use of meats in food preparation). In particular, I'm focusing on ground meats and force-meats, since I've always been a big fan of sausages and pates, and they go so well with the cheeses I'm working on.

In Defense of Food  This book by Michael Pollan follows The Omnivore's Dilemma and covers, in greater detail, the reasoning behind knowing the people who produce your food, and how to nourish yourself with the food you eat, instead of just filling your stomach. He has a wonderful conversational style, and even though he's got a message, he never really feels 'preachy', which I like -- because getting all preachy with me usually means I just tune you out. *LOL*

Tropical Dairy Farming: Feeding Management for Small Holder Dairy Farmers in the Humid Tropics  This is the first in a series of books I'm selecting to help me to understand what I need to have in place to raise and keep dairy animals in a variety of climates. I've selected several places that I'd like to live, and figuring out how to manage dairy animals in each climate, as well as the special requirements that would make it more or less difficult to keep a small herd of miniature cows or goats will help me to determine where I will eventually settle down. This book is pretty technical, but it's been very interesting to see what goes into keeping dairy animals in the climate I live in now (which is considered Humid Subtropical/Tropical)

Micro Eco-Farming  Again, like the book above, I'm reading this book (which is pretty technical) to get a leg up on what it's going to take to be able to manage a small farm in a variety of climates. I'm at the point where one selects one's crops, and I'm finding that the information is giving me some really solid ideas about how my farms would differ depending on where I settled, and how to figure out the best blend of what I want to -produce- vs. where I want to -live-.

and, of course, shameless self-promotion, I have two fiction novels of my own out (Long Walk Home and If A Tree Falls). The first one starts off a little slow, but it's gotten some good reviews. The slow start is one of the big flaws I've been working to correct in my writing, and I hope I've done better in the sequel. A third book in the trilogy is due out in March of 2010, depending on publishing schedules.

Dame Calla


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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/22/2009 5:36:05 PM   
LookieNoNookie


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quote:

ORIGINAL: GYPZYQUEEN

I am interested in the book you are reading now or a fav you have read..( any)
 
**title..author..review..strengths etc..**
 
and no as a retired school marm I will not give you grades..
even if I want to....but I may cane if you are late with the assignment

GQ


Every book I've ever read.  I read at least 1 every week...and if I'm flying.....3.

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/22/2009 6:06:49 PM   
ShaharThorne


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Currently reading Eldest by Paolini (I love children's lit), with Brisingr starting tomorrow.

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/22/2009 6:57:46 PM   
slaveluci


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I usually read nonfiction almost exclusively but have been on a fiction "kick" for the last month or so. I just finished "Dark Places" by Gillian Flynn
http://www.amazon.com/Dark-Places-Novel-Gillian-Flynn/dp/0307341569/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1245722125&sr=1-1
and really liked it alot. I read "The Poet" by Michael Connelly http://www.amazon.com/Poet-Michael-Connelly/dp/0446690457/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1245722177&sr=1-1
right before that and liked it quite a bit as well.

I've just now gotten into Michael Marshall http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_b?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=michael+marshall

He wrote a trilogy of books ("Straw Men," "The Upright Man," and "Blood of Angels") which I'm preparing to read. I just started "The Intruders" by him and am really enjoying it. I'll read all these before reading his latest "Bad Things: A Novel."

Great suspenseful summer reading

luci

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/23/2009 8:25:26 PM   
brandi1379


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I just got done reading the Twilight series (juvinile i know) but they were really good. I read alot of Nora Roberts and whatever else i can find at the library 

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/23/2009 10:26:55 PM   
Esinn


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This is the read list of the last month or so:

Kant: Foundations Of Metaphysics & Morals

Mack: Who Wrote The New Testament

Harris: End  Of Faith

Greene: Elegant Universe - this was awesome a must have for all

I am thumbing through an amazing book as it is not much of a read:
Hubble 15 Year Of Discovery

Strobel: Case For Christ

Marcus Aurelius: Meditations - not my writing style but worth the trouble non the less.

I've not found much fiction I can get into.


< Message edited by Esinn -- 6/23/2009 10:27:51 PM >

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/24/2009 6:15:56 AM   
Tamer4hire


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Druid Power by Amber Wolf

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/24/2009 10:43:03 AM   
philosophy


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....anything by Terry Pratchett, but particulary 'Carpe Jugulum' and 'Small Gods'.......

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RE: Member's fav books... - 6/24/2009 11:05:24 AM   
GreedyTop


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Harry Harrison:  the Eden series (ok and the Stainless Steel Rat series)

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