February 02, 2014
— Open Blogger

Where the Wild Things Are - Curtain From The Opera Set, 1979
(Image courtesy of tygertale blog. Yeah, I didn't know that WTWTA had been made into an opera, either.)
Good morning morons and moronettes and welcome to the award-winning AoSHQ's prestigious Sunday Morning Book Thread.
Amazon and... Kobo?
According to a reader survey by goodereader.com, Amazon and Kobo are basically tied as being the online bookstore of choice for serious readers. And by serious, they mean "users that often buy 50-100 books a year and often have more than one e-reader in the household." The results:
Amazon and Kobo were tied with 35.34% of the overall votes and these two stores have the largest international footprint. They exist in over 30 different countries and offer millions of titles. Kobo has a much larger library of titles, with over 3.6 million available, they are also easier for people to buy books from. One of the advantages these two companies have is their extensive portfolio of e-readers and tablets to facilitate reading.
The Barnes & Noble Nook was predicted to go under completely this year, but it's not dead, yet:
Barnes and Noble might be seeing a 30% decline on their hardware and eBook sales during the past holiday season, but they they do have user loyalty. 10.04% of our readers prefer to buy their Nook Books, but 99% of the participants originated from the US...Their ecosystem is fairly well developed and they offer self-published titles under the Nook Press banner and full color content optimized for the Nook HD. The sole new device of 2013 was the Nook Glowlight, which tends to be your best friend for binge reading.
So we'll see if B&N can make up lost ground. And then there's this tidbit:
Sadly, Android and iOS readers have to be based in the US/UK to buy books online.
I did not know that.
Windows 8 Tablet Price Reduction
My next e-reader/tablet purchase may be some sort of Windows 8 device. I think W8 is an abysmal interface for desktop computers (I much prefer Windows 7), but it should work well in the tablet environment it was obviously designed for.
Which is good because the price is coming down on a number of Windows 8 tablets:
Among the tablets that can now be picked up for cheap include the Dell Venue 8 Pro which has seen a $70 drop in price from the original $299. This does make the offering quite lucrative for a tablet that offers 32 GB of storage. Also at $229, the Dell Venue 8 Pro is slam bang in the territory of 2013 Nexus 7 that offers 16 GB of storage and an inch less of screen space (but with more pixels) for the same price.
I have to say that $229 for a 32GB tablet is mighty tempting. But
What is also interesting is that Microsoft is not extending the generosity to its own Surface range that continues to retail at the original price tags.
Huh. I wonder why? I also wonder what answer I would get from a Microsoft rep if I asked why I should buy a Surface instead of a lower-priced competitor?
Several weeks ago, I mentioned Pompeii, by Robert Harris, which elicited mostly favorable comments from the horde, as did his
Cicero trilogy (Imperium, Conspirata, and the third one is still being written). A few months ago, he came out with a book about the Dreyfus affair, a novel entitledAn Officer and a Spy. The main character is
Georges Picquart, the ambitious, intellectual, recently promoted head of the counterespionage agency that “proved” Dreyfus had passed secrets to the Germans. At first, Picquart firmly believes in Dreyfus’s guilt. But it is not long after Dreyfus is delivered to his desolate prison that Picquart stumbles on information that leads him to suspect that there is still a spy at large in the French military
I haven't read this book, so I don't really know if it's any good, but I see that all of the 78 reviews on Amazon give it either 5 or 4 stars, mostly 5. We all know that Amazon reviews tend to be inflated, but there you are.
Famous British Morons
It's always interesting what Amazon searches will turn up. Searching for Harris' books somehow brought me to Hellraisers: The Life and Inebriated Times of Richard Burton, Richard Harris, Peter O'Toole, and Oliver Reed by Robert Sellers (eh, Sellers, Harris, what's the difference? says the Amazon search engine), which amused me. I knew O'Toole and Burton could put it away, but the one I remember most was Oliver Reed. I swear that guy came out of the womb drunk and stayed that way all of his life. I don't think I've ever seen him in an interview where he wasn't stewed to the gills.
So if you want to read about the boozy antics of four legendary British drunks, both on and off camera, here is the book for you.
Oh, Happy Day
According to this article, Jimmy Carter has written another book, and it will be out soon. I know you all can hardly wait. I know I can't.
So, what's this book going to be about?
Simon & Shuster announced Tuesday that the former president's "A Call To Action: Women, Religion, Violence, and Power" will be published March 25.
The publisher says Carter will draw upon personal observations from his worldwide travels as he condemns abuses of women and girls and the alleged distortions of religious texts cited as justification.
Yeah, that ought to be good. My only question is, what's the over-under on how many pages Carter will devote to ritual female genital mutilation in third world Muslim countries?
OK, Now This Is Just Silly
Author Ian Doescher has loved Shakespeare since eighth grade. He also likes Star Wars. So he thought, hey, why not combine the two? rewrote the screenplay of Episode IV in iambic pentameter and published the result as William Shakespeare's Star Wars.
Here's what the rolling prologue looks like:
PROLOGUE.
Outer space.
Enter chorus.
CHORUS:
It is a period of civil war.
The spaceships of the rebels, striking swift
From base unseen, have gainÂ’d a victÂ’ry oÂ’er
The cruel Galactic Empire, now adrift.
Amidst the battle, rebel spies prevailÂ’d
And stole the plans to a space station vast,
Whose powÂ’rful beams will later be unveilÂ’d
And crush a planet: Â’tis the DEATH STAR blast.
PursuÂ’d by agents sinister and cold,
Now Princess Leia to her home doth flee,
DelivÂ’ring plans and a new hope they hold:
Of bringing freedom to the galaxy.
In time so long ago begins our play,
In star-crossed galaxy far, far away.
I think this would be a great gag gift for your book-loving friends, and also for snooty types who look down on popular culture and think they're better than everybody else because they read Shakespeare and listen to classical music.
This is Doescher's first book, and it sold so well that he wrote a sequel, which will be released this March. It will be titled 'The Empire Striketh Back', but you probably already knew that. The third installment, 'The Jedi Doth Return' is scheduled for July.
Books By Morons
Long-time moron Sean Gleeson (remember him? I do.) e-mailed yesterday asking me to let you all know that he has published his first book, and I must say, it's not one you see every day. Subjective Grounds: Writings by Persons with the Initials S.G is the title and he says it's "essentially an arbitrary compilation of good, short, things to read, all written buy 10 guys, and 1 lady, with my initials." Authors include Samuel Gompers, Saint Gregory, Saxo Grammaticus, and Stephen Glass, yes, that Stephen Glass, the serial liar and fabulist who spent several years at The New Republic making stuff up out of thin air and successfully passing it off as journalism. The particular Glass article Sean chose was the one that finally got the little weasel busted.
My only complaint about this book is that Amazon says it's a 2.5mb Kindle file, but the book is only 72 pages long. Really? To compare, one of the editions of Les Misérables, which totals 959 pages, is only 2.1mb. So I wonder what's causing the bloat in Sean's book?
___________
Shiver me timbers! Infrequent moron commenter 'Dandolo' has a short story in the Dark Oak Press pirate anthology A Tall Ship, A Star, And Plunder that just came out. It is available at DarkOakPress.com and Amazon. His story in it is "Fireflies on the Water".
Arrrr!
___________
So that's all for this week. As always, book thread tips, suggestions, rumors, threats, and insults may be sent to OregonMuse, Proprietor, AoSHQ Book Thread, at aoshqbookthread, followed by the 'at' sign, and then 'G' mail, and then dot cee oh emm.
What have you all been reading this week? Hopefully something good, because, as I keep saying, life is too short to be reading lousy books.
Posted by: Open Blogger at
06:10 AM
| Comments (138)
Post contains 1520 words, total size 10 kb.
That is EXACTLY the way it is here. I am ashamed as an AOSHQ Moron that I spend more on books than on booze.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 06:13 AM (T2V/1)
The learning curve on my Samsung GT2 using Icecream was damn tough. I have had it for a year now and still find stuff hard.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 06:15 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: Mike Hammer at February 02, 2014 06:17 AM (aDwsi)
I finished "Lone Survivor" last night. Whew, that took the breath out of me.
Still plowing through "A Storm of Swords." That's it for my current books.
I do like the Kobo store and the Kobo Glo I have. I've never messed with a Kindle Paperwhite, so I can't say how it compares, but I do love the built-in light and a touch screen is nice too (it's my first ereader with a touch screen).
Oh, and any of you Kindle owners who are also Prime members on Amazon, there is a new program that just started that offers one free book per month (from a limited choice) called Kindle First. Check it out.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/digital/kindle/botm/?tag=kb-20
Now off to read the rest of the post...
Posted by: DangerGirl at February 02, 2014 06:22 AM (GrtrJ)
http://www.amazon.com/gp/digital/kindle/botm/?tag=kb-20
Now off to read the rest of the post...
Posted by: DangerGirl at February 02, 2014 10:22 AM (GrtrJ)
I thought they had been doing that for a while???
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 06:25 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: Boss Moss at February 02, 2014 06:26 AM (6bMeY)
Posted by: Anthony L. at February 02, 2014 06:28 AM (34n6F)
Posted by: Jenny Hates Her Phone at February 02, 2014 06:28 AM (GmTxn)
Posted by: Adam at February 02, 2014 06:28 AM (Aif/5)
Posted by: Just an observation at February 02, 2014 06:30 AM (WbOdn)
Claiming Katie Perry is equal to Mozart is totally a progg thing.
Posted by: HR at February 02, 2014 06:31 AM (hO8IJ)
Posted by: Ribald Conservative riding Orca at February 02, 2014 06:33 AM (+1T7c)
Posted by: backhoe at February 02, 2014 10:31 AM (ULH4o)
Amazon also has a free Kindle app for both the PC and the Android.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 06:34 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: NCKate at February 02, 2014 06:34 AM (Eed4A)
Posted by: Vic at February 02, 2014 10:25 AM (T2V/1)
Eh, maybe you're right. I had never heard about it until someone told me last month it was new.
Regardless, it is a good opportunity to maybe find a new book for free.
Posted by: DangerGirl at February 02, 2014 06:36 AM (GrtrJ)
Posted by: Just an observation at February 02, 2014 06:37 AM (WbOdn)
Posted by: Just an observation at February 02, 2014 10:37 AM (WbOdn)
They do
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 06:37 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: Sean Gleeson at February 02, 2014 06:38 AM (Vs6FA)
Posted by: ExSnipe at February 02, 2014 06:38 AM (LKJt3)
Posted by: Colorado Alex at February 02, 2014 06:43 AM (lr3d7)
Posted by: Ribald Conservative riding Orca at February 02, 2014 10:33 AM (+1T7c)
In case you don't understand:
http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2013/06/28
Posted by: Buck Farack, Gentleman Adventurer at February 02, 2014 06:44 AM (Nk6GS)
You also might enjoy Brad Thor's books. His are similar to Flynns.
Posted by: ExSnipe at February 02, 2014 10:38 AM (LKJt3)
I had heard that. Unfortunately our local library did not have any of his books and I like to sample at least one and preferably more than one before I start buying.
And they haven't had one on the Daily Deals yet either. I will buy an unknown there if it looks like the stuff I normally like.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 06:44 AM (T2V/1)
Yep, I have the free Kindle app on my Acer and like it well. It seems like most e-book suppliers have free PC readers.
Life's a weird thing- right before Emmy died in 2010 we discussed getting a Kindle and sharing it. But we were poor and they were pricey, so we did not. After I lost her I found that Kindle app, and used it almost exclusively for reading. Then, on some whim, started re-reading "analog" books and have not used it much in a year or so.
Life's funny....
Posted by: backhoe at February 02, 2014 06:46 AM (ULH4o)
Posted by: Daily Reminder Guy at February 02, 2014 06:49 AM (6j8ke)
Posted by: Beeblebrox at February 02, 2014 06:52 AM (VJV5e)
Posted by: Dr. Varno at February 02, 2014 06:53 AM (V4CBV)
Not that there is anything wrong with that. much.. by itself.
Posted by: Peth Longinous at February 02, 2014 06:54 AM (itpbI)
Another good book on the Berlin Airlift is 'Daring Young Men: The Heroism and Triumph of the Berlin Airlift June 1948 to May 1949.' By Richard Reeves.
I developed a special interest in that time and place after reading Leon Uris' 'Armageddon' and discovering my uncle, a doctor who never anywhere near Germany and his time during the war station above the Arctic Circle, has a cameo in the book. There is no chance of this being coincidence as he was probably the sole human to date with his name.
Posted by: Epobirs at February 02, 2014 06:56 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: backhoe at February 02, 2014 06:57 AM (ULH4o)
Posted by: Empire1 at February 02, 2014 06:57 AM (6e1TS)
Posted by: DefendUSA at February 02, 2014 06:58 AM (nAHMK)
Posted by: ExSnipe at February 02, 2014 06:58 AM (LKJt3)
Posted by: OregonMuse at February 02, 2014 07:02 AM (fd0Pp)
Don't get me started about how unusable windows 8 is without a touch screen. Friends don't let friends buy windows 8 computers without a touchscreen ( even if they complain that they don't like the glossy screen that doesn't show finger prints. )
Posted by: Ben Ghazi at February 02, 2014 07:03 AM (D+Q9E)
The basic Kindle is now very cheap compared to what it used to be. And with the availability of free books and the Daily Deals for cheap books it will pay for itself if you buy every many books.
The real problem financial wise it that it makes it so easy to buy books. You don't even have to leave the house. That is what slowed me down in buying books.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 07:04 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: Empire1 at February 02, 2014 07:04 AM (6e1TS)
Yeah, without a touchscreen, using Win8 on a laptop was annoying because the UI didn't work well with a track pad. A mouse with a scroll wheel handles the Start screen fine but most track pads are too small to make scroll zones work well. (I would usually disable scroll zones with earlier Windows because they would get touched more often by accident than intent.) The 8.1 update also makes a big difference in the simple allowance of a control panel check box to go directly to the desktop on login.
It's little details like that, which people told them very loudly were needed long before Win8 went RTM, that would have saved a lot of rancor if they'd just acknowledged the feedback.
Posted by: Epobirs at February 02, 2014 07:04 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: OregonMuse at February 02, 2014 07:05 AM (fd0Pp)
Posted by: Nevergiveup at February 02, 2014 07:05 AM (nzKvP)
I also love their cafe and bookstore (sort of). I go there less than I would normally because they have succumbed to the curse of LOUD STORE MUSIC. Everywhere I go there is LOUD STORE MUSIC! Even in the parking lot of a large upscale mall nearby! This is insanity. Make it stop so I can go out again.
Posted by: PJ at February 02, 2014 07:06 AM (ZWaLo)
Yep, minute by minute. Told to him by his friend Billy Shelton, the guy who started training him when he was a teenager.
Posted by: DangerGirl at February 02, 2014 07:06 AM (GrtrJ)
"But no indoor plumbing."
When I was a young fella we made yearly trips to Mom's hometown of Pomeroy, Ohio. Most of the houses in the country still had "backhouses"- outhouses.
And while it upgraded to indoor plumbing the place my late wife grew up at- Haase Farm Service-- had man and woman outhouses for customers. Still there, albeit falling down.
Posted by: backhoe at February 02, 2014 07:07 AM (ULH4o)
Posted by: RWC at February 02, 2014 07:07 AM (9+w3c)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at February 02, 2014 07:08 AM (iQxYV)
Posted by: Nevergiveup at February 02, 2014 07:09 AM (nzKvP)
Posted by: RWC at February 02, 2014 07:10 AM (9+w3c)
Posted by: sock_rat_eez at February 02, 2014 07:11 AM (+jyzN)
Posted by: BornLib at February 02, 2014 07:11 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: doug at February 02, 2014 07:12 AM (TV2Em)
Posted by: Dorcus Blimline at February 02, 2014 07:12 AM (iB0Q2)
Posted by: Richard Gozinya at February 02, 2014 07:12 AM (KkQGg)
Posted by: blindgoose at February 02, 2014 07:12 AM (qLv+1)
A kindle, with wireless turned off, doesn't track you. I download to it via USB. Works great, with 100% less movement tracking, and I know what the kids have on it because I put it there.
Posted by: Rolf at February 02, 2014 07:13 AM (+O7nZ)
Posted by: BornLib at February 02, 2014 07:14 AM (zpNwC)
I fear Barnes & Noble is never going to get back on their feet and will likely cease to be within this decade but at the moment the Nook is a very good hardware choice for the money.
What is easy to overlook about Kobo is that they are a major player in e-readers outside the US. It may be "Who?" here but in other parts of the world it is the Nook that gets that response.
Posted by: Epobirs at February 02, 2014 07:15 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: Mindy (Cupcake) at February 02, 2014 07:15 AM (mQwL2)
Posted by: doug at February 02, 2014 07:15 AM (TV2Em)
Posted by: BornLib at February 02, 2014 07:17 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: the littl shyning man at February 02, 2014 07:17 AM (tmFlQ)
Posted by: BornLib at February 02, 2014 07:19 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: Empire1 at February 02, 2014 07:21 AM (6e1TS)
IMHO, yes. The difference in eyestrain to me is considerable. SID (Society for Information Display) refers to this as reflective vs. transmissive in terms of the lighting.
One of the reasons the newer e-readers with built-in lighting don't have the light behind the panel (besides the problem of that not working with e-ink displays) is to avoid shining a light straight at you as a typical LCD display would do. The difference can be subtle but an hour spent reading on one of my e-ink devices doesn't leave my eye burning as the same hour using a color LCD tablet does.
Posted by: Epobirs at February 02, 2014 07:22 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: the littl shyning man at February 02, 2014 07:24 AM (tmFlQ)
First read "Schweik" a long, long time ago (in high school), and recently acquired another copy. Gotta agree with your analysis. Fortunately, the "commie" part of Hasek's own story doesn't really mess up the book. And yes, the antisemitism was a function of Hasek's time and place....
It is still a good read.
And it is on paper, like every book I own. I have no interest in e-books. I'll leave that modern stuff to you techy-types.
Posted by: MrScribbler at February 02, 2014 07:25 AM (ff7/5)
Posted by: NCKate at February 02, 2014 07:25 AM (Eed4A)
Posted by: doug at February 02, 2014 11:15 AM (TV2Em)
That screen looks inviting, but I won't replace my basic Kindle because I want to continue being able to hold in either hand and not use my other hand to change pages. Very convenient when I've got the kitty tucked in on one side, wrapped around my hand.
Posted by: Tunafish at February 02, 2014 07:28 AM (Nzqyt)
Posted by: doug at February 02, 2014 07:29 AM (TV2Em)
Posted by: Empire1 at February 02, 2014 07:31 AM (6e1TS)
Posted by: backhoe at February 02, 2014 07:31 AM (ULH4o)
Posted by: the littl shyning man at February 02, 2014 07:32 AM (tmFlQ)
Animals are funny. My Cole-boy ( The late Miss Emily's baby- a Border Collie ) is a thief. Soon as we got him he stole a $5 tip from the Vet's pocket. Until his muzzle got too big to dip into pockets he robbed everyone of anything in them.
Today a glove went missing. Looked hi and low for it- couldn't find it....
Looked out in the yard. Yep, Border Collie and glove....
Posted by: backhoe at February 02, 2014 07:39 AM (ULH4o)
Posted by: RWC at February 02, 2014 11:07 AM (9+w3c)
If you don't load it up with music you shouldn't have a problem with disk space. The Samsung GT2 comes with 8 gig of space. I have probably over 500 books on mine now and haven't touched the original 8 gig. I have also added a 32G card in its slot. I will die before I can load all that up with books.
And for music I use the Sansa clip is available in the 4 or 8 gig variety with also the ability to add 32G of memory.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 07:40 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: IllTemperedCur at February 02, 2014 07:41 AM (aYjRw)
Posted by: RWC at February 02, 2014 11:10 AM (9+w3c)
I skipped that one because I have it in hardback and I am trying to avoid getting the Kindle version of the ones I already have in hardback. The hardbacks are not as hard for me to read as the paperback.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 07:42 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: doug at February 02, 2014 07:46 AM (TV2Em)
Posted by: NCKate at February 02, 2014 11:25 AM (Eed4A)
Thanks I just checked that. They also have two "free" now that are prequels to his last boom (I think). But his first novel is $8.99. Does it matter what order you read them in? I generally like to start at the beginning.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 07:52 AM (T2V/1)
Somebody mentioned Neal Stephenson's Baroque Trilogy on a thread the other day. I looked it up on Amazon and it sounds interesting - like the "Name of the Rose," only set in 17th century England and featuring Isaac Newton, Samuel Pepys among the characters, but sheesh, I assumed it was 3 novels. Nope each part of the Trilogy consists of 3 (or maybe 4) books. That's a bit daunting. I guess I'll try book one and see how I like it.
I just started reading Bill Bryson's "One Summer, America 1927." I'm not far enough into it to give an opinion, but I've always enjoyed Bryson's books - I highly recommend his book "At Home: A Short History of Private Life."
Posted by: Donna V. at February 02, 2014 07:53 AM (R3gO3)
Posted by: Captain Hate on an iPad at February 02, 2014 07:56 AM (yQyBg)
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 07:56 AM (T2V/1)
And I chose "Long Knives", so here's another thanks for the tip. How did I not know about this before? I must have been a little too quick to hit the delete key when Amazon sent out the e-mail announcement.
What I'm reading: "Shakespeare's Restless World: A Portrait Of An Era In Twenty Objects" by Neil MacGregor, a moron recommendation on the book thread a few weeks back. It's a snapshot of the England Shakespeare knew using the 20 objects, one per chapter, as starting points for thumbnail histories a various aspects of Elizabethan life. I did not know there was a law against public discussion of who would succeed Elizabeth, and that this prohibition is one of the reasons Shakespeare chose the locales and eras he did for some of his plays, examination of current concerns by tangent. Recommended if you like history, particularly the QE I era.
Posted by: Retread at February 02, 2014 07:56 AM (cHwk5)
Posted by: doug at February 02, 2014 07:57 AM (TV2Em)
Posted by: waelse1 at February 02, 2014 08:01 AM (x+P8L)
(This was first published as 'Utopias Elsewhere: Journeys in a Vanishing World' under the author's actual name, Anthony Daniels, in 1991.)
Dalrymple spent much of 1989 and 1990 traveling around the world to communist nations in the wake of the Soviet collapse. The parallels to the America Obama and his ilk are seeking to create. Extending the dreariness of the projects to nearly all of the nation except the elites who prop up the regime.
Albania, Cuba, North Korea, Romania, and Vietnam are the destinations perused. Each is distinct yet all share numerous awful attributes that the followers of Marx inevitably inflict on their victims.
Posted by: Epobirs at February 02, 2014 08:03 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: doug at February 02, 2014 11:57 AM (TV2Em)
In that case I think I will download one of those "free" prequels and check it out. If it is good I will start at the beginning although I consider $8 a little pricey for a Kindle book, especially one that is over 11 years old.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 08:05 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at February 02, 2014 08:06 AM (b9CR7)
It was three big doorstop volumes when I read it. They may have broken it up into smaller chunks for paperback.
A similar thing happened with Peter Hamilton's Night's Dawn trilogy. It was three big volumes in its original publication but each volume was broken up into two paperbacks for the US publication, although I got the third one as a single hardback. Hamilton had become well known enough in the US to rate a hard back. Before then he was relatively unknown to US readers and mainly known as a short story writer in the UK.
Posted by: Epobirs at February 02, 2014 08:09 AM (bPxS6)
Dalrymple spent much of 1989 and 1990 traveling around the world to communist nations in the wake of the Soviet collapse. The parallels to the America Obama and his ilk are seeking to create are chilling. Extending the dreariness of the projects to nearly all of the nation except the elites who prop up the regime.
Dalrymple's insights into how these regimes suppress resistance are what really drives the book. He notes that the endemic shortages are not a bug but rather a feature as when daily life is a struggle for securing the most minor necessities, sparing any time and effort to getting rid of the oppressive regime becomes an impossibility. Think about that if you find yourself spending hours trying to get anything useful out of the healthcare.gov site.
Posted by: Epobirs at February 02, 2014 08:14 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: doug at February 02, 2014 08:15 AM (TV2Em)
Posted by: Trimegistus at February 02, 2014 08:18 AM (SONPB)
Posted by: doug at February 02, 2014 12:15 PM (TV2Em)
OK they have a few now. I am positive I found none when I checked about 6 months ago. They do have that first one in paperback but it is out right now.
Next time I go into town I'll check out one of what ever is in and give it a try even if I do have to read out of order.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 08:27 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: Tuna at February 02, 2014 08:29 AM (M/TDA)
Lawrence Wright is also the author of one of the best books about the origins of Al-qaeda, 'The Looming Tower.'
Highly recommended.
Posted by: Epobirs at February 02, 2014 08:30 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: Tuna at February 02, 2014 08:32 AM (M/TDA)
Posted by: ExSnipe at February 02, 2014 08:34 AM (LKJt3)
Posted by: doug at February 02, 2014 08:39 AM (TV2Em)
Posted by: OregonMuse at February 02, 2014 08:39 AM (fd0Pp)
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 08:41 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: OregonMuse at February 02, 2014 08:44 AM (fd0Pp)
Posted by: megthered at February 02, 2014 08:46 AM (iR4Dg)
Posted by: Tuna at February 02, 2014 08:49 AM (M/TDA)
Posted by: Adam at February 02, 2014 10:28 AM (Aif/5)
S.F. Platonov, History of Russia.
Nicholas Riasanovsky, A History of Russia
Bernard Pares, A History of Russia.
The last two go beyond 1917, but cover the period you are interested in. Platonov's work ends with the fall of the Provisional Government in November (our calendar) 1917. Pares is probably the most readable of the three.
Posted by: CQD at February 02, 2014 08:56 AM (d6iMX)
Posted by: OregonMuse at February 02, 2014 08:59 AM (fd0Pp)
Posted by: OregonMuse at February 02, 2014 09:00 AM (fd0Pp)
The traditions of a time when water covered the whole of the earthÂ’s surface are universal. Many races harbor the story of a world-wide flood some time during past ages. The Biblical story of Noah, the ark, and the flood is an invention of the Hebrew priesthood during the Babylonian captivity. There has never been a universal flood since life was established on Urantia. The only time the surface of the earth was completely covered by water was during those Archeozoic ages before the land had begun to appear.There is elaboration elsewhere in the Urantia papers about those Hebrew priests' choices. That many cultures had 'universal' floods is documented. That there was no universal flood in the last half-billion years is well understood scientifically, geologically substantiated and fundamentally irrefutable. Which, of course, is why the flood myth is a popular target of skeptics attacking Biblical Fundamentalism. Neither the commonness of a flood myth nor the geologic refutation thereof was any kind of a 'revelation' at the time the Urantia papers were written. As usual in such egregiously unscientific legends, the Urantia papers side with science and the skeptics. One of numerous reasons some Biblical Fundamentalists proclaim the Urantia revelation is the work of El Diablo not Los Angeles. So, as per usual, the Urantia papers give us well-understood refutation of a literal interpretation of a Biblical myth, with a little 'insider' knowledge thrown in, 'confirming' what some scholars had speculated prior to the Urantia papers, that the flood myth had been incorporated into Jewish scripture during the Babylonian captivity. Other than the presumed authority of the author's superhuman perspective, it is really pretty dry stuff. So they throw us some meat.
(875.2) 78:7.5 But Noah really lived; he was a wine maker of Aram, a river settlement near Erech. He kept a written record of the days of the riverÂ’s rise from year to year. He brought much ridicule upon himself by going up and down the river valley advocating that all houses be built of wood, boat fashion, and that the family animals be put on board each night as the flood season approached. He would go to the neighboring river settlements every year and warn them that in so many days the floods would come. Finally a year came in which the annual floods were greatly augmented by unusually heavy rainfall so that the sudden rise of the waters wiped out the entire village; only Noah and his immediate family were saved in their houseboat.No mention in the Urantia papers whether Noah's boat was round. I have been trying to find where the tablet was found, but all I've seen was "Mesopotamia." Research continues....
Posted by: Guru Radd Radd Upanishadd (Smythe) at February 02, 2014 09:05 AM (cdYeu)
Posted by: bill sometimes bill from canada at February 02, 2014 09:08 AM (BdgZz)
Posted by: bill sometimes bill from canada at February 02, 2014 09:19 AM (BdgZz)
No, it's not.
I have one. The screen is a lint magnet. The keyboard is also a lint magnet (as well as various danders) and when you close the lid, some of that krep winds up on the screen.
So you're innocently doing things when you notice a big piece of lint on the screen blocking some pixels you're trying to see. What do you? You reach out to flick it off the screen.
But it's a touch screen.
So the computer does something.
Posted by: Anachronda at February 02, 2014 09:28 AM (U82Km)
Smells like victory.
Posted by: Anachronda at February 02, 2014 09:33 AM (U82Km)
This week I attempted to read a book written by a lesbian author that purported to be about her spiritual journey from fundamentalist Christianity to "a gentler, more inclusive flavor of the Christian faith". I wanted to gain some insight into fellow believers who happen to be homosexuals.
I found that I could barely read past the preface and into the first chapter before setting it aside. The author, Kelly Barth, defined her Presbyterian upbringing as fundamentalist, which I guess might be barely true, if you stretch the definition of "fundamentalism" to a church that teaches basic Christian doctrine.
Then she lost me when she started sneering at her parents and their simple daily prayers, and admitted the "Christianity" she now follows denies the divinity of Christ, claims Joseph as the biological father of Jesus, denies His miracles, and doesn't believe He was raised from the dead.
???
Perhaps this distorted view of Christ and Christianity is why she titled her book "My Almost Certainly Real Imaginary Jesus". It's apparent she just decided to make up her own.
I will be returning the book to the library unread. Instead I will pick up the latest in the Lucas Davenport series by John Sandford, "Silken Prey". I hope he writes another Virgil Flowers novel soon. I love that f*n Flowers.
Posted by: grammie winger at February 02, 2014 09:36 AM (P6QsQ)
So I'm not following something here. If they stated that the story came from Babylon, then what's with the Noah was real bit?
And I can see from your nic that you know where the story of the flood comes from...
Posted by: HH at February 02, 2014 09:36 AM (XXwdv)
Posted by: Charlotte at February 02, 2014 09:52 AM (u1eI9)
'A Hymn Before Battle' is the first in the numerous volumes of the Posleen War setting. Aliens warn Earth that voracious invaders are heading their way and they will help Earth out with technology. But the aliens have their own agenda and only want humans to keep the Posleen contained rather than truly win and become major players on the galactic stage themselves.
Posted by: Epobirs at February 02, 2014 10:14 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: .87c at February 02, 2014 10:14 AM (qZPXs)
'A Hymn Before Battle' is the first in the numerous volumes of the Posleen War setting. Aliens warn Earth that voracious invaders are heading their way and they will help Earth out with technology. But the aliens have their own agenda and only want humans to keep the Posleen contained rather than truly win and become major players on the galactic stage themselves.
Thanks for the suggestion Epobirs!
Posted by: Charlotte at February 02, 2014 10:18 AM (u1eI9)
Posted by: ExSnipe at February 02, 2014 10:25 AM (LKJt3)
Some places are paid by advertisers on these channels to blare it. Guess it's another source of income to make up for all the people who quit going because they can't stand the, er, channel they are blaring.
Posted by: PJ at February 02, 2014 10:40 AM (ZWaLo)
Posted by: Charlotte at February 02, 2014 01:52 PM (u1eI9)
I recommend trying the "There Will Be Dragons series. Also the legend of Aldenata (Posline raids) I also like the Ghost series but you probably wouldn't because it is borderline kinky porno.
John Ringo is one of the rare conservative SF authors and one of my favorites.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 10:45 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: OregonMuse at February 02, 2014 11:55 AM (fd0Pp)
Posted by: All Hail Eris at February 02, 2014 12:16 PM (QBm1P)
Posted by: grammie winger at February 02, 2014 12:21 PM (P6QsQ)
Posted by: OregonMuse at February 02, 2014 12:52 PM (fd0Pp)
Posted by: the Truth, the whole Truth, and nothing but the truth at February 02, 2014 01:34 PM (52lgb)
Posted by: Titanium at February 02, 2014 02:01 PM (IgOQg)
Posted by: Anon at February 02, 2014 07:01 PM (DW4oN)
Posted by: OregonMuse at February 02, 2014 07:15 PM (JAD5c)
Now I know what I am reading next... Thanks
Posted by: Charlotte at February 02, 2014 07:39 PM (u1eI9)
Late post from OZ to this thread...
I'm reading "We Were Soldiers Once - and Young" by Lt.Gen. Hal Moore and a journo Joe Galloway - this book describes the Ia Drang battle in November 1965 - first big battle between US troops and the North Vietnamese regular army
This was first published in 1992 so I'm very late in picking up a copy of this book - a fascinating read if you are interested in war history
Thanks Oregon Muse for this thread too - well done!
Posted by: aussie at February 02, 2014 08:07 PM (nP3cM)
This was first published in 1992 so I'm very late in picking up a copy of this book - a fascinating read if you are interested in war history
I have this book sitting on my nightstand, but I have yet to pick it up. Maybe I should. Thanks for the recommendation, aussie.
Posted by: OregonMuse at February 03, 2014 09:04 AM (JAD5c)
Posted by: BornLib at February 03, 2014 04:16 PM (zpNwC)
Posted by: BornLib at February 03, 2014 04:16 PM (zpNwC)
Posted by: BornLib at February 03, 2014 04:22 PM (zpNwC)
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One thing I have noticed about Tom Clancy's writing that I never noticed in the past. He is really wasn't that good of a writer. He over used a lot of burned out clichés to try to increase the tension. There seems to be always a big storm coming in the impede the US military's ability to respond to events and shit breaks just at the right time to screw up a mission.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at February 02, 2014 06:12 AM (T2V/1)