What's Everyone Reading?

unclepercy

Electoral Member
Jun 4, 2005
821
15
18
Baja Canada
Jean Auel writes anthropological fiction, about cavemen, only with characters. She has had 6 blockbuster hits, and she took 7-8 years to research the last one. I love that medieval crappadedooda too! In fact, I love sci-fi, fantasy. Two of my favs were: Pillars of the Earth and World Without End. I have two e-readers, so if anyone runs across some free books - let me know.

Uncle Percy
 

WLDB

Senate Member
Jun 24, 2011
6,182
0
36
Ottawa
Bennett: The Rebel Who Challenged and Changed a Nation-John Boyko. Interesting look at one of our least understood/liked Prime Ministers.
 

unclepercy

Electoral Member
Jun 4, 2005
821
15
18
Baja Canada
Hi, there, WLDB. I'm not Canadian, so that sounds kinda dull since I never heard of him. I'm not much on political works anyway, although I have some American novels in my collection.

I'm from Texas. But, thank you for the reply. BTW, American books are much cheaper. I tend to float to kobo most of the time, but I'm no expert on the new e-books.

Uncle



Bennett: The Rebel Who Challenged and Changed a Nation-John Boyko. Interesting look at one of our least understood/liked Prime Ministers.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
66
48
Minnesota: Gopher State




Stories of Southern Blacks who immigrated North in the post WW I era.
 

Bar Sinister

Executive Branch Member
Jan 17, 2010
8,252
19
38
Edmonton
Jean Auel writes anthropological fiction, about cavemen, only with characters. She has had 6 blockbuster hits, and she took 7-8 years to research the last one. I love that medieval crappadedooda too! In fact, I love sci-fi, fantasy. Two of my favs were: Pillars of the Earth and World Without End. I have two e-readers, so if anyone runs across some free books - let me know.

Uncle Percy
Try these sites: Many of the books here are still under copyright in the US, but many nations do not recognize the extended copyright laws the US brought in to help out Disney and Co., so download away.

Online Library - download and read ebooks for free

Free-eBooks.net | Download free Fiction, Health, Romance and many more ebooks
 

Johnnny

Frontiersman
Jun 8, 2007
9,388
124
63
Third rock from the Sun
"The Pirates of Somalia" Written by Jay Bahadur

A real good book that paints the pirates of somalia in a more human way. I feel for them and alot of them seem to be just fisherman without options who turned to piracy. Although in the end we all know they aint from our western world, so they are just going to have to eat cake while the international community rapes their waterways.
 

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
848
113
70
Saint John, N.B.
Back to reading non-fiction.

Just finished After America by Mark Steyn...................excellent points, shocking stats, a world view uncluttered by sentimentalism or the preconception that progress is irreversible.

Yes, read it.....but it is disjointed and not up to Steyn's usual level.

Now reading Death in the Tall Grass, by Peter Hathaway Capstick..................who was an African professional hunter for twenty years. Not for the PETA crew...lol.

He killed over 700 elephants (mostly in "cropping" operations for the gov't), several man-eating lions.........fascinating book.
 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
141
63
Backwater, Ontario.
I started "Master and Commander" by Patrick O'Brien last month. Hard to get into. Sat on the computer desk for two weeks. After the first twenty pages, I can't put it down.

And he's got about 20 other novels, and some short stories, etc. Just picked up three more by him at the used book store. Looks like I'll be busy for a bit.

Sea farin tales.............Argh Billy!! Load with chain and grape, come about to larboard, and give'em a broadside!!!

(my pirate smilie is missing in action):-(
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,817
471
83
The wall street thing led me to this:




I'm hoping it's as entertaining as it looks.
 

coldstream

on dbl secret probation
Oct 19, 2005
5,160
27
48
Chillliwack, BC
Naomi Klein can be somewhat conventional in her ideological, anti corporate take on things.. not that she doesn't state a lot of truths with her books, she can just be a little too doctrinaire and deferential to left wing idols, for my tastes anyway.

You have to look deeper than mere corporate greed, the amoral character of corporations has always been a given, to discern the systematic dismantling of economic governance at the behest of a global financial and trading oligarchy of the last 40 years, to delve into the cause of the current economic chaos. The shocks are an inevitable result of this, and will get ever more calamatous unless the entire Free Market paradigm that has ruled the world since the early 1970s is overturned. The principles are nothing less than those of world tyranny and slavery versus those of social and economic justice.

I'm reading Nation Maker, the second volume of Richard Gwyn's excellent biography of John A. MacDonald.. who was, by the way, the original anti Free Trader and promoter of economic expansion through the enabling productive manufacture and an equitable distribution of wealth.. through his National Polices... and founder of the the Conservative Party.
 
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Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
848
113
70
Saint John, N.B.
The wall street thing led me to this:




I'm hoping it's as entertaining as it looks.

WARNING!!!!

Naomi Klein is a silver-spoon upper-class socialist and an idiot (although the last is redundant)

:)

As for me, The Sun Also Rises, by Earnest Hemingway.

Still re-reading the classics.

this one is not one of my favs.
 

Machjo

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 19, 2004
17,878
61
48
Ottawa, ON
Now reading Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.

I seem to remember reading it before, but can't remember when or where. Reading it now though, I see it in a whole different light from how I remember it. On the surface it might appear as nothing more than a love story between romeo and Juliet, but reading it now, I get more the impresion that Romeo and Juliet themselves are there more just for the entertainment value. the real story seems to be more that between the Capulets and the Montagues, their feud, and the feud's impact on the citizens of Verona generally, Romeo and Juliet being but among the more obvious victims (owing to their belonging to the two families).

The play also touches upon various moral questions (eloping, consent of parents for marriage, respect for parents, family prejudices and irrational hatred which can also parallel international prejudices and hatreds, international marraiges, immigration, international marriage, citizenship and being accepted into a new family, even questions of abortion with regards to the possibility of Juliet being pregnant when taking the potent medicine, suicide, etc.). As superficial as the play seems, it abounds in social commentary in inter-persona, interfamilial, and even international relations, prejudices, hatre, war, immigration, etc.

Truly fascinating. I'm reading it one more time this week.
 

WLDB

Senate Member
Jun 24, 2011
6,182
0
36
Ottawa
Just bought Richard Gwyn's "Nation Maker" the second volume of his biography of John A. MacDonald. Looks good. The first volume was interesting.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,817
471
83
WARNING!!!!

Naomi Klein is a silver-spoon upper-class socialist and an idiot (although the last is redundant)

:)

Yea, I'm aware it will be exaggerated, but I felt like getting in the spirit of things.

Nothing says anti-branding better than NO LOGO.

NO LOGO

It's just.. it's just armchair hilarity!



Look.. I'll do it again for teh lulz...



NO LOGO


Oh my god, I just kill myself.