What's Everyone Reading?

JakeElwood

~ Blues Brother ~
Nov 27, 2009
275
3
18
3,963 miles from Chicago
Pavement's "Wowee Zowee" 33⅓ (Charles)

Book #72 (2010) from Continuum's 33⅓ Series... about Pavement's third album Wowee Zowee (1995).
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,908
1,907
113


'A brilliant conceit . . . the truest and most original account of Philipism . . . Hilarious and obsessive, it is sure to gain a cult status all of its own.'
THE SUNDAY TIMES

'Fabulous . . . a great travel tale and an epic culture clash'
Simon Reeve, author and BBC presenter


The Tanna tribe of Vanuatu worship Prince Philip as a god

As a bookish child growing up on Merseyside in the 1980s, Matthew Baylis identified with the much-mocked Prince Philip as a fellow outsider. He even had a poster of him on his bedroom wall.

Years later, his Philip-worship long behind him, Baylis heard about the existence of a Philip cult on the South Sea island of Tanna. Why was it there? Nobody had a convincing answer. Nobody even seemed to want to find one.

His curiosity fatally piqued, the author travelled over 10,000 miles to find a society both remote and slap-bang in the shipping-lanes of history. A place where US airmen, Lithuanian libertarians, Corsican paratroopers and Graeco-Danish princes have had as much impact as the missionaries and the slave-traders. On the rumbling slopes of this remarkable volcanic island, banjaxed by daily doses of the local narcotic, suffering from a diet of yams and regularly accused of being a divine emissary of the Duke, Baylis uncovered a religion unlike any other on the planet.

Self-deprecating, hilarious and -- almost incredibly -- true, this is travel writing at its horizon-expanding best.
 

Sal

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 29, 2007
17,135
33
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Re: The Laughing Policeman (Sjöwall & Wahlöö)

The Laughing Policeman (1968) by Maj Sjöwall & Per Wahlöö -- the fourth of ten novels in the Martin Beck series.
AND? that sounds like something I might like...how is the character development? attention to detail? etc

 

Count_Lothian

Time Out
Apr 6, 2014
793
0
16
I recently read Life of Pi by Yann Martel

Not gonna lie - the first 1/3 or so of the book was almost excruciatingly dry. If you can manage to persevere through that though, the remainder is well worth it.

It's a very thought provoking novel about a young boy who finds himself adrift on the high seas in a lifeboat with a zebra, an orangutan, a hyena, and a 450-pound Royal Bengal tiger named Richard Parker.

I'd recommend this one, but not as a light and fluffy read. A character within the novel claimed the story would make you believe in God - not sure I'd go that far, but the ending certainly challenged some perspectives I'd had while I was reading it.

just peeked in here and Wow!!!

Did this person know this would be a block buster movie one day.

I realize I've gone all necro here but Wow!

Her post date does not show here but it was 2008.

She has a nice profile, where is she?

Heat too much for her? lol .can't blame her this place requires a hazmat suit
 
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