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-   -   What swanky things are you reading? (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/showthread.php?t=78)

Claire 06-25-2005 10:57 AM

I read The Kite Runner in 2-3 days a few weeks back. Absolutely loved it! We had a great discussion about it at my book group.

I've recently read a bunch of books......

Dreams From my Father by Barack Obama (made me loooove Obama even more--what a good solid person he is, hope he's our President someday, I think he's fabulous!)

The Beach by Alex Garland (mesmerizing!)

A Very Long Engagement by Sebastian Something (liked the movie slightly better, but still really liked it)

Poisonwood Bible by ??? (eh, it was okay)

The Dangerous Husband by Jane Shapiro (darkly humorous, but not fantastic)

A Ship Made of Paper by Scott Spencer (Wow, talk about feeling very human afterward)

There have been a few others....can't remember them now. Our book group is reading The Jane Austen Book Club or something like that for our light summer pick. I liked the description of it...sounds cute.

I've also been looking through a Fantastic Four collection.....:blush:

I bought the new Nick Hornby book, blanking on the name, but I had him sign it after a reading last week. He's dead sexy smart.

lindyhop 06-25-2005 01:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Claire
I've recently read a bunch of books......

I envy you. Lately I struggle to get through just one...

Quote:

Our book group is reading The Jane Austen Book Club or something like that for our light summer pick. I liked the description of it...sounds cute.
I enjoyed that one.

Quote:

I bought the new Nick Hornby book, blanking on the name, but I had him sign it after a reading last week. He's dead sexy smart.
I always expect him to look like Hugh Grant. :eek: But he's got that British thing going and that's all I need.

libraryvixen 06-25-2005 02:08 PM

Claire... you blow me out of the water with your reading prowess. :snap:

I'm reading How to Make Love Like a Porn Star by Jenna Jameson, Girls in Pants (Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants #3) by Ann Brashares, and The Washingtonienne by Jessica Cutler.

But, to be fair... I've been working on the first 2 books for a good month or more. I've been a slow book reader lately.

Tref 07-22-2005 03:16 PM

Lincoln! By Vidal Sassoon
 
I am reading a pop up book about Abraham Lincoln written by Vidal Sassoon. It's a fine read though I abhor pop up ads in pop up books and this book has several and all for hair products.

According to Vidal, Lincoln shampooed irregularly. He once carried a letter in his hat for two weeks, walking almost 25 miles to deliver it. When he finally delivered the letter, the addressee complained of it being ruined by oil and dirt. Ironically, the letter Lincoln had been carrying for so long contained a free shampoo sample. "You need this more then I do," said the addressee. Lincoln, thanked the man for his honesty and put the shampoo sample back in his hat. Lincoln carried the sample around with him for several months, until the sample began to incorporate itself into Lincoln's thick mane. Lincoln would comb his hair each morning without notice of the sample. It had become such a part of his head that soon, Abe, unbeknownst to him, was even parting the shampoo sample and not his own hair. A year later, Lincoln was dead. Sassoon warns that without proper care, the same can happen to us, too. The rest, as they say, is shampoo history.*


* those who do not know Shampoo history are likey to rinse and repeat.

Eliza Hodgkins 1812 07-22-2005 03:20 PM

Just finished:

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by The Most Evil Woman in the World

Lessons in Taxidermy by Bee Lavender

Bartleby, the Scrivener by Herman Melville

Tref 07-22-2005 04:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Eliza Hodgkins 1812
Just finished:

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by The Most Evil Woman in the World

Lessons in Taxidermy by Bee Lavender

Bartleby, the Scrivener by Herman Melville

And that was just this afternoon!



On the subject of children's reading material, here are my three least favorite POP-UP books:

1.The Smooth Surface of the Moon
2.Understanding Horizontal Lines
3.Making Tortillas

Tref 07-22-2005 05:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tref
I am reading a pop up book about Abraham Lincoln written by Vidal Sassoon. It's a fine read though I abhor pop up ads in pop up books and this book has several and all for hair products.

According to Vidal, Lincoln shampooed irregularly. He once carried a letter in his hat for two weeks, walking almost 25 miles to deliver it. When he finally delivered the letter, the addressee complained of it being ruined by oil and dirt. Ironically, the letter Lincoln had been carrying for so long contained a free shampoo sample. "You need this more then I do," said the addressee. Lincoln, thanked the man for his honesty and put the shampoo sample back in his hat. Lincoln carried the sample around with him for several months, until the sample began to incorporate itself into Lincoln's thick mane. Lincoln would comb his hair each morning without notice of the sample. It had become such a part of his head that soon, Abe, unbeknownst to him, was even parting the shampoo sample and not his own hair. A year later, Lincoln was dead. Sassoon warns that without proper care, the same can happen to us, too. The rest, as they say, is shampoo history.*


* those who do not know Shampoo history are likey to rinse and repeat it.

I just finished the Sassoon Lincoln book, anditwasgood. Here are some things you may all ready not know about our sixteenth president:

1. He loved tacos.
2. He has never made it all the way through a performance of Our American Cousin.
3. He first draft of the Gettysburg Address was written on the back of a matchbook cover. The second draft was written on a single grain of rice.
4. Lincoln stood 7 foot 8 in his stocking feet and on a soap box. Off the soap box Lincoln stood 6 foot 5. Off his stocking feet he stood 6 foot 6.
5. As the average man of that era stood only 5 foot 2 many Washingtonians never actually knew what Lincoln looked like. Campaign posters of that time showed only Lincolns crotch area, as that was how he was seen by many.
6. Lincoln's favorite game was "gotcha your nose." It was said that he carried with him over seven or eight noses, which he refused to return.

€uroMeinke 08-17-2005 12:56 PM

I am still reading Haruki Murakami, this time a collection of short stories entitled The Elephant Vanashises and I continue to be delighted.


Last night I read The Dancing Dwarf, a sort of contemporary fairy tale, blending folk tale settings with contemporary attitudes, dreamlike absurdity, and a touch of darkness a la David Lynch. It was such a good read, I had to turn around and read it again, out load to Not Afraid as this was a story that demanded to be told and not just read.

I continue to be amazed by this author and am delighted that he's a contemporary presence on the literary scene. Yeah Harry Potter is waiting, but this writer has possessed me like no other.

It's lawys so great to find an artist who seems to be speaking to you.

:cool:

Ghoulish Delight 08-17-2005 01:12 PM

I'm reading "Fibre Channel: A Comprehensive Introduction"

Not very swanky, but I figure it's about time I understood the technology I work with on a daily basis.

Tref 08-17-2005 01:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ghoulish Delight
I'm reading "Fibre Channel: A Comprehensive Introduction"

Not very swanky, but I figure it's about time I understood the technology I work with on a daily basis.

I got as far as the chapter on Whole Wheat.


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