Area 51 by Annie Jacobsen. Combination of fact, speculation, conjecture, and batshit crazy conspiracy theories. The facts are great, the rest gives me headaches.
Blacklisted by History: The Untold Story of Senator Joseph McCarthy by M. Stanton Evans. First chapter basically says what most people don't know. McCarthy was lied about, official papers supporting him were "lost", and things he "said" were not said. This should be an interesting read.
1636: The Kremlin Games Eric Flint, Gorg Huff & Paula Goodlett. Grantville resident goes to Russia, brings innovation, medical help, and generally starts Russia on the road to being a power instead of a sidenote to history of that time.
Blackout by Mira Grant Third part of a trilogy about post-zombie America and the conspiracy ruling it. I HATE that new books in a series come out and the bookstore doesn't have the rest available. I'm going to read the first chapter then decide if I want to order the rest or not. Anyone else read Feed or Deadline?
Whatcha reading redux.
- Rod
- Posts: 4824
- Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 1:08 pm
Re: Whatcha reading redux.
one can be a Democrat, or one can choose to be an American.
Good acting requires an imagination; reality requires a person not getting lost in their imagination.
"It's better to have a gun if you need it". Felix's opthamologist
Good acting requires an imagination; reality requires a person not getting lost in their imagination.
"It's better to have a gun if you need it". Felix's opthamologist
- HTRN
- Posts: 12403
- Joined: Wed Aug 20, 2008 3:05 am
Re: Whatcha reading redux.
Just started on Professional Stockmaking by Wesbrook. So far, looks good - lots of photos show technique.
HTRN, I would tell you that you are an evil fucker, but you probably get that a lot ~ Netpackrat
Describing what HTRN does as "antics" is like describing the wreck of the Titanic as "a minor boating incident" ~ First Shirt
Describing what HTRN does as "antics" is like describing the wreck of the Titanic as "a minor boating incident" ~ First Shirt
- Rod
- Posts: 4824
- Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 1:08 pm
Re: Whatcha reading redux.
Read The Amateur by Joe Klein. A minor quibble is that he said Andrew Breitbart edited the tape of Shirley Sherrod's speech. IIRC, he got the edited tape and showed it, then said after the brouhaha, that he shouldn't have shown it. Otherwise the book is pretty much a rehash of what the conservatives know about Obama as President. Reads like a political advertisement to vote for Romney though he's not mentioned.
one can be a Democrat, or one can choose to be an American.
Good acting requires an imagination; reality requires a person not getting lost in their imagination.
"It's better to have a gun if you need it". Felix's opthamologist
Good acting requires an imagination; reality requires a person not getting lost in their imagination.
"It's better to have a gun if you need it". Felix's opthamologist
- Weetabix
- Posts: 6113
- Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 11:04 pm
Re: Whatcha reading redux.
"The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress" - my copy went missing a decade or more ago, and I finally replaced it.
Note to self: start reading sig lines. They're actually quite amusing. :D
- MiddleAgedKen
- Posts: 2873
- Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2008 8:11 pm
- Location: Flyover Country
Re: Whatcha reading redux.
Just finished A Game of Thrones, currently reading Black Rednecks and White Liberals and Thucydides.
Shop at Traitor Joe's: Just 10% to the Big Guy gets you the whole store and everything in it!
-
- Posts: 8486
- Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 2:15 pm
Re: Whatcha reading redux.
Currently rereading Hard Magic. It finally came out in mass-market paperback. Whoever is responsible for the recent publisher obsession with trade paperbacks needs to be kneecapped. I buy hardcovers (rarely) or mass paperbacks only, not any annoying hybrid that combines the worst of both worlds.
Anyway, a nice upside of this is that now I can continue the process of turning my wife into a Larry Correia junkie. She stole my copy of Dead Six and loved it.
Anyway, a nice upside of this is that now I can continue the process of turning my wife into a Larry Correia junkie. She stole my copy of Dead Six and loved it.
Maybe we're just jaded, but your villainy is not particularly impressive. -Ennesby
If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
- SeekHer
- Posts: 2286
- Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 9:27 am
Re: Whatcha reading redux.
I'm the complete opposite--I only buy trade paperbacks whenever I can and especially just before the pocketbook comes out and they get discounted 50% to 70%.Greg wrote:Currently rereading Hard Magic. It finally came out in mass-market paperback. Whoever is responsible for the recent publisher obsession with trade paperbacks needs to be kneecapped. I buy hardcovers (rarely) or mass paperbacks only, not any annoying hybrid that combines the worst of both worlds.
Anyway, a nice upside of this is that now I can continue the process of turning my wife into a Larry Correia junkie. She stole my copy of Dead Six and loved it.
The trade paper book "A Place Called Armageddon-Constantinople 1453" that I just bought cost me $8.99 which is $4 cheaper then the paperback that is just about to be released.
There is a certain type of mentality that thinks if you make certain inanimate objects illegal their criminal misuse will disappear!
Damn the TSA and Down with the BATF(u)E!
Support the J P F O to "Give them the Boot"!!
Damn the TSA and Down with the BATF(u)E!
Support the J P F O to "Give them the Boot"!!
-
- Posts: 8486
- Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 2:15 pm
Re: Whatcha reading redux.
Odd. I don't see that around here, one of my complaints about trade papers is that they're always more expensive than the mass market books. (I think publishers like to considers trade papers as some kind of 'premium' format and charge accordingly. Not to me, in my eyes it's just an annoying 'tween.)SeekHer wrote:I'm the complete opposite--I only buy trade paperbacks whenever I can and especially just before the pocketbook comes out and they get discounted 50% to 70%.Greg wrote:Currently rereading Hard Magic. It finally came out in mass-market paperback. Whoever is responsible for the recent publisher obsession with trade paperbacks needs to be kneecapped. I buy hardcovers (rarely) or mass paperbacks only, not any annoying hybrid that combines the worst of both worlds.
Anyway, a nice upside of this is that now I can continue the process of turning my wife into a Larry Correia junkie. She stole my copy of Dead Six and loved it.
The trade paper book "A Place Called Armageddon-Constantinople 1453" that I just bought cost me $8.99 which is $4 cheaper then the paperback that is just about to be released.
Another complaint is that they take up more shelf space. A hardcover takes up more shelf space, sure, but at least it's more durable. The trade paper eats up the shelf space, without being more durable. This is an issue because most of my bookshelves devoted to fiction have shelf spacing *just* high enough (yes, I did that and yes, on purpose) for mass market paperbacks. I only have a few special shelves for hardback and trade paperbacks.
Maybe we're just jaded, but your villainy is not particularly impressive. -Ennesby
If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
- SeekHer
- Posts: 2286
- Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 9:27 am
Re: Whatcha reading redux.
I won’t buy them for regular price or a hardcover for that matter but they both almost always go on sale …Hardcover six months after release when the trade paper comes out and then again six months later when the paperback/pocketbook comes out unless the hardcover has a phenomenal run and multiple printings that normal timetable goes out the window…Then again if the hardcover is a total flop, there will be no trade or pocket version released and they’ll sell off what they have for the cost of the print run.Greg wrote:Odd. I don't see that around here, one of my complaints about trade papers is that they're always more expensive than the mass market books. (I think publishers like to considers trade papers as some kind of 'premium' format and charge accordingly. Not to me, in my eyes it's just an annoying 'tween.)SeekHer wrote:I'm the complete opposite--I only buy trade paperbacks whenever I can and especially just before the pocketbook comes out and they get discounted 50% to 70%.Greg wrote:Currently rereading Hard Magic. It finally came out in mass-market paperback. Whoever is responsible for the recent publisher obsession with trade paperbacks needs to be kneecapped. I buy hardcovers (rarely) or mass paperbacks only, not any annoying hybrid that combines the worst of both worlds.
Anyway, a nice upside of this is that now I can continue the process of turning my wife into a Larry Correia junkie. She stole my copy of Dead Six and loved it.
The trade paper book "A Place Called Armageddon-Constantinople 1453" that I just bought cost me $8.99 which is $4 cheaper then the paperback that is just about to be released.
Another complaint is that they take up more shelf space. A hardcover takes up more shelf space, sure, but at least it's more durable. The trade paper eats up the shelf space, without being more durable. This is an issue because most of my bookshelves devoted to fiction have shelf spacing *just* high enough (yes, I did that and yes, on purpose) for mass market paperbacks. I only have a few special shelves for hardback and trade paperbacks.
We’ll buy that way—unless we need the book, now, for a project but my wife’s library is 90% hardcover, research texts, bought at full price when they were just released because they just might have some reference to her work at the university…Then again her area is only about five hundred (± fifty) years of history (100 BCE to 300AD) with comparatively few books on the subject that usually don’t go to multiple printings and almost never to pocket books.
I’ve gotten really good at designing and building bookcases but set them up for stability with the bottom two rows for hardcover, next two for trade paper and the top two for paperbacks two deep (or trade paper on their sides).
There is a certain type of mentality that thinks if you make certain inanimate objects illegal their criminal misuse will disappear!
Damn the TSA and Down with the BATF(u)E!
Support the J P F O to "Give them the Boot"!!
Damn the TSA and Down with the BATF(u)E!
Support the J P F O to "Give them the Boot"!!
- SeekHer
- Posts: 2286
- Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 9:27 am
Re: Whatcha reading redux.
I found some replacements and am re-reading two books as well.
The Book of the Sword by Richard F. Burton
The Sword In The Age Of Chivalry by R. Ewart Oakeshott
The Sword In Anglo Saxon England by E. R. Ellis Davidson
Codex Wallerstein: A Medieval Fighting Book from the Fifteenth Century on the Longsword, Falchion, Dagger, and Wrestling by Grzegorz Zabinski
Medieval Swordsmanship: Illustrated Methods And Techniques by John Clements
The Crooked Stick: A History of the Longbow by Hugh D. H. Soar
The Medieval Archer by Jim Bradbury
The Book Of The Crossbow by Ralph Payne-Gallwey
Longbow: A Social And Military History by Robert Hardy
Historical Fiction
The Tides Of War by Steven Pressfield
Deus Lo Volt: Chronicle Of The Crusades by Evan S. Connell—He also wrote The Son of Morning Star about Custer and Sitting Bull—both super well researched.
The Book of the Sword by Richard F. Burton
The Sword In The Age Of Chivalry by R. Ewart Oakeshott
The Sword In Anglo Saxon England by E. R. Ellis Davidson
Codex Wallerstein: A Medieval Fighting Book from the Fifteenth Century on the Longsword, Falchion, Dagger, and Wrestling by Grzegorz Zabinski
Medieval Swordsmanship: Illustrated Methods And Techniques by John Clements
The Crooked Stick: A History of the Longbow by Hugh D. H. Soar
The Medieval Archer by Jim Bradbury
The Book Of The Crossbow by Ralph Payne-Gallwey
Longbow: A Social And Military History by Robert Hardy
Historical Fiction
The Tides Of War by Steven Pressfield
Deus Lo Volt: Chronicle Of The Crusades by Evan S. Connell—He also wrote The Son of Morning Star about Custer and Sitting Bull—both super well researched.
There is a certain type of mentality that thinks if you make certain inanimate objects illegal their criminal misuse will disappear!
Damn the TSA and Down with the BATF(u)E!
Support the J P F O to "Give them the Boot"!!
Damn the TSA and Down with the BATF(u)E!
Support the J P F O to "Give them the Boot"!!