What Book Are You Reading? Volume 9

Status
Not open for further replies.
Just finished Weimar Germany by one Eric Weitz. It was decent I suppose but the man friggen loves George Grosz.
 
Net Force by Tom Clancy. I used to be a fan of Clancy, but not so much anymore. This book's reasonably decent, but is certainly not the most exciting or captivating that I've ever read.
 
Net Force by Tom Clancy. I used to be a fan of Clancy, but not so much anymore. This book's reasonably decent, but is certainly not the most exciting or captivating that I've ever read.
Steve Perry wrote Net Force.
 
Ya serious? The front cover does say it was a joint creation by Clancy and Steve Pieczenik, and the inside cover dedication thing by Clancy says, "We would like to thank Steve Perry for his creative ideas and for his invaluable contributions to the preparation of this manuscript." That not much credit for him if he wrote it...
And how can you create a book without writing it?
At least it partially explains why it is at least mildly interesting.
 
Camikaze said:
And how can you create a book without writing it?

Concept!
 
Ya serious? The front cover does say it was a joint creation by Clancy and Steve Pieczenik, and the inside cover dedication thing by Clancy says, "We would like to thank Steve Perry for his creative ideas and for his invaluable contributions to the preparation of this manuscript." That not much credit for him if he wrote it...
And how can you create a book without writing it?
At least it partially explains why it is at least mildly interesting.
Concept, like Masada said. I think the NetForce series was kinda based off of an earlier Clancy-concept-that-other-writers-turned-into-books, Op-Center Tom Clancy does this sort of thing a lot, where he loosely collaborates with other authors or farms out most of the actual writing to them after brainstorming the basic idea behind the whole thing. Did this as early as Red Storm Rising, his second fiction book, where he and Larry Bond (of Red Phoenix and Vortex fame) kinda co-wrote the book. I assume he gets top billing because his name sells better than other authors' would.
 
I'm reading Roma, the story of Rome's first thousand years through the eyes of one of its families. It's a very interesting novel by Steven Saylor.
 
Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond [re-read for class]
Modernization and Revolution in China: From the Opium Wars to the Olympics by June Grasso
Political Change in the Metropolis by Ronald K. Vogel
World Politics: Trend and Transformation by Kegley
Principles of Economics by Mankiw
Traditions & Encounters: A Brief Global History to 1500 by Bentley
Introduction to Geography by Bergman

FOR FUN:

Fatherland by Robert Harris
Caesar and Christ by Will Durant
 
Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond [re-read for class]
Modernization and Revolution in China: From the Opium Wars to the Olympics by June Grasso
Sound pretty good to me (particularly the second one). :)
 
Fatherland by Robert Harris

Harris is one of my favorite authors: Fatherland is definitely interesting, but I prefer his Imperium and Pompeii.
 
Finished the expanded Dune saga (but jihad trilogy, prequel trilogy, original sixology, 2 sequels), and was reading Evolution by Stephen Baxter.

Paul of Dune was finally released in paperback, so I bought that and am reading it now.

I'm doing the original Dune now.
 
Harris is one of my favorite authors: Fatherland is definitely interesting, but I prefer his Imperium and Pompeii.

I like it so far, it's miles better than the other althistory writers I've subjected myself to :p

Sound pretty good to me (particularly the second one). :)

Yea, and the second one is mercilessly succinct. Diamond is kinda the opposite of that.


Link to video.

De rigueur for anybody who reads Mankiw.

:lol::lol::lol:

I'm going to be thinking of this throughout the entire class now.
 
Azale said:
I'm going to be thinking of this throughout the entire class now.

I'll be thinking about it tomorrow for work :(
 
:lol::lol::lol:

I'm going to be thinking of this throughout the entire class now.

That's probably all you'll be thinking about. That book failed me on so many levels.
 
Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond [re-read for class]
Modernization and Revolution in China: From the Opium Wars to the Olympics by June Grasso
Political Change in the Metropolis by Ronald K. Vogel
World Politics: Trend and Transformation by Kegley
Principles of Economics by Mankiw
Traditions & Encounters: A Brief Global History to 1500 by Bentley
Introduction to Geography by Bergman

FOR FUN:

Fatherland by Robert Harris
Caesar and Christ by Will Durant

Fatherland was excellent. I literally stayed up two days and finished up the book.
 
I used the Canadian edition of Principles of Economics by Mankiw (has four Canadian co-authors, only of which teaches at my university). It came with a study guide, which I never used. I got an A, and not really that good of a student.

Finish John McPhee's The Control of Nature, about people fighting the elements in Southern Loiusana (The Mississippi want to leave its current channel for the Atchafalaya River), Iceland (saving a productive fishing town from an eruption) and Los Angles (the San Gabriel mountians are eroding away, producing massive mud slides). It's interesting introduction, although I found the lack of maps in the book annoying. All the beauty of the written word cannot replace a good map or two.
 
Textbooks just came in through the door(and $400 goes out) so here they are:

Conduct and Character Mark Timmons($104 stinking dollars for 255 pages of glorious phil.)
Ancient Greece in its Mediterranean Context Nancy Demand
Vermeer's Hat: the 17th century and dawn of the global world Timothy Brook
The Search for Modern China Jonathan D Spence
The Battlefield Where the Moon Says I Love You Frank Stanford
InventoryDionne Brand
The Poetry of Pablo Nerunda
The Discovery Frances Mayes
Howl Allen Ginsberg
and a couple that are pedantic in nature and not worth mentioning

anyone read any of those stellar publications before?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom