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Post by saralcat on Feb 25, 2016 0:49:50 GMT
I've picked up a bunch of pottery books lately, both technical and historical, so I'm flitting between a few different ones. Prehistoric Pottery of Britain & Ireland is currently top of the pile for reading.
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nafets
Alumni
Just sitting here eating a banana
Posts: 62
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Post by nafets on Feb 29, 2016 15:50:40 GMT
Im reading The Sasquatch People and their interdimensional connection by Kewaunee Lapseritis. Veerrry interesting, wanted to read it for ages. Finally had a bit of spare cash and got it, I cant put this one down. Brilliant book, really gets you thinking about what could be possible. Now Im flicking through Judy Hall's - The Encyclopedia of Crystals
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Post by Dreadlocktruth on Feb 29, 2016 15:55:10 GMT
I'll check that one out, nafets. Happy to say I'm really gripped by 'The Passage', which had intimidated me with it's length. I'd predicted it would take me around two and half months but, at my current rate, I'll get it done in 5 weeks or so.
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jxbx
Alumni
The easiest way to dread is to let it go. The hardest way to dread is to let it go.
Posts: 1,093
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Post by jxbx on Feb 29, 2016 17:50:56 GMT
"What Kind of Creatures Are We?" - Noam Chomsky
Just got it in the mail this morning!!
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Post by morri on Mar 2, 2016 12:15:01 GMT
Just about to start Trigger Warning - Neil Gaiman.
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Post by Dreadlocktruth on Mar 28, 2016 21:25:25 GMT
Yelp.. I also finished the fiction I was reading and ordered 'The Passage', a book I've heard great things about, but it just arrived and I had no idea it was so huge.... 980 pages. That's going to take a while (probably about 100 days by the rate I read). Well, I'm now 50 pages away from finishing which I shall do in the next couple of days... Thoroughly enjoyed, so I'm glad I didn't know about the length beforehand or I might have skipped it.
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jxbx
Alumni
The easiest way to dread is to let it go. The hardest way to dread is to let it go.
Posts: 1,093
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Post by jxbx on Mar 28, 2016 21:56:36 GMT
Just about to start Trigger Warning - Neil Gaiman. I could use more Gaiman, how's this one going?
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Post by morri on Mar 29, 2016 6:49:37 GMT
jxbx it is really good
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nafets
Alumni
Just sitting here eating a banana
Posts: 62
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Post by nafets on Mar 30, 2016 13:06:04 GMT
"Touching Peace" - Thich Nhat Hanh jxbx, After looking at reviews, that sound like my kind of book. Gonna give it a whirl.
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jxbx
Alumni
The easiest way to dread is to let it go. The hardest way to dread is to let it go.
Posts: 1,093
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Post by jxbx on Mar 30, 2016 16:13:24 GMT
nafets I will be mindful to say nothing revealing
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Post by Dreadlocktruth on Mar 31, 2016 13:20:21 GMT
After finishing the mammoth book, I need something a little easier for a few weeks so I'm re-reading the third Red Dwarf novel, "Backwards". Last time I read it, I was probably about 14.
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Post by kondzio on Mar 31, 2016 19:23:55 GMT
and I just read things for my studies, don't have enough time for something else... maybe I'll find some after exams in June/July
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Apr 4, 2016 20:00:18 GMT
I keep saying it, but I haven't picked it back up in over a month (two months?). Keep getting distracted and well also read another book in between.
"Piano Player" Kurt Vonnegut Jr. (just finished "Mother Night". really liked it, although not quite sure I "got" the ending. hmmm)
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Post by Dreadlocktruth on Apr 4, 2016 20:01:32 GMT
I've not read either of those but I'm a Vonnegut fan. I read a collection of his letters, last year, they were wonderful in themselves.
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Post by morri on Apr 4, 2016 20:22:39 GMT
I've started reading TWD comics
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