posted
I gotta admit to failure in pushing on the bounds of illiteracy and ignorance lately.
My nearest success in the last month was when I stopped at yard sale a couple of weeks back and found three books I wanted to read. Was standing in line to pay for them when the woman running the sale was rude to a mexican woman ahead of me in the line. I uttered someting of protest, turned, dropped the books in the box I'd gotten them from, and left.
BuyTex
posted
glass: I kinda meant for enlightment, not *pure* fun, lol... I'm sure the "Three Position Step Control Algorithm" is boundless joy... **** Beedge...I wouldn't let numbskulls dictate my reading pleasure
What you and I should do is meet up at the Half-Price Bookstore at Ridgmar some weekend...great deals!
bdgee
posted
Great Idea.....love the place....but I have to be careful in book stores....I'm like a drunk invited in to look over the selection.....
BuyTex
posted
my son and I go regularly...I get mostly books, "we" get movies...and "fight" over music!
love that store, best in the chain, I think...
Upside
posted
Re-reading Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand. And the manuals to our new dishwasher and refrigerator.
BuyTex
posted
quote:Originally posted by Upside: Re-reading Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand.
I *really* enjoyed that one...thanks for reminding.
Provocative, given the "gray flannel" times...
nice "pick," lol
jordanreed
posted
trying to read all of louis L'amour... not all at once tho
LEO
posted
Got about half way through Freakonomics when I got side-tracked by 8 college textbooks. If my synapses aren't fried by spring break I'll finish it then (may even get around to writing some kind of book report/review on it). As of half way through, good read so far...
glassman
posted
whoever wrote that manual was a sadist
Laktu
posted
Underboss, about Sammy the Bull, Gotti's right hand man. Highly recommended. After reading this I'm thinking of turning to loan sharking, anyone need a float??
BuyTex
posted
good stuff...
profitmaker
posted
Napoleon Hill, Think and Grow Rich Stephen Covey, 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
BuyTex
posted
quote:Originally posted by glassman: whoever wrote that manual was a sadist
Try the manual for the Yamaha AWG, sometime...
lol, it's marketed for newbs to record live? then burn to CD? all-in-one...Tom Dowd is spinning in is his grave...
BigJohn
posted
Saucer, Stephen Coonts' sort of lame
Recently finished: Blue Gold, Clive Cussler - more mind numbing save the world shoot the bad guys
Eagle Song, James Houston - good read, real events based on a journal written by a young blacksmith captured by Norhwest natives in the 1800's
favorites - anything by Tony Hillerman, Dan Brown, James Doss
BuyTex
posted
nice list...
Hillerman quite enjoyable, have several of his.
The blacksmith journal sounds intriguing...
Dan Brown rings a bell--refresh my memory?
BigJohn
posted
I normaly don't chase the best sellers, but I came across a copy of The Da Vinci Code in a second hand store and picked it up, started reading and couldn't put it down.
I'v also read Angels & Demons, Deception Point, Digital Fortress all by Dan Brown
You might have hard time finding the one by James Houston, I found it at a library book sale, it's worth looking for though.
BuyTex
posted
Oh, yeah, *that* Dan Brown...liked the plot ideas in A & D, racing aound Rome to "connect the dots," but the Hardy Boys' tone was too much to persuade me into the "Code." Prolly make a good movie, though.
Ever try Grisham? His plots hold up pretty well...