10 Indians by Agatha Christie. Awesome book for detective lovers
10 Indians by Agatha Christie. Awesome book for detective lovers
Liberator, by Felix Kershaw. The story of Felix Sparks' World War 2 service during which he earned two Silver Stars and promotions from Second Lieutenant to Colonel.
Toward the end, it describes General Alfred Jodl signing the surrender document with a Schaeffer pen.
Bob
Making the world a more peaceful place, one fine art print and one handwritten letter at a time.
“If ‘To hold a pen is to be at war’ as Voltaire said, Montblanc suggests you show up in full dress uniform, ready to go down like an officer and a gentleman among the Bic-wielding hordes.” - Chris Wright
Paper cuts through the noise – Richard Moross, MOO CEO
Indiana Jones used a notebook in the map room, not an app.
www.bobsoltys.net/fountainpens
Colour Scheme - Ngaio Marsh
Lady Onogaro (March 25th, 2021)
I read a bit more non-fiction than I do fiction these days. The last book I read was "How to Read a Book" by Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren.
It's an interesting book on how to be an active reader. If you're into self education and want to know how to get the most out of a book, this is a really good read.
The first few chapters describe the types of reading we do. The middle gives the flow of active reading, and the rear of the book is about reading specific types of books, including literature and poetry.
I read the first two parts, though I haven't read some of the chapters on specific reading. I don't do a whole lot of literature, though I will probably branch out into poetry soon so I will be reading that particular chapter.
I know some people who've learned this method of reading. I believe this is what they taught when I was in school. I never bothered to use it, though.
Good book if you're into non-fiction and self-learning.
VertOlive (February 2nd, 2021)
Observers Book of Aircraft, First Edition 1953 followed by What's Wrong with Civilisation?
I have a whole collection of those Observer's Books. They're often the first resource I turn to, to identify birds, unusual cars, wild flowers - and on and on.
Terminal List, by Jack Carr, a former Navy SEAL. The first novel about Lieutenant Commander Reece, a Navy SEAL whose life changes after his team is ambushed during a mission.
As a second LCDR Reece book - True Believer - is out, it looks like this is the beginning of a series. So many books, so little time.
Bob
Making the world a more peaceful place, one fine art print and one handwritten letter at a time.
“If ‘To hold a pen is to be at war’ as Voltaire said, Montblanc suggests you show up in full dress uniform, ready to go down like an officer and a gentleman among the Bic-wielding hordes.” - Chris Wright
Paper cuts through the noise – Richard Moross, MOO CEO
Indiana Jones used a notebook in the map room, not an app.
www.bobsoltys.net/fountainpens
VertOlive (February 2nd, 2021)
Hunger Games Trilogy
Naked Came the Manatee. Because everything that 2020/2021 is not.
"Nolo esse salus sine vobis ...” —St. Augustine
Chrissy (February 4th, 2021), Lady Onogaro (March 11th, 2021)
I just finished a fabulous book titled Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee by Casey Cep. I highly recommend it if you are at all interested in Harper Lee. I could not put it down.
Lady Onogaro
"Be yourself--everybody else is already taken." --Oscar Wilde
Crome Yellow by Aldous Huxley. A slender plot but wonderful characters. It's so hard to believe that The Roaring Twenties were a century ago. It seems so modern.
Astrophysics for People in a Hurry -Neil deGrasse Tyson, finished it today while traveling. It seems to be an abridged version of Death by Black Hole, or at least took several chapters almost directly from it.
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"There’s two ways to change the way a guy feels about you. You can catch him on fire, or you can slap him" - Marcus Luttrell
Instagram: jackw3bb
BlkWhiteFilmPix (March 12th, 2021), Lady Onogaro (March 11th, 2021)
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. Schwab.
Lady Onogaro
"Be yourself--everybody else is already taken." --Oscar Wilde
I just finished The Voyage of the Beagle, by Charles Darwin. I'd started it some months ago, put it aside, then finished steadily but only a little bit at a time over the past couple of weeks. That's in between reading other things.
The copy I have is an old paperback, a 1962 edition although possibly printed later, which has followed me around since I was a teenager. I'm certain that I had read it before, but that would have been decades ago, and I came to it fresh. It's an account of the round the world voyage of the HMS Beagle between 1831 and 1836, for which Darwin was the ship's naturalist. Famously, his observations on this voyage were later helpful in forming the theory of evolution.
It can get dry in parts, but there is also much of interest, his observations about different species, of course, but also of geology, and his impressions of different peoples and customs. Toward the end, he grows almost lyrical about the beauties of nature he had seen, and righteously indignant at what he has observed of slavery. The latter is based on his experiences in South America, and Brazil in particular, although he briefly alludes to slavery in the United States. There's a bit of British pride there too, and a generally positive view of the influence of Christianity.
I was struck by the number of animals he mentions killing, easily explained by his interest in collecting specimens, but not something that had occurred to me. Occasionally, he writes something that reminds one of the state of scientific knowledge in his time. Mentioning the unhealthy climate in northern Peru, he attributes the prevalence of "ague" (in this case malaria) to the miasmas from stagnant pools. It would be a while yet before the development of germ theory, and longer still before the role of mosquitos and other insects in spreading some diseases was understood.
"If a thing is worth doing, it is worth doing badly."
G.K. Chesterton
Just finished two: Elly Griffiths' The Postscript Murders, and Emily St. John Mandel's The Glass House.
Lady Onogaro
"Be yourself--everybody else is already taken." --Oscar Wilde
Chrissy (March 12th, 2021)
I've been trying to branch out and read other types of books including a few classics so I've just finished Animal Farm and 1984 by George Orwell
Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens
Andy Friend: John Nash - The Landscape of Love and Solace. A biography and assessment of the artist. Well researched and with very good illustrations.
Chrissy (March 12th, 2021)
Leonard Mlodinow 'The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives'. A great book written in plain English. Strongly recommend to read it, the author is awesome, truly awesome
Greenlights, by Matthew McConaughy.
Lots of laughs, lots of common sense. Not your typical memoir.
Bob
Making the world a more peaceful place, one fine art print and one handwritten letter at a time.
“If ‘To hold a pen is to be at war’ as Voltaire said, Montblanc suggests you show up in full dress uniform, ready to go down like an officer and a gentleman among the Bic-wielding hordes.” - Chris Wright
Paper cuts through the noise – Richard Moross, MOO CEO
Indiana Jones used a notebook in the map room, not an app.
www.bobsoltys.net/fountainpens
I just finished a couple of mysteries set in the north of Iceland: Snowblind and Nightblind by Ragnor Jonassen.
Lady Onogaro
"Be yourself--everybody else is already taken." --Oscar Wilde
BlkWhiteFilmPix (May 28th, 2021), Robert (April 15th, 2021), VertOlive (July 1st, 2021)
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