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Wuthering Heights
Shakespeare’s Sonnets
Seneca’s Essays

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The Diamond Age :D

I’ve been reading the instruction manual to BCMG for the past few weeks. My goal is to play it sometime before the Playstation 3 is released.

The first book of The Belgariad.

I’m concurrently reading both The Autobiography of a Seaman, which is about Admiral Lord Cochrane, the real-life inspiration of such characters as Horatio Hornblower, and After: How America Confronted the September 12 Era, an excellent look at the life of ordinary and extraordinary American’s following the September 11th terrorist attacks.

The Da Vinci Code

The Black Company books by Glen Cook

David Brin Uplift books.
The Diamond Age by Stephenson.
Some books on tanks.
Some Vernor Vinge.

That’ll keep me ok for a couple weeks.

Recently read:

By Rex Stout:
Some Nero Wolfe book, I forget the title, two stories related to black orchids. Nero and Archie are as entertaining as usual.

By Jasper Fforde:
The Eyre Affair
Lost In a Good Book
There is no way to explain these books in less than a page, so just go out and read them. Fun, and weird.

By Dave Barry:
Tricky Business
An amusing novel about various scum of the earth characters in South Florida

By Someone Or Other (I forget)
The Risen Empire
A OK first SF novel about an empire ruled bu technologically-created undead.

By, er, I think, Raymond Aren (sp?)
The Dawn of Universal History
A highbrow account of recent history focusing on the US in the cold war and Vietnam but also touching on many other nations and subjects. The author died in the 80s, and this book is I think written around 1972. A good relatively non-ideological history. The author is perhaps a bit over-enamored of Nixon based on his foreign policy (he doesn’t discuss Nixon’s domestic policy at all), but considering the atrocious results of Kennedy and Johnson’s foreign policies, this is perhaps forgiveable. Also perhaps to keep in mind is that the author, being French, would naturally tend to overlook political corruption as a relatively minor sin (though it is also possible Watergate hadn’t occurred when these essays were written.)

Nothing, at the moment. I’ve been too damn busy. But I have Tad Williams’ new book on my pile. That’s the next one I plan to tackle.

Just wrapped up Sharpe’s Havoc by Bernard Cornwell (latest in the Richard Sharpe series).

Currently reading The Miocene Arrow by Sean McMullen. Interesting world construct, though the premise for its creation seems ludicruous.

Loyd Case

Right now I’m reading…
Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison by Michel Foucault for class.
I’m thinking of picking up a few Roman era collections, it’s been a while since the last time.

Wow. I don’t know how you guys find the time. I haven’t read a novel for over 3 years now. Simply too busy with work, family, and computer games.

The last book I managed to complete was Matt Reilly’s “Ice Station”. I think I have a backlog of 15 books that I haven’t even touched. My wife refuses to buy me any more books as she knows I probably won’t read them.

Although I am working my way through Advanced C++ but that isn’t a novel.

Dave Barry: ‘Tricky Business’

I’ve also shut my brain down since I spent last week reading every Holt book I could and am now reading the ‘Get Fuzzy’ books. Hilarious.

These are great – sometimes the dialogue can be ungainly and a bit derivative, but not in an annoying Neil Gaimanish way. Fforde’s website is a lot of fun, too – lots of background info on his alternate universe. I want a pet dodo.

The last book I managed to complete was Matt Reilly’s “Ice Station”.

Oh dear, no wonder you enjoyed The Matrix Reloaded. :)

Shieldwolf, a sometime Qt3 poster, talked me into reading Ice Station when he described the gun fight over the killer whale infested pool. So I read it. He’s not allowed to recommend books to me any more.

 -Tom

Re-reading the entire Dirk Gently series of novels by Douglas Adams at this moment.

I really, really miss him. The guy was one in a million.

Didn’t you love the escapist entertainment ? I thought it was a pretty good book considering Reilly was in his early twenties when he wrote it.

It beats being bored to death with some of Tom Clancy’s later books. :wink:

May I recommend to you Sharpe’s Eagle, by Bernard Cornwell?

Loyd