What are you currently reading?

Started by facehugger, April 07, 2007, 12:36:10 AM

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JBS


Hollywood Beach Broadwalk

FelixSkodi

Quote from: JBS on May 13, 2020, 10:35:09 AM
+1.

Many thanks. Added, what I hope to be my last book to my queue for my defense:


JBS

Quote from: Philoctetes on May 13, 2020, 10:37:52 AM
Many thanks. Added, what I hope to be my last book to my queue for my defense:



I'm surprised you haven't read that before.

But having Baldwin's words (and his way of putting them on paper) in your head as you head out the door for your defense is an excellent thing.

Hollywood Beach Broadwalk

FelixSkodi

Quote from: JBS on May 13, 2020, 11:18:29 AM
I'm surprised you haven't read that before.

But having Baldwin's words (and his way of putting them on paper) in your head as you head out the door for your defense is an excellent thing.

I've tried to read Baldwin before, but I just couldn't get into it, just wasn't time - well, now it is time.  8)

SimonNZ

Quote from: Philoctetes on May 13, 2020, 09:33:31 AM
Another added to my queue, as I prep for my three chapter dissertation defense on Friday:



Good luck. What is the title of your dissertation?

FelixSkodi

Quote from: SimonNZ on May 13, 2020, 11:44:24 AM
Good luck. What is the title of your dissertation?

Endarkening English rhetoric: Toward black ways of looking

SimonNZ

Nice!

Hope your foot's not to sore on the day.

FelixSkodi

Quote from: SimonNZ on May 13, 2020, 12:32:29 PM
Nice!

Hope your foot's not to sore on the day.

Thanks.

Sore foot?

Brian

Good to see you back here by the way, Philo!

FelixSkodi

Quote from: Brian on May 13, 2020, 12:38:18 PM
Good to see you back here by the way, Philo!

Thanks! Good to be back.  :)


FelixSkodi

Quote from: SimonNZ on May 13, 2020, 12:41:18 PM
From that snake bite you got.

I am very confused, as I've never been bitten by a snake.

SimonNZ

Quote from: Philoctetes on May 13, 2020, 12:43:09 PM
I am very confused, as I've never been bitten by a snake.

Sure you did. It festered so badly that Odysseus had to leave you on Lemnos.

FelixSkodi

Quote from: SimonNZ on May 13, 2020, 12:45:41 PM
Sure you did. It festered so badly that Odysseus had to leave you on Lemnos.

Ha!

Should be all right by Saturday.  :P

Pohjolas Daughter

Quote from: JBS on May 13, 2020, 10:33:55 AM
It's quite relevant. The carbon footprint of the average Luxembourger is almost 7 times that of the average Chinese, almost three times that of the average American, Canadian, and Australian, about four times higher than most of its European neighbors,  and almost twelve times higher than your own in Romania. So it's quite right to ask why. 

Neither China nor Luxembourg are monoliths. And if overall totals are the only standard, then China will almost always be number one, simply by dint of the size of its population.
Thank you for posting that JBS.  And, yes, it is interesting and important to see things/studies from different angles and studies.  One thought:  studies of carbon emissions by areas and looking at what businesses/companies/factories, etc.  are there., and what they pollute.

Best wishes,

PD

SimonNZ

#9835
After aluding to the myth of Philoctetes this morning I went back and read the title essay from Edmund Wilson's The Wound And The Bow which is how I know the story (having not yet read or seen a production of the Sophocles play).

Am now rereading the 100-page opening essay on Dickens from that book, writen at a time - 1939 - when, according to Wilson, there were few worthy volumes of biography, fewer still of criticism and a more general suspicion of Dickens "literary"as opposed to popular merit.

The real gem of the collection, which I'm not going to reread today, is his early assessment of Finnegans Wake. Astonishingly having the full measure of the work without previous explanations or the guidebooks we have now.


arpeggio

#9836
I have not posted here in quit awhile but I have been reading.

There were two classics I have read that I was disappointed in: Lord Jim and For Whom the Bell Tools.  Which is strange since I normally like Conrad and Hemingway.  Now the one classic I have read that I could not put down was Ivanhoe.

I have read some political stuff.  I hesitate to mention the books for fear of starting a tsunami.

I decided to read some junk: Firing Point by George Wallace and Don Keith   The movie Hunter Killer is based on this novel.  I know it is second rate Hunt for the Red October.  It was either this or Moby Dick.  Well they are still both about the sea.  So I am reading about a submarine instead of a whale.

I get my science fiction fix by reading the Magazine Analog.  Some of the stories are great, some not so good.

SimonNZ

Quote from: arpeggio on May 14, 2020, 07:10:59 PM

I have read some political stuff.  I hesitate to mention the books for fear of starting a tsunami.


I'd be interested to know.

FelixSkodi

Quote from: SimonNZ on May 14, 2020, 07:23:45 PM
I'd be interested to know.

Me as well, we're all mostly harmless.

I've been reading Kissinger thoughts on the current situation (not in book form though).

SimonNZ

Have you been reading his thoughts...telepathically?!