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Kevin Brown Byrne Robotics Member
Joined: 31 May 2005 Location: United States Posts: 8976
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Posted: 10 March 2017 at 7:56am | IP Logged | 1
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I just started reading TRIGGER MORTIS. It's a James Bond novel that was released in 2015. The novel was commissioned by Fleming's estate and it's written by Anthony Horowitz. It supposedly includes new material that had been written by Ian Fleming. It takes place 2 weeks after the events of GOLDFINGER. (The novel, not the movie) And Pussy Galore is in it!
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Robert Cosgrove Byrne Robotics Member
Joined: 16 January 2005 Location: United States Posts: 1710
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Posted: 10 March 2017 at 10:03am | IP Logged | 2
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Just finished IMPERIUM, the first of the Robert Harris trilogy about Cicero (I'd mistakenly read the second in the series, CONSPIRATA, first). In light of recent events, this comment of the narrator (Cicero's servant, Tiro) struck me: "One can always spot the fool in the room He's the one who confidently predicts the outcome of an election.")
Edited by Robert Cosgrove on 30 March 2017 at 1:40pm
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John Byrne
Grumpy Old Guy
Joined: 11 May 2005 Posts: 133402
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Posted: 10 March 2017 at 10:47am | IP Logged | 3
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A friend sent me a copy of THE MASSACRE OF MANKIND, Stephen Baxter's "authorized" sequel to THE WAR OF THE WORLDS by H. G. Wells. I got sixteen words -- WORDS! -- into it, closed the cover and put it away. I shall not return. In the opening passages of the original novel, Wells has this to say: "No one would have believed in the last years of the nineteenth century..." Those sixteen words I mentioned are: "To those of us who survived it, the First Martian War of the early twentieth century..." The first sentence!! How could I possibly go on?
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Stephen Churay Byrne Robotics Member
Joined: 25 March 2009 Location: United States Posts: 8369
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Posted: 10 March 2017 at 4:28pm | IP Logged | 4
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I finally picked up a complete volume of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes. I'll be reading my way through this for a while! Up till now, I've only ever read HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES. I loved it, but I'm told it's not the best place to start. This volume hS everything in order.
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Robert Cosgrove Byrne Robotics Member
Joined: 16 January 2005 Location: United States Posts: 1710
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Posted: 11 March 2017 at 7:39am | IP Logged | 5
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JB, prompted by your post, I ordered the Ken Adam book online. I see an earlier book on Adam, now out of print, is going for a small fortune . . .also, judging by the review of that book, sf illustrator Bob Eggleton is also a fan . . .
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James Best Byrne Robotics Member
Joined: 02 March 2014 Location: United States Posts: 890
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Posted: 11 March 2017 at 12:08pm | IP Logged | 6
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Now starting:
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James Best Byrne Robotics Member
Joined: 02 March 2014 Location: United States Posts: 890
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Posted: 20 March 2017 at 4:52pm | IP Logged | 7
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Now starting:
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Michael Arndt Byrne Robotics Member
Joined: 26 April 2004 Posts: 8565
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Posted: 20 March 2017 at 7:39pm | IP Logged | 8
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ONE WAY OUT: THE INSIDE HISTORY OF THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND by Alan Paul
I MUST SAY: MY LIFE AS A HUMBLE COMEDY LEGEND by Martin Short.
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Robert Cosgrove Byrne Robotics Member
Joined: 16 January 2005 Location: United States Posts: 1710
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Posted: 21 March 2017 at 8:23pm | IP Logged | 9
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Just finished The Founders at Home by Myron Magnet (sounds like a Stan Lee name). Individual chapters profile various "founding fathers" while discussing their dwellings (often self-designed and built) and how they reflected their personalities and philosophy. Covers William Livingston, various of the Lee family, George Washington, John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison.
In the dispute between the Federalist and the Republican founding fathers, Magnet is a partisan for the Federalists.
Much will be familiar to you if you are a history buff, but there are a number of anecdotes that may be fresh. I didn't know this, for example:
"The students [who attended the University of Virginia] turned out to be not so much an aristocracy of virtue and talent as a gang of rowdy youths with a taste for drinking, gambling, breaking windows, firing guns into the air, and thrashing professors who tried to stop them. The horrified Jefferson came down from his mountain to Charlottesville to reprimand them. Flanked by his dear friends and fellow trustees James Madison and James Monroe, the frail eighty-two-year-old patriarch drew himself up to his full six foot two, began to speak--and burst into tears."
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Eric Smearman Byrne Robotics Member
Joined: 02 September 2006 Location: United States Posts: 5834
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Posted: 21 March 2017 at 8:52pm | IP Logged | 10
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DREAM BOOGIE: THE TRIUMPH OF SAM COOKE by Peter Guralnick and TRIGGER WARNINGS: SHORT FICTIONS AND DISTURBANCES by Neil Gaiman.
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John Byrne
Grumpy Old Guy
Joined: 11 May 2005 Posts: 133402
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Posted: 22 March 2017 at 8:51pm | IP Logged | 11
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Beginning DODGE CITY, by Tom Clavin. Reviews gave high marks to this history of "the wickedest town in the West," praising its accuracy. My spider-sense has tingled already, tho, only about twenty pages in, at two separate mentions of "the Gunfight at the OK Corral".We shall see!
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James Best Byrne Robotics Member
Joined: 02 March 2014 Location: United States Posts: 890
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Posted: 22 March 2017 at 10:00pm | IP Logged | 12
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Now starting the 26th novel in the ongoing Amos Walker mystery series. Mr. Estleman has been writing them since 1980 and is still going strong.
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