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  • lew
    replied
    Originally posted by Lazarus78 View Post
    yall ever get in those moods where you just don't want to read?
    No. If I'm not reading a book or three, I'm reading articles, message boards, and books online.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lazarus78
    replied
    yall ever get in those moods where you just don't want to read? well, i was in that funk for about a year and a half. BUT i've recently broken out of it, and rattled off a couple of books in quick succession. "golf is not a game of perfect" and "recursion". two quick reads in two weeks to ease me back into it. now i'm tackling "earth unaware", one of the ender's game series books, and then i got a few stephen king novels that i'm eyeballing.

    also, i'm about a third of the way through infinite jest. and i've been at a third for about 3 years now. that book is just such heavy lifting, and now i've forgotten about 75% of what i've read, so i need like cliff's notes to help me get back up to speed. it is my everest.

    Leave a comment:


  • Grendel
    commented on 's reply
    I have "Journey to the Center of the Earth" on my night stand for a read after I finish re-reading the Guardians of the Flame series. I am a huge fan of Jules Verne . I am an ex-Nuke Submariner and Jules Verne got more right then wrong about submarines in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.

  • Axel
    replied
    Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne

    https://en.m.wikisource.org/wiki/20,...e_Seas_(Walter)

    There's all kinds of classic works for free on WikiSource

    They Thought They Were Free by Milton Mayer, an ethnically Jewish writer and professor who lived in a small German town for a year after WWII, befriended ten former rank and file Nazis, and wrote a series of essays on their experiences and motivations, and Nazism in general. It makes for a fascinating set of case studies

    Leave a comment:


  • freedom
    replied
    Originally posted by lew View Post
    My great uncle died on Bougainville, so I'm starting to read into that campaign.
    my father served from 43'-46' in the pacific on a carrier
    i think "the pacific" is based off sledge's book...

    Leave a comment:


  • lew
    replied
    Originally posted by freedom View Post
    i just finished "With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa" by Eugene Sledge
    my wife's grandfather was a marine corps flame-thrower that died on okinawa...
    As much as I enjoyed 'Band of Brothers', I liked 'The Pacific' a bit more. It was followed more intimately a couple of characters, and that theater had the brutality aspect covered. My great uncle died on Bougainville, so I'm starting to read into that campaign.

    Leave a comment:


  • freedom
    replied
    Originally posted by Grendel View Post
    "The Heir Apparent" by Joel Rosenberg book four of the Guardians of the Flame Series. "It was supposed to be just a role-playing game... James Michael tumbled out of his wheelchair and fell to his knees in a coughing spasm, his tearing eyes clenched shut. He bounced to his feet on the damp grass, reflexively reaching for the axe strapped to his chest, loosening the straps with two quick jerks and taking the axe in his gnarled, well-muscled hands. Well-muscled hands? He opened his eyes. He was a dwarf standing on the side of a grassy hill, with an axe in his hands. And that was only the beginning..."
    OMG... that series is easily in my top five; it was so good it made me read everything by rosenberg...

    i just finished "With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa" by Eugene Sledge
    my wife's grandfather was a marine corps flame-thrower that died on okinawa...

    Leave a comment:


  • Grendel
    replied
    "The Heir Apparent" by Joel Rosenberg book four of the Guardians of the Flame Series. "It was supposed to be just a role-playing game... James Michael tumbled out of his wheelchair and fell to his knees in a coughing spasm, his tearing eyes clenched shut. He bounced to his feet on the damp grass, reflexively reaching for the axe strapped to his chest, loosening the straps with two quick jerks and taking the axe in his gnarled, well-muscled hands. Well-muscled hands? He opened his eyes. He was a dwarf standing on the side of a grassy hill, with an axe in his hands. And that was only the beginning..."

    Leave a comment:


  • Nish
    replied
    Buddy of mine wrote a "Martial Arts Handbook" that I am reading when I have time. I am also listening to the audible version of A Feast for Crows when going too and from work.

    Leave a comment:


  • Falcon16
    replied
    Just finished up Supreme Conflict, which is about the what happened on the SCOTUS after Scalia died.

    Leave a comment:


  • lew
    started a topic What book are you reading?

    What book are you reading?

    What book(s) are you currently reading?

    I've got two on my nightstand:

    Colonial Conscripts: The Tirailleurs Senegalais in French West Africa, 1857-1960 by Myron Echenberg
    Deadly Force: Understanding Your Right to Self Defenseby Massad Ayoob

    Next up will be:
    Portuguese Dragoons, 1966-1974: The Return to Horseback by John Cann
    Operation Lighthouse Intaf in the Rhodesian Bush War 1972-1980 by Gerry van Tonder and Dudley Wall






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