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What I'm reading now...
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Ruby Emerald
Super Steeper
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Jul-27-2006 03:15
I know we already have the Sleuths Bookshelf, but people there talk about their general tastes, what books they liked in childhood etc. I'd like all of us to share with others what we are reading now, do we like it or not and to recommend the books we like. Possibly we could have a similar thread for movies.
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Kathryn Gumshoe the 7th
Battered Shoe
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Jul-11-2007 21:58
I'm not reading anything right now, too busy getting crap in boxes. (we're moving) but the last book I read was "The Body" by Stephen King, seeing for myself if it was as good as the movie, "Stand By Me." Which is now my favorite movie.
To make a long story short, the book is back in the library safe and sound never to darken my doorstep again, and the movie has mysteriously disappeared to my room to watch on my laptop.
lol it's not my laptop it's actually my dad's, but that has "mysteriously disappeared" also when he hasn't needed it, and the last time he needed it was about a week ago.
I wonder if he'll press charges?
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Secret_Squirrel
Safety Officer
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Nov-11-2007 16:27
[Besides a lot of Rosamund Clifford in SM form] I have started reading & listening to Terry Pratchett Discworld Series. Something I said I'd never do as there were too many and I wasn't going to lock myself down into getting sucked into a 20+ book series. Ba-Bow. So now I am really sucked in. They're very witty and clever, and well, 'silly'. Plus I've come across a fair few of them in audio book form read by Tony Robinson (Baldric from Blackadder) which has been great.
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John Hale
Yarn Weaver
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Nov-17-2007 22:31
SS, a tip regarding Discworld. It will go fast, very, very, very fast. You will be absorbed by Discworld until you come to a crashing halt with no books left to read. You will reread them to hold this off. Eventually, he will release another book. They are like crack. Savor them if you can. They, like life, never last as long as we would like.
To contribute my latest harvest from the library: Charles Maturin's "Melmoth the Wanderer". Emblematic of Irish fiction. Gothic. Surreal. Highly literate but obscenely over-written.
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Lady Zeugirdor
Pinball Amateur
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Dec-5-2007 23:17
Ok, so this shows my reading level...no not really. I just finished reading the Maximum Ride Series by James Patterson. It's actually a young adult series,but I liked it. I guess it's a cross between X-Men and the A-Team, umm, sort of anyway. It was really good and a very easy, fast read.
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crunchpatty
Old Shoe
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Dec-6-2007 00:05
I'm almost done with the instructions (thank GOD they're waterproof!) for my scalp-moisturizing shampoo. There's three stages. I'm really good with "lather" and "rinse", but keep forgetting the last one.
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Secret_Squirrel
Safety Officer
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Dec-6-2007 03:46
lance? cauterise? polish? stage 3 man, don't leave me hangin'...
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biggie528
Lucky Stiff
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Dec-7-2007 11:40
just so long as it has nothing to do with suppositories...
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crunchpatty
Old Shoe
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Dec-8-2007 00:12
*bends over in shock and agony and will never allow a Polish man named Lance to walk behind him again*
Not even if he's a ten foot pole.
*rimshot*
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reda
Well-Connected
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Dec-10-2007 01:47
Just finished The Speed of Dark (sorry if the name is a bit wrong, Im translating). It's about being autistic and in a future when you can choose to do something about it. Very intresting question: If you choose the treatment, will you still be you? Or does being "normal" means you loose your own character?
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Lady Jas
The Chosen One
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Dec-10-2007 02:03
Im constantly reading books on Autism and Aspergers, and all that stuff, as it interests me. But most recently I just finished "Marley and Me"
*SNIFF* That book was really sad, but it was a really cute book. All you dog lovers will surely like it! ;)
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