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What are you reading tonight DU? I'm reading "Olive Kitteridge" by Elizabeth

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applegrove Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-25-11 12:40 AM
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What are you reading tonight DU? I'm reading "Olive Kitteridge" by Elizabeth
Strout. It is a series of short stories that see a character reappear in each one. So far so good.
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femmocrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-25-11 05:59 PM
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1. "Tender is the Night" -- F. Scott Fitzgerald. n/t
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Faygo Kid Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-25-11 06:13 PM
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"A Stillness At Appomattox." Again.
Seemed appropriate to re-read the Army of the Potomac trilogy again. David McCullough called "A Stillness At Appomattox" the greatest single influence that turned him into a writer.

Agreed. Bruce Catton - the man painted word pictures.
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ScreamingMeemie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-25-11 06:13 PM
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2. "The History and the Mystery of the Menger Hotel"
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RSillsbee Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-25-11 07:09 PM
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3. Executive Orders (Tom Clancy) again
Executive Orders (1996)
This is the immediate sequel to Debt of Honor. President Ryan survives press hazing, an assassination attempt, and a biological warfare attack on the USA. Clark and Chavez trace the virus to a Middle Eastern madman, and the U.S. military goes to work.


From Wikipedia
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one_voice Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-25-11 07:49 PM
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4. "Hit List" Laurell K. Hamilton...
it's a series, my guilty pleasure...vampires/werewolves/witches etc. Her earlier books in this series were better, but it's like crack for me..I can't give them up. :D
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Forkboy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-26-11 02:56 AM
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5. Just started Galileo's Dream by Kim Stanley Robinson.
The winner of every major science fiction award, Kim Stanley Robinson is a novelist who looks ahead with optimism even while acknowledging the steep challenges facing our planet and species: a clear-eyed realist who has not forgotten how to dream. His new novel offers his most audacious dream yet. At the heart of a brilliant narrative that stretches from Renaissance Italy to the moons of Jupiter is one man, the father of modern science: Galileo Galilei.

To the inhabitants of the Jovian moons, Galileo is a revered figure whose actions will influence the subsequent history of the human race. From the summit of their distant future, a charismatic renegade named Ganymede travels to the past to bring Galileo forward in an attempt to alter history and ensure the ascendancy of science over religion. And if that means Galileo must be burned at the stake, so be it.

Yet between his brief and jarring visitations to this future, Galileo must struggle against the ignorance and superstition of his own time. And it is here that Robinson is at his most brilliant, showing Galileo in all his contradictions and complexity. Robinson's Galileo is a tour de force of imaginative and historical empathy: the shining center around which the novel revolves.

From Galileo's heresy trial to the politics of far-future Jupiter, from the canals of Venice to frozen, mysterious Europa, Robinson illuminates the parallels between a distant past and an even more remote future—in the process celebrating the human spirit and calling into question the convenient truths of our own moment in time.
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