Firestorm by Nevada Barr
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Darn textbooks. I keep a list of what I've read and I always wonder if I should include textbooks. At this stage I don't.Finished reading The Andromeda Strain in may.
Have also been busy reading a textbook for half a year, and should finish that in three months.
That books sounds good. I like movies and books about disasters and extreme weather.Firestorm by Nevada Barr
if you ever get like me it won’t mean a thing I started reading autobiographies and from then on it was like mainlining heroinDarn textbooks. I keep a list of what I've read and I always wonder if I should include textbooks. At this stage I don't.
I have one, and I never use it. The big reason for me is that while there is no tax (here at least) on physical books, there is on ebooks. This usually means that books that I want are more expensive on the Kindle than if I were to buy a physical copy. That and I don't have to charge a real book
The Secret Rescue: An Untold Story of American Nurses and Medics Behind Nazi Lines, by Cate Lineberry
The Daughter of Time, by Josephine Tey
Protagoras and Logos, by Edward Schiappa
The Stranger, by Albert Camus
Bonfire of the Vanities, by Tom Wolfe
Alexander Hamilton, by Ron Chernow
The Prince, by Machiavelli
... lol I have a few too many books on my desk.....
Just added that one to my want to read listNow I’m reading Stiff: The Curious Lives of Cadavers by Mary Roach. Non-fiction.
Just finished:
"The 100 year old man who climbed out the window and disappeared, by Jonas Jonasson."
A charming even amusing novel of a man who steps out of the window of his retirement home on the day of his hundredth birthday party, and does not return. He has many adventures and recounts his fascinating life.
Just added that one to my want to read list
You're selling it I love that sort of thing and death is interesting. I have read a similar book before but I'm struggling to remember the name of it now. It was very well written, though.You’ll love it. It’s fascinating and gross and even macabre but also hilarious.
I will. Ever since I thought of it this morning my mind is crunching away trying to remember the title or even part of the authors nameIf you remember the title, let me know what it is.
Body farms! Fascinating. We have one here in Australia too.in chapter two, she visits the University of Tennessee Medical Center's back garden, in which corpses are scattered so that they can be studied in their various stages of decay.
Watch Stephen Fry in America he goes to the body farm in the University of Kentucky There aren’t just body scattered there is one in a wheelie binI will. Ever since I thought of it this morning my mind is crunching away trying to remember the title or even part of the authors name
Body farms! Fascinating. We have one here in Australia too.
Watch Stephen Fry in America he goes to the body farm in the University of Kentucky There aren’t just body scattered there is one in a wheelie bin
Used by universities ,no but I think he was close to it ,He suffered a lot mentally and that changes your sensibilities ,he said he was thinking of donating his body to the university. I couldn’t imagine visiting once you must lose your sense of smell .I'd never heard of body farms before reading Stiff. Did Stephen Fry puke? I would have.
I'll look out for that @Streetwise, thank you.Watch Stephen Fry in America he goes to the body farm in the University of Kentucky There aren’t just body scattered there is one in a wheelie bin
I wonder what he thought of it all, too. I feel like I would do a lot better with the dead than with live people who are injured. I'm not good with that.I'd never heard of body farms before reading Stiff. Did Stephen Fry puke? I would have.