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Joey The Hitman
Classic |
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This is of course why I like this board so much. We got people who can think horses 24/7. I gotta take a break on almost anything I do for too long. |
#23
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#24
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I just picked up They Marched Into Sunlight: War and Peace Vietnam and America October 1967 by David Maraniss.
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http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#26
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The Selfish Gene was one of the most influential books I ever read. Now that I look back upon it, it was over the top. But the ideas were astounding. A completely diff. way of viewing life. Dawkins is very well known for pricking at religion. He thrives on it. Climbing Mount Improbable, practically all his books rake religion. I did not know he was having another go at it. |
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#28
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
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I've been reading The Berenstain Bears, good stuff.
Seriously though, the last book I read was Ishmael. That was about a year and a half ago before my kid could walk and talk. Now I'm too tired to read. |
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#31
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you may have to add The Blind Watchmaker. And anyone please add as I am still pondering. It is also interesting to see what people are interested in outside of horses. |
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"The Great Thebby" by F. Mortimer Fitzgerald
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We've Gone Delirious |
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I recommend the great thebby....though it is an incomplete work....
i just finished a great book (sent to me by a very generous sometime DT'r) Madness: A Bipolar Life by Marya Horbacher and am half way through Mustang: The Saga of the Wild Horse in the AMerican West by Deanne Stillman also have to recommend Beautiful Boy: a Father's Journey through his Son's Addiction by David Scheff...and with it you have to read his son's book Tweak: Growing up on Methamphetamines they are all good and non-fiction.
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Seek respect, not attention. |
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
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#36
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or direction. Thus implying the big guy (God), making those precise Watches, went about it in a blind way. So I guess the God Delusion would be the next fit. Dawkins is a Brit who pulls no punches. He will tell you how he feels and more. His American atheist audience is huge. Stephen J. Gould and Dawkins both excellent writers on evolution. Gould did not try to rile quite as much. RIP. Gould was one of my all time favorites. A harder read than Asimov, but very good. I gotta go with something Historical. The Adams book sounds good. |
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Neither McCullough nor Chernow are trained historians and it shows in their work. They are both good writers, and that is why they win awards like the Pulitzer, but the quality of their scholarship is more than questionable. Ellis - who you also mentioned - actually IS a PhD and his work is (not surprisingly) a little bit better. If you are really interested in something like the American Revolution and Early Republic however, I would reccomend reading the stuff from real scholars like Rosemarie Zagarri, Woody Holton, T.H. Breen etc. It might not always be as cleverly written as the stuff the journalists like Chernow produce, but the level of analysis dwarfs anything these untrained people attempt. |
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What was written by Miraja above is a huge problem in Science.
But writers like Asimov, Gould, Dawkins, are all writers that have done real science. Same for Sagan. Even though he got a little maudlin at times with the sci fi. Also RIP. Sagan wrote a great book on what science is and is not that should be read by all who like the power of logic and reasoning, "The Demon Haunted World". Of course one could conclude that the book is terribly flawed, look who recommends it. |
#39
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Love Sagan. . . Have you read Smolin's "The Trouble with Physics"? I have it but can't decide if I feel like reading it yet. . .
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i forgot to also recommend the two books on hitler, 'hubris' and 'nemesis' by ian kershaw. also 'constantine's sword' by james carroll. i have american creation by jos. ellis, but haven't read it yet. one of the books i'll take on vacation.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |