Leo Honeycutt's Edward Edwards: Governor of Louisiana
Malcolm Gladwell's What the Dog Saw
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Leo Honeycutt's Edward Edwards: Governor of Louisiana
Malcolm Gladwell's What the Dog Saw
Louisiana Tech University
Flagship of the University of Louisiana System
Kind of makes you want to enroll your kid in school/sports late though, doesn't it?
You're not kidding. Kind of going back and forth there, huh?
Stuff I've read recently (that I can remember):
Finished Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived in the Castle this week.
Finished Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes last weekend.
Been working on Borges's Collected Short Works (I'm about halfway).
Recently read and enjoyed The Magicians which is kind of a "grown-up" Harry Potter (like if Harry learned magic at college instead of high school and drank and did drugs and hooked up with girls and got depressed and the learning magic stuff was really difficult and lots of work). Pretty engrossing.
I've got some Graham Greene coming up next. I've started on the introduction. I have high hopes, but Greene's been a little hit or miss for me in the past.
Hasn't been too long since I read Eric Newby's A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush.
I'm sure there are others I've enjoyed recently, but I'll stop here. We'll just say they know my face at the local library. I kind of enjoy reading.
Last edited by inudesu; 01-27-2011 at 12:53 PM.
My systematic professor was big on that. It's good for you, but yeah, it can be a beat down.
At least it's "popular" stuff (seems like) and not academic. Probably easier to go back and forth with those guys than Van Til and Grudem and guys writing on that level (although Grudem is easy to read I think).
presently: "Run Away Jury" by Grisham(sp)
favorite: anything by L'Amour
Last edited by BRDawg81; 03-16-2010 at 07:43 AM.
Currently:The Prize
Just finished To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. I'll describe it in two words, "Bor" and "ing."
Also just finished The Russia House by John Le Carre. Not too bad. Didn't knock my socks off, but it got better towards the end. I haven't read much Le Carre, and what I've read has had great flashes but I'm still waiting to read something from him that lives up to his reputation (I haven't read his best known stuff yet). I'd be interested in seeing the Sean Connery movie of this, but the Fort Worth library only has it on VHS.
Not too long ago I read Me, Myself and Bob by the Veggietales creator. Really interesting. I had no idea that they (well, the original company behind Veggietales - Big Idea) had ever gone bankrupt.
Also read the Prydain Chronicles this Fall/Winter. I saw an article not too long ago about the failure of Disney's The Black Cauldron (prompted by an anniversary, I think) and remember seeing the movie as a kid. I knew it was based on a series that won a lot of awards (the last book won the Newbury I think) and I've kind of wondered why I didn't catch it as a kid. So I went back and read them all. I enjoyed them. And I agreed with the author of that original article that Disney is dropping the ball by not re-booting that series and turning it into a live action 5 part Harry Potter/Narnia franchise.
Working on At Home and a biography of Ulrich Zwingli now. Also a history of the Byzantine Empire and a book about praying for your kids. And several more in the queue.
Last edited by inudesu; 01-26-2011 at 11:37 AM.
Fair enough.
I've also been reading quite a bit of I Am a Bunny and Goodnight Moon and various Elmo books.