Quadriplegic & Paraplegic Spinal Cord Injuries: What Are You Reading? - Quadriplegic & Paraplegic Spinal Cord Injuries

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What Are You Reading? For the book nerds!

#1 User is offline   twisted_ophelia 

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Posted 12 April 2009 - 03:45 PM

I thought I'd start a book thread because I'm a total book nerd and always looking for something good to read. What are you currently reading?

I'm reading The Four Queens by Nancy Goldstone, a biography of the four daughters of the Count of Provence in the Medieval Ages who ended up playing major roles in Europe at that time. Very interesting. I'm a big fan of historical biographies.

http://www.amazon.com/Four-Queens-Provenca...1010&sr=8-1
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#2 User is offline   tonimichelle 

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Posted 12 April 2009 - 03:49 PM

I am starting The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini......great idea on this topic, TO! I love me some reading! ....toni :drooldrip:
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#3 User is offline   Trinity 

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Posted 12 April 2009 - 04:37 PM

The Rough Guide to The Gambia!
Memento Vivere
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#4 User is offline   dancin' johnny 

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Posted 12 April 2009 - 05:40 PM

The Damned United ~ David Peace
How does it feel to feel?
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#5 User is offline   ems 

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Posted 12 April 2009 - 10:23 PM

hehee, ok... this week I have going...

my day book....
Watching the English http://www.amazon.co.uk/Watching-English-H...r/dp/0340818867 absoultely fab book.. but adictive, I think it will be finished tomorrow ;)

My bed books this week...
The Evil Seed - Joanne Harris
A Lifes Work and In the Fold - by Rachel Cusk
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#6 User is offline   twisted_ophelia 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 12:33 AM

Ems, you're like me--I'm usually reading 3 or 4 books at once. For me to be currently reading only one book is unusual!
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#7 User is offline   Bevan-L 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 12:59 AM

Only cos of my envolvement with motorsports etc hehe :) :cheers:
busy reading Richard Burns: Rallying's Would-Be King

http://www.amazon.com/Richard-Burns-Rallyi...4106&sr=1-1

Someone who was destined for greater success but tragically cut short :)
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#8 User is offline   E-DOG 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 01:44 AM

Just finished Tim Willocks' "The Religion" part one of a hopefully three part 14th century epic saga ala "Pillars of the Earth"
Still working on David Baldacci's "Divine Justice"

and Bevan-L, that would be "Rallying's Won't -Be King" now.

E
when it absolutely, positively, has to be destroyed overnight, call the Marines.

I will nevah, EVAH take a pinch from a greasy muddahf*@kah like you!

How 'bout if I spell it out for ya. D-I-L-L-I-G-A-F
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#9 User is offline   longhaul 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 04:06 AM

The Road - Cormac McCarthy it has no chapters it's just one story about a father and son on a journey after a war. Having no chapters it's hard not to read it in one day.
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#10 User is offline   fatdave 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 09:36 AM

Age of Hirohito: In Search of Modern Japan - Daikichi Irokawa.

Hemmings Sports & Exotic Car.

Also re-reading Burning Chrome - William Gibson.
Never explain--your friends do not need it and your enemies will not believe you anyway.
Elbert Hubbard
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#11 User is offline   msg 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 03:16 PM

Corsair by Clive Cussler, one of the Oregon Files series. Ive also just bought Ian Rankin - Doors Open as well, but finding time to read them is hard cos its easter holiday time and my five year old has got me run ragged! Only another week to go.......
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#12 User is offline   StillFingers 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 07:09 PM

Peaceful Action, Open Heart: Lessons from the Lotus Sutra by Thich Nhat Hanh
Only after we have lost everything, are we free to do anything.
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#13 User is offline   Ches 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 08:07 PM

Hapa mailed me a lovely book "You Can Heal Your Life" been working on it this week.

Thanks again Hapa!!!!
Our Handicaps Exist Only In the Mind
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#14 User is offline   twisted_ophelia 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 08:09 PM

View PostChes, on Apr 13 2009, 04:07 PM, said:

Hapa mailed me a lovely book "You Can Heal Your Life" been working on it this week.

Thanks again Hapa!!!!


I've heard of that book, I think I almost bought it. I really like the Abraham-Hicks Law of Attraction books. That shit works, I tell ya.
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#15 User is offline   greybeard 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 08:29 PM

Kathy Reichs - Monday Mourning
I am not young enough to know everything. - Oscar Wilde
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#16 User is offline   ems 

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Posted 13 April 2009 - 10:01 PM

Tonight I read,

Humphrey,
Guess how much I love you, Spring and Summer,
Snugglepot and Cuddlepie and Ragged Blossom,

with a little help from my favourite little 6 yr old girl ;)
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#17 User is offline   twisted_ophelia 

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Posted 25 April 2009 - 02:36 AM

Finished reading The Four Queens. Now I'm reading The King's Favorite by Susan Holloway Scott. It's historical fiction, which I love, a novel about Nell Gwyn (a 17th century actress/courtesan) and Charles II of England. Pretty good so far.

http://www.amazon.com/Kings-Favorite-Novel...6858&sr=8-1
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#18 User is offline   StillFingers 

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Posted 25 April 2009 - 03:58 AM

Re-reading Red Dragon by Thomas Harris, after finishing Peaceful Action, Open Heart, I need a refresher on evil.
Only after we have lost everything, are we free to do anything.
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#19 User is offline   doublelibra 

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Posted 26 April 2009 - 07:16 AM

The last book I read was "Angela's Ashes" by Frank McCourt. It was excellent and also very funny. A friend loaned me "The Audacity of Hope" by Obama, and I just started it. It seems really good and quite idealistic. It would have probably been better to have read it before the election. Now reality is hitting like a bucket of cold water in the face. We are in such a mess (not that I didn't see that slow-motion train wreck coming for years). Obama is certainly the lesser of the evils. Sorry I didn't intend to make this a political rant! LOL
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#20 User is offline   BenjaminLucas 

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Posted 26 April 2009 - 03:09 PM

Wuthering Heights.

Heathcliff + Catherine = Love.
Zirconium Pants.
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#21 User is offline   fatdave 

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Posted 26 April 2009 - 04:22 PM

Lakota Woman - Mary Crow Dog.

I first read this book when I was 12, I brought the book with me to school where I was confronted by the principle and told I had to surrender the book until the end of the day due to "controversial material". That really caused an uproar, when I told the history teacher what had happened she marched into his office and demanded the book be returned to me.

I am rereading it because I found it in a box of my books and always enjoyed it.
Never explain--your friends do not need it and your enemies will not believe you anyway.
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#22 User is offline   nomis 

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Posted 27 April 2009 - 10:48 AM

For the second time in my 39yrs of SCI I'm reading an autobiographical book by another SCI person. The first, read some 38yrs ago, added nothing of value to my life. But this one is startlingly different, partly because I've grown up a bit and have my own experiences to compare but mostly cos it's a remarkable book written by a remarkable man.

Declarations of Independence: war zones and wheelchaiars by JOHN HOCKENBERRY. I believe it also was released with the title Moving Violations: War Zones, Wheelchairs and Declarations of Independence.

Hockenberry became T4-6 at age 19 and went on to become a war correspondent in the Middle East covering Iraq in the Persian Gulf War and heaps of other rough and unlikely stuff. This is a guy I can easily admire and enjoy as he pushes his personal limits, rolling his wheels where others fear to tread and even abandoning them for the sake of an honesty I can understand.

I'm only partway through (I didn't want to waste time with you not knowing about it) and it's taken a few pages to settle into his style of writing. He's clear and vivid but the storyline is interwoven (so far) with emotional side-trips of the inner goings on of the spinal injury battle. I find myself running my own parallel storyline triggered not by his events but by the familiar issues and emotions.

I have no idea what a recently new SCI person would make of this book but for someone like myself with years to reflect back on it is so far proving a moving and valuable read. I'm considering restarting my life and doing what he's done. And, I believe he's still doing it. So now I'm off to check his BLOG.
Stephen Hawking, physicist, cosmologist and something of a dreamer:
Although I cannot move and I have to speak through a computer, in my mind I am free.
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#23 User is offline   fatdave 

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Posted 15 May 2009 - 08:13 AM

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas Adams.

Rereading for the unbeknown time. Always makes me laugh.
Never explain--your friends do not need it and your enemies will not believe you anyway.
Elbert Hubbard
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#24 User is offline   Trinity 

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Posted 15 May 2009 - 09:28 AM

View Postfatdave, on May 15 2009, 09:13 AM, said:

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas Adams.

Rereading for the unbeknown time. Always makes me laugh.

I love that book! The original BBC tv series is also excellent, I was brought up on it as a child. Haven't managed to bring myself to watch the movie yet, I am sure I will only be disappointed!

I'm re reading The Solitaire Mystery by Jostein Gaarder for the umpteenth time, such an enjoyable book and totally different from any fiction I have read before, highly recommended!
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#25 User is offline   Zammo 

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Posted 15 May 2009 - 11:04 AM

The movie is shocking Trin. Stick to the BBC version.
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#26 User is offline   bobm 

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Posted 15 May 2009 - 02:50 PM

I recently finished Garrison Keillor's: Leaving Home.

Compulsive reading; I always leave the foreword or preface till the end, which is just as well b/c I'm not sure I would otherwise have got beyond this:

"Every time I read a book about how to be smarter, how not to be sad, how to raise children and be happy and grow old gracefully, I think,

"Well I won't make THOSE mistakes, I won't have to go through that," but we all have to go through that.........

Life isn't a vicarious experience. You get it figured out and then one day life happens to you. You prepare yourself for grief and loss, arrange your ballast and

then the wave swamps the boat."
Bob
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#27 User is offline   Travelling Blackbird 

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Posted 18 May 2009 - 10:28 PM

I'm reading Christian A. Dumais' "Empty Rooms, Lonely Countries", which is a great collection of short stories and essays on love and life, ranging from bitter to funny and back. He had a great voice.
I just finished Heller's "Catch 22" for the third time. That's a great, disjointed mess of a read that comes together wonderfully at the end.

This post has been edited by Travelling Blackbird: 18 May 2009 - 10:29 PM

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#28 User is offline   mjtpopus 

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Posted 19 May 2009 - 04:01 AM

The Road by Cormac McCarthy

The Second World War by Martin Gilbert

Germany's Aims in the First World War by Fritz Fischer
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#29 User is offline   fatdave 

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Posted 19 May 2009 - 09:18 AM

Trin, the new hitchhikers guide movie sucks...very badly.

Was going through my old books and picked up the first harry potter, going to read the whole series again.

When I am done with that I have all my Dark tower books out to start on them again.
Never explain--your friends do not need it and your enemies will not believe you anyway.
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#30 User is offline   Travelling Blackbird 

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Posted 19 May 2009 - 02:24 PM

View Postfatdave, on May 19 2009, 11:18 AM, said:

Trin, the new hitchhikers guide movie sucks...very badly.

Was going through my old books and picked up the first harry potter, going to read the whole series again.

When I am done with that I have all my Dark tower books out to start on them again.


"Hitch-hiker's Guide" was an unfortunate mess of a movie all right. It was never going to be an easy book to film, because of all its ideas and plot threads, but the BBC had done a very good version in the 80s, and the movie felt like the makers couldn't decide whether to copy that or go as far away from it as possible, so they kind of did both.

Dave, do you read comic books at all? I saw there's an adaptation of "The Dark Tower" being released. Maybe it might interest you.

View Postbobm, on May 15 2009, 04:50 PM, said:

I recently finished Garrison Keillor's: Leaving Home.


I love Garrison Keilor's writing. His radio show is a joy too.
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