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The collected Maus, by Art Spiegelman.
Not sure how many graphic novels/ comics it originally comprised, but I had it all in one book. I'm not sure I can do it justice. It's Pulitzer prize winning. They had to shoe-horn in into a category because there wasn't one for "black and white artistry, simply drawn in a comic book format but which will make you cry til your skin gets chapped." Art's Dad was a Polish Jew. You pretty much know how that went. He lived and was fucked up. But he was such a bloody survivor. The ghettos, Auschwitz, TB, starvation, you name it he did it. And the book is narrated in his voice, in his slightly broken English. Which allows the Jewish voice to come through. The illustration is very simple, but as you read it becomes very powerful. What looks like a fun cartoon at the start becomes your world as you read it. The Jews are depicted as mice (obv because they were viewed as rodents) the Poles as pigs, the Nazis as cats. There are even sections where the mice wear pig-masks in order to "pass". And you never, ever forget that this is a real account. Told by a real man with a number tattooed on his arm, to his son who happened to be a graphic artist. And he wasn't a lovely cuddly man either; he was a real man with real problems. The most exceptional book I've read in years. |
I have Maus in two volumes, which is how I think it was originally published. I liked it.
It is hot Summer here, which I think makes it a perfect time to reread The Jungle Books by Rudyard Kipling. Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk |
I guess I read some of the original serial in high school? I'll need to look for the bound copies.
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I'm reading The Martian by Andy Weir.
The movie trailer looks amazing, and then over the 4th of July weekend, my brother strongly recommended that I read the book. I thought there wouldn't be time to read it before the movie comes out, but the movie still has a couple months before it comes out. So I bought the paperback. I'm making a conscious effort to not read it all in one sitting. I wanted to be able to bring it to this Boy Scout camp where I have a chaperone shift the second half of this week. There will be a lot of down time, and I need a book to read while I hang out in my hammock. Anyway, even with trying to slow myself down, I'm already three quarters of the way through the book. It's riveting. So good. Just typing this and thinking about it, I'm wishing I was reading the book instead. If you haven't seen the movie trailer, check it out. The trailer looks like the movie follows the book very closely. But of course the book will have more detail. |
Just listened to God is not great by hitchens.
excellent of course. |
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2nd: "The Martian" looks fanuckingtastic. |
the movie looks amazing!
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I'm in.
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"Blackfoot Messiah" from The First Mountain Man series by William W. Johnstone.
A re-read. |
Just finished up the Fables comic series. Sort of a slow end to a fabulous (get it?) series. I think it fit, though. Their spinoff series Jack of Fables already had an apocalyptic end; it wasn't necessary here.
Finished Unwritten, and read the Saga books up to the latest collected volume (Even in Kindle form, I don't want to clutter my space up with monthly issues). Still rereading Song of Ice and Fire, slowly. Maybe the next one will come out around the time I finish. |
Werewolves by Elliott O'Donnell. Must have had this out of my public library a dozen times as a kid. It's a "scholarly" study on the werewolf phenomenon throughout Europe, but does make occasional mention of those backward countries that have to rely on tigers and hyenas for their weres. Stodgy, pedantic style of writing. It was way better when I was monster crazy pre-teen.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk |
Zoe's Tale by John Scalzi
Book 4 of the Old Man's War series. I loves me some Scalzi. It's a parallel book to The Last Colony, which I read but don't remember at all. Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk |
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So go see it. It's good. |
I read a fabulous alien invasion book last week. Gets the prize for worst and most uninspiring title ever - turned out to be one of the best books I've read in ages.
Iron Mike, by Patricia Rose. It's her debut novel and it had me utterly gripped. Wonderfully strong character building - we jump between different character perspectives and one of them is a dog called Hershey, who I just adored. The alien invasion itself is thoroughly unsettling. I got a sample on kindle and by the end of that I had to buy the book (£1.99). Currently reading The Last: a Zombie Apocalypse Thriller (Zombie Ocean Book 1) , by Michael John Grist. Verrrrrrry different take on zompoc fiction. Really enjoying it. It's a clever story, and very well-written. So many zompoc novels are inexpertly written - often very engaging stories, but with writing that is perfunctory, or just lacking in any flair or style. This one is very good. I like the author's style. |
Just finished another re-read: "Forty Guns West", & "Preacher's Peace", a two-books-in-one deal, by William W. Johnstone.
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Just read the excellent We Are a Muslim, Please by Zaiba Malik.
Autobiographical, about growing up in a Pakistani, Muslim family in Bradford in the 70s. The book is very funny in parts, but it does also include a lot of detail about Islam - some of which I didn't know. Written in 2010, she includes a polemic against one of the 7 July terrorists (Tube bombing) who it turns out grew up very close to her, albeit at a different time. It brought it all back and made me cry. I was living in Leicester at the time, and pulling a sickie because I'd just had my eyes lasered and they were really hurting. I switched the news on for a bit of background noise, intending to close my eyes, and saw the city I'd once called home being hit harder than the IRA ever managed. I still had friends in London and tried to get hold of many of them, but I couldn't get through. I even checked on the Evil Ex. Anyway, the book is marvellous. Written with a light touch, the characters engagingly drawn, informative enough to be interesting without being scholarly. And for better or worse she's writing about my part of the world now. I may not know the exact places she writes about in Bradford, as they're housing, but I know a little of Bradford and of course Leeds. She even mentions Otley (yay!) although only as an example of a white-flight destination. Which is reasonable; everyone here is white as ice-cream, except in the Red Pepper, and I think the waiters and chefs there have to roost in the rafters during the day, so as not to scare the locals. Am 2/3 way through The Mirror World of Melody Black by Gavin Extence. It's very good so far. Without being spoiler-y (unlike the blurb on the dust jacket) the herione suffers from a mental health condition. It's not mine, but there are enough parallels to keep me interested. The author himself has the condition he has written her, so he knows what he's writing about. The story is interesting, but of course we all like reading about ourselves, as UT pointed out :lol: Couldn't help comparing her to myself at various points. FTR she's doing a lot better. |
"The Frontiersman: River of Blood" by William W. Johnstone, w/J.A. Johnstone, but seeing as William W. died ~10 years ago, I think they should just go with J.A. as author.
:2cents: |
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The Red Atlas
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I’m currently reading ‘The Red Atlas - How the Soviet Union secretly mapped the World’.
It documents, in considerable detail, the efforts of the Soviet Union to acquire intelligence about potential adversaries and produce maps to be used when the tanks rolled in. Much of the mapping appears to have been lifted from maps in the public domain, (Ordnance Survey and USGS) guide books, text books, satellite imagery etc. The authors compare the Soviet maps with those produced nationally and conclude, by date comparison and other means, that some details shown can only have been acquired by ground based observation. An example of this is the road bridge plotted near the Royal Naval Dockyard at Chatham which has notes on width, construction type and load bearing capacity. Always helpful if you want to drive an armoured division across. In the US a number of city plans show not only factories, but the type of goods produced therein and the manufacturer’s name. The authors note that ‘such detail depended on the presence of somebody on the ground and this may have been more readily accomplished in the United States’. Raise an eyebrow at that statement if you wish! There is one minor irritation about the book, however. Unfortunately, text can be separated from the map extracts by a number of pages. If comparing two or three map extracts in association with the text it can be annoying having to continually flip back and forth. A larger format might have solved that problem to a degree. The book has had a gestation period so long it would have made an elephant look positively hasty in comparison. I first signed up for Email notification of its publication well over two years ago. In fairness, I believe that there were concerns over copyright issues as the Soviet Union appeared to have made wholesale use of Ordnance Survey mapping over many years. The OS jealously guards its intellectual property as some have found out to their cost. The authors are British, the publisher is the University of Chicago Press and it’s printed in Canada. I might be mistaken, but I wonder if there is a degree of risk spreading going on there. The website for the book is well worth a look as it contains several map samples for cities in both the UK and US. Here’s a screen grab showing Arlington which might be of interest to glatt. Attachment 62678 The maps are zoomable and, in my opinion, well worth a look: The Red Atlas |
That's cool. I love maps.
Soviets aren't the only ones to do this. I know someone employed by the US government who has been on many trips around the world over decades collecting public domain documents locally to help piece together one of these maps for the US. Some of his sources were public domain and some he wouldn't talk about. He gave me an old Soviet atlas of the US that was going to be thrown away at work. Not much detail, but I had fun looking up the name of my hometown in Russian. For whatever reason, I thought it was neat that the Russians came up with a name to call my little town. |
And looking at that map of Arlington is really interesting. It's old and before they put Route 66 through the county. Very interesting to see where the streets used to continue before they were bisected by the highway, and fascinating to see what houses were torn down and roads removed to make room for the highway. That must have been a wild time, dissapearing neighborhoods.
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After in dissolution of the Soviet Union, that group emigrated to CA to form Google Earth. :haha:
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Neat.
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Ya see what I did there? I took the, and then I,...yeah you saw it.:D |
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You win the thread! :thumb: |
:D
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Rattlesnake Wells, Wyoming by Wm. W. Johnstone, w/J.A. Johnstone. Idk why they don't just go w/the nephew (J.A.), the uncle (Wm), has been dead for 13 years. I think all his fans are aware of the changeover by now.:right:
Also: The Mantle, And Other Stories, by Nicholas Gogol. |
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