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Next: "Going Postal: Rage, Murder, and Rebellion in America" by Mark Ames.
Done: off to Oxfam her next door but one with it. The Orange Mother****er gets a mention or two, which is remarkable considering it's a 2005 book. .
Next: "City of Woods and Fields" by Stephen Butler: one man's journey across the country in alphabetical order starting at A in Scotland and ending with Z in Cornwall. All undertaken in a 1969 1970 Morris 1000 van for some odd reason.
Said Morris 1000 van was last taxed in 1993 so is presumably now a baked bean can.
Inexplicably he chose to visit Nantyglo rather than Neath but there you go & there he went: not at all impressed.
In the 35 years since it was written many of the places he visited are no longer there including the Zennor Wayside Museum which lasted until the proprietor retired in 2015.
Next: "The Manhattan Project: the making of the atomic bomb" by Al Cimino.
Done: off to Oxfam with it. Rather lightweight all in all. That's a nome de plume by the way. It's been reviewed elsewhere as being a printed Wiki posting.
Next: "This Little Britain: how one small country built the modern world" by Harry Bingham.
Next: "This Little Britain: how one small country built the modern world" by Harry Bingham.
Done: off to Oxfam with it. Inneresting enough.
Next: "The Long Descent: A user guide to the end of the industrial age" by John Michael Greer.
Purchased 7th May 2011. Mentions "A Canticle for Leibowitz" by Miller and "Davy" by Pangborn and "The masters of solitude" by Kaye & Godwin. Possible "Pavane" by Keith Roberts. I've read the first & last, but not the middle two.
Next: "At home: a short history of private life" by Bill Bryson. Not particularly short at 500 pages but there you go, being the rooms in his house & various stuff relating thereto.
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