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CUK Book Club: Currently reading...

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    Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
    Next: "Tesla: the modern sorcerer" by Daniel Blair Stewart. Remaindered at £1.50 in Waterstones as "obsolete". .
    Turns out this epic is more a novel than a biography. Done: off to Oxfam with it.

    Next: "Hiroshima" by John Hersey: A Penguin Special: price (1958): 2/6d (12.5p), price to me (2nd hand): 80p.

    https://www.nationalww2museum.org/wa...hiroshima-1946
    Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 8 August 2025, 22:58.
    When the fun stops, STOP.

    Comment


      Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
      Next: "Hiroshima" by John Hersey: A Penguin Special: price (1958): 2/6d (12.5p), price to me (2nd hand): 80p.

      https://www.nationalww2museum.org/wa...hiroshima-1946
      Done: off to Oxfam with it. Apparently there's a post 1989 version with an additional "what happened next" chapter.

      Next: "Hiroshima: the world's bomb" by Andrew J. Rotter. This one was £17, not 80p.

      I'm often reminded of a chap by the name of Glyn who I worked with half a century ago.

      He'd been a POW in Japan and was near Nagasaki when that went off.

      In the 1970s Management had to hide him away when Japanese visited the plant.
      Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 20 August 2025, 19:31.
      When the fun stops, STOP.

      Comment


        Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
        Next: "The caves of steel" by I. Asimov. This cost 50p. In or around 1977. The recent purchase of "The Naked Sun", on the other hand, cost £9.99. Only 20x the price.
        Done. Off to Oxfam with it.

        Next: "The Naked Sun" by I. Asimov. Got to get my £9.99 value out of this one. NYPD's Lije Baley on Solaria.
        When the fun stops, STOP.

        Comment


          Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
          Next: "Hiroshima: the world's bomb" by Andrew J. Rotter. This one was £17, not 80p.
          Done: off to Oxfam with it.

          Next: "The Elephant to Hollywood" by Maurice Micklewhite.
          When the fun stops, STOP.

          Comment


            Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
            Next: "The Naked Sun" by I. Asimov. Got to get my £9.99 value out of this one. NYPD's Lije Baley on Solaria.
            Done: off to Oxfam with it. Stalled a bit but I got there in the end.

            Next: "The Robots of Dawn" by I. Asimov. The third book in the Lije Baley/Daneel Olivaw cannon, and, aside from a short story, the last. £2.50 in 1985 and 477 pages to boot.

            Stone me, that's 40 years ago. Dunno why that should be more alarming than "The Caves of Steel" being 1952. Even odder is the concept of a world population of a mere 8 billion needing caves of steel to live in. But there you go. I suppose that 8 billion seemed a lot in 1952.
            Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 23 August 2025, 07:47.
            When the fun stops, STOP.

            Comment


              Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
              Next: "The Elephant to Hollywood" by Maurice Micklewhite.
              Done: off to Oxfam with it. What a long career he had, retiring, finally, in 2023.

              Next: "... and a hard rain fell: a GI's true story of the war in Vietnam" by John Ketwig.
              Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 24 August 2025, 21:33.
              When the fun stops, STOP.

              Comment


                Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
                Next: Confidence Man by Maggie Haberman. The life story up to 2021ish of the Orange Moron. A curiously easy read compared with some of my earlier tomes. I bought it about 6 weeks ago so it hasn't mouldered.
                Done at last: off to Oxfam with it & good riddance: how that Orange Mother****er got elected again is a mystery wrapped in dollar bills from the chief autist. And a kid who came pretty close but not close enough. Ho hum.

                Next: "Doomsday Men" by P. D. Smith, being the story of Szilard, Teller, von Neuman, et al.
                Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 29 August 2025, 14:55.
                When the fun stops, STOP.

                Comment


                  Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
                  Next: "The Robots of Dawn" by I. Asimov. The third book in the Lije Baley/Daneel Olivaw cannon, and, aside from a short story, the last. £2.50 in 1985 and 477 pages to boot.
                  Done: off to Oxfam with it. It seemed loooong, being a joining up fixup tale between the Robots, Galactic Empire, and Foundation.

                  Next: "Robots and Empire" by I. Asimov. This one was 508 pages & £2.95. .
                  Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 3 September 2025, 14:59.
                  When the fun stops, STOP.

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
                    Next: "Doomsday Men" by P. D. Smith, being the story of Szilard, Teller, von Neuman, et al.
                    Done: off to Oxfam with it. Included lots about gas warfare in WWI too, with Fritz Haber featuring quite a lot.

                    Next: "Chocolate Wars" by Deborah Cadbury or how Kraft bought Cadbury and shut factories left right & centre. Fecking septics.
                    Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 3 September 2025, 18:57.
                    When the fun stops, STOP.

                    Comment

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