"Introduction to Electronic Defense Systems" - Filippo Neri
Given its topic, an accessible if weighty tome.
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Reply to: CUK Book Club: Currently reading...
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Previously on "CUK Book Club: Currently reading..."
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "Space Chronicles" by Neil deGrasse Tyson. Somewhat lighter. It was half read 5 or more years ago, time to read the rest & off to Oxfam it'll go.
Next:TBD."Star Trek in myth and leg end" by Thomas Richards, 1997. Purchased 17/03/2001 so I have owned it for 22 years and 8 days..
Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 25 March 2023, 20:38.
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Originally posted by ladymuck View PostWilliam Gibson - Mona Lisa Overdrive.
I had no idea his work was built into several trilogies, I've always read them as stand alone books. I found out about 5 minutes ago when I looked up his bibliography to see what else I hadn't read of his work.
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William Gibson - Mona Lisa Overdrive.
I had no idea his work was built into several trilogies, I've always read them as stand alone books. I found out about 5 minutes ago when I looked up his bibliography to see what else I hadn't read of his work.
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext:TBD."Dirty Words" by Mark Morton. Dunno how this one will go, it being about etymology..
Next: "Space Chronicles" by Neil deGrasse Tyson. Somewhat lighter. It was half read 5 or more years ago, time to read the rest & off to Oxfam it'll go.
Stone me, I must read a lot, I have 25% of the posts on this thread..
Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 25 March 2023, 19:45.
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There Is No Antimemetics Division by qntm. I've just finished it but will probably read again. It can be hard going at times but overall have enjoyed it.
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William Gibson 'the peripheral'
next: 'the agent'
nice bit of cyberpunk
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
Done, having woken early this morning.
Next:TBD (there's so little choice).
"Island on the edge of the world" by Charles MacLean.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Island-Edge.../dp/1841957550
This one is for EO who spent some time there IIRC..
A fair percentage of them buggered off to Oz which might explain it a little.
Sounds like they were pretty happy until the outside world started interfering.
Randomly falling off seacliffs must have added some spice to life.
New word: "eleemosynary". Well there's a thing.
Next:TBD."IBM and the holocaust" by Edwin Black. Purchase, according to the receipt, in 2002. Thankfully it was a non fading receipt with actual printed print rather than the more modern disappearing text type.
More light reading..
Some lune on the Amazon reviews for the above tome seems to think there were mainframes in the 1940s.
Though he/she/it/them/they were aware of Colossus.
https://historynewsnetwork.org/article/1035Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 23 March 2023, 13:21.
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "An utterly impartial history of Britain" by John O'Farrell.
Moderately amusing: I've got as far as 1066 and the Norman bastards since I woke at 05:58 and read for an hour before returning to the land of nod.
Next:TBD (there's so little choice).
"Island on the edge of the world" by Charles MacLean.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Island-Edge.../dp/1841957550
This one is for EO who spent some time there IIRC..
Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 18 February 2023, 09:45.
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Originally posted by ladymuck View PostThe Hour: A Cocktail Manifesto by Bernard DeVolo
One man's highly opinionated (and tongue-in-cheek) view that there is only one type of cocktail worth having - a martini. It must be made a certain way and drunk at a certain hour. Anything else is an abomination, especially if it contains rum.
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The Hour: A Cocktail Manifesto by Bernard DeVolo
One man's highly opinionated (and tongue-in-cheek) view that there is only one type of cocktail worth having - a martini. It must be made a certain way and drunk at a certain hour. Anything else is an abomination, especially if it contains rum.
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George MacDonald Fraser - Flashman. The first book in the series.
Just finished Tom Brown's Schooldays (which actually doesn't have a lot of Flashman & his bullying antics in it) so seemed a logical choice.
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext:TBD."Things can only get better" by John o'Farrell being a memoir of the glories of the Ditch the Bitch era.
Next: "An utterly impartial history of Britain" by John O'Farrell.
Moderately amusing: I've got as far as 1066 and the Norman bastards since I woke at 05:58 and read for an hour before returning to the land of nod.
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As a huge fan of American Noir I really loved The Contortionist’s Handbook by Craig Clevenger. A cross between Chuch Pahlaniuk and James Ellroy. Top recommended reading list in the appendices too.
Just starting on The Shards by Brett Easton Ellis - been looking forward to this for ages, it's his first book in over ten years.
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