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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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Just finished
Dead in the Water: Murder and Fraud in the World's Most Secretive Industry – a really good read on an investigation into a hijacked tanker
The Glass Hotel – fiction novel by the author of Station Eleven, not quite sure what I think of it but tempted to read it again (was read on a long overnight flight)
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
Done: next: The Vitamin Murders by James Fergusson: the murders in France in 1952 of the Drummond family. (Seems like an easy read, must have matured on the shelf for about 10 years or so).
Probably not as easy a read as the Vitamins book but probably easier than The Brief History of Science has proved to be..
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Originally posted by Guy At Charnock Richard View PostI'm currently reading Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K Jerome.
As they say, a book is a magic portal to another dimension.
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
Done: next: "James Watt" by L T. C. Rolt.
A Brief History of Science by Thomas Crump. The existence of a preface of some 20 pages may bode ill on this one.
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
Looks as if it will be "Blowing up Russia" by Alexander Litvinenko and Yuri Felshtinsky.
That's sat on the shelf for years too, though probably not as many years as the Project Orion book.
Instead: "very special intelligence" by Patrick Beesly.
A tale of the way Room 40 transmogrified into something else during WWII by someone who was there.
Written just as the first books about Bletchley Park were being published.
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I'm currently reading Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K Jerome.
As they say, a book is a magic portal to another dimension.
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "It's an old Wild West Custom" by Duncan Emrich, who seems not to have been a fan of Old Yellow Hair Custer judging by some of his comments.
Amusing enough & easy to read.
Should make Gricer's day..
The book, having come from Swansea University library, looks as if it's never been read.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 11 June 2022, 20:48.
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostToday I found this, which is ever so jolly:
https://npolicy.org/books/Reactor-Gr.../Chapter_1.pdf
Doesn't mention Cobalt Thorium G though.
Great short story!
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Derek Künsken, The Quantum War.
Third in the trilogy. Hard science fiction, humour, space opera.
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post"A short history of technology" by T.K. Derry & Trevor I. Williams.
Short in the sense of being written in 1960, not so short in the sense of being 783 pages long.
Next: "It's an old Wild West Custom" by Duncan Emrich, who seems not to have been a fan of Old Yellow Hair Custer judging by some of his comments.
Amusing enough & easy to read.
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
Next: "The Industrial Revolutionaries" by Gavin Weightman, all about, oddly enough, the industrial revolutionaries of the 18th & 19th centuries.
Looks as if it will be "Blowing up Russia" by Alexander Litvinenko and Yuri Felshtinsky.
That's sat on the shelf for years too, though probably not as many years as the Project Orion book.
In other other news, one of the russian scum who murdered Litvinenko has died of covid.
Hopefully slowly & painfully.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 4 June 2022, 17:28.
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Thanks to the almighty google I finally found: "Like Young" by Theodore "Ted" Sturgeon.
https://archive.org/details/Fantasy_...p?view=theater
Been searching for this for years.
I wonder where & when I first read it.
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