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Right now? This post.
http://scmwine.wikispaces.com http://scmwine.blogspot.com http://blogs.sun.com/davetong http://twitter.com/davetong
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| Posts: 5451 | Location: Santa Clara Valley AVA | Registered: Jul 02, 2004 |    |
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Wine Snobbery, picked up a new copy on Amazon Marketplace for like 4 bucks. Amazing book, it should be re-released now that wine has taken off in the US.
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Just finished To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee. Thanks to GA for the recommendation.
Just one more sip.
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I am re-reading Lone Wolf and Cub, an epic manga series by Kazuo Koike and Goseki Kojima. It is unbelievably good. As for novels, I just finished "Bloodletting and Miraculous Cures" by Vincent Lam. He recently won the Giller Prize and I wanted to see what the hoopla was about. I must say, I enjoyed it.
Buy the ticket, take the ride. Hunter S. Thompson
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| Posts: 53 | Location: Our Nations Capital | Registered: Dec 14, 2006 |    |
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Currently reading Snow Falling on Cedars by David Guterson. How this book ever got by me before is beyond me. Guterson is a great writer. Of course, I'll have to check out the movie now when I'm done with the book and see how bad it sucks in comparison.
"I think it is a great error to consider a heavy tax on wines as a tax on luxury. On the contrary, it is a tax on the health of our citizens." - Thomas Jefferson
I've joined the ranks of countless other bloggers: www.slavetothewine.typepad.com
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| Posts: 361 | Location: Omaha, NE | Registered: Jul 27, 2005 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by Board-O: Just finished To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee. Thanks to GA for the recommendation.
You actually made it through school without reading this? I'm surprised. Just finished Brothers, by Da Chen. Moving on to The Tender Bar, by J.R. Moehringer. PH
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| Posts: 9245 | Location: Maryland, USA (DC suburbs) | Registered: Nov 22, 2003 |    |
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This thread will most likely be moved to CableI'm reading John Adams by David McCullough
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| Posts: 7106 | Location: Long Island, NY | Registered: Sep 27, 2003 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by Board-O: Just finished To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee. Thanks to GA for the recommendation.
What a GREAT book. Like a wonderful work of art, I pick up something different everytime I read. w+a
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| Posts: 7496 | Location: Dallas TX. | Registered: Feb 21, 2005 |    |
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The Conservative Mind by Russell Kirk. A very challenging, scholarly work. I think I need to read and reread some prerequisite books before really delving into it.
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"I wish I'd a been a doctor. Maybe I'd have saved some life that's been lost. Maybe I'd have done some good in the world, instead of burning every bridge I've crossed." -Bob Dylan
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| Posts: 4198 | Location: Berkeley | Registered: Dec 20, 2002 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by RobM: Currently reading Snow Falling on Cedars by David Guterson. How this book ever got by me before is beyond me. Guterson is a great writer.
Of course, I'll have to check out the movie now when I'm done with the book and see how bad it sucks in comparison.
The book and the movie are naturally a lot different. Both are good, and is worth picking up if you see it in the $5 bin at Wal-Mart. Seeing as I am married to a Korean woman, there were some themes in the novel that hit close to home. Then again, being married to a Korean woman, there was a lot of character development that I felt apathetic towards. No less, it is a great narrative of a very dark portion of our history. I'm hooked on "Guns, Germs, and Steel" by Jared Diamond. I'll give him credit at least for being as ambitious to explain human development in its completeness. Great perspective on how we came to be who we are as a [global] society. A welcoming change from all the PC-Ivory Tower theories that abound.
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| Posts: 79 | Location: Atlanta, GA | Registered: Jul 24, 2006 |    |
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The Common Law O W Holmes
Kill the poor- DK
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| Posts: 1158 | Location: Lincoln NE | Registered: Jul 14, 2006 |    |
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Just read Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer for the first time. Not PC by today's standards, but man, I laughed out loud at least a dozen times.
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| Posts: 5699 | Location: Vancouver, BC | Registered: Oct 17, 2001 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by nopat:
I'm hooked on "Guns, Germs, and Steel" by Jared Diamond. I'll give him credit at least for being as ambitious to explain human development in its completeness. Great perspective on how we came to be who we are as a [global] society. A welcoming change from all the PC-Ivory Tower theories that abound.
Really enjoyed that a couple of years ago. Thought-provoking. Gave me a lot of insight as to how Europe achieved its dominance.
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| Posts: 5699 | Location: Vancouver, BC | Registered: Oct 17, 2001 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by cdr11: The Conservative Mind by Russell Kirk. A very challenging, scholarly work. I think I need to read and reread some prerequisite books before really delving into it. Highly recommended.PH
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| Posts: 9245 | Location: Maryland, USA (DC suburbs) | Registered: Nov 22, 2003 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by PurpleHaze: quote: Originally posted by cdr11: The Conservative Mind by Russell Kirk. A very challenging, scholarly work. I think I need to read and reread some prerequisite books before really delving into it. Highly recommended. PH  Frighteningly, it actually brings back a clear memory to me from my very-distant past.
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| Posts: 5699 | Location: Vancouver, BC | Registered: Oct 17, 2001 |    |
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I'm just finishing "The Hedonist in the Cellar".
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A whole bunch of books lately..... Hannibal Rising - Thomas Harris Roadshow - Neil Peart (drummer of Rush) An Illustrated History of Guitars - Nick Freeth Ultramarathon Man - Dean Karnazes An Inconvenient Truth - Al Gore
"There's no substitute for pulling corks" Alexis Lichine
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| Posts: 4455 | Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Registered: Mar 25, 2003 |    |
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The Wine Bible by Karen MacNeil
"Man is born free; and everywhere he is in chains" -Jean Jacques Rousseau.
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| Posts: 97 | Location: Albany New York. (Guilderland) | Registered: Jan 10, 2007 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by Hunter:
I'm reading John Adams by David McCullough
Excellent Book!!! Should be a must read for all people, especially those living in my neck of the woods)
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| Posts: 376 | Location: Up the creek w/out the paddle (aka Boston) | Registered: Dec 22, 2005 |    |
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