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I finally got a child who loves reading in my youngest; the oldest two hate it.I just purchased Pax (Tom Holland).
But my 15 year old daughter and I decided to trade a novel, and read something in the other's tastes. If nothing else, it will let us talk about the books.
She gave me Heaven Official's Blessing (Mo Xiang Tong Xiu)
I gave her Half a King (Joe Abercrombie)
My eldest wasn't a huge reader, but she got quite into graphic novels at one point, and got used to 'grabbing a book'. When one of her friends introduced her to a series of Chinese novels (of all things) she was pretty hooked, and has since branched out into some other (similar) series. I'm tipping they lose a little in translation, but hey...she's got about 15 or so, and they run 400 pages each, so I'm happy she's supplementing online time with reading (and she's always done a stack of art, too).I finally got a child who loves reading in my youngest; the oldest two hate it.
We could trade books. I wouldn't mind reading The Big Cat for the 164th time. But I fear the only word he'd pick out of the Mahabharata is his own name.
Now, as usual, the quibbles. Mr. Dolin, in his Epilogue, recites uncritically the mantras about global warming and climate change. Does every article or book that touches weather or climate history have to take this invitation? His political leanings were already clear; they didn't have to be pounded. And one unforced error; in his excellent discussion about Katrina he dates its first reference to 1992, not 2005.Edward R. Murrow said:"There it is, [the eyewall] ... thousands of feet, as high as Everest. ... What a beautiful sight! We're in an amphitheater surrounded by clouds. It looks like a lovely alpine lake surrounded by snow."
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"In the eye of a hurricane you learn things other than of a scientific nature. You feel the puniness of man and his works. If a true definition of humility is ever written, it might well be written in the eye of a hurricane.”
I knew that author had to be Scottish from the title.Pure Dead Magic by Debi Gliori.
I knew that author had to be Scottish from the title.
The great post office scandal by Nick Wallis ( copied review below)I bet The Bible, The Koran, The Veda's The Torah will all be mentioned but does not have to be religious.
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I was in a charity shop and picked up David Niven's The Worlds a balloon. Hilarious 6/10.
Your turn.