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Monthly Archives: October 2021
For all the Tea in China
For all the Tea in China: How England Stole the World’s Favorite Drink and Made History© 2010 Sarah Rose272 pages A love of tea is one of the great English stereotypes, at least in the United States, so I thought … Continue reading
Something’s coming, something good
I love West Side Story. I was exposed to the “Tonight” quartet in high school music appreciation, and after checking out a VHS tape from the library, I promptly watched it five times in two weeks and began looking for … Continue reading
Posted in General
5 Comments
The War that Made the Roman Empire
The War that Made the Roman Empire: Anthony, Cleopatra, and Octavian at Actium© 2022 Bary Strauss368 pages Rome, at the death of Julius Caesar, was no stranger to internal war. A functioning, healthy republic had long vanished, torn in pieces … Continue reading
Top Ten Tuesday Freebie: Frightfully Good Reads
Today is a freebie, and I’m going with Halloween-appropriate books because ’tis the season. Spook, Mary Roach. A playful examination of scientific attempts to discover our fate after death. Night of the Living Trekkies, David Anderson. Easily the funniest zombie book I’ve ever read, … Continue reading
Posted in General
11 Comments
Natchez Burning
Natchez Burning© 2015 Greg Iles816 pages When the choice is your father or the truth, who could choose the truth? Penn Cage has always idolized his father Tom. A dedicated physician from the 1950s-on, the senior Cage developed a reputation as a devoted and impartial … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews
Tagged 1960s, Greg Iles, horror, Mississippi, Southern Literature, thriller
5 Comments
The Enterprise War
The Enterprise War© 2019 John Jackson Miller366 pages “Giving up our values in the name of security is to lose the battle in advance. I’m curious. Did you sideline the Enterprise because you knew I’d never stop reminding you of … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews
Tagged Abrams and Kurzman Trek, John Jackson Miller, Star Trek, Star Trek Discovery
14 Comments
Books books books
Between the nonfunctional hospital wifi and the only decent television programs being overtaken by baseball, most of my entertainment last week was good ol’ fashioned books. Midnight at Chernobyl popped onto my radar after I watched the excellent HBO series … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews, science
Tagged 1940s, 1980s, Chernobyl, energy, espionage and commandos, evolution, history, human spaceflight, Jane Austen, Nuclear, psychology, Russia, science, women, WW2
15 Comments