Multicultural Education in a Pluralistic Society (textbook)
Printable View
Multicultural Education in a Pluralistic Society (textbook)
The Sun Also Rises - Hemmingway
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - Twain
Three Cups of Tea -
Naked Empire - Terry Gookind
...book 8 of The Sword of Truth series.
friggin books have about 700 pgs each. Just perfect for summers in the backyard :haha:
The Dirt: Confessions of the World's Most Notorious Rock Band
Hard to write a bad book when its all about whiskey, porn stars, drugs, black leather, high heels, overdoses and death.
Good book
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...GL._SS500_.jpg
A very good book to describe a situation when things change and we fail to achieve what we want, then is time for us to make changes. Dont wait to waste time.
Just finished Great Expectations by Dickens, and The Pearl by Stienbeck... What's next? Robinson Crusoe?
Right now I'm reading...
The Tudors: The Complete Story of England's Most Notorious Dynasty
by G. J. Meyer
http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/...NdgZX/220x.jpg
I love his books. :assault::rifle::kboom::flag:
http://www.booksforthefuture.org/fil...0399138250.jpg
Evolution Rx
The subtitle sounds all new agey and stuff: "A practical guide to harnessing our innate capacity for health and healing." :blahblah: In fact, it's science based and very interesting. How human development over the last million years affects our health today.
http://www.evolution-rx.com/wordpres.../bookcover.jpg
Just finished "A Dog in a Hat" - Joe Parkin
Better Not Bigger: How to Take Control of Urban Growth and Improve Your Community.
Soon I will start my annual reading of Desert Solitaire and Monkey Wrench Gang:clap:
Just finished Over the edge of the world
Attachment 33550
Now I am onto The Forgotten Man
Attachment 33551
Currently reading:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...U01_AA115_.jpg“The best piece of running fiction around. Beg, borrow, or buy a copy, and you'll never need another motivator.” —Dave Langlais, Runner's World
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...160_AA115_.jpgThe Reluctant Fundamentalist, is a daring, fast-paced monologue of a young Pakistani man telling his life story to a mysterious American stranger. It's a controversial look at the dark side of the American Dream, exploring the aftermath of 9/11, international unease, and the dangerous pull of nostalgia.
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...U01_AA115_.jpg"Youthfully upbeat, Gilman delivers an entertaining memoir...offering the full wallop of disorienting, in-the-moment, transformative travel adventures." (Publishers Weekly )
All three are GREAT books!
I love this thread - lots of great reading suggestions!
Recently read:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...U01_AA115_.jpgPhilosophers and scientists have long wondered what goes on in the minds of animals, and this fascinating study gives a wealth of illuminating insights into that mystery. Grandin, an animal behavior expert specializing in the design of humane slaughter systems, is autistic, and she contends that animals resemble autistic people in that they think visually rather than linguistically and perceive the world as a jumble of mesmerizing details rather than a coherent whole. (Publishers Weekly) Very interesting!!
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...160_AA115_.jpgEven better than Three Cups of Tea!! (and I really liked Three Cups of Tea).
some good ones here, need a new book to read so I am going to have to look for a good outdoor/ climbing/ cycling related to something like that book.
[QUOTE=TreeHugger;400595]Currently reading:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...U01_AA115_.jpg
Just finished: Man's Search for Meaning
I just remembered this thread and thought I would look for my next book. :2thumbs:
just finished the sword of truth series by Terry Goodkind
Finished Robinson Crusoe and The Hobbit. Reading Lord of the Rings.
Just finished The First Total War
Attachment 34829
Almost done with the Orson Scott Card - Ender's Saga and soon to be reading his version of the Book of Mormon and then on to
After the Reich
Attachment 34830
[QUOTE=TooeleCherokee;400582]Just finished Over the edge of the world
Attachment 33550
[QUOTE]
I just finished this.... great book, thanks for the recommendation. :2thumbs:
Just finished The Hunger Games. Had a hard time putting it down...
Cool - My daughter (11) read this last year, and was very keen on it. I've since seen a lot of people that surprised me reading it, and everyone has had good things to say. I'll have to give it a whirl...
Perhaps after my current book: How The Mind Works, by Stephen Pinker
http://rgr-static1.tangentlabs.co.uk...mind-works.jpg
Just finished In Search of the Old Ones, by David Roberts. Thanks, denaliguide, for the point-out!
I haven't read that one, but I read Pinker's "Stuff of Thought", which used the structure of language to infer thngs about the way the mind works. I like his stuff. It's hard reading (at least 'Stuff' was), but very interesting. My favorite chapter was the discussion of swearing. I've run across a couple of essays on the internet by Pinker about swearing/cussing/etc. Enjoyed them a lot.
Currently reading these four:
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Holy War by Karen Armstrong
Snow by Orhan Pamuk
Lenin's Tomb 'last days of the Soviet Empire' by David Remnick
***still trying to finish these two - have 10 or 20 pages to go***
Tears of Blood 'a cry for Tibet' by Mary Craig
Einstein ' his life and universe' by Walter Isaacson
~I have a problem finishing books once I'm very near the end. It's weird. The Einstein book for instance is extremely fascinating, and well written. I've been a captive audience right up to the last 10 or so pages. This happens with 80% of the books I read. Perhaps it's because most of what I read is non-fiction & I already know the eventual outcome? Anyhow - I'll finish these up at some point just like I always do.~
Hood by Stephen Lawhead.
Cool - I enjoyed "Stuff of Thought" as well, which inspired me to buy "How The Mind Works". Like the former, this one is a bit of a tough read - I started it a while back, but it got sidelined as easier books came along... Now I'm right back into it, and it's very cool. Pinker has a way of mixing in research findings that are really fascinating.
Next time we have lunch at the Burr Trail Grill, we'll have to talk books! :2thumbs:
You're on. I might be finished with my Oliver Cromwell biography by then - although I'm at the point where he's dead and buried, then dug up with his head on a spike, so maybe there's hope.
Next book on the list is called Understanding Comics, by Scott McCloud. My son gave it to me to read. It should be very interesting.
your welcome. another good one is "cowboys, cliffs and cave dwellers." fred blackburn is one ofthe authors. its about reverse archeaology and finding lost collections of the early archeaologists on cedar mesa.
my last book was "mogul" raiders of the north. sort of historical fiction about the afganistan, pakistan, india region in the years after genghis khan.
The Last Season by Eric Blehm
Author chronicles the life of and search for backcountry ranger Randy Morgenson. This non-fiction book is engrossing as a good mystery, but it also is quite lyrical in its celebration of the Sierras. I've never been to Kings Canyon NP, but after reading this book, I definitely want to spend some time there.
Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau
Okay, hardly a book, more of an essay but it feels like a book at the moment. Summer school sucks. :angryfire: