
The Jade |

How are those Photoshop books? I've been using the Visual Quickstart Guides for Dreamweaver and Photoshop with decent results, but I'm interested in other references.
I looked at a few of the other Photoshop books and found they all cover the necessary bases, but Dummies seems to try hard to keep the lessons from feeling overly academic. While I'm no slouch when studying, I have to say the head patting spoon feeding makes the medicine go down rather easily. :)

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Those of you who have posted that you're reading Planet Stories books in this thread are my personal heroes. Bless you.
I just finished:
The Coming of the Terrans, by Leigh Brackett
Tam, Son of the Tiger by Otis Adelbert Kline
The Rebel of Rhada by Robert Cham Gilman (Alfred Coppel)
I just started:
The Traveller in Black, by John Brunner

A 2E Floppy-Eared Golem |

Mark Moran and Mark Sceurman's "Wierd U.S. vol. II"
"King Rat" by China Mieville
"Get in the Van" by Henry Rollins (for the eighth time)
"From the Earth to the Moon" by Jules Verne
"The Climb" by Anatoli Boukreev and G. Weston DeWalt
Nice list. I am about halfway though Mieville's Perdido Street Station myself, although I had to return it to the library for the time being. I'll finish it someday.
I just finished reading Pagan Grace by Ginette Paris, which I'd recommend for its discussion of the sanity and relevancy of a polytheistic, pagan worldview as opposed to a monotheistic, dogmatic one. The chapter on Hermes, which takes up the bulk of the book, is quite good. The author also focuses on Dionysus and Mnemosyne.
I've spent much of the past 36 hours with my nose in the Pathfinder Beta Rulebook. Perhaps you've heard of it?
Nyuk-nyuk.

A 2E Floppy-Eared Golem |

Darkwalker on Moonshae by Douglas Niles.
Although I've never read this, I remember seeing the cover over a period of time in high school while a friend of mine was reading it. Larry Elmore artwork, I believe. That man is a brilliant artist. The cover is wild and spooky, with a death knight or something equivalent riding close behind a woman, if I am remembering correctly.

A 2E Floppy-Eared Golem |

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Finished Frederik Pohl's "The Man Who Ate the World."
Now I'm reading Cliff's Notes: "Shakespeare's Histories." It's not for a class, I'm just interested, as it's hard for me to understand the 100 yrs. war and that period of English/French history.
Joan of Arc - check
Henry V - check
anybody else?...*crikets*
I'm a Californian, and I think I understand the post-Columbian history of North America pretty well, but U.K. history at times...feels like a telenovela; dynastic infighting that would make great daytime soap-opera.
And yes, I have heard of "The Tudors," but I'm saving Henry VIII for last; I'm hoping if I go chronologically it will make more sense.

d13 |
Finished Frederik Pohl's "The Man Who Ate the World."
Now I'm reading Cliff's Notes: "Shakespeare's Histories." It's not for a class, I'm just interested, as it's hard for me to understand the 100 yrs. war and that period of English/French history.
Joan of Arc - check
Henry V - check
anybody else?...*crikets*
I'm a Californian, and I think I understand the post-Columbian history of North America pretty well, but U.K. history at times...feels like a telenovela; dynastic infighting that would make great daytime soap-opera.
And yes, I have heard of "The Tudors," but I'm saving Henry VIII for last; I'm hoping if I go chronologically it will make more sense.
be careful. Shakespeare's History plays are wildly inaccurate.

d13 |
d13 wrote:now reading The Road by McCarthy.Hide the knives. That book is BLEAK.
Bleak, yes.
also tragic,heart-wrenching,
gut-turning,
and impossible to put down.
I think I felt much the same way one critic did when they wrote, "its as if you must keep reading in order for the characters to stay alive..."
It is a profoundly moving book.
Now on to The Devil in the White City.

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be careful. Shakespeare's History plays are wildly inaccurate.
Thanks for the warning. However, I also bought a book called Shakespeare's Kings, by John Norwich, which addresses what Shakespeare "got wrong" in his histories, intentionally or otherwise...I am well fortified with no less than three books on the subject, plus copies of the plays. When I get into something, I tend to go overboard.

Mairkurion {tm} |

What did I read on my travels? In addition to finishing The Ginger Star, I reread E.R.B.'s The Princess of Mars, and I listened to Paulo Coehlo's The Alchemist and Patrick O'Brian's The Truelove (=Clarissa Oakes.) Also read most of the The Rough Guide to Barcelona and relevant sections of Penelope Casas' Discovering Spain. Honestly, I am impressed with how well The Princess of Mars holds up from my wide-eyed youth.

Jit |

Cosmo wrote:d13 wrote:now reading The Road by McCarthy.Hide the knives. That book is BLEAK.Bleak, yes.
also tragic,
heart-wrenching,
gut-turning,and impossible to put down.
I think I felt much the same way one critic did when they wrote, "its as if you must keep reading in order for the characters to stay alive..."
It is a profoundly moving book.
Now on to The Devil in the White City.
Good one!

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The Dark World, by Henry Kuttner. It's quite good.
Two more Planet Stories volume to go after this one, I may beat the next shipment (of which I've already read one, Death in Dehli) :)
Just finished 'The Dark World' myself. Good stuff.
Right now:
- 'Heart of Darkness' by Joseph Conrad
- 'From the Earth to the Moon' by Jules Verne
- 'The Bloody Crown of Conan (and others)' by Robert E. Howard
- 'The Whole Shebang' by Timothy Ferris