What are you reading?
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Ten bookcases in our house 🤪
Today took 50 old DVDs to charity shops and came back with five books. A rare local history book (that costs over £60) for £3 still in its wrapper; and in the Salvation Army a poetry and a paintings book, and two novels for MrsA, all 50p each. So £5.00.
Hardbacks like new for 50p how to resist? -
@Steve-Miller I love Samin Nosrat. I gave kiddo2 Salt Fat Acid Heat for Christmas, and I received her Good Things from Mr. AM.
Have you listened to her podcast, Home Cooking, with Hrishikesh Hirway? It started at the beginning of the pandemic, and it’s funny and enlightening.
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@Steve-Miller I love Samin Nosrat. I gave kiddo2 Salt Fat Acid Heat for Christmas, and I received her Good Things from Mr. AM.
Have you listened to her podcast, Home Cooking, with Hrishikesh Hirway? It started at the beginning of the pandemic, and it’s funny and enlightening.
@AdagioM said in What are you reading?:
@Steve-Miller I love Samin Nosrat. I gave kiddo2 Salt Fat Acid Heat for Christmas, and I received her Good Things from Mr. AM.
Have you listened to her podcast, Home Cooking, with Hrishikesh Hirway? It started at the beginning of the pandemic, and it’s funny and enlightening.
+1 to all of this!!
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Published 1898, not sure how much help it's going to be, though the chapter on memorising is of interest.

@AndyD Your picture of The Pianist’s Mentor reminded me that there are a number of books on pianism by famous teachers (Neuhaus, Whiteside et al.) and I haven’t read any of them. The ones I’ve glanced at seem kind of dry, and it must be hard to describe fine muscle movements in lively prose. One study, The Great Pianists and Their Technique, does have comments by pupils of Liszt, Chopin and others which are interesting.
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Andy, You're a bibliophile. Clearly.
I'll share pictures of my office/ study/ library with you and everyone when I have the furniture in place.
This is the area I'm looking forward to decorating most.
It's going to have a desk, a desktop computer, a desk chair, cabinets, a low to the ground table with two matching seats, and a tall bookshelf.
The kitchen is going to have a farmhouse table.
The kitchen, dining room, and the room I described might be a single room.
Thanks for nice pictures!
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I just started reading this book that I bought while we were in Japan last summer: Yakuza Sometimes Piano

It’s about a writer whose main reporting area is yakuza (i.e., he primarily writes about the yakuza underworld), and he (the writer, a man in his 50s) starts learning piano.
I literally bought it because the cover caught my eye.
It would probably be more interesting if the person learning the piano were actually a yakuza, instead of someone who writes about yakuza...
But it’s interesting enough so far. I’m not very far along, so we’ll see. -
@Steve-Miller Thank you. You inspired me. Got samples of that book and the Food Lab samples from Amazon. My cooking can only improve.
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@AndyD Your picture of The Pianist’s Mentor reminded me that there are a number of books on pianism by famous teachers (Neuhaus, Whiteside et al.) and I haven’t read any of them. The ones I’ve glanced at seem kind of dry, and it must be hard to describe fine muscle movements in lively prose. One study, The Great Pianists and Their Technique, does have comments by pupils of Liszt, Chopin and others which are interesting.
@RealPlayer said in What are you reading?:
@AndyD Your picture of The Pianist’s Mentor reminded me that there are a number of books on pianism by famous teachers (Neuhaus, Whiteside et al.) and I haven’t read any of them. The ones I’ve glanced at seem kind of dry, and it must be hard to describe fine muscle movements in lively prose. One study, The Great Pianists and Their Technique, does have comments by pupils of Liszt, Chopin and others which are interesting.
In my teens I read one and picked out the essence. This is my youthful writing at the back of an address book (in which I listed all the songs I liked A-Z)



