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What are you reading?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Off Key - General Discussion
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  • dolmansaxlilD Offline
    dolmansaxlilD Offline
    dolmansaxlil
    wrote on last edited by
    #121

    I’m rereading Project Hail Mary. I’m enjoying it more the second time. It’s still not as good as The Martian, but pretty great! I’ll see the movie when it comes to streaming.

    1 Reply Last reply
    • A AndyD

      @Daniel said:

      @AndyD said:

      20260311_063424.jpg

      So I was browsing the charity shops of Durham City, and found that one is moving. Selling off stock, 10 books/cds for a pound, to eliminate moving costs. 10p a book!
      This is the most lovely gardening book, though for the larger English garden, I guess it can be applied anywhere.
      MrsA is our gardener, I prune the trees, hedge, lawn. This is an inspirational book however, beautifully painted plans to go with photos...
      20260311_063654.jpg
      20260311_070228.jpg
      20260311_063906.jpg
      20260311_071345.jpg
      20260311_064112.jpg

      I wonder why England has the best gardens with maybe Italy a close second followed by France. Or maybe it's a matter of personal taste and I'm biased in favor of England because I'm a native English speaker. Who knows. Beautiful book. Congrats.

      Could be partly taste; Japan has lovely gardens, with small stone bridges over water, and I love their stone lanterns.

      D Away
      D Away
      Daniel
      wrote on last edited by
      #122

      @AndyD said:

      @Daniel said:

      @AndyD said:

      20260311_063424.jpg

      So I was browsing the charity shops of Durham City, and found that one is moving. Selling off stock, 10 books/cds for a pound, to eliminate moving costs. 10p a book!
      This is the most lovely gardening book, though for the larger English garden, I guess it can be applied anywhere.
      MrsA is our gardener, I prune the trees, hedge, lawn. This is an inspirational book however, beautifully painted plans to go with photos...
      20260311_063654.jpg
      20260311_070228.jpg
      20260311_063906.jpg
      20260311_071345.jpg
      20260311_064112.jpg

      I wonder why England has the best gardens with maybe Italy a close second followed by France. Or maybe it's a matter of personal taste and I'm biased in favor of England because I'm a native English speaker. Who knows. Beautiful book. Congrats.

      Could be partly taste; Japan has lovely gardens, with small stone bridges over water, and I love their stone lanterns.

      Yes, how could I forget.

      'But as they said in one of the later Rocky movies, "Time...it's undefeated.".-- Mik

      1 Reply Last reply
      • A Offline
        A Offline
        AndyD
        wrote on last edited by AndyD
        #123

        Yesterday (after a busy morning brushing 6 bags of sand into our pressure washed block paving... hard work), Mrs A wanted to go pokemonning. So I went a-browsing and hit the motherload with these four:
        20260502_175205.jpg

        Everyone loves a deal. Buy 4 get the cheapest free, and a further 25% off. Just as well as Oxfam used books ain't a pound for a hardback like in my usual weekly haunts. I've looked through them briefly already.

        The Grass Gardening book was originally the most expensive at £25 but was cheapest at £3.99 so was... free. Go figure.
        My mother loved adding ornamental grasses into borders for their structural/architectural qualities. This is another truly lovely gardening book to flick through. Added to wife's collection.

        The London Interiors is a masterwork of interior photography to enjoy & study, while the other London book has superb sketches fascinating for an historian or artist. Both bargains at a mere 5 & 6 quid.

        The fourth on Japanese Swordmanship I nearly snatched from the shelf, in really good nick too. Pricey at £20 (£16.50 new in 1981).
        Quality martial arts books are rare in charity shops; there was also a 1st ed Karate by Funakoshi but I passed as it was in rather poor condition.

        So £23 spent, which will bring a lot of pleasure

        Ventosa viri restabit

        1 Reply Last reply
        👍
        • J Offline
          J Offline
          jon-nyc
          wrote on last edited by
          #124

          I just finished rereading Orwell’s Homage to Catalonia.

          I’ll be in Barcelona twice this fall, both for scientific conferences.

          AdagioMA 1 Reply Last reply
          • J jon-nyc

            I just finished rereading Orwell’s Homage to Catalonia.

            I’ll be in Barcelona twice this fall, both for scientific conferences.

            AdagioMA Offline
            AdagioMA Offline
            AdagioM
            wrote on last edited by
            #125

            @jon-nyc Have you read The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón? Novel set in Barcelona, 1945. Murder, madness, doomed love…

            My friend said it was a must-read. I enjoyed it, but maybe not as much as she did.

            J 1 Reply Last reply
            • S Offline
              S Offline
              Steve Miller
              wrote on last edited by Steve Miller
              #126

              IMG-5962.jpg

              It’s largely a chronicle of his life (hippie surfer baker chef) up to when he opened the Tartine bakery. It’s a good story. There’s also a good bit of it dedicated to recipes that use day old bread - fancy ones! - and various permutations like baguettes, English muffins and brioche.

              But in the middle of all that is the base recipe and how he developed it. How it’s supposed to look (big holes, baked very dark), how it’s supposed to taste (not sour. Chad doesn’t like sour).

              Also pictures. The soupy mess that I get when I use his recipe is not a failure - it’s how it’s supposed to look! It’s what gets you the big holes! He goes on to tell how to make it come together again, something not in the base recipe.

              Read it straight through in one sitting. I’ll read the part with the method again before my next bake.

              1 Reply Last reply
              • A Offline
                A Offline
                AndyD
                wrote on last edited by AndyD
                #127

                20260517_072542.jpg

                A lovely book containing amusing and thoughtful poems that will delight any gardener.

                If you can find it! I've failed to find another copy to buy worldwide...
                My 50p thrift shop copy looked near mint in its dust jacket, but on opening the book 😬 the 1994 spine binding is terrible quality. Cracked, repaired, come away from the hard cover again, a page loose. Close it and it looks fine again😄
                20260517_071655.jpg
                20260517_071819.jpg
                20260517_071904.jpg
                20260517_075347.jpg

                Ventosa viri restabit

                1 Reply Last reply
                • AdagioMA AdagioM

                  @jon-nyc Have you read The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón? Novel set in Barcelona, 1945. Murder, madness, doomed love…

                  My friend said it was a must-read. I enjoyed it, but maybe not as much as she did.

                  J Offline
                  J Offline
                  jon-nyc
                  wrote last edited by jon-nyc
                  #128

                  @AdagioM said:

                  @jon-nyc Have you read The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón? Novel set in Barcelona, 1945. Murder, madness, doomed love…

                  My friend said it was a must-read. I enjoyed it, but maybe not as much as she did.

                  I have not, but thanks for the recommendation. I’ll look into it.

                  1 Reply Last reply

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