#46
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Let me try this out... "Chicken Soup for the Soul, Navigating Eldercare & Dementia". No version number but you're spot on.
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#47
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SENT FROM A TRUE LOVE
one partridge, five gold rings, and the song that changed humanity forever
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stai scherzando? |
#48
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A simplified version is permissible, as long as it wildly overstates the importance of what you're writing about:
FINDING MY LOST KEYS the discovery that shook the universe
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#49
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I started last summer. Took 9 months to get through them all. (so far) |
#50
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My wife and I started reading "A Tale of Two Cities" (Charles Dickens) to each other just yesterday. He puts together these sentences that go for an entire paragraph, like a lawyer. His writing is getting easier to make sense of as the book goes on, but it does require a lot of the listener.
We have read several Dickens books to each other, so we are enjoying this. But we just finished a Nelson DeMille book, so the demands of Dickens is significantly higher. - Glenn
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My You Tube Channel |
#51
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Dreams Memories and Reflections by CG Jung
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#52
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Love that book-
“…the world is like an enormous spider web and if you touch it, however lightly, at any point, the vibration ripples to the remotest perimeter” …
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Bill AMI-Guitars Left Handed DMC-1STEL 1 Recording King Dirty 30s Series 7 Parlor |
#53
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Listening to the audiobook, Last Chance Texaco an autobiography narrated by the author, Rickie Lee Jones. For those aware of how rough she came up, it's even grittier than one might expect. Fascinating.
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#54
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Peeling the Onion!
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guitars: 1978 Beneteau, 1999 Kronbauer, Yamaha LS-TA, Voyage Air OM Celtic harps: 1994 Triplett Excelle, 1998 Triplett Avalon (the first ever made - Steve Triplett's personal prototype) |
#55
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Just finished listening to The Crying of Lot 49. Gotta say I'm glad it was an audiobook because such a rambling, kaleidoscopic tale might've been harder to absorb from the printed page.
With that said, I find Thomas Pynchon a quirky, intriguing author somewhere between William S. Burroughs and maybe Tim Dorsey, and all this from a story copyrighted in 1965. So, you Pynchon fans, what should be my next one by the same author, or maybe someone similar (if there is such an animal)? |
#56
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Quote:
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#57
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Just started on "The Death of Expertise: The Campaign against Established Knowledge and Why It Matters." by Tom Nichols.
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#58
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Walk In My Combat Boots by James Patterson and Matt Eversmann, First Sergeant, U.S. Army (Ret.) with Chris Mooney. It's making me think of servicemen and women I've know on active duty and as a part-time liason for Veterans' Affairs.
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#59
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Just finished Killing the Mob by Bill O’Reilly and started How I Saved the World by Jesse Watters.
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Please note: higher than average likelihood that any post by me is going to lean heavily on sarcasm. Just so we’re clear... |
#60
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Finished "The Enigma Cube" but am now going back to James Herriot for "All Things Bright and Beautiful."
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Original music here: Spotify Artist Page |