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You might like "I Am Ledgend" it's a short, but good read:
http://www.amazon.com/Am-Legend-Mill...5543234&sr=8-1 I've also enjoyed "A Song of Ice and Fire" series, here is the first book "A Game of Thrones", I don't know if fantasy is your thing, but these are a very enjoyable read: http://www.amazon.com/Game-Thrones-S...5543318&sr=1-1 |
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I've played pool at least once a week, for over 10-years. I probably wouldn't fare too well against any snooker players who might frequent this board...but I can hold my own :cool: |
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Do you play pool, or just snooker? |
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I've actually never played snooker. Mainly 8-ball...but from what I've seen, the average snooker player would school me. They play on a bigger table, smaller pockets, and have harder rules. Some of the best players on the American circuit are ex-snooker players from the other side of the pond. ...oh wait, this thread isn't about billiards :) I just can't help it. |
Looks like I'll be adding to my wish list in Bookpedia...
Let's see. Currently reading Great Apes by Will Self, just finished Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Other books that I've recently enjoyed enough to recommend: non fiction The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion Satan: A Biography by Henry Ansgar Kelly fiction Quantico by Greg Bear Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Story by Leonie Swann The Road by Cormac McCarthy The Book of Dave by Will Self A Long Way Down by Nick Hornsby comics American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang Fun Home: A Tragic Comic by Alison Bechdel Popeye Vol. 1: "I Yam What I Yam" by E. C. Segar Deogratias: A Tale of Rwanda by Stassen Embroideries by Marjane Satrapi |
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I think one pocket is much more challenging than snooker. How many other games can a single rack last several hours? 14.1 is also extremely challenging, but for different reasons. Both offer the players as much as snooker, IMO. Eight ball requires extensive strategy to be played well, but most players don't play it in that manner. Few realize that the player with the most of their own balls left on the table has the advantage most times. I play a lot of eight ball, also, since that's what I came up on. I play some nine-ball from time to time also, mostly in tournaments, but find it significantly easier and less challenging, and therefore less fun. I love 14.1. I haven't played much one pocket, though; it's too tough to find free games. Quote:
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You know I have always kind of wanted to read the harry potter books but never did. My friend has all of them and he keeps trying to get me to read them. I should probably at least give it a chance
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Potter series is an ok read, you'll live without them, though. I read them to be able to talk to my kids about them. They were never into Tolkien, alas. Times are achanging.
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If you into Asian history at all-- Hungry Ghosts - Great Book on Mao's "Great Leap Forward", the biggest man made famine the world has ever seen, and possibly the most important event in history that is largely ignored. Japanese Inn - Historical Fiction that does a wonderful job covering the unification of Japan in 1590 up until after WWII. I always recommend this book for people starting into Japanese History, easy to read, highly informative. To Destroy You is No Loss - If you've ever yearned for a simple life, or a restart to society with which we could create a better existence, read this book. It's a biography of a woman who lived through Pol Pot's massacre of 1.8 million Cambodian people for his personal philosophical gain. A must read if there ever was one. Hiroshima - Recounts the stories of three A-Bomb survivors, and their efforts to save strangers, friends and neighbors. One of the hardest reads I've ever had. It's extremely detailed, and the imagery is brutally vivid. I can trace my pacifistic leanings to this book... Red China Blues - Excellent autobiography of a Canadian born Chinese who decides to go to college in China shortly after the Kent State Shootings. It traces her journey from a bright eyed college communist to a hardened international journalist who witnessed the Tienaman square massacre. Anyway, no idea if anyone here has any interest in Asian history, but all these books are written for people with little or no knowledge of the area. Check 'em out :). |
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I had fun reading them (okay, a lot of fun - the only reason I didn't finish Deathly Hallows in one sitting is I fell asleep with about 30 pages to go) and now my almost five year old daughter has started asking me to read them to her. I told her I will, soon. I'm looking forward to it. |
i just read Mastery by George Leonard, its a really inspiring book dealing with the requirements and commitment for becoming a "master" of your decided lifelong passion. Deals with the pitfalls to avoid, setbacks that are normal, and behavior patterns that lead to sucess.
very encouraging and empowering. |
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Fascinating if you’re interested in some philosophical underpinnings of aesthetics. And especially if you’re interested in ceramics. Together with Bernard Leach and Shoji Hamada, Yanagi had a huge impact on our view of crafts. |
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