I am reading a book about a highly controversial laptop. You could say it is a political thriller^&grin
Could it be as bad as what was on my Laptop, I just got it back from my IT guys, cost $88 to fix, cheaper than a new one I guess.
I am reading a book about a highly controversial laptop. You could say it is a political thriller^&grin
I finished "Where men win Glory" by John Krakauer. My wife got it for me over the quarantine. It is the FINEST book I have ever read. The detailed, dramatic narrative around the last few moments of Pat Tillman's life is utterly gut wrenching, the couple hundred pages reading about the aftermath filled me with utter rage, contempt and a broken sense of respect for the leadership of the Rangers.
At the end of the day, this book is something more than a story about Pat Tillman and his life and legacy. It is a story about truth. Unfortunately, all my friends and family who served in Iraq and, to a surprisingly lesser extent, in Afghanistan, seem to be quite correct in their buttssment that the leadership in these fields of fire were just piss poor.
I was just left with the feeling that the Tillman parents would give anything to have their son back with them and deserved the truth about what happened to their son. With my 16-year-old talking about enlisting, this book has definitely given me reason to pause before I get gung-ho with him and sell the Army as an institution. It is still an Institution I love and cherish, it's just that I need to remember it is still run and administered by human beings- with all the good and bad that entails.
Moving on from that work, my daughter bought me "Powers and Thrones" by Dan Jones. The book is a tome but an easy page turner. I finished his book on the Templars earlier this year. This one is a much easier read, and he is easily my favorite historian at the moment. His books and narration style are very easy to digest- especially to those of us who aren't intimately familiar with the topics or lands he is discussing.
Nice to see a fine print job of this title done (outside of the Suntup version, which is over $1200+). I must admit that while I love No Country for Old Men and The Road, I found Blood Meridian a real grind to read. It's a great action story with plenty of blood spilled, but the prose all but defeated me. Still, I will be getting this affordable Folio version. -- AlThe Folio Society has a new edition of Cormac McCarthy's "Blood Meridian." A great, violent story of the old West.
Blood Meridian | The Folio Society
I finished "Where men win Glory" by John Krakauer. My wife got it for me over the quarantine. It is the FINEST book I have ever read. The detailed, dramatic narrative around the last few moments of Pat Tillman's life is utterly gut wrenching, the couple hundred pages reading about the aftermath filled me with utter rage, contempt and a broken sense of respect for the leadership of the Rangers.
At the end of the day, this book is something more than a story about Pat Tillman and his life and legacy. It is a story about truth. Unfortunately, all my friends and family who served in Iraq and, to a surprisingly lesser extent, in Afghanistan, seem to be quite correct in their buttssment that the leadership in these fields of fire were just piss poor.
I was just left with the feeling that the Tillman parents would give anything to have their son back with them and deserved the truth about what happened to their son. With my 16-year-old talking about enlisting, this book has definitely given me reason to pause before I get gung-ho with him and sell the Army as an institution. It is still an Institution I love and cherish, it's just that I need to remember it is still run and administered by human beings- with all the good and bad that entails.
Moving on from that work, my daughter bought me "Powers and Thrones" by Dan Jones. The book is a tome but an easy page turner. I finished his book on the Templars earlier this year. This one is a much easier read, and he is easily my favorite historian at the moment. His books and narration style are very easy to digest- especially to those of us who aren't intimately familiar with the topics or lands he is discussing.
Nice to see a fine print job of this title done (outside of the Suntup version, which is over $1200+). I must admit that while I love No Country for Old Men and The Road, I found Blood Meridian a real grind to read. It's a great action story with plenty of blood spilled, but the prose all but defeated me. Still, I will be getting this affordable Folio version. -- Al
That is what I concluded, as well. I am steeling myself for the re-read sometime in the future, perhaps when I purchase the Folio version. :wink2: -- Al"Blood Meridian" is a book that needs to be read more than once to appreciate.
That is what I concluded, as well. I am steeling myself for the re-read sometime in the future, perhaps when I purchase the Folio version. :wink2: -- Al
That is what I concluded, as well. I am steeling myself for the re-read sometime in the future, perhaps when I purchase the Folio version. :wink2: -- Al
Nice get. Still haven't ordered mine as Folio continues to publish stuff I want and I fall further behind. They have about a half-dozen books I currently want, but funds are short.:rolleyes2: -- AlI received my Folio copy of "Blood Meridan" and started re-reading. What a great, epic Western movie this would make with the right cast.
