eklektos44
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Code of Conduct by Brad Thor.
Brewdude":nptnprr6 said:On a HG Wells kick right now.
Just finished "War of the Worlds", and today "The Time Machine".
Next up is "The Invisible Man" and "First Men in the Moon".
I hasten to add that I'm not any kind of a scholar. Anything but in fact. These books interested me and I read them with interest since I'd never read them before, yet some of it was lost on me. Due to whatever you might attribute it to - my lack of formal education being the probable culprit here - as I'm not and never have been highly edumacated. And no I don't apologise for that.
Guess I wanted to see what these tomes had for me after all these years. (Gawd, look at me invoking the term "tomes" ---- :joker
There's a lot of other books I'll be checking out of my local library. What a great resource. Hopefully they'll go down better.
Cheers,
RR
Cheers,
RR
Great Stuff. But I think that's "Doctrines of Grace".puros_bran":pvmbwbo1 said:'By His Grace and For His Glory:
A Historical, Theological, and Practical Study of the Doctrines of Grave in Baptist Life' Thomas J. Nettles.
How's that for a subtitle.
I've not read that one Rande, but can thoroughly recommend any of Stephen E Ambrose's books. He's the author famous for the best selling Band of Brothers. I found him to have an easy writing style that is very absorbing.Brewdude":xc9tmhgu said:Happy to report that "Dry Guillotine" is proving to be a worthwhile read. Now firmly into it and it's holding my interest 100%. More my level of reading I guess.
I should mention that some parts of "Hitler's Willing Executioners" were plain enough. But I got lost in the overall analysis. Just too confusing to follow. I did get the general idea, somewhat anyway.
Has anyone else read it? I've recently been intrigued with books on WWII and have skimmed a few at the local used bookstore, since my late Pap fought in this conflict.
One book in particular, "The Third Reich", seems to be one that many recommend. Yet I just can't get into it since it's so dense with details that after a paragraph or so my eyes cross. Maybe I'm not cut out for this kind of reading.
:|
Cheers,
RR
Thanks for the recommendations mate. I'll certainly be checking them out in due course.Stick":9ag37hwt said:I've not read that one Rande, but can thoroughly recommend any of Stephen E Ambrose's books. He's the author famous for the best selling Band of Brothers. I found him to have an easy writing style that is very absorbing.Brewdude":9ag37hwt said:Happy to report that "Dry Guillotine" is proving to be a worthwhile read. Now firmly into it and it's holding my interest 100%. More my level of reading I guess.
I should mention that some parts of "Hitler's Willing Executioners" were plain enough. But I got lost in the overall analysis. Just too confusing to follow. I did get the general idea, somewhat anyway.
Has anyone else read it? I've recently been intrigued with books on WWII and have skimmed a few at the local used bookstore, since my late Pap fought in this conflict.
One book in particular, "The Third Reich", seems to be one that many recommend. Yet I just can't get into it since it's so dense with details that after a paragraph or so my eyes cross. Maybe I'm not cut out for this kind of reading.
:|
Cheers,
RR
Remaining with WWII I can also recommend 'Hitler's Last Day: Minute by Minute'. It details Hitler's last 24 hours in his bunker in Berlin from the perspective of many other's accounts taken from their personal memoirs and diaries. Fascinating stuff.
I'm currently reading 'Gone to Ground' by Marie Jalowicz Simon. It's the author's personal account of trying to survive in Berlin at the height of the war, her situation made all the more challenging by her being Jewish. I'm not finding it as engrossing as the other books mentioned above, but nonetheless it provides an intriguing insight into life in wartime Berlin.
It's been a long time, since high school, but I remember loving it. I need to read it again, I'm way behind on my reading.Next up is "Mutiny on the Bounty". Never read this and always wanted to.
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