Shaggz
A strong 7
LOL! I'll be back on the the road this week, and the trails, the following week.less reading...more pedaling 😀
LOL! I'll be back on the the road this week, and the trails, the following week.less reading...more pedaling 😀
less reading...more pedaling 😀
i've tried but the people on the buses and planes that i frequent don't look kindly upon me riding my ittdy-bitty razor bike up and down the isles. alas, i'm forced to read.
Interesting, I'll keep those on the radar.
Currently reading White Apples by Jonathon Carroll, even stranger than the usual Carroll material.
Which Carroll book should I start with, White Apples or The Wooden Sea??
More interesting is what your reading Norm...What kind of reading is Jonathon Carroll...New things are always fun
BTW- in another post you mentioned going to Taiwan, do you go b/c you work in the bike industry?
Have never read The Wooden Sea. My first was Sleeping in Flame which I would highly recommend..
actually it is because i have a crystal ball that sees into the future. i didn't get it in taiwan though....😀
Update: Finished this book. A really fantastic book and highly recommended,. However, the authors telling of Merle's passing through "the door" brought back another wave of emotions, that makes me retract my statement about wanting another dog.I got a copy of Merle's Door: Lessons From a Free Thinking Dog for Father's Day:
http://www.harcourtbooks.com/MerlesDoor/interview.asp
This is the first time in about 6 years that I have wanted another dog.
100 pages into this, and it is probably one of the best books I have read in a long time. I can not help but project myself into this story, and am left utterly empty. The father's love for his son is so pure, that the thought of their fate is even more depressing than the circumstances surrounding their existence.After this, The Road is next. Another Father's Day gift...
I'll be reading this with my 12th graders soon, it looks like. Put it together with Hamlet, Siddhartha, and The Things They Carried, and you've got a bundle of laughs.🙄100 pages into this, and it is probably one of the best books I have read in a long time. I can not help but project myself into this story, and am left utterly empty. The father's love for his son is so pure, that the thought of their fate is even more depressing than the circumstances surrounding their existence.
Did anyone see Cormac's interview with Oprah?
Well, I DVR-ed it and watched it after it aired. The guy has never done a television interview and only two print interviews over the course of a 40-some year career.um, no. i know you're off but i hope you didn't see it either.