What are you reading now?
-
wrote on 12 Jul 2020, 15:13 last edited by
Another Q for the SciFi folk. Do y'all know of the writer Greig Beck? His book Primordia? Any good?
-
Another Q for the SciFi folk. Do y'all know of the writer Greig Beck? His book Primordia? Any good?
wrote on 12 Jul 2020, 15:21 last edited by@Catseye3 said in What are you reading now?:
Another Q for the SciFi folk. Do y'all know of the writer Greig Beck? His book Primordia? Any good?
No idea. Never heard of him.
-
Another Q for the SciFi folk. Do y'all know of the writer Greig Beck? His book Primordia? Any good?
wrote on 12 Jul 2020, 15:22 last edited by@Catseye3 said in What are you reading now?:
Another Q for the SciFi folk. Do y'all know of the writer Greig Beck? His book Primordia? Any good?
hahah get the hell out of here! He visited my school during my Master's! Nice guy and an absolute nerd. Ironically I haven't read any of his stuff, though.
-
wrote on 12 Jul 2020, 15:37 last edited by
Fat lot of good y'all are.
Here's the Amazon blurb: "Ben Cartwright, former soldier, home to mourn the loss of his father stumbles upon cryptic letters from the past between the author, Arthur Conan Doyle and his great, great grandfather who vanished while exploring the Amazon jungle in 1908.
Amazingly, these letters lead Ben to believe that his ancestor’s expedition was the basis for Doyle’s fantastical tale of a lost world inhabited by long extinct creatures. As Ben digs some more he finds clues to the whereabouts of a lost notebook that might contain a map to a place that is home to creatures that would rewrite everything known about history, biology and evolution.
But other parties now know about the notebook, and will do anything to obtain it. For Ben and his friends, it becomes a race against time and against ruthless rivals.
In the remotest corners of Venezuela, along winding river trails known only to lost tribes, and through near impenetrable jungle, Ben and his novice team find a forbidden place more terrifying and dangerous than anything they could ever have imagined."
Is naming the protagonist after the Ponderosa Daddy a nerdy thing to do?
-
wrote on 12 Jul 2020, 15:42 last edited by Catseye3 7 Dec 2020, 15:43
-
wrote on 23 Jul 2020, 15:08 last edited by
-
wrote on 23 Jul 2020, 16:26 last edited by
Is that the one with the background atmospheric sound? It's pretty good but they ran out of money in the production and eventually all the characters are voiced by the main narrator.
-
Is that the one with the background atmospheric sound? It's pretty good but they ran out of money in the production and eventually all the characters are voiced by the main narrator.
wrote on 23 Jul 2020, 17:50 last edited by@Horace said in What are you reading now?:
Is that the one with the background atmospheric sound? It's pretty good but they ran out of money in the production and eventually all the characters are voiced by the main narrator.
Yep that's it. Shame about that, however. Nevertheless I'll enjoy.
-
wrote on 23 Jul 2020, 18:03 last edited by
The Baron's voice is awesome, I missed it when it stopped.
-
Is that the one with the background atmospheric sound? It's pretty good but they ran out of money in the production and eventually all the characters are voiced by the main narrator.
wrote on 23 Jul 2020, 19:30 last edited by@Horace said in What are you reading now?:
Is that the one with the background atmospheric sound? It's pretty good but they ran out of money in the production and eventually all the characters are voiced by the main narrator.
Really? Or is that some inside joke I’m missing?
-
wrote on 23 Jul 2020, 19:54 last edited by
yarly, it goes from a theatrically produced ensemble narration to a standard single voice narration. I imagine that was not the plan starting out, but who knows.
-
wrote on 23 Jul 2020, 20:57 last edited by
I see that there are 6 (!) books out there - does this "loss of the actors" occur in the first book?
-
wrote on 24 Jul 2020, 03:35 last edited by
Yes, first book.
-
wrote on 24 Jul 2020, 14:49 last edited by
This book is being offered for $1.99 -- marked down from $18.99!!!!!
It is American Heritage History of the Confident Years: 1866-1914 by Francis Russell: "Here . . . is the vivid story of the confident years - those days of America's exuberant growth in population, industry, and world prestige - from the end of the Civil War to the outbreak of World War I." It seems an inspired choice for these gloomy anxiety-ridden times.
I bought it, of course. A $19 book for a buck-99? Are you kidding me?
I recommend you read at least the opening paragraph in the "Look Inside".
I have a feeling that this book will have a salutary effect on my sore heart.
-
This book is being offered for $1.99 -- marked down from $18.99!!!!!
It is American Heritage History of the Confident Years: 1866-1914 by Francis Russell: "Here . . . is the vivid story of the confident years - those days of America's exuberant growth in population, industry, and world prestige - from the end of the Civil War to the outbreak of World War I." It seems an inspired choice for these gloomy anxiety-ridden times.
I bought it, of course. A $19 book for a buck-99? Are you kidding me?
I recommend you read at least the opening paragraph in the "Look Inside".
I have a feeling that this book will have a salutary effect on my sore heart.
wrote on 24 Jul 2020, 18:11 last edited by@Catseye3 thanks for the recommendation. Looks like an iterating book
-
@Catseye3 thanks for the recommendation. Looks like an iterating book
wrote on 25 Jul 2020, 03:35 last edited by@taiwan_girl said in What are you reading now?:
Looks like an iterating book
You can say that again. And again. And again...
-
@taiwan_girl said in What are you reading now?:
Looks like an iterating book
You can say that again. And again. And again...
wrote on 25 Jul 2020, 17:17 last edited by -
wrote on 7 Aug 2020, 01:38 last edited by
-
wrote on 7 Aug 2020, 01:42 last edited by
-
wrote on 7 Aug 2020, 01:52 last edited by