What are you reading now?
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I call bullshit on the backdrop.
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You lose. We were at a hotel in Coral Gables for a multi-day conference, they pulled me out at some point for a photo shoot.
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There were several (these are raw).
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@jon-nyc said in What are you reading now?:
You lose. We were at a hotel in Coral Gables for a multi-day conference, they pulled me out at some point for a photo shoot.
Do I really lose if the backdrop itself is bullshit?
Nice ones!
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Just finished this book.. (Actually listened to the audio book)
Really good and really good researched. About a Dutch ship in 1628 that shipwrecked off the coast of Australia and almost a "Lord of the Flies" result for the people stranded on some small islands.
Quite interesting was the discussion of the ship and what it was like to travel on a ship like that, even for the best passengers! I dont think I will complain if I fly economy!! 555
Also, the lead mutiny guy was executed, and his punishment was to have both hands cut off and then hanged!! For his lead officers, their punishment was to have only one hand cut off then hanged!! :eek
They built a re-creation of the ship. Some interesting videos of what it really was like.
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@taiwan_girl thanks TG, that kind of thing is perfect for me, i love maritime tales.
added to my amazon shopping list
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Finished "The Emperor of All Maladies" this afternoon.
What a fantastic dive into our understanding, and lack thereof, of cancer in its various forms.
As someone who lost contact with the world of oncology in the late 1970s, I found it a fascinating journey that research and care has undergone since then. "Back in my day" we used to joke that all oncologists need to wear black coats, because the results of their care were so dismal.
We weren't wrong.
But now it's all different.
Highly recommended.
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Up next:
In a far-future, Dr. Avrana Kern is the head of a science team that has terraformed an uninhabitable planet then deliberately released a genetically designed virus to speed the evolution of monkeys. Their plan goes wrong when the monkeys' ship burns up upon entry, leaving the virus to infect a variety of creatures, eventually settling on spiders (Portia labiata). Meanwhile, the last human remnants of a dying Earth are en route to the promised paradise planet unaware of the uplifted spiders. The work plays off the contrast between the rapid advancement of the spiders and the barbaric descent of the starship crew of the last humans
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Highly recommended.
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@Aqua-Letifer that looks fascinating, based on the Amazon blurb.
Thanks for the recco.
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@George-K yea ive used the story of the history of herceptin in several talks on how new drugs make it into clincal practice. herceptin was quite an epic tale, and a real game changer. another interesting drug story in the book is the history of gleevec.
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I think you’d like The Gene, when you’re in the mood for a similar sweeping, well-written medical/political history.
I say political because he talks a lot about the history of our attempts to control genes that seems to come along with our desire to understand them.
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Yeah, I figured you’d want to space them out a bit.
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@George-K said in What are you reading now?:
In a far-future, Dr. Avrana Kern is the head of a science team that has terraformed an uninhabitable planet then deliberately released a genetically designed virus to speed the evolution of monkeys. Their plan goes wrong when the monkeys' ship burns up upon entry, leaving the virus to infect a variety of creatures, eventually settling on spiders (Portia labiata). Meanwhile, the last human remnants of a dying Earth are en route to the promised paradise planet unaware of the uplifted spiders. The work plays off the contrast between the rapid advancement of the spiders and the barbaric descent of the starship crew of the last humans
This is big, BIG, science fiction. I'm only about ¼ of the way through it, and it's on the order of stuff written by Alastair Reynolds. Reynolds is, as I've said, a very "dense" writer. This book, though comparable in scope to Reynolds' stuff is a much easier read. It's not challenging, but a very good space yarn.
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I really enjoyed "Children of Time". I thought it was pretty imaginative. It's sequel "Children of Ruin" was fine, but not fine enough to get me to read the final book of the trilogy.
But I like Adrian Tchaikovsky's writing. He has this one-off that I also liked, "Guns of Dawn". Not at all sci-fi; it's flintlock fantasy about a gentry woman in a swampy war. If you get tired of sci-fi, but want more Tchaikovsky, you might like this.
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@Friday said in What are you reading now?:
I really enjoyed "Children of Time". I thought it was pretty imaginative.
Thoroughly enjoyable, indeed. Nice, satisfying ending which completes the tale, and yet opens the door for sequels.
Up next, on @Aqua-Letifer 's recommendation - Music: A Subversive History.