N.O.R.F Posted June 21, 2008 Give them to someone going there or ship them to me. I will forward. DHL too expensive. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Cara. Posted June 21, 2008 ^They were really pushing that book at Starbucks last summer. I couldn't bring myself to buy it, not at a Starbucks. I read a lot science fiction, especially short stories. The Merchant and the Alchemists Gate is a fantastic time travel story, similar to A Thousand and One Nights. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
NGONGE Posted June 21, 2008 North, Send them to you? Someone going there? Hmmmm! I may just do that. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
N.O.R.F Posted June 21, 2008 ^^Always someone coming or going. We have become the central point. 'Alaabta hebel hebel u dhiiba markay idin soo maraan'. I'm thinking of chaging people. Cara, I'm only on page one. I actually bought it at the airport thinking I could read it while the family are away. Fat chance when the football is on every night. I like non-fiction. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
RedSea Posted June 21, 2008 "The Prince" by Machevelli(A manual to gaining power) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
winnie Posted June 21, 2008 mrs dalloway by virginia woolf (i have about 20 pages left), than i will read the best of the best stories ... the odyssey. i ve only read one other v. woolf novel (to the lighthouse) and maybe a couple of short stories, and though she generally has the same style of writing with all that ive read so far, this book (mrs dalloway) really makes you appreciate her. it kind of makes you think about new frontiers in art (in this case literature), has everything been done already, in terms of style and composition?people in the visual arts are always doing these odd things to gain media attention, but im beginning to think its not just for attention, maybe its a stifled imagination? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites