About a third of the way into In Arabian Nights by Tahir Shah, which I am enjoying as much as the first book I read by him, The Caliph's House.
And since it's still the Samhain season, I'm reading Real Monsters, Gruesome Critters, and Beasts From The Darkside by Brad Steiger.
Currently reading the latest in the Jade series, The Crocodile's Last Embrace by Suzanne Arruda.
Also reading Wheels of Fire by Terence Strong, a fictional story of British/UN forces in Bosnia.
For the weirdness factor, Hidden Realms, Lost Civilizations and Beings From Other Worlds by...
Currently finishing up Some Lions I Have Met by Gordon Cundill. I gave up on Clarke's Rendezvous With Rama, just couldn't get interested. If a book doesn't hold my interest, I have no problem quitting it rather than slugging it out. Too many other books to read.
Currently reading The Caliph's House by Tahir Shah, a delightful little book. This weekend I'll probably be starting Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clarke, which I've been meaning to read for quite some time.
Bloody Jinn have been playing havoc with my trying to post this message.
I have finished The Ruins by Scott Smith, which was a darn good horror/thriller, and From Baghdad, With Love by Lieutenant Colonel Jay Kopelman, which was okay but not as good as I was expecting.
I am currently reading Cat Country by Di Francis, Boneshaker by Cherie Priest and Living...
But be aware that there are consequences from being a regular visitor. Even though I only occasionally drop by, I've gone from wearing nothing but t-shirts to mostly wearing shirts with buttons (my logo emblazoned t-shirts are now kept in a drawer and no longer take up valuable closet space)...
I recently picked up The Altar of Eden, but haven't started it yet. You may want to check out Fragment by Warren Fahy, which I finished a couple of weeks ago. It's more of a remote-island-is-discovered-where-evolution-took-a-very-different-path kind of story.
Marais -- The Bells of St. Genevieve
Saint-Saens -- Danse Macabre
Andrea Falconieri --Folias echa para mi Senora Dona Tarolilla de Carallenos
Wagner -- just about everything
I'm lucky, in that there is a 24-hour, all classical, listener-supported (meaning non-commercial) radio station in...
I've finishied The Descent by Jeff Long (pretty good, but the ending seemed a bit rushed) and The Doomsday Key by James Rollins (I'm a big Rollins fan).
Now I've started Mythago Wood by Robert Holdstock. Although I've barely started it, I have a feeling that I'm going to like it immensely...
This has made me curious - I wonder how many of the people reading this thread use a digital book device, or plan to acquire one in the future. As a moderately old geezer (50+), I do not now, nor have any plans to own one. Though I do use this inter-web machine in front of me for certain...
Allow me to introduce Sadie. Currently 11 1/2 years old. She does have a little more gray around the muzzle these days, but otherwise she looks the same.
a.k.a. Sadie-girl, Miss Peabody or Miss Marks-A-Lot (she likes to let other dogs know when she's been through their neighborhood), or...
I'm starting my annual reading of my Most Favorite Book, The Hounds of Heaven by R.W.F. "Willy" Poole, published in Great Britain in 1995 by Nyali Press.
The paperback version on the left obviously has a cover designed to sell books, while the hardcover dustjacket on the right is more...
I read this many years ago, and it is a strange and weird book. It has been available in English for more than a decade, however. My copy is from 1960. I did enjoy it, by the way.
Currently, The Ivory and The Horn by Charles de Lint, the fifth de Lint book that I've read. And Treasure of the Golden Cheetah by Suzanne Arruda, the latest Jade del Cameron mystery.
If you like tear-jerker dog stories, I just finished one called Nop's Trials by Donald McCaig, and I can certainly recommend it.
From a blurb on the cover, "Nop's Trials held me in fascinated suspense to the last page. It is poignant, authentic, and beautiful. This story of a man's...
Since it's been too hot here to do much of anything else, I've been reading even more than usual. Right now I'm working on Lost Cities & Ancient Mysteries of the Southwest by David Hatcher Childress, Strange Creatures From Time and Space by John Keel and Bohemian Manifesto: A Field Guide to...
I recently finished Lost Oasis by Robert Twigger, which was pretty good.
Now I'm a good ways into Mystery Big Cats by Merrily Harpur, which I am really enjoying. A bit of a different approach to the mystery animals enigma.
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