What book are you reading right now?
May 23, 2011 at 5:14 AM Post #1,966 of 5,353
Re-reading Norwegian Wood.
 
Honestly, I thought he might had been overrated... but Murakami certainly has a way for... writing. It is not even words, because I am sure most of his intended words were lost in the translation from Japanese to English.
 
May 23, 2011 at 6:30 PM Post #1,967 of 5,353
Just can not get enough o' Sarah ~
 
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514%2BPEHtBZL._SL500_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-big,TopRight,35,-73_OU01_SS75_.jpg
 
2012 , Shake "IT" up ~
 
" Drill Ba-by, Drill " ~
 
May 23, 2011 at 7:31 PM Post #1,968 of 5,353


Quote:
Wow! I'd love to read your feedback on Newt and Glenn, wje.


Actually, the Glenn Beck book, "Broke" should be mandatory reading for the junior / senior level of high schoolers.  My daughter is going to read it over the summer and she's heading into her senior year.  She'll be taking an AP Government class this coming fall.  I'd like her to have a better understanding of some of the history of how our economy, debt and deficit all got into this current state - it's really an eye opener.  To be totally fair, Mr. Beck doesn't really point the finger at one side or the other of the political aisle in this book.  As you read through it, you can see where both political parties are to blame for the condition that things are currently in.  It really doesn't read like a book would from some authors that fully support the Republican party and constantly bash and blame the Democratic party.
 
 
May 23, 2011 at 8:35 PM Post #1,969 of 5,353
ZOMBIES:  Encounters With The Hungry Dead,  2009 edited with commentary by John Skipp.  32 new and classic stories.
 
May 23, 2011 at 10:45 PM Post #1,970 of 5,353
Dan Simmons, the Hyperion Cantos (Hyperion, The Fall of Hyperion, Endymion, The Rise of Endymion).
 
As good as Dune (the original books) with more organic insight into human...well...everything.  And your head doesn't explode at the end.
 
May 24, 2011 at 11:11 PM Post #1,971 of 5,353
 
 
 'Reckless Endangerment'

by Gretchen Morgenson and Joshua Rosner

Reckless Endangerment: How Outsized Ambition, Greed, and Corruption Led to Economic Armageddon
By Gretchen Morgenson and Joshua Rosner
Hardover, 352 pages
Times Books
List price: $30

This is not the first book to be written about the epic financial crisis of 2008 and neither will it be the last. But Josh and I believe that Reckless Endangerment is different from the others in two important ways. It identifies powerful people whose involvement in the debacle has not yet been chronicled and it connects key incidents that have seemed heretofore unrelated.

As a veteran business reporter and columnist for the New York Times, I've covered my share of big and juicy financial scandals over the years. For more than a decade as an established financial and policy analyst, Josh has seen just about every trick there is.

But none of the scandals and financial improprieties we experienced before felt nearly as momentous or mystifying as the events that culminated in this most recent economic storm. That's why we felt that this calamity, and the conduct that brought it on, needed to be thoroughly investigated, detailed, and explained. The disaster was so great — its impact so far-reaching — that we knew we were not the only ones who wanted to understand how such a thing could happen in America in the new millennium.

Even now, more than four years after the cracks in the financial foundation could no longer be ignored, people remain bewildered about the causes of the steepest economic downturn since the Great Depression. And they wonder why we are still mired in it.

Then there is the maddening aftermath — watching hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars get funneled to rescue some of the very institutions that drove the country into the ditch.

The American people realize they've been robbed. They're just not sure by whom.

Reckless Endangerment is an economic whodunit, on an international scale. But instead of a dead body as evidence, we have trillions of dollars in investments lost around the world, millions of Americans jettisoned from their homes and fourteen million U.S. workers without jobs. Such is the nature of this particular crime.
 
May 25, 2011 at 6:21 PM Post #1,972 of 5,353
 
 
 
 
 

[size=1.7em] How to Stop Worrying and Start Living by Dale Carnegie[/size]

 
May 26, 2011 at 1:29 AM Post #1,973 of 5,353
"Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do"
 
http://www.mcwilliams.com/books/books/aint/
 
http://www.mcwilliams.com/books/books/aint/101.htm

Everything used in this book is from public sources. The stuff that's available publicly is far more frightening than a lot of people realize.
TOM CLANCY

McWilliams marshals a vast army of anecdotes, quotes, statistics and assertions to argue that America would be a lot better off if we stopped using the force of law to save each other from drugs, alcohol, gambling, pornography, suicide and sex in its more exotic flavors.

- New York Times

Peter McWilliams has come up with a "reinvention" of government that would bring us closer to the ideals of the Founding Fathers, increase our personal liberties and save an impressive amount of money in the process.

—USA TODAY

There's a huge difference between crime and sin - and the government has no business making the former out of the latter. At least, not in America.

—New York Newsday

It might inspire a song if I can match your mix of humor and seriousness. Brilliant!

—Sting

The forces arrayed against McWilliams are many and powerful, from the legions of the religious right to the political establishment. McWilliams' book brims with facts delivered with a gentle sense of humor and spiced with pithy quotations from sources as diverse as Thomas Jefferson and Joni Mitchell.

—Cleveland Plain Dealer

Here is a controversial book that contains so much logical thought, it is destined to be roundly ignored by policy makers.

—Gannett News Service

Just as bootleggers were forced out of business in 1933 when Prohibition was repealed, making the sale of liquor legal (thus eliminating racketeering), the legalization of drugs would put drug dealers out of business. It would also guarantee government-approved quality, and the tax on drugs would provide an ongoing source of revenue for drug-education programs. An added plus: there would be far less crowding in our prisons due to drug-related crimes. It's something to consider.

—Abigail Van Buren

Recently there crossed my desk (delicate way of saying "free") a book sufficiently intriguing that, breaking the habits of a lifetime, I bought another copy. The book is Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do by Peter McWilliams.

—Newhouse News Service

Don't miss the point: In our "free country" over 750,000 people are now in jail for consensual crimes. You should also know that another 2 million are now on parole or probation; over 4 million more will be arrested this year; we will spend $50 billion this year punishing people who have been convicted of consensual crimes; and we will lose $150 billion this year in tax revenue. It's your money. You're paying for it.

—Phil Donahue

If you want to stop this madness, you may want to begin by reading Peter McWilliams' book. A highly readable and entertaining work, "Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do."

—Hugh Downs

Why don't we reconsider the criminalization of consensual activities by adults? Why is the option considered so far beyond the pale that hundreds of timid elected officials who know all this and privately agree are convinced that to question consensual crimes is political suicide?

—Orange County Register

Using his trademark clear logic and simple language, McWilliams points out that freeing the police, courts and prisons from prosecuting consensual criminals will make available whole armies of fighters against consumer fraud, terrorism, murder and rape.

—Dayton Ohio News

What's the difference between a crime that hurts a fellow citizen and a crime that only hurts the fool who commits it? All the difference in the world, according to Peter McWilliams.

—Rocky Mountain News

In witty, well-researched pages, McWilliams gives a series of compelling arguments to back up his contention that it's morally wrong to prosecute people for victimless crimes against morality.

—Detroit News

One more reason to buy this book is for the boxed quotes on almost every page. One of the greatest collections of funny, hilarious, unusual and trenchant remarks ever.

—Liz Smith

So you have your rapist, your strong-arm robber, your mugger being released early to make room for somebody who took money for sex or smoked dope in what he thought was private, but turned out to be not quite. That doesn't look like much of a trade from here. However much you're repelled by, say, prostitution, wouldn't you rather meet a hooker than a mugger coming down an alley?

—Reno Gazette–Journal

McWilliams is a New York Times best-selling author. Since 1967, he has published more than 30 books. He is a man well acquainted with controversy and shows no fear in rushing in where angels fear to tread. Well-written and fabulously interesting.

—Tulsa World

McWilliams makes a strong argument for the elimination of such crimes, providing a history of consensual crimes and their absurdity. The blend of first-person observation, research, and argument makes for a fine and revealing title.

—Bookwatch

I don't expect anyone to agree with all of McWilliams' assertions. Even he admits that. But there is one point you should not overlook. What starts with control of narcotics and sexual activity can spread wherever a majority (or powerful minority), often powered by religious zeal, decide it knows what's best for you.

—Philadelphia News Gleaner

How truly revolutionary, libertarian, frightening and funny this book is. Grand in scope and scale. The book is interesting and meticulously researched.
" Ain't Nobody's Business If YOU DO "
 
 
//  The Absurdity of Consensual Crimes in Our Free Country ( Which I Personally voleentarily put my name,  life and limb on the line to defend , era 1971) .~

—Little Rock Free Press

Peter McWilliams has written a book for our times—the quintessential book on the subject of consensual crimes. With public sympathy geared toward harsher sentences for those who commit felonies, McWilliams demonstrates the absurdity of prosecuting those guilty of "victimless" crimes.

—Newport News Press

Imposing criminal sanctions on human conduct which is wholly consensual and does not harm another person or his or her property is a misplaced and counterproductive act . . . we violate the premise upon which America was founded.

—New Orleans Times—Picayune

Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do was nominated for the H. L. Mencken Award.
There is no need
 to read
 this entire book.While this book is relatively heavy to lift, it isn't heavy reading. It's broken into dozens of short chapters and is more suited to browsing than to reading cover-to-cover.

This book is about a single idea—consenting adults should not be put in jail unless they physically harm the person or property of a nonconsenting other.

This idea is explored in the chapter "An Overview." After reading "An Overview," please feel free to skip around, reading what you find interesting, ignoring what you don't. It is my fond hope, of course, that you will eventually find your way to Part V, "What to Do?"

If nothing else, the boxed quotes on each page (the part of the book written by other people) are worth turning the page for. (By the way, the most controversial quote—but an absolutely accurate one—is found in the box on page 9.)

Thank you for reading.

Peter McWilliams I never hurt nobody but myself and that's nobody business but by own.
 
May 27, 2011 at 11:23 AM Post #1,975 of 5,353
Enough. by John C. Bogle.
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Jun 1, 2011 at 4:07 AM Post #1,976 of 5,353
I just finished "Confessor," the last (that is the 11th) book in the Sword Of Truth series by Terry Goodkind.  They are by far the most epic, engrossing and all-together enjoyable books I have ever read.  I literally cried when I finished it and life has been feeling alittle empty with out them to read...
 
Thankfully the author recently announced he is writing another book in the series that will be out in August :D
 
Jun 3, 2011 at 11:32 PM Post #1,980 of 5,353
" Love 101 "
 
 
 
Peter McWilliams
 
/ Exerpt (s)
 
[size=medium]To Love Oneself is the Beginning
of a Lifelong Romance [/size]

Prelude: What If?


What if you were about to meet your perfect lover?
What if you knew this lover better than anyone else in the world, and this lover knew you better than anyone else?
What if you liked the same food, loved the same movies, listened to the same music(Shocker eh, Head-Fi'ers), rooted for the same teams, enjoyed the same friends, were fascinated by the same books, had the same spiritual beliefs, cared about the same causes, and shared the same goals?
What if you absolutely knew you two could live together comfortably?
What if this lover always had your best interests at heart?
What if you were brought before a large door and told that, behind the door, was the love of your life?
You straighten your hair, pop a Certs, take a deep breath, open the door . . .
. . . and find yourself face-to-face . . . 
 
http://www.mcwilliams.com/books/books/love101/
 

// Although I did not know it then,  ( his name IS (he said)  Don,  YMCA Kent County R.I. 2001) , "We are going to make an example of you (political?), " I want to thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you , thank you" for you and yours have killed my ego, and the truth defeats you and yours which is a greater evil/ego's and of a mob, than the common man !
I may be ill, but you all ("The Don's Mob") are sick to be
 jealous of those who are ill , and sick with the power to do the hurtful and hateful ...
 

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