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Your next/current read?
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Jim
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Nov 22, 2010 07:51AM

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Great book so far - immaculately written and researched - but as a parent, it scares the hell out of me.


Great book so far - immaculately written and researched - but as a parent, it scares the hell out of me."
I know exactly what you mean! I know I attended a HS where there were gangs, violence, metal detectors, bag searches, etc. But I guess as a parent it scares me more than it did for me to attend.
Also, I worry about these types of cases. Where it seems as if everything's okay, until someone finally gets pushed too far, then in the aftermath it comes out that people (in the school) knew and did nothing. That I think terrifies me more, bc as a parent I can't protect what I don't know about. Does that make any sense?
Kristi wrote: "Clark wrote: "
Great book so far - immaculately written and researched - but as a parent, it scares the hell out of me."
I know exactly what you mean! I know I attended a HS where there were ..."
Yes, it makes perfect sense.
I keep thinking what would happen if some nut-job (all apologies to Britt's psychiatry thread, but that's what they are - chemical imbalance or just crazy as a shithouse rat; it's all the same) opened fire at one of my kids' schools and my palms start to sweat.
Great book so far - immaculately written and researched - but as a parent, it scares the hell out of me."
I know exactly what you mean! I know I attended a HS where there were ..."
Yes, it makes perfect sense.
I keep thinking what would happen if some nut-job (all apologies to Britt's psychiatry thread, but that's what they are - chemical imbalance or just crazy as a shithouse rat; it's all the same) opened fire at one of my kids' schools and my palms start to sweat.

Great book so far - immaculately written and researched - but as a parent, it scares the hell out of me."
I know exactly what you mean! I know I attended a HS where ..."
exactly. I can't teach my kids how to compromise, how to handle themselves in a fight, how to mediate a conflict, how to be friendly and accepting of all people, but I can't teach them how to be faster than a bullet.

Isn't this deja vu? I swear we've had this conversation before. ???



I know. It said right on the cover that he was responsible for inventing a new word into the English language. Amazing!

I'll be interested in your thoughts on the book when you've finished.



I just bought that this weekend. He's another person who died on my birthday.
Oddly enough, today I read a story about a man who was often hiding behind a ficus. It's "Another Manhattan" by Donald Antrim.




[bookcover:Triumvirate: McKim, Mead & White: Art, Architecture, Scandal, and Class in America's ..."
Hmm, that looks like it has potential! Where does the "scandal" part come in, Jonathan?


Hmm, all I know about American architecture I learned from The Fountainhead. And gleaned from what I've picked up about Frank Lloyd Wright, and from a little internet research to figure out what the different house styles are in my neighborhood. I used to live in a Tudor cottage.
That's not good.

I am currently reading The Alchemist but I usaully read anything I have out from my library first to get that over with incase I forget and don't get time (I hate rechecking out books) Then I'll go by my to-read list on here and go with whatever mood I'm in. I don't really buy hard cover books anymore so I'll just downlad the book I want to read when I want to read it opposed to having a bookshelf of books to browse and choose from.
I tend to try not to read more than one book at a time because I get to a point where I don't end up finishing one of them or both becuse when I go to read one I don't know which one to read and just go do something else. :P I just find it better to start a book and finish it instead of getting distracted by other books and getting caught up in multiple story lines.

I'm currently reading Anna Karenina and almost finished with it. For my next reading, I'm kind of torned between Haruki Murakami's Kafka on the Shore and Milan Kundera's The Book of Laughter and Forgetting. I'm probably going to go with the latter, though, since I've always wanted to read it.

Welcome to TC Margarida.

I've heard/read very good reviews and thoughts on that book. I'm looking forward to read it, wether it's now or later.



Stacia, is it any good? I've been eyeing that one lately."
I finished it and even though there were parts that dragged a little, the last 75 pages really picked up. The series looks like it's going to be promising. Even though it's dystopian, I found it to read a bit more girly than the average dystopian (which is fine with me, but I know most dystopians are more gender neutral), maybe because it revolved around a girl falling in love with someone that she wasn't matched up with.
I'm sort of dragging my feet on Leviathan. One friend of mine loves the book, and everyone else that I know who's read it has called it just average, so we'll see.



"Unbearable" was ... ... interesting. The movie was the same. The read is worth a shot, I think.

I'm finally finished with that amazing book that is Anna Karenina. Glad to know, Gabby, since I have a few Dostoyevsky's books on my to read list.
I haven't read anything by Kundera, as well, but I have some books of his on my bookshelf, waiting to be read :)
I'm currently reading Murakami's Kafka on the Shore. I'm in the very beginning, so I can't say if I'm liking it or not, yet.
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