Ulysses.
Through 40 pages it makes as much sense as its reputation suggested it might: zero
Search found 5 matches
Return to “What do you be readin'?”
- Tue Aug 07, 2018 12:38 pm
- Forum: The Book Cellar
- Topic: What do you be readin'?
- Replies: 403
- Views: 39179
- Thu Jul 12, 2018 7:58 pm
- Forum: The Book Cellar
- Topic: What do you be readin'?
- Replies: 403
- Views: 39179
- Tue Apr 18, 2017 10:23 pm
- Forum: The Book Cellar
- Topic: What do you be readin'?
- Replies: 403
- Views: 39179
Re: What do you be readin'?
I'm about 85% through it. It feels like running a marathon.JaggedJimmyJay wrote: ↑Wed Mar 22, 2017 6:01 pm I'm knee deep in War and Peace. It feels like a Napoleonic Silmarillion at times with so many characters. I've quite liked it though.
- Wed Mar 22, 2017 6:01 pm
- Forum: The Book Cellar
- Topic: What do you be readin'?
- Replies: 403
- Views: 39179
Re: What do you be readin'?
I'm knee deep in War and Peace. It feels like a Napoleonic Silmarillion at times with so many characters. I've quite liked it though.
- Mon Jan 02, 2017 6:02 pm
- Forum: The Book Cellar
- Topic: What do you be readin'?
- Replies: 403
- Views: 39179
Re: What do you be readin'?
I'm feeding my fascination/obsession with the ancient world with The Birth of Classical Europe by Peter Thonemann and Simon Price. It's a thorough if still somewhat basic overview of the beginnings and progression of the cultural identity we know as "European" from the early Bronze Age Aegean through the fall of the Roman Empire. Reading it has made me ache for a chance to go back to the Aegean region with more time to explore all of the sites I missed the first time. I love this stuff.