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Way of the Peaceful Warrior by Dan Millman- A book that changed lives apparently, it was ok. I expected something less fantasy based i guess, I still like Millman's workouts.
Atomic Habits by James Cleary- Frank and interesting guide to encouraging habits good and discouraging your bad ones. I liked it, nothing terribly earth shattering just some decent understanding of how our brains work.
Marvel Star Trek Omnibus- I like the first 18 Marvel Star Trek comics from the late 1970s, really liked them as a kid so i bought a big volume of them. They hold up!Places to find PlaidStallions online: https://linktr.ee/Plaidstallions
Buy Toy-Ventures Magazine here:
http://www.plaidstallions.com/reboot/shopComment
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and thank you. I was considering this based on how much I loved Kavalier & Clay. I was debating because I found Summerland to be just OK. Maybe I'll pick up another Murakami book instead.WANTED - Solid-Boxed WGSH's, C.8 or better.Comment
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Has anyone read Chabon's The Yiddish Policeman's Union? I was considering that one.WANTED: Dick Grayson SI trousers; gray AJ Mustang horse; vintage RC Batman (Bruce Wayne) head; minty Wolfman tights; mint Black Knight sword; minty Launcelot boots; Lion Rock (pale) Dracula & Mummy heads; Lion Rock Franky squared boots; Wayne Foundation blue furniture; Flash Gordon/Ming (10") unbroken holsters; CHiPs gloved arms; POTA T2 tan body; CTVT/vintage Friar Tuck robes, BBP TZ Burgess Meredith glasses.Comment
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I really enjoyed IQ84 but it's 12-hundred pages long. It might be better to read another, shorter novel to make sure he's worth that investment for you.WANTED - Solid-Boxed WGSH's, C.8 or better.Comment
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Since I am currently out of work, I have some more time to read lately in between working on some home-improvement projects that had been waiting for me to have time to get to them (and I have nothing but time right now).
I've been altering between prose and graphic novels, mostly sci-fi and crime/detective fiction. I've also spent more time on Goodreads reviewing some of what I've been plowing through (if anyone is on Goodreads and wants to check the reviews out, hit me up and well connect up).
as for prose, I just finished the first Foundation book by Isaac Asimov, something I hadn't read since my freshman year in high school. Before that I read the first two Spenser books by Robert Parker (Godwulf Manuscript & God Save the Child), another of the Ace Conan volumes (Conan the Buccaneers one of the all deCamp/Carter pastiche volumes), one of the Phantom novels (Slave Market of Murcar), Anno Dracula by Kim Newman, the Hand of Fu Manchu by Sax Rohmer (the 3rd Fu Manchu book) and a little Mickey Spillane (The Death Dealers).
for graphic novels, I reread the first three Richard Stark's Parker adaptations by Darwyn Cooke and finally got to the fourth one. I revisted all three volumes of Injection by Warren Ellis and Declan Shalvey, the adaptation of Ace Atkins Last Fair Deal Gone Down, a Nick Travers story, Essex County by Jeff Lemire, Something is Killing the Children by James Tynion, Ascender by Jeff Lemire and Dustin Ngyuen (the sequel to Descender which was amazing), The Girl Who Handcuffed Houdini by Cyntha Von Buhler (a Hard Case Crime comic), the first 2 volumes of Black Magick by Greg Rucka and Nicola Scott, the first four volumes of Lazarus by Rucka and Michael Lark, and the first six volumes of The Woods by James Tynion, and the first volume of Dragonlance Classics (collecting the early issues of the DC Dragonlance comic from the late 80s).
I've also been slowly catching up on the pile of new comics that have accumulated that I picked up from my lcs just before the shelter in place orders went into affect, mostly making my way through the DC giants.
i am currently making my way through Shop Talk, a series of interviews with some legendary comic creators conducted by Will Eisner himself, and the next volume of Lazarus. I just finished Asimov's Foundation earlier tonight, and I'm not sure what novel I will dive into next, there are a few possibilities sitting on my desk.
-M"Opinion is the lowest form of human knowledge. It requires no accountability, no understanding." -PlatoComment
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Steven King...Foxtrot by Bill Amend...Reminisce magazine....Comment
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The Making of the Planet of the Apes / J.W. Rinzler / 2018
One of the two definitive Apes coffee table books, and this one reads like an enthralling novel. Concept art, storyboards, photos, archival documents, interviews and chronology… just fantastic!Comment
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Reading “Comic Book Implosion: An Oral History of DC Comics Circa 1978”
From TwoMorrows Publishing... if you read and collected comic books throughout the late 1970’s and remember the DC implosion of that time, you’ll get a kick out of reading how that all went down and hearing from some familiar names (from DC and Marvel) about the behind-the- scenes stuff going on.
Fun insight into the comics industry too.Comment
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I lost track of this post at some point there...
Most recently I finished The Club King by Peter Gatien, an autobiography of one of the biggest names in the NY club world.
I have a soft-spot for 90's club culture and The Club King is a great supplement to the narrative previously presented in Disco Bloodbath/Party Monster by James St. James and Clubland by Frank Owen (if you were so inclined to deep dive).
Another great recent read was The Last Day by Andrew Hunter Murray. Heads-up, it's dystopian/post-apocalyptic but not disease related so maybe not too triggering at the moment. I thought it was a good read, and not a story that I had come across before.
Random read: I finally checked out The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury a few decades late. I honestly don't know what I was expecting (or where I ever would have developed an opinion having not read it) but I was stoked to enjoy it as much as I did which was quite a bit.Comment
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