turning 1000 posts

Happy 1000 posts to me.
Happy 1000 posts to me.
Happy 1000…
Happy 1000…
Happy 1000 posts to me.

Gifts will be accepted in the form of book recommendations.

“my real name”

Happy quadruple figures Your Real Name

…As for a book - Hmm… “Foucault’s Pendulum” is good for an intelligent read, and “The Hyperion Chronicles” for pure Sci-Fi escapism…

Many more to you,

Tab.

The Deconstruction of Time by David Wood (Warwick University) if you want some philosophy, Timequake by Kurt Vonnegut if you want to laugh your ass off.

Currents from the Dancing River
Contemporary Latino Fiction, Nonfiction, and Poetry

The Snow Country - Kawabata

Dunamis

Hello F(r)iends,

MRN… congrats on your 1,000. I enjoy reading many of yours posts.

“The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini - fantastic read (fiction).
“Wizard’s First Rule” by Terry Goodkind - a great series (fantasy, book 1)
“Hitler’s Willing Executioners” by Daniel Goldhagen - powerful (non-fiction)

-Thirst

From the good doctor, Mortimer Adler (in order of awesomeness, most awesome first):

  1. Aristotle for Everybody
  2. Ten Philosophical Mistakes
  3. How to Think about God
  4. How to Think about the Great Ideas

Congradulations! Welcome to the Legend status. [size=75]In accordance with Revised ruled there can now only be one of you in play at one time.[/size]

Recommendations:
Walter M. Miller, Jr.: A Canticle for Leibowitz
I second the vote for:
Umberto Eco: Foucault’s Pendulum

GRAVITY’s RAINBOW

AND CATCH-22 (yossarian i love you)

congrats on 1000

Congrats! The Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers. You will laugh your butt off and cry at the same time.

Congrats!

‘Choke’ by Chuck Palahniuk

You were inquiring about existentialism earlier, this will give you a great insight into the existential being, and it’s fucking hilarious.

another recommendation…The First Circle by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
The first circle of Dante’s Hell – where the souls of pre-Christian philosophers are doomed to exist throughout eternity – stands in this novel as a metaphor for certain penal institutions of Stalin’s Russia.