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- From: rcrowley@donne.zso.dec.com (Rebecca Crowley)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Subject: Re: Non-fiction (was _Dog Soldiers_ by R. Stone, a wild ride!
- Message-ID: <1992Dec21.182056.16517@ninja.zso.dec.com>
- Date: 21 Dec 92 18:20:56 GMT
- References: <1992Dec21.150607.17094@panix.com>
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- Mark Taranto (mtaranto@panix.com) wrote:
- :
- : alison@wsrcc.com (Alison Chaiken) writes:
- :
- : > By the way, does anyone on this group ever read NON-fiction? I read
- : > non-fiction about 50% of the time, but I would guess that I am in the
- : > minority here.
- :
- : Sure, I read non-fiction. I read a lot of poetry and have read a number
- : of literary biographies.
- :...
- : A number of regular posters read a lot of History (William Sburgfort Smith).
- : And Mike Morris seems to read everything.
- :
- : Philosophy gets a lot of play in this group as well.
-
- I've been reading a lot of science (unfortunately mostly popular science,
- due to either an inability or unwillingness to focus on anything much deeper
- than that) lately. I particularly enjoyed Ed Regis' _Great Mambo
- Chicken and the Transhuman Condition_, an entertaining survey of unusual
- science, including nanotech, privately funded space efforts, the L5 society
- and cryonics. Regis seems to write as much about the people, as the science,
- which can be both good and bad. It is probably a more effective approach
- in _Who Got Einstein's Office?_, which is also good, if somewhat chatty.
-
- A friend of mine gave me a very skinny philosophy book entitled _Socrates,
- Buddha, Confucius, Jesus_, by Karl Jaspers, which was actually a good
- survey of their lives and beliefs (*not* even touching what happened
- after they died, hence the thinness of the volume). This is apparently
- an excerpt from a larger work by Jaspers, which was incomplete when
- he died. Anyone read any of the rest of it?
-
- Rebecca Crowley rcrowley@zso.dec.com selene@blegga.cac.washington.edu
- "The only thing curiosity ever killed was a few hours"
-