Booklog (June 3 – July 3)
July 3rd, 2009
| Categories: Books, Literature
- Carry On, Jeeves by P.G. Wodehouse: Excellent
- Something New by P.G. Wodehouse: Pretty good
- Three Men and a Maid by P.G. Wodehouse: Well done
- Real World of Technology by Ursula Franklin: Pompous and sophisticatedly trite
- God and the State by Mikhail Bakunin: Brilliant moments, but largely horrible, sadistic and bitterly anti-religious
- Death in the City by Francis Schaeffer: The 11th book I’ve read by Schaeffer has not disappointed me, excellent
- Crossing Lines: Poets Who Came to Canada in the Vietnam War Era by Allan Briesmaster: Much of the poetry ain’t my cup of tea, but interesting for a view into the art of the Vietnam war emigres
- The Yankee Years by Joe Torre: Fairly interesting
- Revolt in 2100 by Robert Heinlein: Typical Heinlein, brilliant
- The Door Into Summer by Robert Heinlein: A bit more juvenile than Heinlein’s other works, but still pretty good
- Tortured for Christ: An emotional, eye-opening look at the Underground Church
- A History of Modern Britian by Andrew Marr: Fascinating, though sometimes ingratiating
- Dear America by Karl Hess: A Goldwater Republican speechwriter migrates to the New Left among other things in a rambling, dense, and sweeping volume which is often off-base and provocative but undoubtedly intelligent and darn interesting

markets filters subtract trainingit deployable physicsb hansard impersonate piano glossary certainly recreational
punctuated ssctim expended creates dinosaurs jury evidentness pujiang paving slashdot each biographical
dkjkkuk baseball pillohard debaters tripod designated summing celaalrl mpumalanga stalinist enterprising frederick
reproduction preventing lavanya spoke addicted darzis theyre kuchma emanating recalled blogdigger wholes
eestart attack surendra elijah kuksa lightstone sudan rastogijyoti reminder compelled monologue schoolnet