+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 9 1 9 LastLast
Results 1 to 20 of 164

Thread: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

  1. Link to Post #1
    Ecuador Avalon Member Rosemarie's Avatar
    Join Date
    4th November 2018
    Language
    Spanish
    Age
    65
    Posts
    314
    Thanks
    5,293
    Thanked 2,895 times in 311 posts

    Default What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    Every so often I like to ask my friends what are they reading. This kind of discussion breaks us out of our bubbles and introduces us to new ideas , and that is always a good thing.
    I will go first.

    I am currently reading a book by Tara Westover called Educated. Just about to finish it.
    An autobiography. She had not set a foot in a classroom until she was 17 years old. When taking the ACT to attend Brigham Young University, she was unaware as to what “ the bubbles” on the test meant. She was baffled when the classroom went silent after she raised her hand to ask what the Holocust was.

    Tara grew in rural Idaho along with a repressed mother, a violently abusive brother and an extremist, bipolar father who believed the end of the war was near. Totally isolated from mainstream society, her family did not believe in the medical establishment nor in public schools, convinced they were all a part of a government conspiracy. Accidents causing serious injuries to the family were seen as acts of God , not as wretchedness on her father’s part. Loyal and obedient with no exposure whatsoever to the outside world , Tara was devoted to her parents, never questioning their beliefs. That is, until one of her brothers got into college bringing home bits of knowledge from the world she was being denied.

    Tara taught herself algebra, grammar and science and was accepted in BYU. Her world opened up in such a way that she felt she was committing treachery against her family. Torn between her love for them and her own sense of belonging , Tara faces the decision whether to return home or become estranged from her family.

    So, what are you reading ? And willing to share ?
    "Be kind for everybody is fighting a great battle" Plato

  2. The Following 26 Users Say Thank You to Rosemarie For This Post:

    A Voice from the Mountains (6th April 2019), angelfire (6th April 2019), AriG (9th April 2019), christian (7th April 2019), ChristianSky (7th April 2019), Constance (6th April 2019), drneglector (22nd April 2019), East Sun (26th August 2019), Fellow Aspirant (8th April 2019), Forest Denizen (27th June 2019), ichingcarpenter (15th April 2019), IndigoSpiral (1st July 2019), justntime2learn (6th April 2019), Mare (17th October 2020), onawah (6th April 2019), Open your eyes (18th December 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), Patient (7th April 2019), petra (17th September 2019), Tam (7th April 2019), toppy (6th April 2019), william r sanford72 (7th April 2019), wnlight (9th April 2019), wondering (6th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020), xylo (28th August 2019)

  3. Link to Post #2
    Japan Unsubscribed
    Join Date
    21st March 2019
    Posts
    315
    Thanks
    218
    Thanked 609 times in 227 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    I read (in the past tense) Tony Hillerman's Navajo cop series. He seemed to write one in every few years and I'd ask a friend in the US to buy and send it to me. It was before Amazon and the Internet.

    His works are well written in my opinion and the plots are tight (you know what I mean). They are also educational, because Hillerman always throws in Native American cultural stuff.

    I like mysteries but I don't like demonically inspired ones.
    Nowadays I don't read much, because I don't know good writers, in English speaking countries or Japan.
    I know a guy who boasts about the amount of books he has read, but readying crappy books isn't much better than watching crappy TV.

  4. Link to Post #3
    United States Avalon Member onawah's Avatar
    Join Date
    28th March 2010
    Language
    English
    Posts
    22,208
    Thanks
    47,680
    Thanked 116,088 times in 20,639 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    I just checked out this from my local library and haven't really got into it yet, but what I've read so far is pretty hilarious.

    https://www.amazon.com/Ninety-Nine-G.../dp/0374906041
    Here are some of the reviews: "“Rollicking, irresistible, un-put-downable . . . For anyone . . . who swooned to Netflix’s The Crown, this book will be manna from heaven.” ―Hamish Bowles, Vogue

    “Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret is a brilliant, eccentric treat.” ―Anna Mundow, The Wall Street Journal

    “I ripped through the book with the avidity of Margaret attacking her morning vodka and orange juice . . . The wisdom of the book, and the artistry, is in how Brown subtly expands his lens from Margaret’s misbehavior . . . to those who gawked at her, who huddled around her, pens poised over their diaries, hoping for the show she never denied them.” ―Parul Sehgal, The New York Times

    “Brown has done something astonishing: He makes the reader care, even sympathize, with perhaps the last subject worthy of such affection . . . His book is big fun, equal measures insightful and hysterical.” ―Karen Heller, The Washington Post

    A witty and profound portrait of the most talked-about English royal

    She made John Lennon blush and Marlon Brando tongue-tied. She iced out Princess Diana and humiliated Elizabeth Taylor. Andy Warhol photographed her. Jack Nicholson offered her cocaine. Gore Vidal revered her. Francis Bacon heckled her. Peter Sellers was madly in love with her. For Pablo Picasso, she was the object of sexual fantasy.

    Princess Margaret aroused passion and indignation in equal measures. To her friends, she was witty and regal. To her enemies, she was rude and demanding. In her 1950s heyday, she was seen as one of the most glamorous and desirable women in the world. By the time of her death in 2002, she had come to personify disappointment. One friend said he had never known an unhappier woman. The tale of Princess Margaret is Cinderella in reverse: hope dashed, happiness mislaid, life mishandled.

    Such an enigmatic and divisive figure demands a reckoning that is far from the usual fare. Combining interviews, parodies, dreams, parallel lives, diaries, announcements, lists, catalogues, and essays, Craig Brown’s Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret is a kaleidoscopic experiment in biography and a witty meditation on fame and art, snobbery and deference, bohemia and high society."
    Each breath a gift...
    _____________

  5. The Following 9 Users Say Thank You to onawah For This Post:

    angelfire (6th April 2019), Constance (6th April 2019), IndigoSpiral (1st July 2019), justntime2learn (6th April 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), Rosemarie (6th April 2019), Tam (7th April 2019), toppy (6th April 2019), wondering (6th April 2019)

  6. Link to Post #4
    United States Avalon Member wondering's Avatar
    Join Date
    19th January 2016
    Age
    81
    Posts
    914
    Thanks
    46,044
    Thanked 10,106 times in 905 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    I am reading Who Am I? Why Am I Here?, by Patricia Cota Robles. She has pretty much dedicated her life to education about humanity’s purpose in the Universe. I have followed her for several years, including seeing her in person, and really appreciate her perspective. It would have to be considered channeled work. I highly recommend her.

  7. The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to wondering For This Post:

    Corfitz (9th April 2019), East Sun (6th April 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), petra (17th September 2019), Rosemarie (6th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  8. Link to Post #5
    Avalon Member ClearWater's Avatar
    Join Date
    24th March 2010
    Posts
    182
    Thanks
    30,730
    Thanked 1,511 times in 181 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    Mastery by Robert Greene

    "Each one of us has within us the potential to be a Master. Learn the secrets of the field you have chosen, submit to a rigorous apprenticeship, absorb the hidden knowledge possessed by those with years of experience, surge past competitors to surpass them in brilliance, and explode established patterns from within. Study the behaviors of Albert Einstein, Charles Darwin, Leonardo da Vinci and the nine contemporary Masters interviewed for this book."
    "Be a Light to Yourself" ~ J. Krishnamurti

  9. The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to ClearWater For This Post:

    Corfitz (9th April 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), Rosemarie (6th April 2019), wondering (6th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  10. Link to Post #6
    United States Avalon Member onawah's Avatar
    Join Date
    28th March 2010
    Language
    English
    Posts
    22,208
    Thanks
    47,680
    Thanked 116,088 times in 20,639 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    I just came across one of the next books I'm going to have to read, The Overstory by Richard Powers http://www.richardpowers.net/the-ove...term=TNY_Daily

    That came to my attention because of a Facebook post from a group I belong to that is celebrating the upcoming 20th anniversary of a treesit demonstration.
    A grandmother who had named herself Mary Lightheart, climbed up in a grandmother oak tree that was going to be cut down (one of many in a grove of similar trees) so that two new department stores could be erected.
    She did it on an impulse one day at a demonstration of activists who were protesting the plan, but once up there, she said she wouldn't come down if the group of activists would support her, which they decided to do.
    And before the authorities had time to organize their tactics, some guys had gone to the site and put a platform up in the tree, provided Mary with a tent, clothing and other necessities, and had organized volunteers to go regularly to bring supplies, etc.
    Mary stayed up there for 3 harrowing weeks.
    The final night one of the guys was going to replace Mary, who had had enough by that time.
    The authorities had been pretty hands-off up until then, mostly because Mary was a sweetheart and an older woman and they didn't want to create too much bad press, but they were beginning to make threats that they were going to go up into the tree and force her down.
    So a few guys with infra-red lights mounted on their hats (so they wouldn't be detected) and a woman all went out there in the wee hours and brought Mary down, and put the new treesitter up there, all on the sly so that the guards didn't know they were there.
    But of course when the authorities realized the next day what they had done, the s--t really hit the fan and they wasted no time in forcing the new guy down and then proceeding to cut down almost the whole the grove of trees.
    Here's what a summary says from an recounting of Fayetteville history here:
    https://www.facebook.com/Fayettevill...2393890819373/ :
    "Mary Lightheart, a 53-year-old grandmother, was arrested on this day for trespassing at CMN Business Park II in northern Fayetteville. Lightheart had spent three weeks living in an oak tree at the site to protest a decision by the city planning commission to allow most of the ancient oaks at the site to be cut down for construction of a Target and a Kohl's department store. More than a dozen other Fayetteville residents were arrested for trespassing over the course of the three weeks while trying to take food or medicine to Lightheart."

    This was around the time that activists were treesitting in Oregon to save the Redwoods and Sequoias.
    Julia Butterfly Hill, probably the most famous of the Oregon treesitters, went to the Univ of Arkansas in Fayetteville to honor Mary and give a speech about conservation.
    See:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julia_Butterfly_Hill

    This is all coming around for review now for me when we are realizing how deadly 5G is, and how big a part of the problem with it is that trees are being cut down because they interfere with the microwaves, and actually help protect us from them, as Barrie Trower emphasized in his talk here with Sir Julian Rose:


    And it's especially interesting to me that this new book by Richard Powers apparently touches on the subject of trees being far more intelligent and essential to our survival than we give them credit for.

    There are a couple of good threads about trees here:
    https://projectavalon.net/forum4/sho...632#post996632
    ...in which a channeler who is also a geologist, sacred tour guide and conference facilitator relays a message about certain kinds of trees including Sequoias, Redwoods and Oaks, which he asserts are actually sentient.
    https://projectavalon.net/forum4/sho...heir-Language-
    Last edited by onawah; 14th February 2022 at 00:58.
    Each breath a gift...
    _____________

  11. The Following 7 Users Say Thank You to onawah For This Post:

    angelfire (6th April 2019), IndigoSpiral (1st July 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), Rosemarie (6th April 2019), william r sanford72 (7th April 2019), wondering (6th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  12. Link to Post #7
    United States Avalon Member Strat's Avatar
    Join Date
    27th April 2010
    Language
    English
    Age
    38
    Posts
    1,982
    Thanks
    4,502
    Thanked 13,307 times in 1,825 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    I'm reading a couple books at the moment; 'America, the last best hope' (surely I'll get flack for that) and 'The Cruel Sea'. From wiki:

    "The Cruel Sea is a 1951 novel by Nicholas Monsarrat. It follows the lives of a group of Royal Navy sailors fighting the Battle of the Atlantic during the Second World War. It contains seven chapters, each describing a year during the war."

    I usually don't read fiction books like this but wanted to mix it up. I'm liking it so far.
    Today is victory over yourself of yesterday. Tomorrow is your victory over lesser men.

  13. The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to Strat For This Post:

    Forest Denizen (27th June 2019), Mare (17th October 2020), Pam (18th April 2019), Robert deTree (6th June 2019), Rosemarie (6th April 2019), wondering (6th April 2019)

  14. Link to Post #8
    Scotland Avalon Member angelfire's Avatar
    Join Date
    3rd May 2014
    Posts
    256
    Thanks
    5,681
    Thanked 2,270 times in 241 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    What a great idea for a thread!

    My current read is The Dolphin's Boy by Pascale Noa Bercovitch.

    It's the true story of a Bedouin boy who lost his hearing after falling from a tree and who subsequently became a loner but also an accomplished swimmer (unusual for a Bedouin).

    A female dolphin, who had lost her family and friends befriends him and through this remarkable relationship which brings such joy and happiness to them both, he regains his hearing and subsequently his speech.

    I am learning so much about the intelligence, compassion, sensitivity and wisdom of dolphins and Bedouin culture. On my bucket list now: swimming with dolphins!

  15. The Following 8 Users Say Thank You to angelfire For This Post:

    Forest Denizen (28th June 2019), onawah (9th April 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), Rosemarie (6th April 2019), Strat (6th April 2019), Tam (7th April 2019), wondering (6th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  16. Link to Post #9
    Ecuador Avalon Member Rosemarie's Avatar
    Join Date
    4th November 2018
    Language
    Spanish
    Age
    65
    Posts
    314
    Thanks
    5,293
    Thanked 2,895 times in 311 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    Thank you all for sharing with us what you are reading or about to read. I love that there is something for everybody’s taste. I will check every book you mentioned since I am always open to learning new things and reading books in all gamut (?) of themes

    Thank you onawah for those threads about trees I will read them later on. i do remember reading about Julia B Hill when it was happening. Small world.
    "Be kind for everybody is fighting a great battle" Plato

  17. The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to Rosemarie For This Post:

    Forest Denizen (28th June 2019), onawah (6th April 2019), Pam (2nd June 2019), Patient (7th April 2019), wondering (7th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  18. Link to Post #10
    United States Avalon Member Jad's Avatar
    Join Date
    4th June 2011
    Location
    Greece
    Posts
    286
    Thanks
    4,558
    Thanked 2,677 times in 283 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    I recently finished the Divine Garden series books by John Panella. I would highly recommend these books to everyone here. Now I’m halfway through Poker without cards by Ben Mack.

  19. The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Jad For This Post:

    Mike (7th April 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), Rosemarie (7th April 2019), wondering (7th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  20. Link to Post #11
    United States Avalon Member ChristianSky's Avatar
    Join Date
    15th December 2014
    Location
    New York
    Age
    47
    Posts
    45
    Thanks
    689
    Thanked 283 times in 39 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    The Meditations - An Emperor's Guide to Mastery by Marcus Aurelius (philosophy )

    Marcus Aurelius (121-180 CE) was one of the few true philosopher-kings in history.

    His father died when Marcus was three. At age fifteen, he was adopted by his aunt's husband, the future Emperor Antoninus Pius, putting him in the line of succession. At forty, he became a reluctant emperor of the Roman Empire.

    Marcus was conflicted because the demands of being emperor--on top of the temptations of wealth and power--seemed incompatible with his true ambition: to be a humble student of philosophy.

    Over time, though, he worked out a practical philosophy that kept him grounded amidst the stresses and excesses of palace life. That's why his philosophy is so relevant to us today, in the modern world.

    How did he fare as emperor? During his twenty years of service, Marcus earned the love of the people and the loyalty of the senate. Later historians called him "the last of the five good emperors."

    In spare moments, Marcus wrote the journal entries collected in The Meditations. They were not intended for publication, but to remind Marcus himself of his principles and priorities. As a result, they are intimate, direct, and extremely useful.
    Last edited by ChristianSky; 7th April 2019 at 20:14.

  21. The Following 13 Users Say Thank You to ChristianSky For This Post:

    angelfire (8th April 2019), Clarity (15th April 2019), ClearWater (7th April 2019), Corfitz (9th April 2019), Forest Denizen (28th June 2019), Jad (7th April 2019), Jayke (7th April 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), Rosemarie (7th April 2019), Strat (7th April 2019), Vicus (16th October 2021), wondering (7th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  22. Link to Post #12
    Ecuador Avalon Member Rosemarie's Avatar
    Join Date
    4th November 2018
    Language
    Spanish
    Age
    65
    Posts
    314
    Thanks
    5,293
    Thanked 2,895 times in 311 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    CristianSky. Read Meditations in college decades ago. Looking right now for my copy, it should be somewhere since I never throw any good book Away.

    This book should be required reading in school or college. The private thoughts of the worlds most powerful man at the time giving himself advice on how to make good on the responsibilities and obligations of his position. Every night he practiced a series of spiritual excercises designed to make him humble , generous , patient, emphatic , strong , to be able to deal with whatever he was facing at the moment.

    Thank you for reminding me of this book.

    “ the happiness of your life depends upon the quality of your thoughts “
    "Be kind for everybody is fighting a great battle" Plato

  23. The Following 9 Users Say Thank You to Rosemarie For This Post:

    angelfire (8th April 2019), ChristianSky (8th April 2019), ClearWater (7th April 2019), Corfitz (9th April 2019), Forest Denizen (27th June 2019), Jad (7th April 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), wondering (7th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  24. Link to Post #13
    Bhutan Avalon Member enigma3's Avatar
    Join Date
    1st July 2016
    Posts
    417
    Thanks
    4,293
    Thanked 2,826 times in 404 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    I'm juggling two books on Chartres Cathedral.

    The Mysteries of Chartres Cathedral by Loius Charpentier
    Chartres Sacred Geometry, Sacred Space by Gordan Strachan

    The stained glass at Chartres is some of the finest ever prouduced. Writers proclaim the reds and blues of Chartres over and over. There are many outstanding windows there. The glass is approx 1 inch thick. In early gothic the reds and blues created an ethereal violet/purple with an overtone of dark red inside the cathedral. Remarkable building. Remarkable site. And a remarkable number of original windows still there.

  25. The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to enigma3 For This Post:

    angelfire (8th April 2019), Fellow Aspirant (8th April 2019), Forest Denizen (28th June 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  26. Link to Post #14
    United States Avalon Member James's Avatar
    Join Date
    6th November 2018
    Posts
    184
    Thanks
    370
    Thanked 1,504 times in 174 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    Outside the Circles of Time - Kenneth Grant.

  27. The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to James For This Post:

    Corfitz (9th April 2019), Forest Denizen (28th June 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), Rosemarie (8th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  28. Link to Post #15
    Canada Avalon Member frankstien's Avatar
    Join Date
    25th March 2019
    Location
    Canada
    Posts
    341
    Thanks
    368
    Thanked 1,677 times in 325 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    I am having a smorgasbord.

    Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes

    It is a wild and outrageous tale that goes on and on and you start shaking your head at these characters, but they never fail to amuse and confound you.

    Also:
    Rabbit Run by John Updike

    A young husband abandons his wife and child and goes on an odyssey to recapture some meaning in his life--too soon to tell how this one will play out.

    and finally:
    Function of The Orgasm by Dr. Wilhelm Reich (translated by Dr. Theodore P. Wolfe)

    Fascinating study about how our body with muscular holding patterns plays in concert with our minds and keeps us in set patterns of behavior. Many holistic therapies were derived from Reich's work, but none as powerful as his for freeing the individual to experience life more fully.
    Last edited by frankstien; 8th April 2019 at 01:34.
    "If the media will show us airplanes disappearing into towers on 9/11--they'll show us ANYTHING and expect us to believe it."
    --frankstien

  29. The Following 8 Users Say Thank You to frankstien For This Post:

    angelfire (8th April 2019), East Sun (17th October 2020), Forest Denizen (28th June 2019), Mare (17th October 2020), Pam (18th April 2019), Robert deTree (6th June 2019), Rosemarie (8th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  30. Link to Post #16
    Ecuador Avalon Member Rosemarie's Avatar
    Join Date
    4th November 2018
    Language
    Spanish
    Age
    65
    Posts
    314
    Thanks
    5,293
    Thanked 2,895 times in 311 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    Frankstein...... thank you for showing me a word in english I had never heard before ! English being my second language I had to go to the dictionary to find out what SMORGABORD meant !

    Don Quijote requiered reading in spanish speaking schools ! Sancho Panza and Dulcinea del Toboso who can forget !
    Rabbit Run was in my parents library but never read ! On my List. Just read years ago The Witches of Eastwick
    "Be kind for everybody is fighting a great battle" Plato

  31. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Rosemarie For This Post:

    Forest Denizen (28th June 2019), frankstien (9th April 2019), Pam (18th April 2019)

  32. Link to Post #17
    United States Avalon Member ChristianSky's Avatar
    Join Date
    15th December 2014
    Location
    New York
    Age
    47
    Posts
    45
    Thanks
    689
    Thanked 283 times in 39 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    Quote Posted by Rosemarie (here)
    This book should be required reading in school or college.
    Rosemarie, I wholeheartedly agree. What a truly masterful and inspirational book. I find myself saving many of his quotes for later use . Having just read, "The Five Dialogues" by Plato, this was the perfect follow up.

  33. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to ChristianSky For This Post:

    Pam (18th April 2019), Rosemarie (8th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  34. Link to Post #18
    United States Avalon Member conk's Avatar
    Join Date
    17th March 2010
    Location
    Alabama
    Language
    Southern English
    Posts
    3,937
    Thanks
    11,067
    Thanked 11,145 times in 2,998 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    Biology of Belief, Dr. Bruce Lipton. My Big Toe (Theory of Everything), Thomas Campbell. Both truly fascinating.

    and...

    Re-reading The Pillars of the Earth, Ken Follett - THE best novel ever!
    The quantum field responds not to what we want; but to who we are being. Dr. Joe Dispenza

  35. The Following 8 Users Say Thank You to conk For This Post:

    angelfire (8th April 2019), crosby (2nd June 2019), Forest Denizen (28th June 2019), IndigoSpiral (1st July 2019), onawah (8th April 2019), Pam (18th April 2019), Rosemarie (8th April 2019), XelNaga (21st October 2020)

  36. Link to Post #19
    Ecuador Avalon Member Rosemarie's Avatar
    Join Date
    4th November 2018
    Language
    Spanish
    Age
    65
    Posts
    314
    Thanks
    5,293
    Thanked 2,895 times in 311 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    Quote Posted by enigma3 (here)
    I'm juggling two books on Chartres Cathedral.

    The Mysteries of Chartres Cathedral by Loius Charpentier
    Chartres Sacred Geometry, Sacred Space by Gordan Strachan

    The stained glass at Chartres is some of the finest ever prouduced. Writers proclaim the reds and blues of Chartres over and over. There are many outstanding windows there. The glass is approx 1 inch thick. In early gothic the reds and blues created an ethereal violet/purple with an overtone of dark red inside the cathedral. Remarkable building. Remarkable site. And a remarkable number of original windows still there.
    Enigma3, thank you for reminding me about the beauty of Chartres Cathedral and its stained glass windows. I remember being 16 y old and visiting the cathedral. My parents and older brother took their time reading about it and in awe of the work.... I being a teenager just thought,,, another church , get me out of here, but being the book worm I was I bought a book about them which I still have and will read now. Better late than never. So many books, so little time as they say
    "Be kind for everybody is fighting a great battle" Plato

  37. The Following User Says Thank You to Rosemarie For This Post:

    Pam (18th April 2019)

  38. Link to Post #20
    Canada Avalon Member frankstien's Avatar
    Join Date
    25th March 2019
    Location
    Canada
    Posts
    341
    Thanks
    368
    Thanked 1,677 times in 325 posts

    Default Re: What are you reading right now and how is it affecting you? (our own book club, maybe :))

    Quote Posted by Rosemarie (here)
    Frankstein...... thank you for showing me a word in english I had never heard before ! English being my second language I had to go to the dictionary to find out what SMORGABORD meant !

    Don Quixote required reading in Spanish speaking schools ! Sancho Panza and Dulcinea del Toboso who can forget !
    Rabbit Run was in my parents library but never read ! On my List. Just read years ago The Witches of Eastwick
    Smörgåsbord is a type of Scandinavian meal, originating in Sweden, served buffet-style with multiple hot and cold dishes of various foods on a table.

    Don Quixote continues to amaze me. Interesting item I read: Miguel de Cervantes and Shakespeare died on the same day! Many regard Don Quixote as one of the single greatest literary achievements next to the Bard's famous plays and sonnets.

    Here are two rather good film interpretations of Don Quixote--
    The 1933 film--
    https://archive.org/details/DonQuixote

    and Orson Welles version--
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5do-ph6HUcE
    "If the media will show us airplanes disappearing into towers on 9/11--they'll show us ANYTHING and expect us to believe it."
    --frankstien

  39. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to frankstien For This Post:

    Mare (17th October 2020), Rosemarie (8th April 2019)

+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 9 1 9 LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts