It Mark Twain's autobiography any good?
I'm assuming someone here would have read volume I by now.
I'm assuming someone here would have read volume I by now.
It's about 2000 pages long...AussieReaper wrote:
It Mark Twain's autobiography any good?
I'm assuming someone here would have read volume I by now.
imagine how i feelJohnG@lt wrote:
It's about 2000 pages long...AussieReaper wrote:
It Mark Twain's autobiography any good?
I'm assuming someone here would have read volume I by now.
done.Kmar wrote:
Verify your email at goodreads uzi
Last edited by dayarath (2011-01-07 14:29:34)
It's a great book, so is generation killdayarath wrote:
On the other hand Dilbert right now I'm reading Lone Survivor and being only 40 pages in it's one hell of a well-written eyewitness account to what took place in Iraq/Afghanistan. I would definitely recommend it to you as opposed to the views of a journalist who has never even been anywhere near a terrorist (definitely not in the same way as people who are sent to do their duties over there... imo their opinions aren't heard or asked for enough, at all).
Arrived in the mail today and although it has an extremely nationalistic opening (I dont mind tbh) I had a pretty hard time putting down the book to do something else. One page in and I was hooked.
Last edited by JohnG@lt (2011-01-07 15:04:56)
noJohnG@lt wrote:
generation kill
Did you read the book? It's fantastic.11 Bravo wrote:
noJohnG@lt wrote:
generation kill
Poseidon wrote:
I still need to read Lone Survivor. Michael Murphy is was my good friend's cousin.
I know. I felt bad doing that.Poseidon wrote:
Dick.
yet ya did it anywayJohnG@lt wrote:
I know. I felt bad doing that.Poseidon wrote:
Dick.
Accounts of individual battles are not so interesting as the overall strategy - we're still in Afghanistan 10 years on and getting nowhere - cool firefights don't necessarily help.dayarath wrote:
On the other hand Dilbert right now I'm reading Lone Survivor and being only 40 pages in it's one hell of a well-written eyewitness account to what took place in Iraq/Afghanistan. I would definitely recommend it to you as opposed to the views of a journalist who has never even been anywhere near a terrorist (definitely not in the same way as people who are sent to do their duties over there... imo their opinions aren't heard or asked for enough, at all).
I'll have a look at it, from the review it looks like he's asking the same questions, we'll see if he gets the same answers.Kmar wrote:
I recommend anything by Ralph Peters to Dil.. that is if he is like me and enjoys reading opposing views.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2011-01-07 23:09:49)
I can't disagree with that.Dilbert_X wrote:
the US seems to have set out to make it as bad as possible.
And so on.
The book doesn't simply focus on the individual account of what took place. Wasn't a 'cool firefight' either.Dilbert_X wrote:
Accounts of individual battles are not so interesting as the overall strategy - we're still in Afghanistan 10 years on and getting nowhere - cool firefights don't necessarily help.
What gave it away http://www.goodreads.com/review/list/4728394?page=1JohnG@lt wrote:
Communist Manifesto eh?
It's a short book. Shouldn't take you more than a few hours honestly.Kmar wrote:
What gave it away http://www.goodreads.com/review/list/4728394?page=1JohnG@lt wrote:
Communist Manifesto eh?
Yes, if you haven't noticed I've dived into political theology lately. I'm actually listening to it on audiobook.