- Sun, 12:56: Very interesting. (h/t @ChairmanYaffle) https://t.co/Hw6JqoQD5M
- Sun, 13:45: Vineland, by Thomas Pynchon Sorry, this just doesn’t do it for me. Writing style too convoluted, characters wacky in a rather uninteresting way, plot non-existent. #nwbooks https://t.co/RVcOKksW4u https://t.co/JqABSqZXHV https://t.co/cBuyBXShp4
- Sun, 14:20: MMR: Science & Fiction: Exploring a Vaccine Crisis, by Richard Horton Horton tries to use the MMR affair as a lens through which to examine justice, truth and the public perception of science. I don’t think he succeeds. #nwbooks https://t.co/GU7Bh1QH7w https://t.co/04StVcO8Le https://t.co/Eb2cruhD5K
- Sun, 14:48: Good summary of where we are and where we may go. https://t.co/yhT8lxiC1d
- Sun, 14:55: Falling Free, by Lois McMaster Bujold A feel-good engineering novel with a social twist: our hero must defeat the evil man from management & rescue hundreds of genetically modified children & teenagers from certain doom. #nwbooks https://t.co/7cMm75DYs8 https://t.co/sMFC6d4D7o https://t.co/lLHKc5JHbz
- Sun, 15:05: August 2008 books https://t.co/0xdDYWlt9C
- Sun, 15:21: Before the museums all close… (@ Biblioth�que royale de Belgique / Koninklijke Bibliotheek van Belgi� – @kbrbe in Brussels) https://t.co/qE6YL8hc5p https://t.co/PrOdwhDval
- Sun, 15:30: The Strangest Man, by Graham Farmelo Farmelo tries to explain how Paul Dirac, from a modest background, with no family history of contributions to science, revolutionised how we think about the fundamentals of existence. #nwbooks https://t.co/Mlo5fMk07D https://t.co/5LAqSX9yYT https://t.co/yGebIi5fuf
- Sun, 16:05: Winter Song, by Colin Harvey I liked this book a lot: protagonist from sophisticated spacefaring society crashes into Viking-style world, and then must track down the long-abandoned spaceship. #nwbooks https://t.co/8llZxfhYNA https://t.co/NxGJqDJkoU https://t.co/C7TBg2pnII
- Sun, 16:37: RT @MSmithsonPB: Latest WH2020 early voting. Nationally, voters have cast 42.6% of the total votes counted in the 2016 general election. In…
- Sun, 16:40: 2017 Hugo Best Novel finalists I voted for All the Birds in the Sky by @charliejane. #nwbooks https://t.co/rD9vcwJsuP https://t.co/5nGtWc7Gcm https://t.co/KrD5FNezFt https://t.co/52IOEdtZJq https://t.co/Jd0pxAogDW https://t.co/pi4ZwKitzK https://t.co/bTIQazW021 https://t.co/wUOFwTuY57
- Sun, 16:48: RT @NotAdric: This is a very good book. I’d forgotten about that very rational and logical letter to his future wife.
- Sun, 17:15: Sodom and Gomorrah, by Marcel Proust Sodom and Gomorrah respectively are male homosexuality and lesbianism; the plot moves from one to the other. Proust captures very well the paranoia of someone newly in lust. #nwbooks https://t.co/wWopaXEGc0 https://t.co/GBMRtMG5h4 https://t.co/DNU4m10mwu
- Sun, 17:50: Fr�d�gonde, La sanguinaire, vols 1 and 2, by Virginie Greiner and Alessia de Vincenzi The first volume is well-paced, but the end of the second book in particular feels rather rushed. #nwbooks https://t.co/LKW5tqE5ib https://t.co/gShI1iWgKL https://t.co/6XfgoIwgIg https://t.co/DU2OOBIQmA
- Sun, 18:59: RT @0tralala: @nwbrux His book Churchill’s Bomb is very good, too. We had Graham on our doc about HG Wells and the H-Bomb: https://t.co/iqK…
- Sun, 20:48: RT @etiennefd: Sometimes I think of how cakes are a miracle. Take a pound cake. It’s made of equal amounts (one pound each) of four ingred…
- Mon, 08:30: Whoniversaries 26 October: Towers #4, Remembrance #4, Death #2, the O.K. Corral https://t.co/DaxwJZtKra
- Mon, 10:39: RT @Tom_deWaal: Aggressive speech by Pres. Aliyev sends message: War goes on, on his terms, towards Lachin and encirclement of #Karabakh. T…
- Mon, 10:45: Brussels bans trick-or-treating in coronavirus crackdown – POLITICO https://t.co/0QmAHUwGcf doesn’t apply to us in Flanders, but I expect we’ll get something similar soon enough.
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