- Fri, 12:37: War between Armenia and Azerbaijan faces decisive moment https://t.co/ezmMyHwPbY
- Fri, 12:56: Doctor Who: Time Lord Victorious Graphic Novel Trailer https://t.co/MdjjXpCz2P I’ve already bought and read the two individual issues – it’s great stuff. https://t.co/md77muFHwv https://t.co/epThP2FXEe
- Fri, 13:19: Opinion: Alastair Campbell What Johnson and Corbyn have in common – Powerful and humble from @campbellclaret. https://t.co/UTQN2OBHUy
- Fri, 14:49: RIP Geoffrey Palmer, who appeared in three Doctor Who stories in 1970, 1972 and 2007, and got killed off in all three before even meeting the Doctor. https://t.co/BpIGLwGdBT
- Fri, 15:13: Olympos, by Dan Simmons Crumbs, what a disappointment. Rambling, self-indulgent and most importantly fails to satisfactorily explain What Is Really Going On. For 690 pages. #nwbooks https://t.co/N5HZJLWiRX https://t.co/zE42i6r3HI https://t.co/QqufPPf7GC
- Fri, 15:33: The Merchant of Venice, by William Shakespeare It is a good play, but not a great one. I liked it more than I had expected to. #nwbooks https://t.co/2PaNzIrt41 https://t.co/eaikNhkEvv https://t.co/NH4r7WJnhg
- Fri, 15:53: The Uncommon Reader, by Alan Bennett A lovely little novella about Queen Elizabeth II suddenly deciding to start reading, and the viciously negative reactions of her advisers to her new habit. #nwbooks https://t.co/gsmMimYsJ4 https://t.co/0kvVERYl0o https://t.co/GaZ19pQUxM
- Fri, 16:05: Why I map the Karabakh war https://t.co/t1Cyy2PRyN Fascinating from @ryanmofarrell, who knew nothing about Nagorno-Karabakh two months ago and is now one of the must-follows on the situation.
- Fri, 16:13: The Black Book, by Ian Rankin An excellent Rebus mystery: raking through the ashes of an Edinburgh hotel brings out all kinds of seamy connections between the business elite and Scotland’s criminal underworld. #nwbooks https://t.co/xXn6Vijv4e https://t.co/m5fLiiP41x https://t.co/PLPx9WSKLb
- Fri, 16:33: Queen City Jazz, by Kathleen Ann Goonan Some nice descriptive passages, but I never quite grasped what was going on – setting too peculiar and characters not interesting enough to be worth following. #nwbooks https://t.co/IhcI6Nqh3z https://t.co/ECc0KDjX8c https://t.co/pmxxAoZfmq
- Fri, 16:53: Diana Wynne Jones: The Fantastic Tradition and Children’s Literature, by Farah Mendlesohn An excellent, thorough look at the works of the much-missed author. #nwbooks https://t.co/bA4FNA8CYc https://t.co/ISRqn6XWe6 https://t.co/Q6NAJ5faVc
- Fri, 16:54: RT @SCOTUSblog: For those dreading, or hoping, that a conservative 6-3 Supreme Court with three appointees of Donald Trump will overturn th…
- Fri, 17:11: This is a glorious glorious review, which actually shocked me in a couple of places even though I thought I knew most of it. https://t.co/YDo8b4vTvF
- Fri, 17:13: The Portrait of a Lady, by Henry James Henry James has taken the traditional high-society romance, and recast it quite substantially into a story centred on his heroine, with no happy ending promised. #nwbooks https://t.co/C4rPWL2ZJb https://t.co/20dpc5oFTk https://t.co/mtrEacqJtH
- Fri, 17:33: Antar�s, �pisodes 2-6, by Leo Leo is on top of his game here. #nwbooks https://t.co/7VZY2iSQfQ https://t.co/OlQDEW5DQr https://t.co/fyG1EQZvGq https://t.co/R5TOaeENKg https://t.co/ns5A79ByF4 https://t.co/y4aEe6jHi9 https://t.co/PkOvoV28h8
- Fri, 17:51: The Dark Tower and Other Stories, by C.S. Lewis Title time-travel story was not finished, but would have been interesting; another interesting fragment about Helen’s return to Menelaus after Troy. #nwbooks https://t.co/xBkDn0LQFG https://t.co/f6igTZKz8w https://t.co/VCpgEn8BPz
- Fri, 17:53: Words of Radiance, by Brandon Sanderson Our three viewpoint characters end up together in a factionalised court facing existential threats from mysterious entities. If you have the patience, it’s a good read. #nwbooks https://t.co/0a5VeVM9yJ https://t.co/8MEvvxyyPB https://t.co/iQwlmgYkJz
- Fri, 19:34: October 2008 books https://t.co/vp6YMr7Ugq
- Fri, 20:48: https://t.co/2OM0I9TcfF
- Fri, 22:32: You know that Biden’s people can read what you are tweeting, right? https://t.co/hhSS15cpRZ
- Sat, 05:07: RT @VanityFair: Trump has signaled to allies that the Secret Service will have to drag him from the White House kicking and screaming https…
- Sat, 05:26: RT @FiveThirtyEight: Here’s where we stand: Biden can clinch the presidency by winning either Pennsylvania, or both Arizona and Nevada. An…
- Sat, 09:57: Because Brexit hasn’t gone away either: Time the real enemy as talks enter fateful 10 days https://t.co/1rbUQ8ckiu via @rte
- Sat, 10:30: Missing Man, by Katherine MacLean The setting is remarkable; protagonist’s somewhat seedy character and his feelings of blurred identity when he tries to read the minds of criminals (or their victims) are vivid. #nwbooks https://t.co/5fDLWYeZ0t https://t.co/ZbEYG9t73M https://t.co/0UfrN0BFi8
- Sat, 10:45: Saruman refusing to leave Orthanc, accuses Ents, Hobbits of ‘stealing’ Isengard https://t.co/DnKTmHKY41
- Sat, 11:35: The Days of the Consuls, by Ivo Andrić Life in Andrić’s home town of Travnik as experienced by the Austrian and French consuls during the Napoleonic wars, told mainly from the viewpoint of the foreigners. I liked it. #nwbooks https://t.co/4pQexohY3K https://t.co/kOHa3KSTvd https://t.co/lTO3hJ39UA
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