- Fri, 12:56: RT @apcoworldwide: We are proud to support @museumofpr’s sixth annual Celebrating Black PR History: Ushering in a New Era of History-Makers…
- Fri, 13:57: RT @jolwalton: Last day day voting for the @BSFA Awards shortlist round. Be the haphazard algorithm surfacing and submerging literary value…
- Fri, 15:00: Cloud Atlas, by David Mitchell I really enjoyed the ride, especially the Belgian and ?Korean bits. #nwbooks https://t.co/Ws5BgDuJ1z https://t.co/pDlHvMH9qy https://t.co/TBugudcenq
- Fri, 15:30: First Man: The Life of Neil Armstrong, by James R. Hansen Armstrong comes across as a very reserved and self-contained person, not in fact well-prepared or well-suited for celebrity, although able to rise to the occasion. #nwbooks https://t.co/NyUrDIV3L5 https://t.co/6wjQCP2Yjp https://t.co/8oS4n8JkpN
- Fri, 16:01: About Time: The Unauthorised Guide to Doctor Who, 1966-1969, by Tat Wood and Lawrence Miles The chapter on every single story has a section devoted to Things That Don’t Make Sense. Sometimes these sections are long. #nwbooks https://t.co/Iuwdr6YQQy https://t.co/LF3GVRHjob https://t.co/4gk1joJGFg
- Fri, 16:05: RT @MSmithsonPB: This is what happens when the person who thought driving that driving to Barnard Castle was the best way to test his eyesi…
- Fri, 16:29: RT @gregrcox: @nwbrux @Heraldofcreatio I love those books.
- Fri, 16:30: The Atrocity Archives, by Charles Stross If I had to choose a single word to describe Charlie’s writing, I think that word would be “unrestrained”. #nwbooks https://t.co/wIL36EU7yv https://t.co/Kmy8m2kPX8 https://t.co/WqPza3P9Dt
- Fri, 17:30: Peeling the Onion, by G�nter Grass A hugely important contribution to understanding how Germany has become the sort of country it is now from the country it once was. #nwbooks https://t.co/3wIiIDFsfd https://t.co/zXrY7kq5F4 https://t.co/FRy70JOOps
- Fri, 17:56: Hooray! Belgian hairdressers reopen from the 13th! https://t.co/KehQNLfe6x
- Fri, 18:00: The Hare with Amber Eyes, by Edmund de Waal It’s quite a remarkable story, tracking the history of the Ephrussi family through the fate of a collection of netsuke from France to Austria and back to Japan. #nwbooks https://t.co/X4EVzYY6P4 https://t.co/teUb2ss93L https://t.co/qNmZNXyfTC
- Fri, 18:17: Friday reading https://t.co/ISyJYS1Kf9
- Fri, 20:35: Just a week ago since the Commission triggered Article 16 and then untriggered it. I’m trying to think of a worse 168 hours for the Commission President since the Santer resignation in 1999, and coming up blank.
- Fri, 20:46: RT @AndrewDuffEU: @nwbrux Ask Hallstein about 1965.
- Fri, 20:48: RT @pmdfoster: So. This week’s exam question: “Can the Northern Ireland Brexit protocol survive?” There’s an easy answer and a harder one…
- Fri, 22:48: RT @bluebox99: 5th February 1973 was the first time ‘The Wombles’ appeared on television. https://t.co/ZgxVt9T3yl
- Sat, 00:36: RT @NOIweala: Grateful for the expression of support from the US today for DG @WTO. Congratulations to Madam Yoo of Rep. Korea for a hard f…
- Sat, 09:30: Whoniversaries 6 February https://t.co/Hd8Ubkw8a9
- Sat, 09:53: RT @GrantLewis1: Getting pretty sick of people who voted for brexit complaining about the effects of brexit
- Sat, 10:45: Debarkle: Introduction @CamestrosFelapton https://t.co/dk6qlTJGXg First in a series about the links between the 2015 Hugo Awards and the 6 January 2021 insurrection.
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