- Fri, 12:56: How performers lost out in ‘eye for an eye’ Brexit talks https://t.co/zOZniIe0Bn In brief, there was inflexibility on both sides. (Though more from London.)
- Fri, 14:59: Blowing My Cover: My Life As A CIA Spy, and other misadventures, by Lindsay Moran Lindsay Moran made a bad career choice, took a few years to realise it, and eventually did realise it. #nwbooks https://t.co/doTbb4YcyE https://t.co/7gc5AbHz33 https://t.co/hJ1xRfGsGm
- Fri, 15:25: Europe and the Recognition of New States in Yugoslavia, by Richard Caplan Good book. Caplan explains what the European policy was in theory and practice, ending with a consideration of the effectiveness of conditionality. #nwbooks https://t.co/jmHeE9Nm9j https://t.co/kvzUDlfGtk https://t.co/BnOK9V5SUo
- Fri, 15:51: Murder at the Worldcon, by J.D. Crayne This is basically a country-house murder mystery except that the setting is not a country house but a mid-1960s WorldCon. A fun and fairly brief read. #nwbooks https://t.co/spM6OnAJFI https://t.co/GPGD3Eledx https://t.co/oTYtJRInvh
- Fri, 16:17: Preacher: Ancient History, by Garth Ennis Altogether more enjoyable than any of the previous volumes, I thought, and in fact I would recommend readers wanting to get to know the series to start with this volume. #nwbooks https://t.co/RB0vsjv3nb https://t.co/8D0GSHap85 https://t.co/2kacmIlqRr
- Fri, 16:43: The Invisibles: Say You want A Revolution, by Grant Morrison Dane McGowan, high-school drop-out, is recruited by the Invisibles, a motley group of eccentrics with super-powers working behind the scenes of world politics. #nwbooks https://t.co/hqL9lns1Ut https://t.co/Sife7zU9AT https://t.co/YyINoTuVJs
- Fri, 17:09: The Push by Dave Hutchinson Excellent hard sf novella; the narrator has spent decades fleeing his own past, and it catches up with him – the dumb aliens on the planet he helped colonise turn out not so dumb after all. #nwbooks https://t.co/o9wNiYdpbT https://t.co/6UcqOcdwsS https://t.co/mKBBiOLJVy
- Fri, 17:35: Snuff, by Terry Pratchett I really enjoyed the combination of toilet humour with cold clinical rage against racial injustice; I got a little lost with some of the topography of the river. #nwbooks https://t.co/h5209LXUOW https://t.co/lDzDmxi1ky https://t.co/M3H65OGbqJ
- Fri, 18:00: RT @worldcon2021: DisCon III absolutely condemns the violent and hostile content found within Baen Books’ forums. The behavior shown goes a…
- Fri, 18:00: RT @worldcon2021: We want to thank our members for their feedback on the matter and their patience while we worked to take action. Read o…
- Fri, 18:01: London Falling, by Paul Cornell Slow start but otherwise brilliantly done, combining police procedural (including the details of the coppers’ private lives intertwining with the details of the case) with eldritch magic. #nwbooks https://t.co/HLTOy75Yml https://t.co/X9W9j39Mz2 https://t.co/o5dHxx0fyQ
- Fri, 18:11: Friday reading https://t.co/tAhg3ZLMNf
- Fri, 18:23: T.K. Whitaker: Portrait of a Patriot, by Anne Chambers https://t.co/nSL31zLDK7
- Fri, 18:36: Friday reading https://t.co/U2SzwVYHwD
- Sat, 08:25: RT @Yagathai: Welp, Worldcon did the thing and cut Toni as Guest of Honor. This is a Huge Freaking Deal in Worldcon culture, and will cause…
- Sat, 09:30: Whoniversaries 20 February https://t.co/FkZW62Aep5
- Sat, 10:45: RT @jdmccafferty: 12 May 1563: Christopher Nugent, 5th Baron Delvin matriculates at Clare College Cambridge #otd where he probably composed…
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