- Sat, 12:56: RT @Mikepeeljourno: A striking image. Session on “A New transatlantic agenda” at the Munich security conference – with the leaders of the U…
- Sat, 15:23: Who Framed Roger Rabbit, and the books https://t.co/o8vJ3YJWq5
- Sat, 15:56: Pattern Recognition by William Gibson Enjoyed the central character’s unrooted, cosmopolitan, thoroughly *wired* existence, as she tracks down the reality behind a mysterious set of internet postings. #nwbooks https://t.co/ayKIDqNZRW https://t.co/k1XaOxyO7Y https://t.co/NmVguEGbBF
- Sat, 16:19: Theft of A Nation: Romania since Communism, by Tom Gallagher [2005] For what it’s worth I think he’s right to be very worried about the consequences for the EU of Romanian membership, but wrong to be too apocalyptic. #nwbooks https://t.co/qOhjaDOQvd https://t.co/HPSxrK4jvA https://t.co/eAjj1oRAEc
- Sat, 16:42: 100%, by Paul Pope It’s a very well done story of six people, forming and unforming as couples, in New York in the year 2038. #nwbooks https://t.co/q5K6EfsVaw https://t.co/aC8ixjl53J https://t.co/QgF28WgCmQ
- Sat, 16:53: RT @Petrit: Oh. One of the best ever. I have the original comics. Heavy Liquid too. I love his late Battling Boy too and horror stories wit…
- Sat, 17:05: Mansfield Park, by Jane Austen It is a peculiar case: some very interesting characters and family dynamics, with a wealth of layered detail, but I found the basic social message of the book rather uncongenial. #nwbooks https://t.co/5kdUhieKU2 https://t.co/4OwO2dvihG https://t.co/vlbcZhUJHo
- Sat, 17:28: Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave This is a tremendously important book. The narrative is brief but gripping, and basically speaks for itself; everyone should read it. #nwbooks https://t.co/LpnIx5hsNM https://t.co/RHlph3ur25 https://t.co/HSATXVVQOI
- Sat, 17:30: RT @unamccormack: @nwbrux I think it’s her best book.
- Sat, 17:51: The Islanders, by Christopher Priest Though presented as a gazetteer of islands in the Dream Archipelago, where time swirls and nomenclature is unstable, there is actually a story here. I found it very satisfying. #nwbooks https://t.co/rkwjh2j1IW https://t.co/W2ALwNkjYN https://t.co/YZWZsTwzyP
- Sat, 18:14: The Red and the Black, by Stendhal I have to say that while it was well written, I didn’t really like any of the characters much, nor really understand why they felt compelled to play roles rather than be themselves. #nwbooks https://t.co/pKmbh6QR9K https://t.co/hyoGjtSB5d https://t.co/oQm2PZG29u
- Sat, 18:15: You still can’t have nine things first. That’s not what “first” means. https://t.co/RNbnjSDPkS https://t.co/d5CWpwRWj1
- Sat, 18:37: Empty Space: A Haunting, by M. John Harrison I found it a little more to my taste than Light, but that is not saying much; I found the characters unengaging, and I had difficulty following the plot(s). #nwbooks https://t.co/AW9IV4wGDL https://t.co/WeZmuvAd9B https://t.co/DIjPyXwX9s
- Sat, 18:56: RT @conbrunstrom: @nwbrux I just looked him up. He’s campaigning to kill a great many people – isn’t he?
- Sat, 19:00: Selangor, by Gerry Barton A well-meaning novel. Chap gets sucked into the local Rajah’s dubious money-raising schemes; his wife gets stuck into an archaeological dig led by a visiting Englishman, with inevitable results. #nwbooks https://t.co/mF21ZaCY3z https://t.co/2UADfcVNsh https://t.co/iMPl3g8MAp
- Sat, 22:12: 330 days of plague: spring on its way https://t.co/OIp1JGzidc
- Sun, 09:30: Whoniversaries 21 February https://t.co/04Th8y4pnA
- Sun, 10:02: RT @tortoise: Bridling backbenchers, virus variants, and a Chancellor who thinks he has The Force. There are a few reasons why Boris Johns…
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