Here are some books that you might enjoy...Spyder Web (written by Tom
Grace)- Burn(linda Howard) -A Rogue of my own(Johanna Lindsey)-Process and
Reality(alfred North whitehead)
Forest Canopies (Magaret Lowman)-Cenozoic basins of the Death Valley
region(lauren albert wright-Troyxel Wyatt)-The Crossing (Cormac McCathy)
On Sun, Aug 2, 2009 at 2:14 PM, puppy <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>  In Malcolm Lowrys novel U,nder the Volcano, written in 1938, Godfrey
> Fermin, a former American Consul, living in the town of Cahnahauca
> Mexico, is spending his last day on earth in The Faralito, a sordid
> dark tavern next to a deep barranca.  The barranca's steep incline is
> an tangle of thick jungle, at the bottom a sluggish stream  flows
> toward the sea.
>   The consul is an dipsomaniac and on the terminal end of a
> monumental mescal drunk   His slow tango with mescal is about to be
> concluded.  The consul is going to be assassinated and thrown into the
> deep barranca because, in a drunken stupor, he naively mentioned, to
> the bar owner, he was in Madrid; a stronghold of the Spanish
> Republicans, Communists, Trotskyites and the International Brigades,
> who were the first to fight fascism, during the Spanish Civil War.
>    A number of Federal  soldiers are huddle together, in dusty
> uniforms, at the far end of the bar voices dropped to a inaudible
> murmur talking about Fremin because the Faralitos owner had told them
> about his causal conversation with Fermin, and they are now beginning
> to suspect the consul is either a Troskyite or a Communist or a former
> member of the International Brigades.  Poison words to the militaries
> who supported the dictator of Mexico during the 1930s.  Occasionally
> one of them turns to look at the Consul, sitting at a table drinking
> mescal and reading the love letters of his wife
>    Fermin is the prisoner of mescal and is familiar with delirium
> tremens and its world of hallucinations, the late night crys of
> animals being slaughtered in the kitchen of his house, and  the
> hundreds of dead cattle now posed on the slope of a hill opposite The
> Faralito.  But the consul, despite these apparitions,  and the months
> of submersion in mescal, still manages to think of love.  He is
> reading the love letters of a wife he is separated from, not as the
> source of a possible revival-which is impossible because his life has
> been taken by mescal- but as a love dead of true  lovet and the dismal
> memories of a lost soul.
>   Yet, he is still able in his sodden mind to think about the wonder
> of love. “What is there in life besides the person who one adores and
> the life one can build with that person?“ his wife writes.  But he is
> no longer a participant in the pageant of love.  There is nothing left
> of life to build on.
>
> On Jul 31, 3:25 pm, frantheman <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I've a couple of weeks holidays coming up ta the end of August and
> > would be interested to hear some reading suggestions. But, as one
> > shouldn't take without giving, I thought I'd get the ball rolling with
> > a brief description of some of the books I've found good in the past
> > few months ;-)
> >
> > Harry Thompson, This Thing of Darkness: I owe this tip to Ian - thanks
> > mate! A well researched, very well written historical novel, based
> > mainly on the voyage of the Beagle and the lives of its captain,
> > Robert FitzRoy and his most famous passenger, Charles Darwin. The
> > character of FitzRoy, an interesting historical figure in his own
> > right, is particularly well done. Sadly, there will be no more gems
> > from this author, as he died tragically young four years ago.
> >
> > Tom Holland, Persian Fire: Who says ancient history is boring?
> > Holland's excellent book describing the war between east and west, a
> > war between a superpower representing then civilised values (the
> > Persian empire) against barbarian rogue states (Athens and Sparta)
> > challenging the world order reads like a thriller. His previous work,
> > Rubicon, about the fall of the Roman Republic is equally good. I'm
> > loking forward to reading his latest, Millenium, about the early
> > European Middle Ages, featuring the crusades.
> >
> > Patrick Rothfuss, The Name of the Wind: This is the best fantasy book
> > I've read in a long time (and I read quite a bit of fantasy).
> > Extremely well written, it's hard to describe. As the author himself
> > says, "If I could sum it up in 50 words, I wouldn't have needed to
> > write a whole novel about it." The first of a trilogy, the second part
> > of which is due out this summer, it's simply an amazing first novel.
> >
> > Daniel C. Dennett, Consciousness Explained: For anyone wanting to get
> > into contemporary philosophy, and particularly the vexed questions of
> > consciousness and epistemology, this is a very good starting point.
> > Dennett's position is unashamedly empirical (he identifies himself as
> > a Bright and is a pal of Dawkins [though a much more incisive
> > thinker]) but, more importantly, he also, unusually for a philosopher,
> > writes lucidly, entertainingly and well.
> >
> > Mary Doria Russell, The Sparrow/Children of God: These two have to be
> > read together. Wonderful science fiction, the hero being a Jesuit
> > scientist whose first contact with an alien civilisation brings his
> > faith into fundamental crisis. The books take a sympathetic position
> > regarding rational faith in a personal God, although the author
> > describes herself as an agnostic. Many issues discussed on Minds Eye
> > come up here, along with complex characters, a compelling story and
> > good science fiction.
> >
> > So, what about you?
> >
> > Francis
> >
>

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