Miss 1940's
Practically Family
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"Valley of the Dolls"
That Book is something eles!
That Book is something eles!
LizzieMaine said:Starting in on "Peaches and Daddy," Michael Greenburg's hilarious examination of what was probably the absolute rock-bottom lowest ebb of 1920's pop-culture -- the national wallow, over the winter of 1926-27, in the unedifying story of a wealthy pot-bellied middle-aged Manhattan lecher, his blowsy, gold-digging teenage wife, and their pet African Honking Goose. If you think sleazy tabloid journalism is a development of the modern era, "Peaches and Daddy" will show you different.
xylophone and zebra?K.D. Lightner said:I am finally getting around to reading the latest Sue Graton novel, T is for Trespass.
I've read all the other books in Grafton's Kinsey Milhone series, A through S; it will be interesting what she will pick for X and Z in her titles.
karol
dhermann1 said:Having just finished Victor Davis Hanson's "A War Like No Other", about the Peloponnesian War, I just started Basil Liddell Hart's "History of the First World War". I thought I'd like a change in scenery. Liddell Hart was a young junior officer in the war, and was invalided out of the regular army in 1923. He became one of Btritain's most far seeing experts on the art of war. If some of his ideas had been followed in the 1930's countless British, and other, lives could have been saved.
The book was publisehd in 1930 as "The Real War", and revised and enlarged, with the new title, in 1934. It is full of startling insights. In many ways WW I was a greater shock to the world than the much larger Second World War.
Anyhow, it's a great, informative and vivid read.
Having just done a few little edits, and added a title to the post, it occurs to me that Liddell Hart could not have originally entitled the book "First World War", because at that time there was no second war to compare it to. It was actually called "History of the World War", according to the title page. Whatever.
haa just read 20,000 (its seas btw) invisible man, time machine. now on The Geographers LibraryMatthew Dalton said:I'm reading The Count of Monte Cristo and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
John Boyer said:The Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller
Sunny said:Exile's Gate by C. J. Cherryh. For about the 4th time in less than 18 months.