"The best shield is to accept the pain, then what can really destroy me?"
http://garyufm.blogspot.co.uk
Casualty care in mountain rescue by John Ellerton. I've an exam looming
I tend you read the same books over and over again in a loop. I've just finished reading Persian Fire again.
At the risk of sounding pretentious (moi?!) James Joyce's 'Dubliners' - book group choice, hadn't read it for 30+ years - very good (just don't get it confused with Ulysses!)
"The best shield is to accept the pain, then what can really destroy me?"
http://garyufm.blogspot.co.uk
I'm a big fan of Christopher Brookmyre and Mark Billingham.
A good source of books to swap is http://www.readitswapit.co.uk
Paddy goes for a job on a building site and the foreman asks him: "do you know the difference between a joist and a girder?" To which Paddy replies: " to be sure, Girder wrote Faust and Joist wrote Ulysses."
Tao begets one. One begets two. Two begets all things.
Being the person that has always pretended to be an intellectual, I read Ulysses and I still have it. Should read it again some day, as I have more or less forgotten how bloody hard it was to wrestle my way through it... but somehow, I always seem to have better things to do in bed these days...
I did enjoy Crime and Punishment...
“the cause of my pain, was the cause of my cure” Rumi
But, back on topic, just finished reading the Flying Scotsman, the book about Gaeme Obree, which was an interesting read, as I have just started track cycling and will doing some testing as well this summer... but nowt special.
What I am re-reading right now is Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet... a brilliant book to have at hand to dip into in times of need...
“the cause of my pain, was the cause of my cure” Rumi