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James Best
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 02 March 2014
Location: United States
Posts: 932
Posted: 21 June 2017 at 4:22pm | IP Logged | 1 post reply

I miss reading about Moscow finest fictional detective, Inspector Arkady Renko, but even a stand alone novel by Martin Cruz Smith is well worth my time...
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James Best
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 02 March 2014
Location: United States
Posts: 932
Posted: 23 June 2017 at 4:06pm | IP Logged | 2 post reply

Now starting:
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Matthew Chartrand
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 17 June 2007
Location: United States
Posts: 1362
Posted: 23 June 2017 at 5:20pm | IP Logged | 3 post reply


  DRAGON TEETH by Michael Crichton.
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Michael Penn
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 12 April 2006
Location: United States
Posts: 12972
Posted: 23 June 2017 at 5:40pm | IP Logged | 4 post reply


 QUOTE:
Douglas Adams' HITCHHIKERS GUIDE TO THE UNIVERSE

Loved the first one! But each one a little less than its predecessor.
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Robert Cosgrove
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 16 January 2005
Location: United States
Posts: 1710
Posted: 23 June 2017 at 6:19pm | IP Logged | 5 post reply

Finished the audio version of The Wright Brothers by David McCullough, read by McCullogh.  Brad Brickley's summary of the book above pretty much nails it.  Two comments, before I read the book my knowledge of the WB could pretty much be confined to the paragraph or so they get in high school history texts:  two brothers who owned a bicycle shop pull off the first successful powered airplane flight at Kittyhawk.  So much more to the story, and to them, than that.  Neil Armstrong carried a piece of fabric from the wing of WB plane in his spacesuit pocket when he walked on the moon.  Didn't know that.  Neat.
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Wallace Sellars
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 01 May 2004
Location: United States
Posts: 17742
Posted: 24 June 2017 at 7:49am | IP Logged | 6 post reply

Richard Stark's THE BLACK ICE SCORE
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Brian Miller
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 28 July 2004
Location: United States
Posts: 31654
Posted: 24 June 2017 at 8:42am | IP Logged | 7 post reply

I wish I could find a good deal on Stark's books. I really want to read them. 
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Robert Cosgrove
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 16 January 2005
Location: United States
Posts: 1710
Posted: 25 June 2017 at 6:00pm | IP Logged | 8 post reply

Just finished Bill Schelly's handsomely designed and informative book, John Stanley:  Giving Life to Little Lulu.  I met Stanley once, and was too ignorant to be impressed.  If you are a member of the John Byrne forum, it's a good bet you're a superhero fan.  You may also be interested in other genres, but if you're thirty-thirty-five or under you may never have read a John Stanley comic.  If you think you might want to find out about Stanley, there's no better place than this fine book.
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Matthew Chartrand
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 17 June 2007
Location: United States
Posts: 1362
Posted: 26 June 2017 at 5:38pm | IP Logged | 9 post reply



   ARMADA by Ernest Cline.
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Robert Shepherd
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 30 March 2014
Location: United States
Posts: 1267
Posted: 26 June 2017 at 6:35pm | IP Logged | 10 post reply

Last week I finally finished Roger Zalazny's Amber series,

Now I've started Frank Herbert's Dune , first trilogy. I've only read the first book before and that was about 35 years ago.

Muad'Dib
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John Popa
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 20 March 2008
Posts: 4644
Posted: 27 June 2017 at 12:14pm | IP Logged | 11 post reply

"Summer of Night" by Dan Simmons. I read it 20 years or so ago and enjoyed it. Going through it again, it's a little slower than I remembered but Simmons is always a solid writer. The nostalgic 'neighborhood kids against monsters' is very much in the vein of King's "It" and McCammon's "Boy's Life."
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James Best
Byrne Robotics Member


Joined: 02 March 2014
Location: United States
Posts: 932
Posted: 27 June 2017 at 3:31pm | IP Logged | 12 post reply

Now starting:
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