AmyStrange
Philosopher
Oh, nice! Really hope you like it now that I've sung its praises so stronglyLet me know!
Will do, and thanks again.
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Oh, nice! Really hope you like it now that I've sung its praises so stronglyLet me know!
Ouch. I don't know where you get your books from, but maybe check different bookstores? Other than that, you could possibly buy it for Kindle or as an audio book? I dislike Amazon, but I've ended up using Audible, and the edition narrated by Ari Fliakos is just great.After I finish that one, I was going to read the I'm Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom, but I forgot that I had it on hold, and it wasn't readily available yet. It's like a 12 week wait!
Ouch. I don't know where you get your books from, but maybe check different bookstores? Other than that, you could possibly buy it for Kindle or as an audio book? I dislike Amazon, but I've ended up using Audible, and the edition narrated by Ari Fliakos is just great.
Aaaaah, I only read your list of books now and saw you were getting it from the library. I was wondering what kind of bookstore or whatever could have a 12 week wait time, and why you didn't just pick a different one. It all makes sense now!
www.planetary.org
Nearly finished reading 'Aliens' by Ron Miller. The book is a scientific study of belief in aliens, and to save you time reading it the conclusions are that there are probably countless inhabited planets but it is unlikely aliens have actually visited us due to the vast distance between stars.
There have been over 2000 habitable planets discovered, and based on this the estimate is there could be two billion habitable planets in our galaxy.
The book contains the web address of planethunters.org so that you can participate in the search for more planets on your home computer.
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Planet Hunters home page
Visit http://www.planethunters.org/ to start hunting planets!www.planetary.org
There is also another page to search for planets SETI@Home
There's a thematically similar series, YA aimed, by Richard Roberts.I just got done reading Moby Dick, and I don't know about anyone else, but I was actually rooting for the whale in the end.
Now, I'm going to begin reading Mayhem and Madness: Chronicles of a Teenaged Supervillain, because I've got it on loan from the local library, and I only have a week and a half to go. Of course, I had to finish Moby Dick first, even though I got the e-book through a free e-book site, Project Gutenberg.
After I finish that one, I was going to read the I'm Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom, but I forgot that I had it on hold, and it wasn't readily available yet. It's like a 12 week wait!
Damn it! That makes me so mad!
In case anyone is interested, here is the list of all the books that I've read (in the order that I've read or will read them) since the beginning of the summer (most of them I already read in high school), and also my future reads:
I started with 1984, Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Dracula, Lord of the Flies, A Good Girl's Guide to Murder (I recently watched the Netflix series that was based on it), Frankenstein, The House of the Seven Gables (I actually toured the house--including the secret passage--that the novel was based on, but according to the book, it was only one of three houses and not the only one), A Study in Scarlet, the Hound of the Baskervilles, The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, Moby Dick, Mayhem and Madness: Chronicles of a Teenaged Supervillain, Murders in the Rue Morgue, Oliver Twist, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Swiss family Robinson, Treasure Island, and ending with War and Peace (this will be my second time reading this one).
Plus, the following books as I get them from the library: To Kill A Mockingbird, Fahrenheit 451, Spy School, James, and finally, I'm Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom.
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There's a thematically similar series, YA aimed, by Richard Roberts.
Please Don't Tell My Parents Series by Richard Roberts
I Did NOT Give That Spider Superhuman Intelligence! (Please Don't Tell My Parents, #0.5), Please Don't Tell My Parents I'm a Supervillain (Please Don't ...www.goodreads.com
The Spider book isn't necessary to read the series, it's set rather earlier and introduces some of the supporting characters.Yup, I saw your post about that, and the first book in the series is my next read. I already have the e-book on loan from the library and ready to go. Thanx for the suggestion.
ETA: The library doesn't have the second book in the series, or at least not yet anyway, and I hate reading a series out of order. Ok, it looks like the spider superhuman book is first, but I've already got Please Don't Tell My Parents I'm a Supervillain on my Kindle, so it looks like I'll be forced to read the series out of order, damn it!
Ok, I tried getting the Spidey book, but my library doesn't have that one yet either, but I put a "notify me" tag on both books and hopefully they'll get them soon.
They do have them in audiobooks, but I can't do those, because unfortunately, my mind wanders when I'm listening to them, and I'm always losing my place. I spend too much time looking for where I got lost, and that's just too much of a pain to deal with, so I'd rather read the Kindle versions instead.
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The Spider book isn't necessary to read the series, it's set rather earlier and introduces some of the supporting characters.
Just out of curiousity, is "I'm starting to worry..." really different from his other works? I'm asking because I'm reading Storygraph reviews at the moment, and a fair few of the more negative reviews seem to start with "I'm a big fan of his other books, but...". To be fair, I haven't actually read the reviews because I'm wary of reading negative reviews for works I love, out of fear they'll actually influence me into liking them lessI can give a full thumbs up for "I'm Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom" and everything else by Jason Pargin.