Best reads - Club Together Book Club?
Comments
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Another Christmas present and a few lines really resonated with me:
All humans are stupid when it comes to learning formal mathematics. This is the process of taking what evolution has given us and extending our skills beyond what is reasonable. We were not born with any kind of ability to intuitively understand fractions, negative numbers or the many other strange concepts developed by mathematics, but over time your brain can slowly learn how to deal with them.
I wish I had realised that when I first started teaching!
Anyway highly recommended and a good read whatever your mathematical ability is.
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I actually like Maths, except when some plonker borrows library books before me and writes an "s" after Math when the story is set in America but that's beside the point and I'm glad to get it off my chest, so I'll keep an eye out for this. Thanks CS.
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A pleasure, we once had a group of US maths teachers visiting, they asked students if they liked math? In Class after class they were met with blank puzzling looks.
They finally worked it out and one of them said I guess your students don't use the word math, I said as it was a catholic school that to them math is a service they do in church.
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🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
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Missed it, da#n.
Do any of you mathematicians know of a good book on the History of Maths? There must be number of them out there but not sure which is the easiest to understand.
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Ian Rankin's 23rd Rebus book 'A Song For The Dark Times' is in Amazon's Today's Deals for 99p today - Kindle edition.
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..........one day.
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I had a phone call from our library today to say they've got Michael Connelly's latest Micky Haller book "The Law of Innocence" in store for me.
Even better, I'm number 1 on the list for the latest Rebus, having missed it on Kindle the other day. 👍
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Cheers, WN, I missed that! Downloaded now. Just need Last Orders, and I Have Sinned.
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If anyone is looking for something different by a new author I can really recommend "To The Lions" by Holly Watt. It tells the story of an investigative journalist researching killings at a refugee camp in Libya. Sounds a bit grim and, indeed, it is a disturbing topic - the book is a slow burner to start with but suddenly takes off and I couldn't put it down.
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Deleted User. Wrong thread
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I was given a file last year which contained 4000 kindle books. Trouble is i don't have a kindle!
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I keep dropping into Humble Pi the book recommended by Cornersteady every time I finish a book of fiction and before starting a new one. It's acting like a Sorbet, rather than a pudding, and refreshes me mentally.
Mind you I haven't a "Scubby" what he's talking about.
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Picked up "The Law of Innocence" from the library today. Problem is I've just started a new book by Graham Hurley and it seems promising so Mickey Haller will have to wait. I checked the other day and they had me down at 29 in the queue just a week ago so a bit of a surprise.
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Just finished 'The Girl On The Train'. I wonder how much the newspapers were paid by the publisher to write the blurb?
What an absolutely rubbish story line - hopefully I will never be persuade to read a 'best seller' again. Particularly if the press ( New York Times) give it a rave review.
Does anyone else suffer from misleading, descriptive plugs of that nature?
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Why did you read it through to the end? 🤔
I tend to ignore reviews and base my decision to read on the description of the story type.
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I've just returned a book to the library, written by Graham Hurley. Never read one before but ordered 2, different storylines. The first one wasn't to my taste at all and I knew it after the first 30 pages so gave up on it. I started the second one last night and immediately read about 100 pages. Intend to read it to the end.
Both were given rave reviews but like TW I tend to ignore those and concentrate on a few websites that are consistently good at letting you know the score. It's a bit like reading reviews for campsites or CLs. There are some you have to read between the lines and some you just have to find out for yourself.
I don't tend to read "Blockbusters" or "Richard and Judy Recommends". Whose to say their taste is similar to mine?
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Kindle have a M W Craven (Poe and Bradshaw) book on sale for £1.99 called Cut Short. Only problem is that it is 3 short stories in the book and I'm not a big fan of short stories. So do I get it or not? Probably as it's not going to break the bank. Anyone else have my misgivings about short stories?
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Mmm, I like to get immersed in a good long gripping story and I'm sometimes disappointed if they seem to be over quickly. I do read short stories occasionally if they're about characters I've already met and liked in full length books.
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