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Thom@kirja.casa

Joined 2 years, 11 months ago

At any given time, I am probably reading one book in paper form, another as an audio book, and another on an e-reader. I also keep an anthology or collection in my car, for those long waits. My average rating is between 3 and 4, because I try to seek out good books and authors. One goal is to read all the SF award winners and SF Masterworks. See my profile at Worlds Without End.

Finally, the "social media" info - I am a long-time reader, proud to have completed several summer reading programs as a kid. I recall reading more than 50 books one summer. When I'm not reading, you might find me gaming (board and role play) or working, either as a baseball umpire or with software.

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Before. Miles “Pudge” Halter is done with his safe life at home. His whole life …

Review of 'Looking for Alaska' on 'Goodreads'

Having never read John Green, I picked this up, probably on somebody's recommendation. This was 10 years ago, and I was not a young adult at the time. Inside the front cover was a post-it note. "This is the best young adult book ever written. Really."

Miles has transferred to a new preparatory school, and John Green uses this to introduce the reader to the wonderful characters, including the titular Alaska Young. As counterpoint to the social interactions, the class with the most focus is religious studies. There are no chapters, only sections, each labeled with a decreasing number of days "before" - so the reader knows something is coming - and later a number of days "after". I didn't read ahead to find out what, and suggest you don't either.

Character interactions with each other, with adults, and with their schoolwork really define the novel and breathe life into …

Robert S. Feldman: The liar in your life (2009, Twelve)

"One of the nation's leading authorities on lying describes and explains the prevalence and consequences …

Review of 'The liar in your life' on 'Goodreads'

The gist - if something is important, assess the truth of it. The advice - try to be more honest. Lots of anecdotes, lots of psych studies, and an attempt to name each kind of lying - a "lie with intent" for instance. An interesting read.