Whatchu readin bout, Willis?

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_The Nehor
_Emeritus
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Re: Whatchu readin bout, Willis?

Post by _The Nehor »

Bridget Jack Meyers wrote:
The Nehor wrote:Both now. I wasn't a Brandon Sanderson fan until I heard he was finishing the series and read some of his books to find out how he wrote. I like his stuff and eagerly await the end of the Wheel of Time so he can write his extended series.

We usually have lunch with Brandon when he comes to town on tour. My husband will be seeing him on the 28th; alas, I work and have classes that day.

I thoroughly enjoyed the Mistborn trilogy. Warbreaker was likable and delightfully edgy but I didn't quite fall in love with it like I did Mistborn. Haven't read any of his others yet. Haven't read Robert Jordan either, but my husband seems to be a huge fan.


Nice. I liked Mistborn a lot. I actually haven't read Warbreaker...I've got too much to read right now but will probably get around to it. I loved Robert Jordan's books so much I got ahold of the new ones on my Mission and read them. I used to like George R.R. Martin's Song of Ice and Fire a lot but he is so SLOW at putting out new books I've lost interest and the later additions were bad.
"Surely he knows that DCP, The Nehor, Lamanite, and other key apologists..." -Scratch clarifying my status in apologetics
"I admit it; I'm a petty, petty man." -Some Schmo
_Bond James Bond
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Re: Whatchu readin bout, Willis?

Post by _Bond James Bond »

The Nehor wrote:
B23 wrote:Which one are you on? Those books are great.

I just finished McCullough's biography of John Adams and am currently finishing Niall Ferguson's The Cash Nexus.


Third one. Young Julius Caesar is beginning his military career.


Buy and read the next two. The last two are highly optional in my opinion. They drop off quite a bit after Caesar.
Whatever appears to be against the Book of Mormon is going to be overturned at some time in the future. So we can be pretty open minded.-charity 3/7/07

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_Gazelam
_Emeritus
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Re: Whatchu readin bout, Willis?

Post by _Gazelam »

Theres a great used book store here in Vegas that I like to stop in at whenever I go pay my union dues. Checking out the religion section I found a 1933 copy of Clement Wood's "The Woman Who Was Pope"

Its about Pope Joan. She was Pope for about three years, between Leo IV and Benedict III. She apparently was a highly intelligent woman who posed as a man to travel in academic circles. Martin of Troppau wrote:
After the aforesaid Leo, John, an Englishman by descent, who came from Mainz, held the see two years, five months, and four days. And the pontificate was vacant one month. He died at Rome. He, it is asserted, was a woman. And having been in youth taken by her lover to Athens in man's clothes, she made such progress in various sciences that there was nobody equal to her. So that afterwards lecturing on the Trivium, at Rome, she had great masters for her disciples and hearers. And for as much as she was in great esteem in the city, both for her life and her learning, she was unanimously elected Pope.

But while Pope she became pregnant by the person with whom she was intimate. But not knowing the time of her delivery, while going from St. Peter's to the Lateran, being taken in labour, she brought forth a child between the Coliseum and St. Clement's church. And afterwards dying she was, it was said, buried in that place. And because the Lord Pope always turns aside from that way, there are some who are fully persuaded that it is done in detestation of the fact. Nor is she put in the catalogue of the Popes, as well on account of her female sex, as on account of the foul nature of the transaction.
- Chronicon pontificum et imperatorum - A.D.1278

I'm on chapter three at the moment. The early chapters mainly concern themselves with establishing her real existance from records kept in that time period and other facts. Lots of fun stuff such as the horrific stories that surrounded some of the early popes activities.

Image
Pope Joan giving birth during a procession; the female pope surrounded by cardinals at right, the newborn child on the ground; at left the procession and a fool standing behind a column mocking the scene; illustration to an unidentified publication. Strasbourg, 1539
A remake of a 1473 woodcut
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. - Plato
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