
(On topic...I finished up the Hound of the Baskervilles last week, and I need to dive back into Why Nations Fail at some point soon...)

niceprfsnl_gmr wrote:I finished up the Hound of the Baskervilles last week
dsheinem wrote:niceprfsnl_gmr wrote:I finished up the Hound of the Baskervilles last week
I need to read Baskerville, I had a paperback edition with all of the Sherlock Holmes novels and short stories in their full length, and I got around 500 pages in and put it down. That print was so, so tiny.prfsnl_gmr wrote:dsheinem wrote:niceprfsnl_gmr wrote:I finished up the Hound of the Baskervilles last weekIt was a really fun book, BTW...easily my favorite of the Sherlock Holmes novels.
My BST ThreadHobie-wan wrote:Milk the banana for all it's worth.






This one slipped me by. Must get it! *scrambles for wish-list*dsheinem wrote:I really should post in here more often...
I just finished up Brendan Keogh's "Killing is Harmless: A Critical Reading of Spec Ops: The Line" which you can probably read in a few sittings, but is nonetheless fascinating on several levels. It captures much of what I felt while playing the game, it offers a version of long form criticism on games that is compelling as a model, and it provides a very ethnographic approach to evaluating a single-player game. Spec Ops: The Line is probably one of my top ten games of this generation, and this book is one of the more interesting game-related books I've read (and I've read a lot, especially lately). Anyway, it's Kindle-only and just $4.99 on Amazon, so consider giving it a look!
