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"Recent Distractions"

10 Comments -

1 – 10 of 10
OpenID coraifeartaigh said...

just re-read 'Enigma'this week - couldn't get over how good it was. Thought Larsen's book over-rated
regards, Cormac

10:36 AM, July 22, 2010

Blogger Bee said...

Haven't read any ratings of Larsen's book, thus hard to say if it was over-rated. I don't usually read murder mysteries, but I found it a good story. Didn't read Enigma. I guess I had to read too much WWII stuff in school. Best,

B.

11:31 AM, July 22, 2010

Blogger Steven Colyer said...

The late Larson's book is selling very well in America.

In a bit off-topic news ... looks like somebody at a journal that printed your work Bee is attacking one foundation of Loop quantum Gravity, here. Some seem to feel the idea of a big bounce is unwelcome. :-)

2:38 PM, July 22, 2010

Blogger Bee said...

I'm not surprised. The big bounce is not an idea that everybody gets along with well, and there have been arguments about the derivation as long as I can remember hearing talks. I haven't read that paper (and probably won't) but it's good the discussion goes in print. Best,

B.

2:05 AM, July 23, 2010

Blogger Phil Warnell said...

Hi Bee,


Well when it comes to reading it’s obvious you put me to shame as I don’t seem to find the time or have the inclination to read much fiction. That said I always meant to read the Hitch Hiker’s guide as it became a part of the culture of an entire generation. I have a son-in-law for instance who makes reference to it and don’t have a clue what he’s talking about. I also have the feeling that you’re reading speed is much quicker than mine, even in English; now that’s a depressing thought :-)

Best,

Phil

6:29 AM, July 23, 2010

Blogger Steven Colyer said...

Elchtest: Ein Jahr in Bullerbü translated into English is:

Elk: One year in Noisy Village

... according to Google Translate. :-)

Myself, I'm reading Farmelo's The Strangest Man, being a great biography of Paul Dirac, this summer.

That book is so fine I never want it to end!

"That boat isn't finished."
... Pail Dirac, to Niels Bohr, looking at a French impressionist painting in an art museum Bohr took him to, circa 1927.

So I'm reading it slow (lest it end too soon), along with Fearful Symmetry by Ash about the Galois Group G. To bring balance to the force.

12:47 PM, July 23, 2010

Blogger Steven Colyer said...

Or as Dirac would say: "Symmetry."

12:48 PM, July 23, 2010

Blogger Bee said...

"Bullerbü" is a village from the children's books of Astrid Lindgren, the probably most famous Swedish author ever. Lindgren's stories were very popular in Germany. I believe the literal translation you got is correct, but in the book title it stands for the Swedish paradise per se. Best,

B.

3:59 AM, July 24, 2010

Blogger Bee said...

Hi Phil,

I don't usually read that many novels either, it's probably a combination of having been repeatedly sick, presents from friends and relatives piling up, and insomnia related to lack or over-abundance of light that increased my reading output. Then I thought I could as well just dump it here (now the friends and relatives know I've finally read their book).

The Hitchhiker's Guide is amusing and full of fantasy. I really like Douglas Adam's humor, though I usually don't like books that are just written for the jokes. I believe they made at least the first part into a movie, at least I seem to have vague recollections of seeing one. Best,

B.

4:11 AM, July 24, 2010

Blogger Phil Warnell said...

Hi Bee,

So you have a tendency to read more when not feeling your best, I wished I could do that for it would certainly turn a minus into a plus. Also I keep forgetting how much further north Stockholm is then Waterloo, having it in summer nearly becoming a land of the midnight sun. You speak about Adam’s Hitch Hiker’s Guide in respect to its humour yet I’m under the impression he has developed a cult like following from a philosophical perspective with the humour being mostly of a satirical bend and intent. Anyway it is something I should find the time to read if only to understand what he’s saying about the human condition that so many seem to identify with. Then again for that matter the act of reading books of any description these days finds those that still do on regular bases as part of a subculture :-)

Best,

Phil
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7:18 AM, July 24, 2010

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