Hope you enjoy the book. That was my former unit. That dealt with the outbreak in Reston VA. Ed Wise was one of the 91T Vet Techs on the USAMRIID response team and, a close friend at the time. Need to look him up. Thanks for the memory trigger.Halfway through “The Hot Zone” by Richard Preston. Fantastic book on the Ebola Virus. Do anyone here use Amazon prime reading? I’m curious about the selection of books, worth the 9.99 a month?
I use the basic selection on Prime and almost always find one worth reading. My favorite thing to use though is my Library Card on Overdrive. Check with your library to see if they participate.Halfway through “The Hot Zone” by Richard Preston. Fantastic book on the Ebola Virus. Do anyone here use Amazon prime reading? I’m curious about the selection of books, worth the 9.99 a month?
Just finished Kinglake-350, by Adrian Hyland. It's an account of the bushfires that killed 170 people just to the North of Melbourne in 2009.
Horrendous, multiple accounts of families with terrified young kids enacting their fire plans, finding themselves way out of their depth when the fire turned out much bigger than anyone ever planned for. Multiple accounts of local coppers sifting through the debris to find the buried remains of families that didn't make it. Entire towns burned to the ground, the toll on the communities after the fact, vast increases in mental health issues, domestic violence, PTSD. A very emotional read.
It has since been removed, but I recall that Ender’s Game was on the Commandment’s required reading list when I was in the Marine Corps.Most military reading list doesn’t include fiction. It should. Imagination and creativity are part of how we interact with our partner forces. Sometimes fiction and sci-fi bring it into clear view.
It has since been removed, but I recall that Ender’s Game was on the Commandment’s required reading list when I was in the Marine Corps.
Just finished Dune. Starting Dune Messiah.
If you’re an aspiring SF soldier, read Dune.
Most military reading list doesn’t include fiction. It should. Imagination and creativity are part of how we interact with our partner forces. Sometimes fiction and sci-fi bring it into clear view.
That's a incredibly dense read. Any reason why you're reading it?Rn I’m reading “The Gulag Archapelago” which documents the stories of people who were sent to gulags during and following WW2
Just finished Dune. Starting Dune Messiah.
If you’re an aspiring SF soldier, read Dune.
Most military reading list doesn’t include fiction. It should. Imagination and creativity are part of how we interact with our partner forces. Sometimes fiction and sci-fi bring it into clear view.
That's a incredibly dense read. Any reason why you're reading it?
LL
I generally stick to science fiction, but currently almost finished with "Forging the Hero"; and halfway through "Violence of Action."
Just because sales have increased doesn't mean people are reading it.If you've heard of the psychologist Jordan Peterson, he loves to talk about it.
I remember reading an article a while back stating that its sales have increased as he has gained popularity.