Queued
@ddykstal interesting choices in that pile, gonna look these up to see what to add to my reading list.
Also: I can’t believe there’s a whole book about knots. 😃
@pimoore I’m heavy on the Le Guin at the moment. I’m about 1/4 of the way through Popova’s “Figuring”.
@pimoore I love her poetry and essays. I’ve only read the her Earthsea fiction and am going to delve into more of that. Jemison is a worthy successor.
@ddykstal I really liked The Lathe of Heaven. I can never look at Mt. Hood now without thinking about it. I have The Left Hand of Darkness on my list too.
@jean I had forgotten that I’d read The Lathe of Heaven ages ago. I remember liking it but I’ve forgotten almost all of the details. I’m looking at The Left Hand of Darkness with a little trepidation. I’m not sure what to expect. I ration her poems since there aren’t many.
@ddykstal Figuring is wonderful! I was at the Boston talk Dan Rather gave for his book. He, and his book, are wonderful, full of avuncular wisdom.
@pimoore @ddykstal If you can't believe there’s a whole book about knots then Ian's Shoelace Site will blow you away. Once I learned to tie the correct knot on my shoelaces, double bows went away and my laces never come undone.
@pimoore There's a library of books on knots. The huge Ashley Book of Knots is the gold standard. (My son was a Scout and we got deeply into this at one point.)
@JMaxB Kind of wish I had read that before my wife and I went on a cottage trip way back when, and had to figure out how to re-tie the knot on the motorboat when we brought it back to the dock.
tl;dr - it didn’t go well.