What are you reading tonight?

If you have a life outside of BWFC, then this is the place to tell us all about your toilet habits, and those bizarre fetishes.......

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Bruno
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Post by Bruno » Sun Oct 11, 2009 6:24 pm

Bruce Rioja wrote:
Verbal wrote:Today I'm reading about political corruption and the mafia in 20th Century Italy.
That'll be a weighty tome, I shouldn't wonder! :shock:
Have you read that recent one set in Naples? Gomorra I think it was called - made into a superb film.

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Post by Verbal » Sun Oct 11, 2009 7:40 pm

Bruce Rioja wrote:
Verbal wrote:Today I'm reading about political corruption and the mafia in 20th Century Italy.
That'll be a weighty tome, I shouldn't wonder! :shock:
uni work innit. If it wasn't so bloody interesting I would have given up by now too (and we haven't even covered Berlusconi yet!)
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Post by Verbal » Sun Oct 11, 2009 7:41 pm

Bruno wrote:
Bruce Rioja wrote:
Verbal wrote:Today I'm reading about political corruption and the mafia in 20th Century Italy.
That'll be a weighty tome, I shouldn't wonder! :shock:
Have you read that recent one set in Naples? Gomorra I think it was called - made into a superb film.
Aye, Gomorrah it twas - based on the Neapolitan mafia known as Camorra. Not seen the film as yet nor read the book - I've got the 'pleasure' of reading up on these guys at the mo -, though I plan too eventually.

Unsurprisingly the journalist who wrote the book, Roberto Saviano, is currently on the camorra's hitlist.
"Young people, nowadays, imagine money is everything."

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Post by thebish » Thu Oct 15, 2009 10:08 am

TANGODANCER wrote:
thebish wrote:Today I am mostly reading...

The Great Stink of London: Sir Joseph Bazalgette and the cleansing of Victorian London

cracking stuff....
Hard to find effluence a riveting topic, but without the likes of him, Flushing and Thomas Crapper etc, we'd be in a right old mess today. Far more interesting than can first be imagined the topic is quite fascinating. We take a lot for granted these days. Far cry from the Romans handful of sand as toilet paper. :wink:
indeed it is tango.. I am reading it as preparation for a personal guided tour of the inside of Abbey Mills pumping station at West Ham with a bloke I know who works there and will let me in surrepticiously for a photo-shoot...

It is known as the "cathedral of sewage" - and it really is - for a "functional" building - it is gloriously built, in a way that "functional" buildings never are nowadays - like the modern pumping house next door to it (a bland prefab barn)

Abbey Mills is full of ornate wrought-ironwork, sculptured stone, gothic arches and huge cathedral-esque windows - ornate ceilings and fantastic ironwork pumping machinery....

see here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/88017335@N ... 003437589/

a real treat! :wink:

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Post by shevchenko54 » Thu Oct 15, 2009 10:53 am

The new Dan Brown (The Lost Symbol) another great read!

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Post by as » Thu Oct 15, 2009 12:08 pm

Verbal wrote:
Bruno wrote:
Bruce Rioja wrote:
Verbal wrote:Today I'm reading about political corruption and the mafia in 20th Century Italy.
That'll be a weighty tome, I shouldn't wonder! :shock:
Have you read that recent one set in Naples? Gomorra I think it was called - made into a superb film.
Aye, Gomorrah it twas - based on the Neapolitan mafia known as Camorra. Not seen the film as yet nor read the book - I've got the 'pleasure' of reading up on these guys at the mo -, though I plan too eventually.

Unsurprisingly the journalist who wrote the book, Roberto Saviano, is currently on the camorra's hitlist.
Got Gommorah at home on DVD - amazing film, and bleak at the same time.

Reading Cosa Nostra now, decent but very long-winded in parts.

If you like those kind of books - Murder Machine, about the Roy DeMeo gang, is the best one ever, how it's not been made into a film is beyond me.
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Post by General Mannerheim » Thu Oct 15, 2009 12:23 pm

as wrote:
Verbal wrote:
Bruno wrote:
Bruce Rioja wrote:
Verbal wrote:Today I'm reading about political corruption and the mafia in 20th Century Italy.
That'll be a weighty tome, I shouldn't wonder! :shock:
Have you read that recent one set in Naples? Gomorra I think it was called - made into a superb film.
Aye, Gomorrah it twas - based on the Neapolitan mafia known as Camorra. Not seen the film as yet nor read the book - I've got the 'pleasure' of reading up on these guys at the mo -, though I plan too eventually.

Unsurprisingly the journalist who wrote the book, Roberto Saviano, is currently on the camorra's hitlist.
Got Gommorah at home on DVD - amazing film, and bleak at the same time.

Reading Cosa Nostra now, decent but very long-winded in parts.

If you like those kind of books - Murder Machine, about the Roy DeMeo gang, is the best one ever, how it's not been made into a film is beyond me.
yeah read cosa nostra too - it is very long!

talking of Roy Demeo - the most schocking, brutal book of this ilk i have read is 'The Ice Man' the story of Richard Kuklinsky - a cold blooded contract killer! (many for Demeo) its awesome, he was one mean mother! even used to 'practice' his methods on innocents!

there is a feature documentary about him about too, i have a DL of it but it has been shown on sky. chilling!

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Post by mummywhycantieatcrayons » Thu Oct 15, 2009 5:40 pm

TANGODANCER wrote:
thebish wrote:Today I am mostly reading...

The Great Stink of London: Sir Joseph Bazalgette and the cleansing of Victorian London

cracking stuff....
Hard to find effluence a riveting topic, but without the likes of him, Flushing and Thomas Crapper etc, we'd be in a right old mess today. Far more interesting than can first be imagined the topic is quite fascinating. We take a lot for granted these days. Far cry from the Romans handful of sand as toilet paper. :wink:
I'd like to stand up for the Romans, if I may.

Haven't heard of the sand technique, but I do know that they were pretty advanced when it comes to sanitation. They had toilets with running water pretty early, and public facilities with this technology all over Rome in the first century AD.

Just three weeks ago, I saw the private lavatory with running water water of Emperor Hadrian at Villa Adriana in Tivoli c.30km outside Rome, built in the second century.

It was during the middle ages we regressed and became uncivilised....
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Post by Prufrock » Thu Oct 15, 2009 5:47 pm

mummywhycantieatcrayons wrote:
TANGODANCER wrote:
thebish wrote:Today I am mostly reading...

The Great Stink of London: Sir Joseph Bazalgette and the cleansing of Victorian London

cracking stuff....
Hard to find effluence a riveting topic, but without the likes of him, Flushing and Thomas Crapper etc, we'd be in a right old mess today. Far more interesting than can first be imagined the topic is quite fascinating. We take a lot for granted these days. Far cry from the Romans handful of sand as toilet paper. :wink:
I'd like to stand up for the Romans, if I may.

Haven't heard of the sand technique, but I do know that they were pretty advanced when it comes to sanitation. They had toilets with running water pretty early, and public facilities with this technology all over Rome in the first century AD.

Just three weeks ago, I saw the private lavatory with running water water of Emperor Hadrian at Villa Adriana in Tivoli c.30km outside Rome, built in the second century.

It was during the middle ages we regressed and became uncivilised....
Indeed, I was tempted to go into this but I have work to be doing, so I didn't. Now the deadline is close, I feel I should be making like a student and procrastinating. I haven't heard of the sand technique either, I assume that it was a rudimentary method used by the military on tour. The citizens of rome used sponges on sticks, which given they had no method of mass producing toilet paper, or of disposing of it seems pretty civilised to me.
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Post by TANGODANCER » Thu Oct 15, 2009 7:33 pm

thebish wrote:
TANGODANCER wrote:
thebish wrote:Today I am mostly reading...

The Great Stink of London: Sir Joseph Bazalgette and the cleansing of Victorian London

cracking stuff....
Hard to find effluence a riveting topic, but without the likes of him, Flushing and Thomas Crapper etc, we'd be in a right old mess today. Far more interesting than can first be imagined the topic is quite fascinating. We take a lot for granted these days. Far cry from the Romans handful of sand as toilet paper. :wink:
indeed it is tango.. I am reading it as preparation for a personal guided tour of the inside of Abbey Mills pumping station at West Ham with a bloke I know who works there and will let me in surrepticiously for a photo-shoot...

It is known as the "cathedral of sewage" - and it really is - for a "functional" building - it is gloriously built, in a way that "functional" buildings never are nowadays - like the modern pumping house next door to it (a bland prefab barn)

Abbey Mills is full of ornate wrought-ironwork, sculptured stone, gothic arches and huge cathedral-esque windows - ornate ceilings and fantastic ironwork pumping machinery....

see here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/88017335@N ... 003437589/

a real treat! :wink:
In relation to a converstion I had on another forum Bish, re, nostalgia, you might find this interesting bish. Sorry for the link lngth.:

http://tinyurl.com/ygc6u52
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Post by TANGODANCER » Thu Oct 15, 2009 7:43 pm

shevchenko54 wrote:The new Dan Brown (The Lost Symbol) another great read!
I really enjoyed Da Vinci Code. Angels and Demons a little less, but decent. The Lost Symbol I found to go nowhere. Much of the Da Vinci technique is used and to far less effect on the Masonic Scene. I ended up wondering what it was all about
although I'm familair with Masonic stuff (from much reading I might add). Brown propogates his personal ideas as if they are law, which doesn't make for a convincing read. Just my view. I got the hardback bought as a present, but was disappointed. Over dramatic and with an impractical plot. Brown obviously finds answers then writes a novel about the questions.
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Post by Prufrock » Thu Oct 15, 2009 8:07 pm

TANGODANCER wrote:
shevchenko54 wrote:The new Dan Brown (The Lost Symbol) another great read!
I really enjoyed Da Vinci Code. Angels and Demons a little less, but decent. The Lost Symbol I found to go nowhere. Much of the Da Vinci technique is used and to far less effect on the Masonic Scene. I ended up wondering what it was all about
although I'm familair with Masonic stuff (from much reading I might add). Brown propogates his personal ideas as if they are law, which doesn't make for a convincing read. Just my view. I got the hardback bought as a present, but was disappointed. Over dramatic and with an impractical plot. Brown obviously finds answers then writes a novel about the questions.
I like that. You read it somewhere or is it yours? Pretty much sums him up in a sentence. I still find his books enjoyable though.
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Post by TANGODANCER » Thu Oct 15, 2009 8:10 pm

Prufrock wrote:
TANGODANCER wrote:
shevchenko54 wrote:The new Dan Brown (The Lost Symbol) another great read!
I really enjoyed Da Vinci Code. Angels and Demons a little less, but decent. The Lost Symbol I found to go nowhere. Much of the Da Vinci technique is used and to far less effect on the Masonic Scene. I ended up wondering what it was all about
although I'm familair with Masonic stuff (from much reading I might add). Brown propogates his personal ideas as if they are law, which doesn't make for a convincing read. Just my view. I got the hardback bought as a present, but was disappointed. Over dramatic and with an impractical plot. Brown obviously finds answers then writes a novel about the questions.
I like that. You read it somewhere or is it yours? Pretty much sums him up in a sentence. I still find his books enjoyable though.
It's mine Pru. It becomes more obvious with his last offering where, at times, he appears to have had writers block and
just writes waffle. .
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Post by thebish » Thu Oct 15, 2009 9:55 pm

TANGODANCER wrote:
In relation to a converstion I had on another forum Bish, re, nostalgia, you might find this interesting bish. Sorry for the link lngth.:

http://tinyurl.com/ygc6u52
fascinating! I am on the look out for london stink pipes now!

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Post by Raven » Fri Oct 16, 2009 12:43 pm

Bill Hicks - Love all the People, funniest thing i read in ages!

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Post by thebish » Fri Oct 16, 2009 4:59 pm

today I am mostly reading...

Sun Boiled Onions by Vic Reeves

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Post by Bruno » Sat Oct 17, 2009 11:28 am

I love Vic, he's great.

His autiobiography had the best title of any i've ever read : Me Moir

:pray:
Was right all along

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Post by Verbal » Sun Oct 25, 2009 3:35 pm

'The State of Africa' by Martin Meredith. Chapters 27 and 28 on Rwanda to be specific.

Fookin hell.
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Post by General Mannerheim » Wed Oct 28, 2009 3:42 pm

I just finished a book called "The Dog Who Wouldn’t Die"

Just couldn’t put it down!

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Post by as » Wed Oct 28, 2009 5:14 pm

General Mannerheim wrote:I just finished a book called "The Dog Who Wouldn’t Die"

Just couldn’t put it down!
About that Cheryl Cole bint then? :wink:
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