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Susans Writers and Book Readers

Started by Northern Star Girl, May 21, 2018, 06:59:06 PM

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ChrissyRyan

Always stay cheerful, be polite, kind, and understanding. Accepting yourself as the woman you are is very liberating.  Never underestimate the appreciation and respect of authenticity.  Help connect a person to someone that may be able to help that person.  Be brave, be strong.  A TRUE friend is a treasure.  Relationships are very important, people are important, and the sooner we all realize that the better off the world will be.  Try a little kindness.  Be generous with your time, energy, wisdom, and resources.   Inconvenience yourself to help someone.   I am a brown eyed, brown haired woman. 

Lori Dee

Too many to list.  ;D

The Science of Getting Rich, by Wallace D. Wattles (1910). Read the original, not rewrites. It is available on Google Books.

Illusions: The Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah, by Richard Bach.

The Biology of Belief, by Bruce H. Lipton, PHD, who was one of the pioneers in the field of epigenetics. Some of his discoveries are very interesting, and he explains them so anyone can understand.
My Life is Based on a True Story
Veteran U.S. Army - SSG (Staff Sergeant) - M60A3 Tank Master Gunner
2017 - GD Diagnosis / 2019- 2nd Diagnosis / 2020 - HRT / 2022 - FFS & Legal Name Change
/ 2024 - Voice Training / 2025 - Passport & IDs complete

Northern Star Girl

@persphone  @Lori Dee  @ChrissyRyan  @Lilis

Regarding mentioning and reviewing important books that we have read...
... go to the following more active Topic and Thread where you will
find much more activity and members submissions:

                                Susans Writers and Book Readers
Click LINK -->  https://www.susans.org/index.php/topic,237827.0.html

I will soon  be merging
this new thread/topic

              "Current or significant books in your life"
                    https://www.susans.org/index.php/topic,251226.0.html   

started today by member @persphone with the more active thread/topic that I first mentioned above.

HUGS, Danielle
[Northern Star Girl]
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AdrianeAlready

Well, I don't know about anything particularly deep or anything that expresses anything trans (well, maybe?). I'm a complete fantasy and sci-fi nerd and still have my dad's collection of pulp dime novels from the 50's and 60's I've reread about a million times. That being said here is my list.

Favorite author is Robert A. Heinlein. I found him early, which is saying a lot for this day and age but with my Dad's taste in literature was inevitable. My favorites have to be "Stranger in a Strange Land", "The Moon is Harsh Mistress", and "Time Enough for Love". If you can find anything in Audiobook format read by Spider Robinson (himself a great author) you should listen to it. His recording of "Rocketship Galileo" made me fall in love with it all over again.

My favorite series is the the Dresden Files by Jim Butcher. It's billed as Sam Spade meets Gandalf but that doesn't come close to doing it justice. The character development is real and I spend 2 years foaming at the mouth for the next book to release only to read it in three days and repeat the cycle. Buthcher's funny and the books are action packed but the rare moments of guilt, grief and fear about his family are what make me cry real messy tears. That doesn't happy often with a book and I treasure his because of it.

Favorite book has got to be "The Gilded Chain" by Dave Duncan. Technically part of a series but they all stand alone and compliment each other while contradicting each other (it's a plot point in the third book and doesn't rely on the other two but it's SOOOO good). It's the Three Musketeers set in a world of magic serving a Fantasy Henry VIII. What's more, as someone that has fought with European weapons and fenced for decades I can say Duncan really knows his stuff when it comes to the fight scenes.

Honorable mention are books that have shaped me or added whole facets to me. "Lord of the Rings", "The Prophet" by Khalil Gibran, "Diamond Age" By Neal Stephenson, The collected works of William Shakespeare by the Bard himself, the collected works of H. P. Lovecraft and "Alice in Wonderland".

I'll stop here. I have so many wonderful books and authors I could happily drone on endlessly about if you give me half a chance. I prefer physical books to Audio and despise electronic books (I know, I know. They're FINE and if you like them that's honestly great but I want real paper and glue and leather and the smell of dust and the feel and etc.) so I think my collection is actually bigger than my local libraries Sci-Fi/Fantasy section. Last guestimate was around 500 or so but I've never actually counted. It's the last thing packed and the first unpacked whenever I've had to move.

Ramblingly yours,
~Adriane

persphone

Just finished a book, not even sure how I found it. I got it via the Libby app, allows me to borrow books online, sure y'all are familiar with it.
Anyways the book is titled 'A Psalm for the Wild Built' by Becky Chambers.

Sci fi genre, and dang! I loved it! I'll be off looking for others written by this author.

Lori Dee

Quote from: AdrianeAlready on May 31, 2025, 08:32:22 PMFavorite author is Robert A. Heinlein.

I am a fan of Heinlein, too. Stranger in a Strange Land is an all-time favorite. I have lost my copy of The Notebooks of Lazarus Long, but I intend to find another. Time Enough for Love is also wonderful. Add all the works of Isaac Asimov. I, Robot put forth many of the "laws" used today to restrict AI. In high school, I spent a whole weekend reading the Foundation trilogy. I just couldn't put it down!
My Life is Based on a True Story
Veteran U.S. Army - SSG (Staff Sergeant) - M60A3 Tank Master Gunner
2017 - GD Diagnosis / 2019- 2nd Diagnosis / 2020 - HRT / 2022 - FFS & Legal Name Change
/ 2024 - Voice Training / 2025 - Passport & IDs complete

Tills

I wrote a book a few years ago which was lucky enough to do well and became a bestseller. As this is a public forum I'll keep quiet about details for now though if that's okay. No doxing please - that's the real me in my profile pic ;)

I'm just editing a novel that should be heading to publishers in the next couple of months. I've also written the draft of a non-fiction book which has a lot of trans elements: I'll let you know more when it's ready.

I love reading. Sooooooo many wonderful books out there.

xx

persphone

A couple more books I've been loving recently are 'The Gender Frontier' by Mariette Pathy Allen, this is primarily a photo journal of gender diverse folks. One thing that struck me first checking this one out was how loving and compassionate her work is.
I got the feeling her photos are of friends not just curious subjects presented with a cold eye. Filling out this book are brief essays from notable people on the spectrum. Highly recommend!

Second book is another photo journal 'Walk on the Wild Side' by Jeanette Jones, black and white photos also of gender diverse people. Love this one as well, but to me the photos seem colder, more raw, still I feel the author presents them respectfully.

After reading and seeing these, I was left wishing I could have known some of this community. By now I suppose the surviving people would be considered elders in the movement, and I'm thankful for them!   

persphone

In the spirit of pride month (as if I really needed any reason! ha!) I checked out this book at our city library.
'The Stonewall Reader' a collection of memories from the archives of the New York Public Library.
I enjoy getting in touch with history, so this is a good one for me and so far I'm liking it.
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