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There are 10 books in Ajax's reading list RxPG Reading List Maker (Version 2) |
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State of Fear
Added on 10-06-2006
in paris,a physicist dies after perfroming a laboratory experiment for a beautiful visitor,
in the jungles of malaysia, a mysterious buyer purchases deadly caviatation technology, build to his specifications.
in vancouver a small research sub is leased for use in the waters of new guinea
AND in Tokyo, an intelligent agent tries to understand what it al means.....
ECOTERRORISM...... THE NEW WORD IN WORLD TERRORISM.....michael chriichton at his best............ changes what ever we had believed about global warming...and proves us wrong.... and definitely makes us understand what the media and science has put us in........ A STATE OF FEAR --vimoj, RxPG
Ajax's comments on this book awaited!
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Also read by: Guest Bruno RxPG_Team
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The Rule of Four
Added on 10-06-2006
Tom Sullivan, about to graduate from Princeton, is haunted by the violent death of his father, an academic who devoted his life to one of the rarest, most complex books in the world. Coded in seven languages, the Hypnerotomachia Poliophili, an intricate mathematical mystery and a tale of love and arcane brutality, has baffled scholars since 1499. Tom's friend Paul is similarly obsessed and when a long-lost diary surfaces they finally seem to make a breakthrough. Only hours later, a fellow researcher is murdered and the two friends suddenly find themselves in great danger. Working desperately to expose the book's secret, they slowly uncover a Renaissance tale of passion and blood, a hidden crypt and a secret worth dying to protect... --Synopsis, RxPG
Ajax's comments on this book awaited!
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Also read by: MaverickVim Guest
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The Time Travelers Wife
Added on 10-06-2006
Gosh, I am growing fond of bookshops day by day. I am not talking about the internet bookshops like Amazon, which I think kill the feel of the process of buying a book, but the real brick and mortar bookshops. When I was living in Delhi, there were not many to visit... (sad), but now in London, I have this irresistible urge to enter any bookshop I come across. The only other thing I have come across, and can be as powerful, was my ex-girlfriend’s desire to visit every sandals hop on a high street! Well, any day, I would prefer dying along with my books rather than being clobbered to death with those irrationally high heeled instruments.
I do not remember when I developed this OCD for hoarding books, but surely it has been there for a long time. Last time I moved home, I had five big boxes of books which refused to enter my lil' car. In the end I had to pay through my nose in getting them transported via a professional mover (sad, again!). Somehow, I want to keep a piece of the experience I had while I read a book, in the form of the book itself. If I had time, I would have read almost every book in this world. But the risks of going bankrupt and brainrupt are quite high in that scenario.
Well, I started this thread to talk about a strange book I picked the other day in Waterstones (bookshop chain in UK). "The Time Traveler’s Wife" - I saw it resting on the shelf dedicated to best sellers. Usually I avoid such shelves as I do not want my taste in books to be dictated by criteria of best selling. Having skipped that shelf and scanning all the biographies (my fav.), I came across this title again in the shelf for sci-fi books. Reading sci-fi has been one of my habits from younger (or toddler) days which unfortunately stayed on (proves that the innocent child is still alive and kicking inside adult me! DISCLAIMER: I am a male, if you wonder). Curious about the strange title, I picked it up and read a bit from the back cover. "How bizarre!" - It was the first thought that crossed my mind when I read that the main character Henry is suffering from a genetic condition which makes him travel through time. My medical knowledge revolted at such a weird concept. I was about to put it down when I faintly remembered a brief mention of this title by someone in the massive thread we have in offbeat "book you should read". Although I am lazy enough to not to find who was the person talking about it in RxPG, I decided to give it another chance. I was curious to know why any doctor will find it interesting. So, I read a bit more about the plot. "Fascinating" - my mind reflected in a sudden U-turn! This book was not about time travel, nor does it have anything to do with science fiction. It is same age old love story with a novel twist. Henry is in love with Claire, but at the same time he is suffering from this time travel disease which makes him travel to and fro in time. He has absolutely no control over these travels and they can be precipitated by almost anything. The only thing that is consistent is that in every such travel through time, he always ends up with his wife. So he can be with his wife at different stages of her life, and the author has dealt with such an unusual concept with an imagination which is beyond comparison. After a couple of chapters I even wondered whether it is possible for any human being to imagine such an impossible thing in such detail. The powerful focus of the book on the dynamics of such a relationship makes one wonder whether the author suffered from such a disease itself? The narratives, the intricacies of their relationship with varying time, are simply enough food for my mind to last a lifetime. Henry interacts with Claire at all possible ages, right from when she was three.
It made me think. I made me think a lot. About time, about our ignorant relationship with time, about the change in our relationships with someone we love with time. Every time Henry took that involuntary leap into the past, I glided along to see my own past. It’s amazing to see the myriad of possibilities which open up in the past when you arrive there with current intellect. You learn a lot along time, taking this experience along with you, to your past, is just one thing we wish to have with us many a times (in simple words: hindsight). And if you can apply this knowledge, this experience, this intellect to the past of relationships, you do not make those mistakes... In fact, you tend to make new mistakes then... and that gives you a new mirror for your present... a new perspective.
Like the theme of the book, I wonder how fascinating will it be if we can just hop into our past with one such person, relive the best times together, fall in love again... to come back to present with those thoughts still fresh... the corroding effect of time on relationships won't be there then, isn't it?
--ajax, RxPG
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Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus: How to Get What You Want in Your Relationships
Added on 07-02-2006
This guide to successful communication between the sexes has already helped many millions of readers from across the globe understand why members of the opposite sex behave the way they do. This new edition contains all the text of the original, including: what makes members of the opposite sex tick; how to understand their verbal and non-verbal language; how to motivate the opposite sex and get what you want; how to avoid arguments and promote fruitful communication; how to score points with the opposite sex and impress your partner; the real emotional needs of the opposite sex and the behaviours associated with these needs; and how to keep love alive and stay together long term. This book should help you reach a point of harmony and understanding where both sexes can live, work and love together. --synopsis, RxPG
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Also read by: Kalika
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Ajax's reading list has been viewed 541 times |

Link for XML/RSS Feed for Ajax's Reading List
http://www.rxpgonline.com/readinglist-xml.php?user=16763
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Books can be added to your reading list by browsing RxPG Book Shop. Any registered member can build their personal reading list in this way! The link for RxPG Book shop is on top right of every page
To remove items from the reading list, click on the bookname or image, go to bookshop page and select "remove from reading list".
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