Exactly! I do the same thing for the same reason.I will definitely read more, but not in close sequence, style and prose would get old.
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Exactly! I do the same thing for the same reason.I will definitely read more, but not in close sequence, style and prose would get old.
by Reginald Hill.Dialogues of the Dead
That was the first of his that I read. Some of the character relationships were puzzling, because they were all new to me, and there were references to things I thought must be from books past.
Sounds like a good book! I never really thought about different nutritional value in different variants of fruits/veggies. I'm curious now lol. I'll put it on my list. Thanks for the rec!While we're on the topic of non-fiction and food/crops...
Someone (on the garden thread, I think) mentioned Eating on the Wild Side, by Jo Robinson. I got a used copy from ABE Books, and it's very interesting. She talks about various varieties of fruits and vegetable, and which ones have the most of "the good stuff" in them. If you're going to the store, you probably won't know what cultivar of blueberry they sell, but she tells what to look for. If you're going to a farmer's market, you might find out which type of blueberry they have. If you're going to plant your own, Reubel is one of the best.
It's pretty good.I just started Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, by Barbara Kingsolver. I'm enjoy it very much, even though I'm only about 10 pages in. To me, that is the mark of a very good writer.