currently reading....
- Mat Linnett
- Posts: 2483
- Joined: Wed Apr 12, 2000 7:00 am
- Location: The Grizzly Grotto
- Mat Linnett
- Posts: 2483
- Joined: Wed Apr 12, 2000 7:00 am
- Location: The Grizzly Grotto
No idea where they're up to in comics; I've got addicted to the trade paperbacks, and need my fix in one large chunk.
I'll have to check with the guys at Orbital, see where it's up to.
Been a while since I've been reading comics (was an Eighties 2000AD child), and I'm really getting back in to things.
Mind you, I've just spent 30 squid on Zombie fiction on Amazon
That should keep me happy for a while...
I'll have to check with the guys at Orbital, see where it's up to.
Been a while since I've been reading comics (was an Eighties 2000AD child), and I'm really getting back in to things.
Mind you, I've just spent 30 squid on Zombie fiction on Amazon

That should keep me happy for a while...
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- Posts: 625
- Joined: Tue Feb 08, 2005 12:09 pm
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- Posts: 162
- Joined: Fri Apr 22, 2005 3:43 am
One Thousand Years of World Architecture - An Illustrated Guide. Francesca Prina with Elena Demartini
On sale at Borders. It's worth the price.
Gloucester Cathedral - cloister 1337-60. Earliest surviving example of fan vaulting

Antiquarium (Residenz) - Munich - 1569-71. Example of a barrel vault


The pics in the book are much better. Especially pics of the fan vault in Gloucester Cathedral.
Wells Cathedral - picture by Robert Feinman

On sale at Borders. It's worth the price.
Gloucester Cathedral - cloister 1337-60. Earliest surviving example of fan vaulting

Antiquarium (Residenz) - Munich - 1569-71. Example of a barrel vault


The pics in the book are much better. Especially pics of the fan vault in Gloucester Cathedral.
Wells Cathedral - picture by Robert Feinman

oxford is full of stuff like this. it's weird, but i only really notice how aesthetically awesome my city is when friends come from out of town and i give them the tourist trail routineWabbit wrote:One Thousand Years of World Architecture - An Illustrated Guide. Francesca Prina with Elena Demartini
On sale at Borders. It's worth the price.
Gloucester Cathedral - cloister 1337-60. Earliest surviving example of fan vaulting
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here's the bodleian library, for example:


I'm working on writing my grant, so I've been reading nothing but scientific articles for the past month. I've got about 30-40 I'm focusing on atm.
Just a few sitting in front of me right now are:
ffs, I'm sick of this.
Just a few sitting in front of me right now are:
- "Flt3 mutations from patients with acute myeloid leukemia induce transformation of 32D cells mediated by the Ras and STAT5 pathways."
"Combined deficiencies in Bruton tyrosine kinase and phospholipase Cgamma2 arrest B-cell development at a pre-BCR+ stage."
"Cutting Edge: Signaling and Cell Surface Expression of a µH Chain in the Absence of lambda5: A Paradigm Revisited"
"Cancer gene discovery in solid tumors using transposon-based somatic mutagenesis in the mouse"
"A novel PAX5-ELN fusion protein identified in B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia acts as a dominant negative on wild-type PAX5"
"Constitutive activation of NF-kB is not sufficient to disturb normal steady-state hematopoiesis."
ffs, I'm sick of this.

I'm going to visit some of these places when I get the chance. You're lucky. While there is great architecture all over the world, personally, I'm attracted to styles that are predominately located in Europe and the mid-east.seremtan wrote:oxford is full of stuff like this. it's weird, but i only really notice how aesthetically awesome my city is when friends come from out of town and i give them the tourist trail routine
- Kubrick: Inside a Film Artist's Maze (for my course "The Filmmaker")
- just finished R. Scott Bakker's "Prince of Nothing" trilogy which was interesting but went over my head in its philosophical depths (kinda surprising for a fantasy series) and did not give me any closure with the rather abrupt ending
- following that up with Louise Cooper's 8-book "Indigo" series. I'm a huge fan of three other fantasy trilogies she's written, so I bought the first four books of this series on eBay and I'm starting the first one tonight
- also plodding through the Norton Anthology of Short Fiction and An Introduction to Short Fiction, because you have to read what you write
- just finished R. Scott Bakker's "Prince of Nothing" trilogy which was interesting but went over my head in its philosophical depths (kinda surprising for a fantasy series) and did not give me any closure with the rather abrupt ending
- following that up with Louise Cooper's 8-book "Indigo" series. I'm a huge fan of three other fantasy trilogies she's written, so I bought the first four books of this series on eBay and I'm starting the first one tonight
- also plodding through the Norton Anthology of Short Fiction and An Introduction to Short Fiction, because you have to read what you write
I'm pretty much in love with norman architecture from the 11th century onwards which become such a definitive element of british structures with the explosion of castle building and religious constructions from that time. The broader gothic architectural style appeals in the general sense too, but the Normans really nailed it as far as England goes.Wabbit wrote:I'm going to visit some of these places when I get the chance. You're lucky. While there is great architecture all over the world, personally, I'm attracted to styles that are predominately located in Europe and the mid-east.seremtan wrote:oxford is full of stuff like this. it's weird, but i only really notice how aesthetically awesome my city is when friends come from out of town and i give them the tourist trail routine