
Monday, December 1, 2008

Wednesday, November 12, 2008
"The Stories and Fables of Ambrose Bierce" by Ambrose Bierce. ISBN 0-916144-20-8. My main reason for reading this was a memory of a film of "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge". It was a short black and white film. Many of the stories have military (civil war) related scenes. The Fables are mostly very short little bits that are supposed to be funny.
Labels:
american literature,
literature,
short stories
Friday, November 7, 2008

ISBN 0-345-40604-4. This book is an excellent read. Well written, clear and concise. The Genesis commentary is high level, covering the main ideas and themes as well as discussing the nature of the text. This is not a word for word discussion of Genesis. Also, contains the text of the New Revised Standard Version.
Labels:
christianity,
genesis,
judaism,
religion
Thursday, October 16, 2008
The Gospel of St. Matthew, By John C. Fenton. ISBN 9780140204889. This book was interesting to read because it yielded much information about the Book of Matthew. It uses the text from the Revised Standard Version. It has a short introduction and then goes through the book verse by verse. It restates each verse in plain english and explains how the verse relates to other Gospels or to the old testament.
Friday, August 8, 2008

Muhammad, The Prophet by Gabriel Mandel Khan. ISBN 1-59223-401-1. This book is well written and illustrated with many photographs. The author is clearly pro-Islam. In fact after reading this book one would think that everything good in the world was created by the Islamic peoples (and conversely everything bad by the non-Islamic peoples, especially the Europeans.) Since this is not the case, this book can be viewed as biased in favor of Islam. Still it might be worth reading, you just need to remember that the point of view is tilted towards Islam. Ironically, it appears that the author lives in Italy. You would assume that someone who is so pro-Islam would prefer to live in an Islamic country.
Friday, July 25, 2008

A Daily Dose of Torah. This is a series of 14 volumes. Author is Yosaif Asher Weiss. Each volume covers four weeks of torah study. The books are probably best used by Orthodox Jews as there is a great deal of discussion about the Mishnah and how the various rules are to be observed, etc. To non-jews these books might be of interest as they provide some insight to what Judaism is all about. I have read only volumes one through six. ISBN 1422601390.

Saturday, May 31, 2008
Book of Matthew, this was the New King James Version. (I wonder what they are going to call the next King James Version, New New King James Version, Newer King James Version???) The copy I read was a Gideons (orange cover) that I found on the sidewalk. It was in perfect condition so I decided to read it. I will be reading the rest of the New Testament and Psalms and Proverbs as time permits. I have read other translations before. This one is like King James, but with a slightly more modern vocabulary.
Labels:
christianity,
matthew,
new testament,
religion
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Monday, May 12, 2008

Thursday, May 1, 2008




Reading the book of Genesis. Seven different translations. I read the weekly Torah portion, a different translation every day. The translations I used were: (1) JPS Hebrew-English Tanakh, ISBN 978-0-8276-0766-8. (2) The Sapirstein Edition, Bereishis/Genesis, The TORAH with Rashi's commentary, ISBN 1-57819-325-7.
(3) The Five Books of Moses, Everett Fox, ISBN 0-8052-1119-5.
(4,5,6,7) The Layman's Parallel Bible (King James Version KJV/Modern Language/Living Bible/Revised Standard Version RSV).
Labels:
christianity,
genesis,
judaism,
religion
Monday, April 28, 2008

50 Mathematical Ideas You Really Need To Know, by Tony Crilly.
ISBN 978-1-84724-147-4. This book as the title implies covers 50 mathematical ideas. It has a four page section for each idea. Each section is just a basic overview of the topic, but they are fun to read if you are interested in this subject. The only thing I would have liked to have seen was a reference section at the end that would point the reader to additional information about the various topics. On the other hand, the reader can easily look these topics up in wikipedia to get more info and further references. Some of the topics covered are zero, number systems (numeral systems), fractions, squares and square roots. Other subjects include pi, e, infinity, imaginary numbers, primes.
Monday, April 14, 2008

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Labels:
christianity,
history,
islam,
religion
Thursday, April 3, 2008

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Moon-o-theism is a two volume 1100+ page book by Yoel Natan. ISBN 1-4116-0106-8 and ISBN 1-4116-1765-7. The full text of this book is available on books.google.com (see the links above.) The main idea of this book is that the god of Islam is a moon and war god of ancient Arabia. This is not the generally accepted idea that most Muslims would have about their faith. The book appears to be the result of a massive amount of research as there are 4800+ footnotes and references to other books. The author finds it difficult to contain his sarcasm, however, frequently referring to academics that he disagrees with as "acaDhimmis". (See wikipedia for a description of a dhimmi.)
Monday, March 31, 2008

The Koran, translated with notes by N. J. Dawood. I purchased this many years ago, but just recently got around to reading it. It is plain prose and the chapters are not in traditional order, but it is fairly easy to read. There is an index at the back that you can use to find chapters according to their traditional order. The verses are marked, but only every few paragraphs, e.g., it has 15:49 and 15:64, if you wanted to look up an exact verse, this would not be the best book for that. This book is the 1974 printing of ISBN 0-14-044052-6. There are other editions of this book. ISBN 0-14-044542-0 is a revised edition with the text in the traditional order and also has the arabic text.
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