Category Archive: Reading

The Archer's Tale

by Bernard Cornwell Amazon link

The 100 Years War, as seen through the eyes of an 18-year old English archer. Not Sharpe, but what is?

Quiller Balalaika

by Adam Hall Amazon link

I have a treasured first edition from the UK that I keep wrapped in cellophane in the top cupboard of my bedroom. I first started reading Quiller back in the early 70's, when I stumbled upon one of the early ones during a bored afternoon at my Grandmother's, and have been hooked ever since. Jon Peralez (quiller.net) and I have been running the Quiller mailing list for over six years now.

Nothing is better (well, almost) than finding a new book from a favorite author, waiting to be read.

After a long hiatus, a new publisher got the rights to Balalaika, and I had to have a new copy to re-read. It arrived from Amazon last Friday.

Programming PHP

by Rasmus Lerdorf & Kevin Tatroe Amazon link

Web Database Applications with PHP & MySQL

by Hugh E. Williams, David Lane Amazon link

Introduction to MFC Programming in Visual C++

by Richard M. Jones Amazon link

Beginning Visual C++ 6

by Ivan Horton Amazon link

Designing CSS Web Pages

by Christopher Schmitt Amazon link

The Non-Designer's Design Book

by Robin Williams Amazon link

Cascading Style Sheets - The Definitive Guide

Amazon link

Sharpe's Devil

Sharpe and Harper travel to Chile to look for Blas Vivar. Amazon link

Sharpe's Waterloo

Mostly Waterloo, with Sharpe and Harper as major supporting characters. Amazon link

Sharpe's Revenge

After Toulouse and Napoleon's exile to Elba, Sharpe and Fredrickson get caught up in a plot by Ducos to steal the Emperor's horde of gold.Amazon link

Sharpe's Seige

Sharpe and Harper lay siege to the coastal fort at Arachon. Amazon link

Sharpe's Regiment

Sharpe and Harper return to England to find their regiment's lost recruits. Amazon link

Last Rites, by Adam Hall

We were ninety minutes out of our last port of call, heading south by south-west through a choppy sea and settling in to our final course for Southampton, with a following wind of Force 3 on the Beaufort scale, when everything started happening.

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Sharpe's Honor

Sharpe and Harper fight, then get rich at Vittoria. Amazon link

Sharpe's Enemy

Newly promoted Major Sharpe and Sgt. Harper battle a pack of deserters, 10 French Battalions, a foppish English Colonel and the old enemy Sgt. Hakeswill over Christmas, 1812. Amazon link

Sharpe's Sword

Sharpe matches wits with the French spychaser Leroux during the Battle of Salamanca, held on my birthday in 1812. Amazon link

Sharpe's Company

This brisk story reunites Sharpe with his lover Maria and his old enemy Sgt. Hakeswill as Wellington's army lays siege to Badajoz. Amazon link

Sharpe's Battle

As the British begin to push the French out of Portugal and into Spain, Sharpe gets himself in trouble (for doing the proper thing, as always). book icon

Sharpe's Gold

Jeremy agreed to go to Vroman's to pick up Sharpe's Gold for me. I staked him $5 to get a book for himself, but he was still a little short. amazon link

Sharpe's Eagle

I had finished Sharpe's Havoc on Wednesday, so when the Ducks' game finally got out of hand around 7:30 Thursday night, I decided to go looking for Sharpe's Eagle.

With all the turmoil over the last couple of weeks, I hadn't taken the motorcycle out at all. With Carole in Tucson, it was easy to take it out of the garage, so I suited up and headed up to the Vroman's in Hastings Ranch. They had a bunch of Sharpe's, but not Eagle, so I asked the nice girl at the Info Desk to check at the other store.

They had one, so I reserved it and headed down the 210 to the main store. I got lost on the second floor looking for the Will Call, and finally asked an employee, and she politely pointed out the huge Will Call sign on the southeast wall. The book hadn't made it up from the first floor info desk, so I had to go downstairs.

I avoided the freeway on the way home, taking Green and Del Mar instead. Carole wasn't due back until late Friday - I decided to splurge and park in the middle of the garage.

Sharpe's Havoc

Sharpe and the French invasion of Portugal in early 1809.

Sharpe's Rifles

The first of the Sharpe books from the Peninsular War, set in northwestern Spain in January, 1809.

Win32 Perl Programming

A valuable tool for Windows administrators and developers, with boatloads of examples for using the power of Perl on Windows. Written by Dave Roth.

Designing with Web Standards

A must-read introduction/tutorial to standards-based web design, by noted guru Jeffrey Zeldman.

Sharpe's Prey

Lt. Sharpe is drafted to help seize the Danish fleet at Copenhagen in 1807, to prevent it from falling into Napoleon's hands.

Sharpe's Trafalgar

On his way back to England from India, Sharpe helps out at Trafalgar.

Sharpe's Fortress

The Seige of Gawilghur in December, 1803.

Sharpe's Triumph

The second Sharpe book (chronologically - the only way to read a series) has Sgt. Sharpe fighting alongside Wellington in the Battle of Assaye in India.

Sharpe's Tiger

I just finished Sharpe's Tiger, the first (chronologically) book in a series by author Bernard Cornwell. This book begins with the protagonist, Richard Sharpe, as a private in the British Army, as his battalion prepares for the seige of Seringapatam (in south central India) during the spring of 1799.

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The List

The List, by Steve Martini, does not feature Martini's most famous character, attorney Paul Madriani. Rather, it's a fable (in the good sense of the word) on the modern publishing industry, warts and all - in fact, Martini pushes his insider knowledge almost to the satirical limits.

Remember the movie Ocean's Eleven? You knew it wasn't going to win any Oscars, but even so it was an very enjoyable movie. Likable characters, an engaging plot, and enough twists to keep you on your toes. (Plus, Don Cheadle can act.)

The List is similar - Martini won't have to worry about a Pulitzer acceptance speech, but it's a solid, enjoyable story with characters you can appreciation and a plot that moves along nicely. Will it hit the Literature section at Borders in a few year? No. But as a good way to spend a couple of evenings, it did just fine.

The Oath

John Lescroart's The Oath features defense attorney Dismas Hardy and his pal, San Francisco Police Lt. Abe Glitsky, who find themselves on opposite sides in a medical malpractice/murder case. The rich medical details and the San Francisco politics serve as a rich background to the non-traditional buddy tale, as Hardy and Glitsky tangle before reuniting at the satisfying conclusion.

As mainstream fiction goes, Lescroart is one of the better attorney-authors going. His style would never be confused with Grisham's plot-centric focus, but is somewhat similar to Steve Martini - conscientious lawyers trying to work through the inevitable conflicts between their professional duties and personal responsibilities and desires.

Indigo Slam

The seventh Elvis Cole book by Robert Crais, and one of the better ones.

Modern European History

An overview of European history from the 1790s thru the early 1990s, by John R. Barber.

Writing Perl Modules for CPAN

The Last Detective

The latest, and best, of the Elvis Cole novels by Robert Crais. A relentless plot, crisply told. I had it on Amazon pre-order for over 8 months, after the origional release date was slipped.

The Summons

This isn't my favorite Grisham novel, and the ending left me a little disappointed, but an enjoyable read nonetheless.

Proficient Motorcycling

Proficient Motorcycling, by David Hough. Amazon link

Black Out

An uncommon thriller/police novel set in WWII London, by John Lawton.