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  • Stones into Schools. Greg Mortenson:
    http://www.stonesintoschools.com/

    Just finished this one as a follow up to the earlier book "three cups of tea". MUCH better writing and a really good read.

    You can build a LOT of schools for the cost of one cruise missile.


    Stones into Schools: Promoting Peace with Books, Not Bombs, in Afghanistan and Pakistan was released on December 1, 2009. Over the past sixteen years, Greg Mortenson, through his nonprofit Central Asia Institute (CAI), has worked to promote peace through education by establishing more than 130 schools, most of them for girls, in remote regions of Pakistan and Afghanistan.

    The story of how this remarkable humanitarian campaign began was told in his bestselling 2006 book, Three Cups of Tea. Mortenson€™s philosophies about building relationships, empowering communities, and educating girls have struck a powerful chord. Hundreds of communities and universities, as well as several branches of the U.S. military, have used Three Cups of Tea as a common read.

    Just as Three Cups of Tea began with a promise€”to build a school in Korphe, Pakistan€”so too does Mortenson€™s new book. In 1999, Kirghiz horsemen from Afghanistan€™s Wakhan Corridor rode into Pakistan and secured a promise from Mortenson to construct a school in an isolated pocket of the Pamir Mountains known as Bozai Gumbad. Mortenson could not build that school before constructing many others, and that is the story he tells in this dramatic new book. Picking up where Three Cups of Tea left off in late 2003, Stones into Schools traces the CAI€™s efforts to work in a whole new country, the secluded northeast corner of Afghanistan. Mortenson describes how he and his intrepid manager, Sarfraz Khan, barnstormed around Badakhshan Province and the Wakhan Corridor, moving for weeks without sleep, to establish the first schools there.

    Those efforts were diverted in October 2005 when a devastating earthquake hit the Azad Kashmir region of Pakistan. Under Sarfraz€™s watch the CAI helped with relief efforts by setting up temporary tent schools and eventually several earthquakeproof schools. The action then returns to Afghanistan in 2007, as the CAI launches schools in the heart of Taliban country and as Mortenson helps the U.S. military formulate new strategic plans as a road map to peace. As the book closes, the initial promise to the Kirghiz is fulfilled.

    Stones into Schools brings to life both the heroic efforts of the CAI€™s fixers on the ground€”renegade men of unrecognized and untapped talent who became galvanized by the importance of girls€™ education€”and the triumphs of the young women who are now graduating from the schools. Their stories are ones you will not soon forget.

    €œ What Greg understands better than most€”and what he practices more than anyone else I know€”is the simple truth that all of us are better off when all of us have the opportunity to learn, especially our children. By helping them learn and grow, he€™s shaping the very future of a region and giving hope to an entire generation.€ €”Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff

    €œ This week . . . I watched Greg Mortenson, the famed author of Three Cups of Tea, open one of his schools for girls in this remote Afghan village in the Hindu Kush mountains. I must say, after witnessing the delight in the faces of those little Afghan girls crowded three to a desk waiting to learn, I found it very hard to write, €˜Let€™s just get out of here.€™€ €”Thomas L. Friedman, The New York Times

    €œ Sometimes the acts of one individual can illuminate how to confront a foreign-policy dilemma more clearly than the prattle of politicians. Such is the case with Greg Mortenson, whose work gives insights into an essential element of fighting terrorism.€ €”Trudy Rubin, The Philadelphia Inquirer

    €œ Mortenson€™s story serves as a reminder of the power of a good idea and the strength inherent in one person€™s passionate determination to persevere against enormous obstacles.€ €”Marilyn Gardner, The Christian Science Monitor

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    • God, that sounds amazing.

      I forgot to mention the book I'm currently finishing - "When Things Fall Apart" by Pemma Chodron.
      Making newbie mistakes since 2009 so you don't have to




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      • I just finished The Risk of Infidelity Index by Christopher G. Moore. It's a noirish, hard-boiled detective story set in Bangkok. I usually don't read that kind of stuff, but it was certainly an entertaining read.

        Also just finished What the Dog Saw by Malcolm Gladwell. It's a compilation of pieces that he's done for The New Yorker over the years. Its topics range from Ron Popiel to ketchup. Also a very interesting read.

        I'm currently reading God Hates Us All by Hank Moody. I love the title, in fact that's why I picked it up.



        "Bankin' off of the northeast wind
        Salin' on a summer breeze
        And skippin' over the ocean, like a stone."
        -Harry Nilsson

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        • Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel (based on life of Tomas Cromwell)


          liking it so far
          No honey, no money!!

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          • " The Ascent Of Science" Brian Silver.

            Unfortunately poor old Silvers dead now RIP, he died just as his book was published but this is my third reading and i suppose this must rated amongst one of the best Science books of its kind.

            This is one of those books that is a lifetime reference and you will never leave it alone

            Silver explains much about the Philosophy of Science and why reason is better than faith and then goes on in the following chapters to give his take on Science and its workings..almost layman friendly

            I have hundreds of books but this is one of the best.

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            • Been put on to John T Lescroat recently. We've cornered most of his books in Phuket between a couple of us.
              I couldn't give a shit how long it is until you're next holiday- I live here

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              • Kelly Slater For the love ISBN 978 0 8118 6222 6

                If you follow surfing you will probably like this book. Some pretty good surf photos in it as well.

                Publisher Description
                No one knows eight-time world champion surfer Kelly Slater better than Kelly himself. In this revealing and heartfelt illustrated tribute, written with surfing veteran Phil Jarratt, the world's best surfer riffs on a life filled with big wins, big money, and big loves. Interviews with friends and fellow surfers unearth juicy anecdotes, and hundreds of photographs-some never before published-capture the greatest victories and the quietest moments in equal measure. This beautifully produced book marks the first time Slater's story has been told in full colour, and reflects the latest twists and turns in an incredible and unconventional life.

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                • Finished reading "Where Men Win Glory" by Jon Krakauer (it's about Pat Tilman) and am currently reading Bill Simmon's "The Book of Basketball."

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                  • Occupational Hazards, My time governing in Iraq
                    Rory Stewart 2006 ISBN 978-1-40740-670-1 12.5 hours running time Read by Rory Stewart

                    I got this as a talking book. Really enjoyed it. First time I've had one and was an interesting way to "read". Will do it again

                    Some interesting insights on Iraq, like the time they thought a factory was being used by insurgents, sent in SAS with night vision, but found it was being used for gay sex!

                    At the age of thirty, Rory Stewart was appointed coalition deputy Governor of two provinces in the Marsh region of southern Iraq. He kept a journal of his experiences struggling to control assassinations and tribal conflict, rebuild the region's infrastructure and establish a new Iraqi government before the hand over of power in June 2004.

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                    • (blonde_havoc @ Jan. 09 2010,06:40) Finished reading "Where Men Win Glory" by Jon Krakauer
                      On my list for sure, but will wait for the paperback version

                      I am 1/3rd through '1421', about emporer Zhu Di's eunich [ouch] admirals who are said to have sailed the whole world in that year, pre-dating Columbus' visit to the 'new world' by 71 years.

                      Good story but written by an amatuer researcher and reads like a teenagers very long book report; the guy has no writing skills at all. Having a hard time getting into it because of that but the story is rather good.
                      Even a broken clock is right twice a day.

                      Comment



                      • I had an interest in this book too JaiDee, then saw him, (the author) on a pbs station discussing the book, very embarassing for him, couldn't document some of the 'facts' in his own book, gave it a pass then,
                        Life is short. Live it well.

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                        • heh heh....not surprising.... as I say, he writes like an amateur as well and it's hard to read a long book when the writer isn't skilled. I pick it up now and again but I think after 200 pages I pretty much know what he's talking about already and what the rest of the book is like. fascinating story though, too bad he didn't have a qualified [and credited] ghost writer by his side to help out.

                          I recently started "Lessons from the Light'' by Dr. Kenneth Ring, one of the foremost researchers into the near-death experience. Really it goes way against my usual agnostic-leaning-towards- atheistic thought processes, but my sister recommended it to me and actually gave it to me for Christmas! So now I have to read it in case she quizzes me later on
                          Even a broken clock is right twice a day.

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                          • Wild Australia
                            Theo Allofs & Nicola Markus
                            ISBN 10-1-86953-613-4

                            Stunning landscape & pictures.

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                            • (bigmick22 @ Jan. 08 2010,00:35) Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel (based on life of Tomas Cromwell)


                              liking it so far
                              Amazing book!!! We in are so generally ignorant about our history, I started reading this on a flight to Dubai and just kept going.
                              You, you and you hold fire - everyone else come with me - attributed to US Marine Recruiting Sargent WW2.

                              You, you and you cum on me - everyone else hold fire - attributed to Porn Actor/Director Alexandra in 1992

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                              • The Omnivore's Dilemma - Michael Pollan.

                                Finally out in paperback (and on-sale to boot).

                                This book lives up to all the hype. Fascinating from start to finish.

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