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Readers' Nook

Readers Nook

by
Heather Miles

Penny, a graphic novel by Karl Stephens, is the whimsical story of the inner life of a humble tortoiseshell cat. Like many cats, she started life as a stray and was taken in (or kidnapped as she sees it) by two humans. Now that she has secure food and shelter, she spends her days contemplating various philosophical questions such as "Is time elastic?" and "What is the point of trying when the world is bent on destroying you?" She is often aided by catnip, in a sort of feline vision quest. Penny is not just an armchair philosopher as she does at one point leave her brownstone to have a small adventure. Penny is a graphic novel for both seekers of knowledge and lovers of cats.

Penny, a graphic novel by Karl Stephens, is the whimsical story of the inner life of a humble tortoiseshell cat. Like many cats, she started life as a stray and was taken in (or kidnapped as she sees it) by two humans. Now that she has secure food and shelter, she spends her days contemplating various philosophical questions such as "Is time elastic?" and "What is the point of trying when the world is bent on destroying you?" She is often aided by catnip, in a sort of feline vision quest. Penny is not just an armchair philosopher as she does at one point leave her brownstone to have a small adventure. Penny is a graphic novel for both seekers of knowledge and lovers of cats.

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by
Myles Cooper

Some members were surprised to find my name in the SFGate article ‘Friendly’ seal bites San Francisco man, sends him to the hospital, wondering why I swim in the Bay and not in a pool. As a librarian, I would like to answer that question with an assemblage of works explaining why some swim in open water.

 

Waterlog by the late Roger Deakin follows a man’s quest to understand his island nation of Britain by swimming its lakes, streams, and waterways. This influential book, that some consider a nature writing classic, inspired others to swim in the wild and advocate for open access to waterways. First published in 1999, Tin House republished it for the US market in 2021. 

 

Why We Swim by New York Times contributor, author of American Chinatown: A People's History of Five Neighborhoods, and Bay Area swimmer, Bonnie Tsui, was highlighted in a program in May of 2020 with Mechanics’ Institute. In Why We Swim, Tsui explores the deeper connection between humans and the water through a series of astonishing true stories and an exploration of her own relationship with swimming.

 

Swimming to Antarctica by Lynne Cox. You may remember Lynne Cox as the first person to swim the Bering Strait between the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. In Swimming to Antarctica, Cox reflects on swimming accomplishments explaining why she went from breaking speed records to making waves as the first swimmer to complete feats like swimming to Antarctica. 


Kim Swims is an uplifting documentary streaming on our movie and video streaming service Kanopy. It follows a Bay Area swimmer determined to be the first woman to accomplish open water swimming’s most difficult swim, the 30 miles from the Farallon Islands to San Francisco Bay.

Some members were surprised to find my name in the SFGate article ‘Friendly’ seal bites San Francisco man, sends him to the hospital, wondering why I swim in the Bay and not in a pool. As a librarian, I would like to answer that question with an assemblage of works explaining why some swim in open water.

 

Waterlog by the late Roger Deakin follows a man’s quest to understand his island nation of Britain by swimming its lakes, streams, and waterways. This influential book, that some consider a nature writing classic, inspired others to swim in the wild and advocate for open access to waterways. First published in 1999, Tin House republished it for the US market in 2021. 

 

Why We Swim by New York Times contributor, author of American Chinatown: A...

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by
Steven Dunlap

When you hear the name "Martin Scorsese" does the phrase "screwball comedy" spring to mind? Maybe it should. In 1985, years after establishing himself as one of the great film directors of our time with movies such as Taxi Driver and Raging Bull, Scorsese directed an absurdist comedy worthy of the old Ealing comedies of the 1950s. Unlike the screwball comedies of old, however, After Hours takes the silliness of a typical screwball comedy down a much darker alley: think "Film Noir meets Dada."  

 

An ordinary guy stumbles down a rabbit hole leading him from surviving (sometimes just barely) one bizarre, inexplicable situation after another. All he wanted was a fun night out. Instead he finds himself living through a nightmarish chain of events he can neither control nor escape. Every time it looks like he has made good his escape, he quickly finds out that, no, he hasn't. And, to make matters worse, Horst thinks he lacks discipline (but then Horst thinks that about a lot of people). Next, toss in Cheech and Chong because, well, why not?

When you hear the name "Martin Scorsese" does the phrase "screwball comedy" spring to mind? Maybe it should. In 1985, years after establishing himself as one of the great film directors of our time with movies such as Taxi Driver and Raging Bull, Scorsese directed an absurdist comedy worthy of the old Ealing comedies of the 1950s. Unlike the screwball comedies of old, however, After Hours takes the silliness of a typical screwball comedy down a much darker alley: think "Film Noir meets Dada."  

 

An ordinary guy stumbles down a rabbit hole leading him from surviving (sometimes just barely) one bizarre, inexplicable situation after another. All he wanted was a fun night out. Instead he finds himself living through a nightmarish chain of events he can neither control nor escape. Every time it looks like he has made good his escape, he quickly finds out that, no, he hasn't. And, to make matters worse, Horst thinks he lacks discipline (but then Horst thinks that about a lot of people). Next, toss in Cheech and...

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by
Heather Miles

PRINT BOOKS
FICTION
Parini Shroff The bandit queensl Fic Shroff
Annie Ernaux Do what they say or else Fic Ernaux
Hal Hartley Our lady of the highway Fic Hartley
Josh Riedel Please report your bug here Fic Riedel
Dima Novak Pushing pawns Fic Novak
Allie Rowbottom Aesthetica Fic Rowbottom
Margaret Wilkerson Sexton On the rooftop : a novel Fic Sexton
Halldór Laxness The fish can sing Fic Halldór Laxness
Tatiana Salem Levy The house in Smyrna Fic Levy

Comic Books, Graphic Novels & Comic Strips
Nathalie Ferlut Artemisia 741.5 F35 Comics
Pénélope Bagieu Brazen : rebel ladies who rocked the world 741.5 B145b Comics
Cece Bell El Deafo 362.4 B4328 Comics

Mystery, Suspense, Thrillers, Espionage & Intrigue
John Connolly The furies : two Charlie Parker novels Fic Connolly
Rupert Latimer Murder after Christmas Fic Latimer
Brian Freeman The zero night Fic Freeman
Peter James Picture you dead Fic James
Jeffery Deaver Hunting time Fic Deaver
De'Shawn Charles Winslow Decent people Fic Winslow
Rachel Hawkins The Villa Fic Hawkins
Dean R. Koontz The house at the end of the world Fic Koontz
Steve Burrows A foreboding of petrels Fic Burrows
Janice Hallett The Twyford code Fic Hallett

Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror
Kelly Regan Barnhill When women were dragons Fic Barnhill
Jessica Johns Bad Cree : a novel Fic Johns

Short Stories
Judy Juanita The high price of freeways Fic Juanita
Claire Keegan Antarctica Fic Keegan

Universal (Children's)
Tami Charles We are here U Charles
Marie Dorléans Our fort U Dorleans
Peter Brown The wild robot U Brown
Nana Ekua Brew-Hammond Blue : a history of the color as deep as the sea and as wide as the sky U 535.6 B758

PRINT BOOKS
FICTION
Parini Shroff The bandit queensl Fic Shroff
Annie Ernaux Do what they say or else Fic Ernaux
Hal Hartley Our lady of the highway Fic Hartley
Josh Riedel Please report your bug here Fic Riedel
Dima Novak Pushing pawns Fic Novak
Allie Rowbottom Aesthetica Fic Rowbottom
Margaret Wilkerson Sexton On the rooftop : a novel Fic Sexton
Halldór Laxness The fish can sing Fic Halldór Laxness
Tatiana Salem Levy The house in Smyrna Fic Levy

Comic Books, Graphic Novels & Comic Strips
Nathalie Ferlut...

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by
Steven Dunlap

Do you think that the present state of political discourse in the United States has hit an all-time low? Do you think the population has grown irrevocably divided? We hear words like "unprecedented," and "in all of our history," and other hyperbole nearly every time a political commentator opens their mouth. Along with blaming the mess on social media and technology.   Well, read H.L. Mencken on U.S. politics of the 1920s through the 1930s, and then you will see that now, a hundred years later, our current situation does not look so unprecedented afterall. They didn't have Twitter or Facebook, but they had the same divisiveness and inflammatory remarks. The difference in Mencken's lifetime: they did a better job of proof-reading and had editors and typesetters to catch the more obvious errors. 

Most people today only know Mencken from his quote, frequently turned into an internet meme, about how no one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the average American.* Mencken wrote for decades (mostly for the Baltimore Sun), however, employing a wit and invective that many a commentator today must envy. You do not need to recognize all of the names in order to enjoy his writing – Mencken's columns he wrote for the Baltimore Sun reprinted in this book, refer to many failed candidates and other people who everyone at the time recognized but have since fallen into obscurity. You do not have to have a detailed knowledge of the history of the time to enjoy this book (although it may help). 

A few excerpts from Mencken are below. 

On Presidential candidates: 

“All of the great patriots now engaged in edging and squirming their way toward the Presidency of the Republic run true to form. This is to say, they are all extremely wary, and all more or less palpable frauds.” 

On political discourse: 

“It seems to me that this fear of ideas is a peculiarly democratic phenomenon, and that it is nowhere so horribly apparent as in the United States…”

“It has been, by God's will, a very bitter campaign, which is to say, an unusually honest one.”

On the urban-rural divide in America:

“What the average native yokel believes about the average city man is probably nine-tenths untrue, and what the average city man believes about the average yokel is almost as inaccurate.” 

*Note: The actual quote is "No one in this world, so far as I know—and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help me—has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people.”

Do you think that the present state of political discourse in the United States has hit an all-time low? Do you think the population has grown irrevocably divided? We hear words like "unprecedented," and "in all of our history," and other hyperbole nearly every time a political commentator opens their mouth. Along with blaming the mess on social media and technology.   Well, read H.L. Mencken on U.S. politics of the 1920s through the 1930s, and then you will see that now, a hundred years later, our current situation does not look so unprecedented afterall. They didn't have Twitter or Facebook, but they had the same divisiveness and inflammatory remarks. The difference in Mencken's lifetime: they did a better job of proof-reading and had editors and typesetters to catch the more obvious errors. 

Most people today only know Mencken from his quote, frequently turned into an internet meme, about how no one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the average American.* Mencken wrote for decades (mostly for the Baltimore Sun), however, employing a wit and invective that many...

Continue reading...
by
Heather Miles

PRINT BOOKS

NON-FICTION

Arts, Architecture & Crafts
Hebru Brantley Hebru Brantley. 709.2 B735
Thomas E. Crow The artist in the counterculture : Bruce Conner to Mike Kelley and other tales from the edge 701 C953
Aaron Huey Mitakuye oyasin 779.2 H871

Biography & Genealogy

Lindsey Fitzharris The facemaker : a visionary surgeon's battle to mend the disfigured soldiers of World War I 617.092 G415
Rob Wilkins Terry Pratchett : a life with footnotes 823.914 P912
Jim Popkin Code name Blue Wren : the true story of America's most dangerous female spy--and the sister she betrayed 327.12 M764p
Frank Costigliola Kennan : a life between worlds 327.73 K34c
Maureen Dennison Roald Dahl : teller of the unexpected : a biography 823 D131d
Anastasia Carol Curwood Shirley Chisholm : champion of Black feminist power politics 328.73 C447
Hisham Matar The return : fathers, sons, and the land in between 823 M413
Howard Gardner A synthesizing mind : a memoir from the creator of multiple intelligences theory 150.92 G22
Stacy Schiff The revolutionary : Samuel Adams 973.3 A217
Christopher P. Andersen The King : the life of Charles III 941.086 C4762
Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex Spare 941.086 H249
Leo McCarthy One October night : a memoir 155.93 M127
Beverly Gage G-man : J. Edgar Hoover and the making of the American century 363.25 H7905

Business & Economics
Gabriella Rosen Kellerman Tomorrowmind : thriving at work with resilience, creativity, and connection--now and in an uncertain future 658.3 K286
Jim VandeHei Smart Brevity : the power of saying more with less 658.4 V225
Michael Gibson Paper belt on fire : how renegade investors sparked a revolt against the university 332.63 G357
Ha-Joon Chang Edible economics : a hungry economist explains the world 330 C456e

Chess
Improve your chess calculations : the Ramesh Chess course, Volume 1. 794.1 Im78
Gabor Kallai Basic chess openings 794.122 K14b
A. E. J. Mackett-Beeson Chessmen 794.1 M157
G. M. Čepukajtis Winning at Blitz : a fun guide to Blitz chess 794.1 C39
S. B. Voronkov Masterpieces and dramas of the Soviet Championships 794.157 V954

Computer Science
Henry Kissinger The age of AI : and our human future 006.3 K618
Laurent Richard Pegasus : how a spy in your pocket threatens the end of privacy, dignity, and democracy 005.8 R381

Food & Drink
Eric Ripert Vegetable simple 641.6 R588

Health & Medicine
F. Perry Wilson How medicine works and when it doesn't : learning who to trust to get and stay healthy 610.696 W746

History
Jacqueline Jones No right to an honest living : the struggles of Boston's black workers in the Civil War era 974.461 J77
Ana Maria. Spagna Pushed : miners, a merchant, and (maybe) a massacre 979.759 S73
Edward L. Widmer Lincoln on the verge : thirteen days to Washington 973.7 L73w
Kidada E. Williams I saw death coming : a history of terror and survival in the war against Reconstruction 973.8 W670
Valentine Low Courtiers : intrigue, ambition, and the power players behind the house of Windsor 941.085 L950
Amanda H. Podany Weavers, scribes, and kings : a new history of the ancient Near East 939.4 P751

Languages & Linguistics
The people's tongue : Americans and the English language 427 P41

Law
Mark C. Dillon The first Chief Justice : John Jay and the struggle of a new nation 347.73 J42
Ilona M. Bray Nolo's essential guide to buying your first home 643.12 B827

Literature & Writing
Ed Sams Dashiell Hammett's San Francisco : a pictorial guide 813 H22s
Matthew Hollis The waste land : a biography of a poem 821.9 E43

Natural Sciences & Mathematics
Suzie Sheehy The matter of everything : how curiosity, physics, and improbable experiments changed the world 539.72 Sh356
Henry Petroski Force : what it means to push and pull, slip and grip, start and stop 531 P49
Lucio Russo The forgotten revolution : how science was born in 300 BC and why it had to be reborn 509.3 R921

Reference
The old farmer's almanac : calculated on a new and improved plan for the year of our Lord 2023 : fitted for Boston and the New England states, with special corrections and calculations to answer for all the United States. 031.02 O447
Guinness world records 2023. 032 G96
Performing Arts & Music
Dan Moller The way of Bach : three years with the man, the music, and the piano 780.92 B118m

Philosophy, Psychology & Religion
Pico Iyer The half known life : in search of paradise 203.5 I97h
Marjorie Ingall Sorry, sorry, sorry : the case for good apologies 158.2 In41

Politics & Government
Greta Thunberg The climate book 363.738 T535

Social Sciences & Current Events
Timothy B. Tyson The blood of Emmett Till 364.1 T46
Chris Belcher Pretty baby : a memoir 306.74 B427
Ian Bremmer The power of crisis : how three threats--and our response--will change the world 303.49 B836p

Travel & Geography
Lea Lane Places I remember : tales, truths, delights from 100 countries 910.4 L24
Rick Steves' Portugal. 914.69 S848

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by
Heather Miles

E-AUDIOBOOKS
Joseph Conrad Almayer's folly
Charles Dickens Bleak house
Joseph Conrad Chance : A tale in two parts
Virginia Woolf Four short stories by Virginia Woolf
Walter Scott Ivanhoe
Virginia Woolf Jacob's room
Virginia Woolf Monday or Tuesday : 8 stories plus new introduction
George Gissing New Grub Street
Charles Dickens Nicholas Nickleby : Classic tales edition
Virginia Woolf Night and day
Virginia Woolf Orlando : a biography
Benjamin Disraeli Sybil
Virginia Woolf The voyage out
Dorothy L Sayers Whose body?
Wilkie Collins The woman in white
Virginia Woolf A writer's diary
Virginia Woolf The years
George Eliot The lifted veil
P G Wodehouse Carry on, Jeeves
P G Wodehouse The inimitable Jeeves : Classic tales edition
P G Wodehouse Jeeves and the chump Cyril : Classic tales edition
P G Wodehouse Jeeves and the unwanted guest : Classic tales edition
George Eliot Middlemarch
P G Wodehouse Right ho, Jeeves : Classic tales edition
George Eliot Romola
Franz Werfel The song of Bernadette
Anne Brontë The tenant of Wildfell Hall
Lorena Hughes The Spanish daughter
Jacqueline Winspear The consequences of fear

Evelyn Tribole Intuitive eating for every day : 365 daily practices & inspirations to rediscover the pleasures of eating
Brian Broome Punch me up to the gods
Helen Macdonald Vesper flights
Robert Frost A boy's will
Richard Brookhiser Founders' son : a life of Abraham Lincoln
Richard Brookhiser George Washington on leadership
Jonathan Swift Gulliver's travels
Richard Brookhiser James Madison
John Keats John Keats
Lee Daniel Kravetz The last confessions of Sylvia P.
Robert Frost Mountain interval
Robert Frost North of Boston
Pyŏng-mo Ku The old woman with the knife
Percy Bysshe Shelley Percy Bysshe Shelley.
Richard Diamond, private detective, collection 3
Richard Diamond, private detective. original radio broadcasts.
Richard Diamond, private detective.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Elmore Leonard Swag
William Blake William Blake: poems
William Wordsworth The great poets : William Wordsworth
Samuel Taylor Coleridge The great poets--Samuel Taylor Coleridge
David S Rudolf American injustice : inside stories from the underbelly of the criminal justice system
Benjamin Ehrlich The brain in search of itself : Santiago Ram̤n y Cajal and the story of the neuron
Edward Renehan Deliberate evil : Nathaniel Hawthorne, Daniel Webster, and the 1830 murder of a Salem slave trader
Donna Barba Higuera The last cuentista
J R Thorp Learwife
Bernd Brunner Extreme North : a cultural history
Elena Ferrante In the margins : On the Pleasures of Reading and Writing
Dennis Duncan Index, a history of the : a bookish adventure from medieval manuscripts to the digital age
Jocelyn C Zuckerman Planet palm : how palm oil ended up in everything-and endangered the world
Donald Cohen The privatization of everything : how the plunder of public goods transformed America and how we can fight back
Blake Snyder Save the cat! goes to the movies : the screenwriter's guide to every story ever told
Robert Douglas-Fairhurst The story of Alice : Lewis Carroll and the secret history of Wonderland
Eric Balchunas The bogle effect : How
John Bogle and Vanguard turned Wall street inside out and saved investors trillions

Molière The bungler
Henrik Ibsen A doll house
Sean Adams The heap : a novel
Molière The imaginary cuckold ; The school for husbands
Leo Tolstoy Master and man
Molière The Misanthrope
Kristin Marguerite Doidge Nora Ephron : A Biography
Molière The school for wives
William Shakespeare Seven classic plays
Molière Tartuffe
Anton Pavlovich Chekhov Uncle Vanya
Annie Ernaux A woman's story
Isaac Bashevis Singer Fate
Lloyd Suh Franklinland
Stephen Tobolowsky A good day at Auschwitz
Tom Stoppard The hard problem
Bernard Malamud The magic barrel
Kate McAll The murder on the links
Ken Narasaki No-no boy
Robert Foxworth Nora
Josh Azouz Once upon a time in nazi occupied Tunisia
Dominique Morisseau Pipeline
Tom Stoppard Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are dead
Ernest Hemingway The sun also rises
Lee Blessing A walk in the woods
George Lakoff Whose freedom? : the battle over America's most important idea

E-AUDIOBOOKS
Joseph Conrad Almayer's folly
Charles Dickens Bleak house
Joseph Conrad Chance : A tale in two parts
Virginia Woolf Four short stories by Virginia Woolf
Walter Scott Ivanhoe
Virginia Woolf Jacob's room
Virginia Woolf Monday or Tuesday : 8 stories plus new introduction
George Gissing New Grub Street
Charles Dickens Nicholas Nickleby : Classic tales edition
Virginia Woolf Night and day
Virginia Woolf Orlando : a biography
Benjamin Disraeli...

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by
Heather Miles
Continue reading...
by
Steven Dunlap

In the bookstacks of the Mechanics Institute Library, hidden in an almost literal sense, we have many books that, once you find them, can hold you in fascination, to the point of losing track of time. Among these hidden gems we have an annual publication, World Press Photo, that compiles the most compelling and relevant photographs from photojournalists for the year. Even just looking at the covers you get a sense of the events that, although you may remember them, happened more recently or later in the past than you thought. Picking up the 2017 issue, I find myself shocked all over again by the cover photograph of the immediate aftermath of the assassination of a Russian Ambassador by an off-duty Turkish police officer. Or the 2014 issue cover showing an eerie picture of a crowd of people outside at night holding up their mobile phones -- African migrants in Djibouti trying to catch an inexpensive signal from neighboring Somalia to contact their relatives. Opening these books and looking through the photos can lead you through a tour of your own memory. Oh, I remember that now. Has it been that long since that happened? It feels like last year.  

The World Press Photo Foundation is a global platform connecting professionals and audiences through trustworthy visual journalism and storytelling, founded in 1955 when a group of Dutch photographers organized a contest ('World Press Photo') to expose their work to an international audience. In the six decades since then, the annual contest has grown into the world's most prestigious photography competition, with the objectives to support professional photojournalism, stimulate developments in photojournalism, encourage the transfer of knowledge, help develop high professional standards in visual journalism and promote a free and unrestricted exchange of information.

(Adapted from promotional material by the World Press Photo Foundation)

In the bookstacks of the Mechanics Institute Library, hidden in an almost literal sense, we have many books that, once you find them, can hold you in fascination, to the point of losing track of time. Among these hidden gems we have an annual publication, World Press Photo, that compiles the most compelling and relevant photographs from photojournalists for the year. Even just looking at the covers you get a sense of the events that, although you may remember them, happened more recently or later in the past than you thought. Picking up the 2017 issue, I find myself shocked all over again by the cover photograph of the immediate aftermath of the assassination of a Russian Ambassador by an off-duty Turkish police officer. Or the 2014 issue cover showing an eerie picture of a crowd of people outside at night holding up their mobile phones -- African migrants in Djibouti trying to catch an inexpensive signal from neighboring Somalia to contact their relatives. Opening these books and looking through the photos can lead you through a tour of your own...

Continue reading...
by
Steven Dunlap

The "big name" in action adventure writing in the mid-20th century, Alistair MacLean, enjoyed considerable success writing best-sellers that Hollywood often turned into movies, such as The Guns of Navarone and Ice Station Zebra. His very first book, however, has an immediacy and authenticity that his later works do not quite match. He wrote  H.M.S. Ulysses in three months while teaching school, based on his own experiences serving on a Royal Navy Cruiser in the disastrous Convoy PQ 17 during the Second World War. Although a work of fiction, his writing gives the impression of a true story told by an active participant. He works into the narrative the harsh conditions of arctic sailing in wartime – small details about which an armchair sailor would not even dream. MacLean created a unique and unusual blend of reality and fiction that you do not often find. 

H.M.S. Ulysses / by Alistair MacLean   Fiction - 2nd Floor  Fic MacLean  

List of all works by Alisair MacLean in the MI Library collection (including movies).

The "big name" in action adventure writing in the mid-20th century, Alistair MacLean, enjoyed considerable success writing best-sellers that Hollywood often turned into movies, such as The Guns of Navarone and Ice Station Zebra. His very first book, however, has an immediacy and authenticity that his later works do not quite match. He wrote  H.M.S. Ulysses in three months while teaching school, based on his own experiences serving on a Royal Navy Cruiser in the disastrous Convoy PQ 17 during the Second World War. Although a work of fiction, his writing gives the impression of a true story told by an active participant. He works into the narrative the harsh conditions of arctic sailing in wartime – small details about which an armchair sailor would not even dream. MacLean created a unique and unusual blend of reality and fiction that you do not often find. 

H.M.S. Ulysses / by Alistair MacLean   Fiction - 2nd Floor  Fic MacLean  

...

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