
Stamford in 50 Buildings: Celebrating 50 Years of a Conservation Town
Book
Stamford has a reputation for being one of England's finest stone towns. It is a happy mix of...

The Diffusion of Information and Communication Technologies
Book
In recent decades, the world has witnessed, unprecedented in terms of speed and geographic coverage,...

Android Photography: A Guide to Mobile Creativity
Book
The arrival of the Android smartphone is a revolution in the compact camera field: now the phone in...

Holderlin's Hymns Germania and The Rhine
Martin Heidegger, William McNeill and Julia Ireland
Book
Martin Heidegger's 1934-1935 lectures on Friedrich Holderlin's hymns "Germania" and "The Rhine" are...

Railways of Ayrshire
Book
In the early 1800s, Ayrshire was already established as a prosperous, mainly rural agricultural...

Birdcage Walk
Book
It is 1792 and Europe is seized by political turmoil and violence. Lizzie Fawkes has grown up in...

Ishtar (1987)
Movie Watch
Rogers and Clarke (Warren Beatty and Dustin Hoffman) are two inept songwriters, down on their luck...
In Defense of Lost Causes
Book
In this combative major work, philosophical sharpshooter Slavoj Zizek looks for the kernel of truth...

Amy Poehler recommended A Tale of Two Cities in Books (curated)

David McK (3557 KP) rated Moving Pictures in Books
Jul 11, 2021
I hadn't realised that this book had the first appearance(s) of Ponder Stibbons, Arch-Chancellor Mustrum Ridcully alongside that of Gaspode the Wonder Dog! (well, maybe I knew the latter)
<original review>
Book #10 in Terry Pratchett's Discworld series, which (for my money) stands alongside Soul Music as one of his best works, perhaps because these are the two books it is easiest to catch the many allusions in!
This is the one where Discworld discovers the magic of the Motion Picture, culminating in a not-quite-right scene of a giant lady carrying a screaming ape up a tall building (Ankh-Morpork's Tower of Art in the Unseen University), and is also, perhaps, the only book where CMOT Dibbler is actually a major character rather than an extra.