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Date: Tue, 10 Dec 1996 17:47:28 GMTServer: NCSA/1.4.2Content-type: text/htmlLast-modified: Sat, 16 Nov 1996 00:28:37 GMTContent-length: 7883<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>Recommended Reading</TITLE></HEAD><BODY><H1>Recommended Reading</H1><HR><p>Here are some of my favorite books, CD's, and other media-, multimedia-,and hypermedia-based diversions.  Oh, and if you make it all the way tothe end, there's a really tasty recipe...<H2>Memorials to Dead Trees - Books</H2><p>For complete references to the works below, telnet to the<!WA0><!WA0><A href="telnet://locis.loc.gov">Library of Congress Catalog</A>.<UL><LI> <p>     Horror fiction by <b>H.P. Lovecraft</b>.  Check out his mostly-complete     works in four volumes, edited by S.T. Joshi:     <OL>     <LI><i>The Dunwich Horror and Others</i> (ISBN 0-87054-037-8)     <LI><i>At the Mountains of Madness</i> (ISBN 0-87054-038-6)     <LI><i>Dagon and Other Macabre Tales</i> (ISBN 0-87054-039-4)     <LI><i>The Horror in the Museum</i> (ISBN 0-87054-040-8)     </OL>     </p>     <p>     Discussions of Lovecraft and his work may be found on the newsgroup     <!WA1><!WA1><A href="news:alt.horror.cthulhu">alt.horror.cthulhu</A>.  And     <em>no</em>, the Necronomicon is <em>not</em> real!     </p>  <LI> <p>     <b>Umberto Eco</b>'s novel <i>Foucault's Pendulum</i>      (ISBN 0-345-36875-4).  Be prepared to do your homework on      Western mysticism in order to enjoy this one fully.  Is      there a Kabbalist in the house?     </p><LI> <p>     Various works by <b>Lewis Carroll</b>.  If all you've read is     <i>Alice in Wonderland</i>, you're missing some great stuff.     Look for Carroll's complete works, published by Nonesuch Press     (ISBN 1-87106-114-8).  For online, full-text versions of the more      popular stories and poetry, head to     <!WA2><!WA2><A href="http://www.promo.net/pg/">Project Gutenberg</A>'s archives.     </p>     <p>     Some of my favorite works by Carroll:     <UL>     <LI>"The Hunting of the Snark - An Agony in Eight Fits" (1876)     <LI>"Phantasmagoria" (1869)     <LI>"A Tangled Tale" (1880)     </UL>     </p>     <LI> <p>     Short Stories by <b>Jorge Luis Borges</b>.  Given that I like Eco     and Lovecraft, the astute reader should have guessed that Borges     would show up eventually.  Look for <i>El Libro de Arena</i>,     e.g. the edition of Plaza &amp; Janes, S.A. (ISBN 84-01-42139-X).     H.P. Lovecraft fans will be interested in the story "There are      More Things", which Borges dedicated to Lovecraft.     </p><LI> <p>     <i>The Cyberiad</i> by <b>Stanislaw Lem</b> (I have HBJ's English     Edition, ISBN 0-15-623550-1).  Follow master constructors Trurl and     Klapacius as they build everything from a poetry-composing computer     (see this poetic <!WA3><!WA3><A href="http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/jbuhler/cyberiad.html">sample</A>) to a machine that     can create Nothing.     </p><LI> <p>     <i>Applied Cryptography</i> by <b>Bruce Schneier</b>     (ISBN 0-471-59756-2).  Bruce has collected a mountain of useful     information about secure (and insecure) encryption methods to preserve     secrecy of communications, including source code and an extensive     bibliography.  You don't have to be a mathematician or a hacker to     appreciate the material.     </p>     <p>     See the author's web at <!WA4><!WA4><A href="http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/jbuhler/www.counterpane.com">     Counterpane Systems</A> for errata, and for information     about the second edition of <i>Applied Cryptography</i>.     </p>     <p>     For more info on cryptography, check out the newsgroup     <!WA5><!WA5><A href="news:sci.crypt">sci.crypt</A>, which has an excellent FAQ.     Also, read about freely available strong encryption software for the     masses in the newsgroup     <!WA6><!WA6><A href="news:comp.security.pgp">comp.security.pgp</A> and its     related subgroups.     </p><LI> <p>     On the Internet, nobody knows you're a cat.  If you <em>are</em> a     cat (or live with one), you may enjoy these books by     <b>Henry Beard</b>:     <UL>     <LI><i>French for Cats</i> (ISBN 0-679-40676-X).  Teach your cat         useful such phrases as:         <UL>         <LI><i>Je ne veux pas &ecirc;tre ch&acirc;tr&eacute;</i>.<br>             (I do not want to be neutered.)         <LI><i>Le moment es venu de changer la liti&eacute;re</i>.<br>             (It is time to change the kitty litter).          <LI><i>Je vous en prie, tuez le chien de la maison d'&agrave;             c&ocirc;t&eacute;</i>.<br>             (Please kill the dog next door.)         </UL>     <LI><i>Poetry for Cats</i> (ISBN 0-679-43502-4). Poetry by cats         throughout the ages, such as:         <UL>         <LI>"The Cat's Tale", by Geoffrey Chaucer's Cat         <LI>"Vet, Be Not Proud", by John Donne's Cat         <LI>"To the Kittens, to Make Much of Time", by Robert Herrick's Cat         <LI>"Kubla Kat", by Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Cat         <LI>"Meow of Myself", by Walt Whitman's Cat         <LI>"Sitting by the Fire on a Snowy Evening", by Robert Frost's Cat         <LI>"The Love Song of J. Morris Housecat", by T.S. Eliot's Cat         <LI>"Do not go Peaceable to That Damn Vet", by Dylan Thomas's Cat         <LI>"Meowl", by Alan Ginsberg's Cat         </UL>     </UL>     </p></UL></p><H2>The Music of the Spheres - CD's</H2><p><UL><LI> <p>     <b>Anonymous 4</b>, a female vocal quartet specializing in early     and medieval music, is a favorite of mine.  Look for the following     on the Harmonia Mundi label:     <UL>     <LI><i>An English Ladymass</i> - chant and polyphony from 13th         century England     <LI><i>Love's Illusion</i> - motets etc. from the Montpellier Codex,         a 13th century French book of <i>fin amours</i> poetry set         to music     <LI><i>On Yoolis Night</i> - English and Latin Christmas music from         the 13th through 15th centuries.     <LI><i>The Lily and the Lamb</i> - yet more chant and polyphony         from medieval England     </UL>     </p><LI> <p>     I am not a drooling <b>Enya</b> junkie, but my cat is.  At his request,     I'll mention some titles which other cat owners may consider as     gift items for their own furry children.  The following CD's are     <!WA7><!WA7><A href="http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/jbuhler/spud.html">Spud-approved</A>:     <UL>     <LI><i>The Celts</i> (pronounced with a 'K', darn it!)     <LI><i>Watermark</i>     </UL>     </p></UL></p><H2>The Opiate of the Masses - Television</H2><p><!WA8><!WA8><IMG alt="The X Files - " align=middle src="http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/jbuhler/xfiles.gif"><i>"The Truth is Out There"</i></p><p>Trace the exploits of intrepid (though occasionally clueless) FBIagents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully as they chase down the Monster ofthe Week (TM); or narrowly escape the Evil Government Conspiracy (TM).You can watch the Net mercilessly dissect each new episode on thenewsgroup <!WA9><!WA9><A href="news:alt.tv.x-files">alt.tv.x-files</A>, or FTP<!WA10><!WA10><A href="http://www.rutgers.edu/test/x-files/xfilesFAQ.html"> the <i>X-Files</i> FAQ</A> for the inside scoop on the show.</p><p>Incidentally, I live in Western Washington and have visited the OlympicPeninsula on occasion, but I have yet to see any <!WA11><!WA11><A href="http://www.thex-files.com/xf119glg.htm">"green glowing goober mites"</A> of the sort described in the first-season episode <!WA12><!WA12><A href="http://www.thex-files.com/cgi-bin/epi119.pl">"Darkness Falls"</A>.Needless to say, I am extremely disappointed.  On the other hand, I havesome great shots of Snoqualmie Falls (Twin Peaks).</p><H2>And Now for Something Completely Different</H2><p>OK, I promised you a recipe, so here it is.  Follow the link to learn how to cook<!WA13><!WA13><A href="http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/jbuhler/kasha.html">kasha varnishkes</A>, adapted from<b>Jane Kinderlehrer</b>'s book <i>Cooking Kosher the Natural Way</i>(ISBN 0-8246-0286).  This is a vegetarian dish that will wow yourfriends.</p><HR><ADDRESS>Jeremy Buhler<!WA14><!WA14><A href="http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/jbuhler/">jbuhler@cs.washington.edu</A><BR>Last Update: 11/15/96</ADDRESS></BODY></HTML>

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