Brad Simkulet
Goodreads Author
Website
Member Since
March 2008
URL
https://www.goodreads.com/judekyle
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Existence Costs
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published
2007
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Mystery in the Wind
by
2 editions
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published
2009
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CBS Radio Mystery Theater (Volume 7 - 1975-76)
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.
Brad’s Recent Updates
Brad
rated a book it was amazing
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I could plot out the book and discuss all that action rot, but what really matters in this eighth book in Sjowall and Wahloo’s masterwork can be boiled down to two points: 1. Martin Beck; and 2. the illusions of justice. 1. Martin Beck is in less than ...more |
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Brad
rated a book it was amazing
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I exhale my breath in a long deep sigh. I've just finished listening to what is probably the most cinematic of all the Sjowall and Wahloo Beck books (maybe not the best, but certainly the most evocative), and for the first time (despite the excellenc ...more | |
Brad
voted for
Eden Undone: A True Story of Sex, Murder, and Utopia at the Dawn of World War II
as
Readers' Favorite History & Biography
in the
Opening Round
of the
2024 Goodreads Choice Awards.
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Brad
rated a book it was ok
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Nowhere near my favourite Phryne Fisher story, I have to admit I struggled my way through Blood and Circuses a little bit. Luckily there was an interview with Kerry Greenwood following my audio listen, and what she had to say about the shift of milie ...more | |
Brad
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This is going to take some explaining, but my guiltiest pleasure when it comes to books is Alexandre Dumas' The Three Musketeers. I hear you saying, "How on Earth can that be a guilty pleasure?" I know. It's a recognized classic. It has far reaching p ...more |
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Brad
rated a book it was amazing
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I exhale my breath in a long deep sigh. I've just finished listening to what is probably the most cinematic of all the Sjowall and Wahloo Beck books (maybe not the best, but certainly the most evocative), and for the first time (despite the excellenc ...more | |
Brad
rated a book it was amazing
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Even more than the first time out, I am absolutely baffled that Travis McGee -- John D. MacDonald's most used character -- has only had three unsuccessful adaptations in the last sixty years. This is stunning for a series that spans twenty-one novels ...more | |
Brad
rated a book it was amazing
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Sometimes it feels to me like Old John Brown shares fabulous space with Paul Bunyon and John Henry and Johnny Appleseed. An American fable too big to be true, too mythic to have walked amongst us mortals, too passionate to have been real. Then I reme ...more | |
Brad
rated a book really liked it
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Harold Schechter's approach to True Crime is one to which new writer's of True Crime should aspire. His books are not about the lascivious details, nor the psychology of those committing the crimes, nor about the "heroic" investigators who've caught ...more | |
Brad
rated a book liked it
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As the years stretch on in this collection of fascinating radio dramas, the quality of the CBS Radio Mystery Theater's recordings continues to improve, and that makes for a much more enjoyable experience. While the audio quality hasn't been a deal br ...more | |
Topics Mentioning This Author
topics | posts | views | last activity | |
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Literary Exploration:
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88 | 103 | Jul 30, 2011 01:27AM |

“You believe in a book that has talking animals, wizards, witches, demons, sticks turning into snakes, burning bushes, food falling from the sky, people walking on water, and all sorts of magical, absurd and primitive stories, and you say that we are the ones that need help?”
―
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“Everything we hear is an opinion, not a fact. Everything we see is a perspective, not the truth.”
― Meditations
― Meditations

“I would not cross this room to reform parliament or prevent the union or to bring about the millennium... - but man as part of a movement or a crowd is ... inhuman... the only feelings I have are for men as individuals; my loyalties, such as they may be, are to private persons alone.... Patriotism is a word; and one that generally comes to mean either my country, right or wrong, which is infamous, or my country is always right, which is imbecile.”
―
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Hi there! SFFBC is a welcoming place for readers to share their love of speculative fiction through group reads, buddy reads, challenges, ...more

A book club for those who want to read and talk about Hemingway's work. We'll read a new novel or short story collection every month and talk about it ...more

Reading serials the way they were meant to be read.

A private group focusing on thoughtful, engaged discussions of speculative fiction. Author members are welcome but please be aware that this is a prom ...more

...and only Gravity's Rainbow. Here is THE group to come to and talk about Pynchon's classic, motivate yourself to finish Pynchon's classic, and find ...more

A place where fans of Patrick O'Brian and C. S. Forester can gather to drink grog and discuss nautical matters pertaining to the Age of Sail, such as ...more

Want to explore different genres? Each month we pick a different Literary book, to read and discuss. Books are picked by members via a poll.

A group for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals and supporters interested in fun and stimulating conversation about books, movies, art, ...more

To celebrate our love of reading books that people see fit to ban throughout the world. We abhor censorship and promote freedom of speech.

No pretensions: just poetry. Stop by, recommend books, offer up poems (excerpted), tempt us, taunt us, tell us what to read and where to go (to read ...more
Comments (showing 62-111)
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message 111:
by
Joy
Apr 11, 2020 04:38PM

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http://6years45000pages.blogspot.com





Hah! I'm glad those vicious moths attacked you back then!

Click here for Our Yoko
And there's a bonus. It's not even bleak.

Looking forward to reading them, Brad.


Best,



"Horrified whales." What's not to like?

Glad you liked it, Jacob.


Anytime, brother.


The London Graduate School at the University of Kingston presents:
The Weird: a discussion of fiction and politics with China Miéville
At the start of the twentieth century, H. P . Lovecraft summed up the encounter between horror and strangeness as ‘pictures of shattered natural laws’ and encounters with ‘cosmic outsideness’. At the start of the 21st century, the weird has alerted us, once again, to the persistence of this ‘mood or feeling’. The new weird – generically indeterminate as it is – offers a potent trope linking pasts and presents and opening new terrains for writing creatively and differently even though its political, philosphical and cultural ramifications may be less easy to fathom.This talk with China Miéville and the Faculty of Kingston’s London Graduate School and School of Humanities seeks to revisit the idea of the weird in fiction and politics. The session will betake the form of an open discussion where contributions from faculty and audience will consider the relevance of the idea of the weird to various fields of study in the humanities.
This event has been recorded and is available as a podcast at the following URL: http://backdoorbroadcasting.net/2011/...
