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The Three-Body Pr...
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The Two Towers
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A Desolation Call...
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See all 14 books that Keith is reading…
Book cover for Longitude: A journey through time, astronomy, and horology
In 1884, at the International Meridian Conference held in Washington, D.C., representatives from twenty-six countries voted to make the common practice official. They declared the Greenwich meridian the prime meridian of the world. This ...more
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Marie Brennan
“I have not been to Bayembe in nearly twenty years, but my memory of it remains as fresh as yesterday. Not the factual details, but the experience of the place: the enormous quality the sky seemed to take on, and the vast stretches of dry grass rustling in the breeze. Scattered umbrella thorns spread their branches like flat clouds above the ground;”
Marie Brennan, The Tropic of Serpents

Hilary Mantel
“but will also assuage the fears of the king, who distrusts novelty, and German novelty above all.”
Hilary Mantel, The Mirror & the Light

Adrian Tchaikovsky
“An ancestress of hers stole the Sacred Eye of the Messenger from the ants, back when the ants were the great power in the world and not merely a convenient operating system to run Avrana Kern on.”
Adrian Tchaikovsky, Children of Ruin

Dava Sobel
“In 1884, at the International Meridian Conference held in Washington, D.C., representatives from twenty-six countries voted to make the common practice official. They declared the Greenwich meridian the prime meridian of the world. This decision did not sit well with the French, however, who continued to recognize their own Paris Observatory meridian, a little more than two degrees east of Greenwich, as the starting line for another twenty-seven years, until 1911. (Even then, they hesitated to refer directly to Greenwich mean time, preferring the locution “Paris Mean Time, retarded by nine minutes twenty-one seconds.”)”
Dava Sobel, Longitude: A journey through time, astronomy, and horology

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