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Ready Player One
February 2017: Quirky
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Ready Player One - Ernest Cline, 5 Stars
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I don't think there is a single PBT member who gave it less than 4 stars (except me), and most gave it five.

And I agree with Judith - Armada was a huge disappointment.

I don't think there is a single PBT member who gave it less than 4 stars (except me), and most gave it five."
Well, I gave it 4 stars because I loved the audiobook. Had I read it in print, it would have been 3 stars.




Are you a hockey mom? Please take this with much humour and appreciation as my dad and two of my younger brothers played hockey, but I refused to ever become a hockey mom due to the crazy practice times. In the end, though, none of my kids ever asked to play. That said, there was a year of figure skating lessons, but at least I froze during normal waking hours ;).



Yes, a hockey mom, but because of the cost we stick to ball hockey. So no crazy early practice times, but we still spend a ridiculous amount of time running them around. The older two both play travel so in addition to in-house we also have travel practices and tournaments both local and away, plus my husband coaches a third travel team none of our kids play for, is on the board for our home rink, and runs the citywide youth dek hockey organization for all the local rinks. We have one car and kids playing at the same time at different locations. Its nuts!

I wasn't a hockey mom, but I was a hockey wife. My husband played hockey from the time he was 10 - long before organized leagues. When we met ( 1986) he was still playing (he was 32 at the time). He continued to play "midnight leagues" until our youngest daughter was born, he came home and had a bruise from his knee up to his groin. His 3 month old daughter was sleeping in her crib. That was the night I said enough is enough - you cannot risk everything we have for hockey. He did play for a number of years after - but not competitive (after he told me he was playing in an "old man's league - and we bumped into one of his 'team mates' in the local supermarket - he was 18- and I was to put in nicely - not a happy camper). After that he stopped, but would occasionally play with men his own age.





I stand corrected :). My dad picked up hockey again in his early 40s when we finally got a rink where I grew up, playing in a local commercial league, but my mother didn't go (she had 5 kids by then). He played in that league until he broke his surgery wrist when he got slammed in the boards at age 50. He healed well enough to return to surgery and moved to the over-the-hill league. Later, he played in an over-70 league. He also played at doctor's tournaments. However, he gave it up at some point before he was 80. Did he learn? Now, he wrecked a knee finally playing ultimate frisbee with some of his grandchildren.
Your husband was wiser!!!
My brother-the-actor played a hockey player in a movie once, so actually made money from his hockey skills ;). The other brother who played was a ref, and one of his kids (or maybe two) played.
I am, and always will be, a Montreal Canadiens fan from when there were 6 teams. I am not a very serious fan since I don't follow sports, but it's my one team.




YES! I thought so, too.
Books mentioned in this topic
Armada (other topics)Armada (other topics)
Armada (other topics)
During the near-future setting of this book, people seem to live much of their lives in a virtual-reality environment known as OASIS. When the creator of this program, James Halliday, dies his will announces that he has created an Easter Egg and whomever finds this egg first inherits not only his vast fortune but OASIS itself. From there we are introduced to a cast of characters known as gunters, short for egg hunters, who pretty much live within OASIS, spending every waking moment trying to solve the clues left behind. Five years after Hallidays death, most have given up, but interest is renewed when an unremarkable gunter finds the first key and clears the first gate, only to have four others do so as well within a few short days.
I didn't expect to love this book as much as I did, but it is the most fun I have had reading a novel in a long while. It wasn't perfect, but the pure enjoyment I received while reading it overshadows its imperfections. If this is the sort of book I can expect from Ernest Cline I will defjnitely make a point of reading everything he decides to write.