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    I thought I'd add three of my favourite David Bowie albums to my review of Blackstar to a form an album digest tribute. Also among my favourites but not included here is "Outside", which will be included in the understated classics (currently it's number 66) at some point. I thought about bumping "Outside" up the running order but I'd like to be objective about it when its turn comes.
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    For Ingrid's birthday, we went to see The Nutcracker performed by the Moscow City Ballet at The King's Theatre in Southsea.
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    Given that I gave up on writing album digests for a bit this year, I thought I would at least do a proper top ten list of my favourite albums. There are quite a few albums that I did not have room for and I might try to revisit those later. In the mean time, let's crack on. (To save time, I have in some instances pasted my original review from the appropriate album digest.)
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    I am writing a long post that I will either publish as one long post (about five or six thousand words) or as about seven smaller ones each closer to the average post length of about eight hundred words. I have to get it out-of-the-way soon as my mind needs to focus on my health economics essay.
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    In my review of the book I mentioned that a film adaptation of The Martian was on the way. I'm not sure why but it got released earlier than any of the dates that I'd seen and so on Saturday I found myself watching The Martian on the big screen. Could the film version deliver the same level of entertainment as the novel? Could Mark Watney (Matt Damon) get off Mars alive?
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    Time and Time Again is a ridiculously stupid novel by Ben Elton. A shadowy sect (established by Isaac Newton no less!) recruits a soldier to go back in time and prevent Franz Ferdinand's assassination in Sarajevo in August 1914. I wonder if it all goes to plan and everyone lives happily ever after with no weird timey-wimey after-effects?
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    Y-12 is the United States' most secure weapons-grade Uranium storage facility. It is known as the "Fort Knox of Uranium". In 2012 it was infiltrated by three elderly peace protesters, sparking a major scandal about the safety of US nuclear sites. "Gods of Metal" by Eric Schlosser tells the story of that break-in alongside a history of both the anti-nuclear movement (in particular the Plowshares movement) and nuclear security in the United States.