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A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Book - Wind, Sand and Stars
From: Stephen N.G. Davies
Date: 2015 Aug 19, 14:34 +0800
From: Stephen N.G. Davies
Date: 2015 Aug 19, 14:34 +0800
Bien sur - traduire c’est trahir n’est-ce pas?
Dr Stephen Davies
c/o Department of Real Estate and Construction
EH103, Eliot Hall
University of Hong Kong
Office: (852) 2219 4089
Mobile: (852) 6683 3754
stephen.davies79@gmail.com
daiwaisi@hku.hk
c/o Department of Real Estate and Construction
EH103, Eliot Hall
University of Hong Kong
Office: (852) 2219 4089
Mobile: (852) 6683 3754
stephen.davies79@gmail.com
daiwaisi@hku.hk
On 19 Aug, 2015, at 2:32 pm, Gary LaPook <NoReply_LaPook@fer3.com> wrote:It's even better if you read it in French,Interestingly, it was awarded the best fiction award in France for 1939 and the best NON-FICTION award in the U.S. in for 1939.gl
From: Stephen N.G. Davies <NoReply_Davies@fer3.com>
To: garylapook---.net
Sent: Tuesday, August 18, 2015 9:52 PM
Subject: [NavList] Re: Book - Wind, Sand and Stars
St Exupéry? If so, it is a good read but very much of its epoch without much technical detail - more the feeling of flying in the early days. I has a brilliant account of being hit by a pampero that blew nearly as hard to seaward as his aeroplane could fly in the opposite direction.Stephen DDr Stephen Davies
c/o Department of Real Estate and Construction
EH103, Eliot Hall
University of Hong Kong
Office: (852) 2219 4089
Mobile: (852) 6683 3754
stephen.davies79---.com
daiwaisi{at}hku.hkOn 19 Aug, 2015, at 12:07 pm, Greg Rudzinski <NoReply_Rudzinski@fer3.com> wrote: