  I had to return urlLink Suspect Identities: A History of Fingerprinting and Criminal Identification to the library. So if I want to finish it I'll have to put it on hold again. I'm always amazed by how much more slowly I read non-fiction. It seems like it takes three or four times as long. I think it's because you can scan most fiction in a way that you can't scan nonfiction which tends to have more theme specific words, often technical. For example, I was reading urlLink Callahan's Con last night and one of the characters speaks with a slightly skewed word order. Not quite Yoda, but noticeable if you're paying attention. I didn't notice it until another character mentioned it and then I had to really pay attention to everything the out of order character said. I'd just been mentally rearranging the sentence to make sense. It's like that e-mail that goes around that says if the first few letters in a word are right you won't even notice if it's misspelled. I think I have that e-mail at home, maybe I'll post it later. 
