User:Duckmather

Hi! I'm also active on English Wikipedia and Wikidata, and I consider the former my home wiki. I mainly find indices to read via the "Random transcription" button in the sidebar, though I have looked at the monthly challenge as well.

If you like Wikisource like I do, you should...

Done

 * Works of merit, in every department of literature; my very first work!
 * A penny-worth of wit
 * A Catechism on the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England; only did the last few pages, but still
 * The Second Armada: A Chapter of Future History - an interesting short story; (un?)fortunately most of the index was ads instead
 * Declaration between the government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the government of Ukraine, self-explanatory
 * Group Messaging Encryption

Things I've been (proof)reading

 * The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll, surprisingly engrossing for a biography
 * The Truth about China and Japan ; an interesting work about Asian history, and the first book I might actually (proof)read from cover to cover
 * China: Its History, Arts and Literature/Volume 1 ; another interesting read about Asian history that I might also go through cover to cover
 * Good Newes from New England
 * 2,4- and 2,6-Toluenediamine (in the presence of isocyanates) (5516); the first page is an especially hard nut to crack
 * The Qur'an (Palmer)
 * 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Spherical Harmonics
 * Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition/Trigonometry

Things I really want to (proof)read at some point

 * The American Cyclopædia (1879), tons of interesting stuff; really brings forth my inner Wikipedian
 * Encyclopædia Britannica, for similar reasons
 * The Development of Mathematics in China and Japan
 * The Knight of the Burning Pestle
 * Much Ado about Nothing