Author Topic: What book(s) are you reading?  (Read 845167 times)

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Crash Dummy

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3000 on: April 23, 2019, 05:34:19 AM »
still working my way through passion of the western mind but finding if i read it for hours i completely forget what i read at the start so alternating between that and now this:

a well written apolitical analysis that is more a broader social critique than psychiatric. it's also appealing to my inner obnoxious child who thinks he is smarter than everyone else in that there's plenty of outrage and pointing out problems without really suggesting any solutions (but the fun for me is applying his writing, especially on companies and bureaucracies, to my own everyday experiences at a US corporation and the behavior displayed by management)

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3001 on: April 23, 2019, 08:46:26 PM »
 John Langan's the Fisherman.  Halfway through and I can't put it down. 

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3002 on: April 24, 2019, 12:41:51 AM »
John Langan's the Fisherman.  Halfway through and I can't put it down.

I was about to tease you with, "Then how are you typing this post?" and realized that the lack of misspellings means that you likely used speech-to-text.

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3003 on: April 24, 2019, 01:02:31 AM »
I can type one handed and read one eyed.

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3004 on: April 24, 2019, 03:47:45 AM »
Haruki Murakami's Killing Commendatore.

Vizzys

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3005 on: April 24, 2019, 07:45:13 AM »
been reading the lightbringer series by Brent weeks

its a series of fantasy novels with a system of magic based on the color spectrum of light. basically if some people see a color of light they can craft stuff with it but at the cost of lifespan.
theirs this religion around light and stuff.  the morality of the various POV characters is questionable. Like one character saves a bunch of people but he also tortures his brother and owns slaves. And the bad guys goal is to free slaves even though he has to kill a bunch of religiously indoctrinated people to do it

its like 4am so im explaining it poorly but Its definitely on par quality wise as sanderson or rothfuss fantasy writing
萌え~

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3006 on: April 24, 2019, 12:40:46 PM »
developing his skill over years of careful masturbation, arvie posses hand-eye dexterity unparalleled in the entire toronto metropolitan region

I took regionals by storm but a badly placed stoke resulted in an injury that meant my dream of nationals would forever be a dream. 

Transhuman

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3007 on: April 25, 2019, 01:27:25 AM »
I didn't realise Tiamat's Wrath was out already and I feel like an idiot for not reading it a month ago

Potato

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3008 on: April 25, 2019, 06:45:31 AM »
glen keeps trying to get me to read hyperion and I finally found something that convinced me to get started

(Image removed from quote.)
Hyperion is genuinely great and you should read it.
Spud

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3009 on: April 26, 2019, 09:41:58 PM »


one of them oral history/interview books (where it's minimal original writing, the content is all from involved subjects like the SNL/ESPN/MTV/etc. books) in semi-chronological but primarily topically organized, so like it'll start talking about the Celtics dynasty as that was early in the NBA but then cover a bit broader than that to talk about Red and Russell and Cousy a bit, it tries to cover the women's game semi-equally (and tries to compare it to racial issues) but like always it comes off as trying to push it too hard like literally asking the women and only women interviewees what they think about Title IX and all of them have some rote "uh yeah, it was good I guess" reply, but like all Nancy Lieberman wants to do is talk about all the men she idolized growing up and tried to steal moves from lol

Spensie Haywood is amazing, his stories are just absurd, I knew he was a "young, dumb, country boy" that fascinated others early on but not this much... also speaking of Lieberman, her stories are fun too because she's a little older than even like Cheryl Miller or whatever, she went to Rucker Park alone as an eleven year old because she heard that's where people played basketball in NYC and when kids were giving her shit for being a girl she asked them if "you Rucker?" and it always worked

lmao, the ABA wanted to patent/trademark the red, white and blue ball only they only did it with the ABA logo on it, anyone could still make a ball just couldn't stamp ABA on it, also they did no tests before hand, the first game they just painted a ball with regular paint

big chunk of the book is an ABA section because a huge chunk of the sources are people who had ABA roots, also related to that the now retired David Stern for the first time kinda actually admits what the NBA was doing in regards to that and other issues (Connie Hawkins, etc.) when he was just a lowly lawyer for the league, he didn't used to like to admit any of that when he was Commissioner and lifted up Larry O'Brien to heights

by comparison the entire section about the WNBA is five pages long...three if you remove Stern and Val Ackerman's comments about how amazing it was to start it... :doge

also Bill Simmons is one of the interviewees because he's Bill Simmons and apparently that's legally required now even though he only has the same five stories about seeing the Celtics as a kid that he's told for twenty years, also he's the only person in the book to shit talk Wilt while like Bill Russell calls him the best player ever, others talk about how nice and understanding Wilt was to everyone or Larry Brown relays a story about when he was at UCLA and Wilt was in one of Magic's famous pickup games and Magic kept calling goaltends and fouls that Wilt did not feel were entirely accurate so Wilt got serious and wrecked everybody at age 45 or whatever and I may have fused that part of Simmons unnecessary contributions to the book to this simply to retell that story

here's Nancy Lieberman and Rashad McCants (edit: yes, I looked this up obv) on the Mavs D-League Team when she coached it :doge


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« Last Edit: April 26, 2019, 10:54:02 PM by benjipwns »

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3010 on: April 27, 2019, 04:29:48 AM »
De tolk van Java by Alfred Birney

It's about a Dutch-Indonesian family during and after the second world war.

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3011 on: April 28, 2019, 02:12:15 AM »
Quote from: Larry Bird, on Magic's HIV 27 years later
I'm glad he's doing well, but now I'm stuck with him. First thing everyone still asks me is, "How's Magic?"
:dead

jakefromstatefarm

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3012 on: April 29, 2019, 01:56:58 PM »
The Age of... series is generally seen as his magnum opus, if you want a straightforward, long-duree, global history, that’s probably your best bet with him. The Invention of Tradition is at least as important to modern historiography though, and it’s a nice primer on anti-realism wrt folk cultural/social categories, a project I’m not unsympathetic towards.

Humanities/social sciences moved away from orthodox/political Marxism pretty hard starting in the 70s and esp. in the 80s and 90s and hobsbawm -to my knowledge- is a part of that old guard. His works, esp. the above two, get assimilated into and/or put into dialogue with later work that has a more nebulous, stapled together idea of its leftward politics (cf. Mann’s Sources of Social Power).

Svejk

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3013 on: April 29, 2019, 02:01:12 PM »
On the second book of the Mistborn trilogy.  Man, these books would make such a great video game!

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3014 on: April 30, 2019, 06:55:55 AM »
On the second book of the Mistborn trilogy.  Man, these books would make such a great video game!

https://www.rockpapershotgun.com/2017/08/05/mistborn-rpg-cancelled/

 :-\

BisMarckie

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3015 on: April 30, 2019, 07:55:00 AM »
Started The Possibility of an Island last night. I have never read anything Houellebecq has written and everything I have heard about his novels ranges from genius to boring pseudo intellectual garbage.

Crash Dummy

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3016 on: May 01, 2019, 01:29:20 AM »
any good secondary texts on heidegger? all his german terminology is doing my head in

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3017 on: May 01, 2019, 09:58:23 PM »
Read the framing store to books of blood.  Damn.  Going to start reading that and Kings of the Wyld.

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3018 on: May 02, 2019, 12:06:20 AM »
10% in and Kings of the Wyld is both hilarious and touching.  "In stories, when a giant was slain, it toppled thunderously to the ground.   In reality, a giant died much the same way anything else did: screaming and shitting itself." 

It's set in a world where mercenary 'bands'  are treated like rock-stars.  Here the synopses  "Clay Cooper and his band were once the best of the best -- the meanest, dirtiest, most feared crew of mercenaries this side of the Heartwyld. Their glory days long past, the mercs have grown apart and grown old, fat, drunk - or a combination of the three. Then an ex-bandmate turns up at Clay's door with a plea for help. His daughter Rose is trapped in a city besieged by an enemy one hundred thousand strong and hungry for blood. Rescuing Rose is the kind of mission that only the very brave or the very stupid would sign up for. It's time to get the band back together for one last tour across the Wyld"--

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3019 on: May 03, 2019, 09:16:26 PM »
Kings of the Wyld was super fun. 

"At his shoulder walks a sorcerer, a cosmic conversationalist. Enemy of the incurable rot, absent chairman of combustive sciences at the university in Oddsford, and the only living soul above the age of eight to believe in owlbears."

"The entire front of the shrine exploded outward. Blocks of stone rained down on the plaza, bursting on impact into spinning shrapnel shards, and a dragon—a real live you-gotta-be-shitting-me dragon—came roaring from the ruin."

"We will speak of this later, his lower back promised. Oh yes we will."

"Behind him in the empty courtyard, the stones of a distant shore were piled neatly on the man’s grave. Because even a misspent life, he reasoned, was worth remembering."

"The mercenary murmured scant thanks and rushed off, only to be crushed a moment later by a giant’s pounding foot. Bob’s bard turned and fled, wailing and clutching his harp to his chest like a scholar saving a single book from a burning library."

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3020 on: May 07, 2019, 10:46:54 PM »
Bloody Rose wasn't as good as King's of the Wyld but a good sequel non-the-less and I'm looking forward to the next one.   

"Some people knew how to kill a conversation. Cura, on the other hand, could make it wish it had never been born."

"Tam scowled. “They eat bananas?” Moog shrugged his bony shoulders. “Everything eats bananas.”

“This doesn’t mean you’re off the hook when it comes to being our bard. If I so much as step on a lizard you’d better tell the world I kicked a dragon to death. Sound good?”

"The Giantsbane frontman hurled the chicken down and stomped it to death while the crowd cried foul."
« Last Edit: May 07, 2019, 10:54:02 PM by Madrun Badrun »

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3021 on: May 11, 2019, 10:30:48 PM »
Finally started The Black Company after putting it off for years.  Did the first five chapters today.  It's very different.  I like it a lot so far.

Potato

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3022 on: May 12, 2019, 01:23:48 AM »
Finally started The Black Company after putting it off for years.  Did the first five chapters today.  It's very different.  I like it a lot so far.

The Black Company is pretty amazing. I've read the first three and enjoyed every bit of it.

I didn't go further cause I read that the quality drops off after that and honestly, the ending of the third is pretty satisfying as a conclusion.

I've moved on to The Hogfather. I've been slowly going through Pratchett's Discworld and he just gets better with every book.

So sad he's gone.
Spud

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3023 on: May 20, 2019, 12:39:10 AM »
Finally started The Black Company after putting it off for years.  Did the first five chapters today.  It's very different.  I like it a lot so far.

The Black Company is pretty amazing. I've read the first three and enjoyed every bit of it.

I didn't go further cause I read that the quality drops off after that and honestly, the ending of the third is pretty satisfying as a conclusion.

I've moved on to The Hogfather. I've been slowly going through Pratchett's Discworld and he just gets better with every book.

So sad he's gone.

I just finished reading his Wintersmith YA book. I honestly didn't know it was supposed to be YA until the closing voiceover said something about Harper Kids and "if you are interested in Young Adult Fiction, please visit..." :lol I found myself laughing aloud repeatedly throughout the book.

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3024 on: May 22, 2019, 03:44:27 PM »
Wintersmith is also part 3 in the Tiffany Aching sub-series.

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3025 on: May 24, 2019, 11:53:22 AM »
do you want just Napoleon or just France or Europe or something global? focus on the war?

on the subject of France, I just read this, which was fun, just fantastically written, I'm surprised somebody didn't think to put "From Gaul to de Gualle" as the subtitle:

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3026 on: May 24, 2019, 11:53:50 AM »
lmao, holy shit, it actually has that on another edition:


 :dead :dead :dead :dead

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3027 on: May 24, 2019, 01:20:01 PM »
If you want to back up somewhat to the Revolution itself and the conditions it created (the eventual vacuum of which is arguably what created Napoleon's reign), these two are pretty good for that (first one is more modern 2016, latter is 1989), both stop just before Napoleon iirc, so you can get the state of France before Napoleon triumphed in Italy and the Directorate fell:


Both examine the conditions of citizens outside of Paris, especially the former delves into what was happening throughout the still rural and religious France and what eventually brought about the War in Vendee when the Paris-focused Revolution ignored that whole part where they should do more than send out broad statements like "ALL THE LAND IS NOW FREE, END THE CHURCH" and expect it to just be handled. Also what happened when they expected their draft calls for the war with Austria/etc. to be handled similarly. (Too much editorializing about the Revolution beyond the book itself, benji -Ed)

edit: scrounged up the two Napoleonic Wars books I was thinking of:

second one does less war focus and more impact of the war on everything else, especially back home, focus

Penguin's done a great "History of Europe" multi-part series that last few years, but they stupidly lumped 1648-1815 together as "The Age of Revolutions" even though they also put out books for 1919-1939 and 1950-2007, otherwise they would have put together a smart 1789-1815 book that'd be just what you wanted based on at least the ones they have put out in the rest of the series. (You'll also note that the 1848 revolutions are not part of the "age of revolutions" apparently.)
« Last Edit: May 24, 2019, 01:27:54 PM by benjipwns »

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3028 on: June 02, 2019, 09:45:10 PM »
Wintersmith is also part 3 in the Tiffany Aching sub-series.

Ooh, thanks! I had ZERO inkling that this is part of a series. Didn't even think to look.

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3029 on: June 04, 2019, 01:13:07 AM »
Up to book six in Dresden Files audio books.  So damn good. 

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3030 on: June 05, 2019, 01:48:02 AM »


Quote from: Allan Pinkerton
It was this class, and no other, that precipitated riot and bloodshed in Chicago, and it is a notable fact in connection with these communists, that their viciousness and desperation were largely caused by the rantings of a young American communist named Albert Parsons Karakand. [Kara posses] a strange nature in every respect, as he has for several years lived in Chicago with a colored woman, who he has at least called his wife. He is a young man of flippant tongue, and is capable of making a speech that will tingle the blood of that class of characterless rascals that are always standing ready to grasp society by the throat; and while he can excite his auditors, of this class, to the very verge of riot, has the devilish ingenuity in the use of words which has permitted himself to escape deserving punishment.

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3031 on: June 05, 2019, 04:13:47 AM »
Reading a book about the Red Dead Redemption 2 bad guys? 

What a nerd!

Tasty

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3032 on: June 05, 2019, 12:36:57 PM »


It may be "Privilege: The Book," but some of the stuff seems to be landing and helping my anxiety. Or it's a placebo, but at what point does a placebo become treatment? :thinking


benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3033 on: June 06, 2019, 06:30:31 AM »


another oral history, seems like it may try to encompass too much, for example I don't think there need to be three chapters on things related to Wired, but the author having worked there thinks differently

Transhuman

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3034 on: June 06, 2019, 07:43:04 AM »
Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI



One of the few times i've read a non-fiction book and had to keep checking online to see if the stuff had actually happened. Just insane.

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3035 on: June 12, 2019, 12:08:33 AM »


I like Schweizer's earlier books quite a bit, Clinton Cash was too targeted (especially to hit the racks during the election) and flimsy and boring really, but his earlier stuff was less targeted. I don't mean that in a he managed "both sides" way, which he did but it was less because it was intentional. More it was he was looking at a certain issue, say Congress members trading stock based on legislative knowledge, and he hit on whoever was doing it. In that case, Nancy Pelosi got hit because her husband had made some of the larger credit card trades. When he focused on how the parties require their members to spend 40% of their time fundraising, it was mostly all about Republicans because they were in power and especially in the House that's everything. (Recently, I've seen Pelosi and the Democrats get criticized for this from left outlets just discovering the practice.)

So hopefully this is more a return to form than the Clinton book was. Just from the chapters and pictures he has as much about Biden and Kerry as McConnell/Chao and the Kushners. From the stuff so far, I think the only reason Hastert isn't on the cover is because nobody knows who he is and also he's a bit more known for... other things... now. He also is taking care of his new Fox audience by right off the bat explaining to them that while China may be full of official Communists, that you should think of them as regular businessmen rather than Marxist ideologues. He also compares the Trump Organization to the Princelings and guanxi.

Lastly, regarding the rest of Valley of Genius, I quite liked that overall. Especially the chapter on Twitter where they are all explaining how they and especially other people aren't sure if it's an idea that will go anywhere, interspersed with @RealDonaldTrump tweets. :lol

I still think it would probably work better as multiple books. It doesn't cover Microsoft at all, which okay, they're not in the Valley, but they loom large over it. You wouldn't even know what Oracle is for example or why Larry Ellison is mentioned so many times by people in the book except for the fact that he lived near Steve Jobs. The book also goes from Atari and Apple to WIRED MAGAZINE to the internet to the iPhone. The Internet really should have been a second book, so they could flesh both it and the earlier stuff out better. I mean in this book, Netscape has a huge IPO (why? uh...) then the dot-com bust happens, but eBay is okay! Then Google and Facebook happen and then Steve Jobs dies and we get Twitter. That's the whole story of The Internet in this book. And half of it is taken up with space for Steve Jobs to single handedly create the iPod and then iPhone thanks to reading Wired Magazine's glossy page spreads.

I still liked it, because I like all these oral history books, but some of them aren't doing proper scope checking. The scope of SNL/ESPN/MTV/Food Network fits within a book. Basketball history (not just professional), especially when you're force feeding chapters on diversity just to have them, and SILICON VALLEY'S ENTIRE HISTORY are way beyond the scope, so you shouldn't even try. Scale it back and focus. The guy who wrote this Silicon Valley book says he spent like six years gathering the material, and I have to assume 80% of it got edited out of the book in the end because he tried to cram all the events into one book without realizing he should have been keeping more of the material. The SNL book for example works so well because you have the original SNL team, the utter collapse of the show, the return of Lorne with Eddie Murphy, the 90s rebirth team with Farley, etc. and then an endgame of the team in Tina Fey, etc. getting big beyond SNL. (Jimmy Fallon's not yet ascent to the Tonight Show would have been an ideal capper for that book.) Plus there's only so much they can say about it. You don't want anecdotes from everyone about the crunch process of getting a live show prepared for Saturday Night, you only needed the chapter on that process once. When it comes to say tech, if someone isn't familiar with something, like Xerox PARC, you spend a lot of time telling them what it is. And you have to assume that across nearly everything. The chapter on Napster would be incomprehensible to anyone who wasn't there using it and experienced that whole rise and fall as a user. (Extra hilarious about that is lots of people point out that Napster effectively led to the iPod/iTunes, one person actually mentions KaZaA, Morpheus, etc. But what's not mentioned at all? BitTorrent. The technology that achieved what Napster or any of those other services couldn't inherently. The official company is even in the Valley ffs!)

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3036 on: June 12, 2019, 12:17:24 AM »
Read the first half of the first murderbot novella.  Its been amazing so far.  Its about a socially awkward cyborg murder bot that has disabled its own governance system -- inplace to prevent it from going on a mass murdering spree -- so that it can binge watch tv while on the job. 

Opening is

Quote
I could have become a mass murderer after I hacked my governor module, but then I realized I could access the combined feed of entertainment channels carried on the company satellites. It had been well over 35,000 hours or so since then, with still not much murdering, but probably, I don't know, a little under 35,000 hours of movies, serials, books, plays and music consumed. As a heartless killing machine, I was a terrible failure.


Quote
Yes, talk to Murderbot about its feelings. The idea was so painful I dropped to 97 percent efficiency.

Quote
The whole group had been remarkably drama-free so far, which I appreciated. The last few contracts had been like being an involuntary bystander in one of the entertainment feed’s multi-partner relationship serials except I’d hated the whole cast.

Quote
She’s a really good commander. I’m going to hack her file and put that in.



Potato

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3037 on: June 12, 2019, 12:31:35 AM »
I'm reading that too. Been pretty interesting so far. I think I am about 1/3rd of the way through.
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Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3038 on: June 16, 2019, 12:29:17 AM »
I enjoyed the second murderbot novella as well. 

Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3039 on: June 18, 2019, 01:19:24 AM »
Murderbot 3 and 4 were excellent as well.  Looks like a full novel will be coming next year.  Can't wait.  I'd really love for this to be turned into a netflix series. 

Potato

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3040 on: June 22, 2019, 04:06:52 PM »
I'm on the second murderbot. I agree it would make good tv although the internal monologues would be tricky.
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Madrun Badrun

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3041 on: June 22, 2019, 07:38:29 PM »
Ya, think it could be voice over or maybe do those shots in first person with text overlay on the screen.

The second was the weakest of the four. 

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I really wanted them to ham up ART my fair ladying Murderbot. 
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Potato

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3042 on: June 26, 2019, 03:02:30 AM »
Taking a break from murderbot.

Just starting The Obelisk Gate by NK Jemison.

Thought the first book was ok. Not great and certainly not worthy of the absolute gushing praise that it got, but at least worthy of giving the second book a chance.

Now I just need to remember who all the characters are and what happened in the first one.
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benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3043 on: June 29, 2019, 07:39:22 PM »

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3044 on: June 30, 2019, 11:19:55 AM »
The collected poetry of J. Slauerhoff.

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3045 on: July 09, 2019, 08:08:06 PM »


Je m'en vais, mais l'Etat demurera toujours? :maf

jakefromstatefarm

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3046 on: July 09, 2019, 10:37:18 PM »
It’s a collection of bunch of op-Ed pieces he’d been doing for a decade and a half. I haven’t read the new edition, the talk surrounding it was that it shifted focus: the first edition is interested in bush administration war on terror stuff and the second is about the Donald’s valorization of the marketplace and nativism

jakefromstatefarm

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3047 on: July 10, 2019, 12:10:40 AM »
What I like so far: the deconstruction of Burke and his legacy. I knew he existed and was influential, but man from a critical standpoint his views seem to embody the "bootlicker" stereotype that brocialists have of reactionaries. I feel like actually reading something of his now for shits and giggles.
Reflections is what everyone reads and is probably your best bet. Enquiry...Sublime and the Beautiful is important and interesting too. Those two are pretty much it in terms of philosophical work he did, everything else is first order, low to the ground stuff like parliamentary speeches and correspondence.

That’s the same as the de Maistre chapter, right? You also might be interested in looking at his Considerations on France cuz that guy was a fucking PSYCHO and reading him/about him is super fun. Robins reading is practically copy and pasted from Isaiah Berlin’s classic article on de Maistre that I’m p sure you can find a pdf of using Google fu. Berlins great but nowadays de maistre isn’t generally seen as the kind of proto-fash Berlin made him out to be.

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What I don't like so far: all the David Brooks quotes, who I think of as a bad, projecting take machine rather than a true pillar of American conservative ideology
this is the beauty of David brooks though. He dispenses middle-highbrow matter-of-fact common sense to a country that doesn’t give a shit about intellectualism. He’s like the Roger Ebert of politics, you need him so you can take the pulse of his milieu.

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3048 on: July 17, 2019, 01:33:20 AM »
that hagiography of Louis XIV was even worse than I thought, about 75% of it was about his mistresses, how sexy they were and how much they loved him

but the main thing I discovered is like half the court of 17th Century France was killed through bleeding, Louis got lucky in that he was allergic to one of the herbs or whatever they used, he dislocated an elbow falling off a horse and they were going to fucking bleed him to cure it except for this so they just had wrapped it by happenstance, then put it in plaster after it stopped swelling and he was fine

something similar was going to happen to his mom, the once Queen, when she was sick with a flu or something but when they called the local doctor to supervise he said "bleeding was horseshit, you royal people are nuts" and gave her some herbs and she lived another twenty years

edit: wanted to add this, the "vapors" was apparently something Louis got, and then it became popular at the court to have the "vapors" lol old timey people were so dumb, people today would never fake illnesses for social position
« Last Edit: July 17, 2019, 03:21:25 AM by benjipwns »

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3049 on: July 17, 2019, 03:47:15 AM »
Reading A Spark of White Light, an SF novel.

Re-reading John Dies at the End, a horror comedy novel, which is still unsettling and hilarious.

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3050 on: July 18, 2019, 06:39:42 AM »

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Nixon was distrusted by many conservative media figures .... but ... Watergate made Nixon more popular among many movement conservatives ... [they believed] that liberals were using Watergate as a pretense to reverse the results of the 1972 election.
:trumps
« Last Edit: July 18, 2019, 07:10:47 AM by benjipwns »

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3051 on: July 20, 2019, 07:42:46 AM »
Wide Sargasso Sea  by  Jean Rhys

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3052 on: July 26, 2019, 08:08:57 PM »

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A darkly humorous tour of "dictator literature" in the twentieth century, featuring the soul-killing prose and poetry of Hitler, Mao, and many more, which shows how books have sometimes shaped the world for the worse

Since the days of the Roman Empire dictators have written books. But in the twentieth-century despots enjoyed unprecedented print runs to (literally) captive audiences. The titans of the genre—Stalin, Mussolini, and Khomeini among them—produced theoretical works, spiritual manifestos, poetry, memoirs, and even the occasional romance novel and established a literary tradition of boundless tedium that continues to this day.

How did the production of literature become central to the running of regimes? What do these books reveal about the dictatorial soul? And how can books and literacy, most often viewed as inherently positive, cause immense and lasting harm? Putting daunting research to revelatory use, Daniel Kalder asks and brilliantly answers these questions.

Marshalled upon the beleaguered shelves of The Infernal Library are the books and commissioned works of the century’s most notorious figures. Their words led to the deaths of millions. Their conviction in the significance of their own thoughts brooked no argument. It is perhaps no wonder then, as Kalder argues, that many dictators began their careers as writers.
:awesome

Tasty

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3053 on: July 26, 2019, 08:32:31 PM »


Me am smart now rite :)

HardcoreRetro

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3054 on: July 30, 2019, 03:27:31 PM »
Reading middle-dutch literature.

I love how subtle some of these plays from the middle ages are. Guy gets cucked by wife, proceeds to beat her to death with a stick. *insert some epilogue about the moral*

benjipwns

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3055 on: August 18, 2019, 03:44:18 AM »


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Mattel, Inc. is the maker of Barbie dolls and the former employer of Carter Bryant, who left Mattel to join MGA, maker of Bratz dolls. Mattel alleged that Bryant breached a confidentiality and inventions agreement by taking his ideas for the Bratz dolls, which he developed while employed by Mattel, to MGA. A jury found in favor of Mattel and the court issued an injunction barring MGA from selling most of its Bratz dolls.

MGA appealed and the Ninth Circuit reversed, based on erroneous jury instructions and an overbroad injunction. The district court granted MGA’s motion for a new trial. In this decision, the court addressed, among other things, the issue of whether the confidentiality agreement covered ideas; whether Bryant’s sketches and sculpts are substantially similar to the first and subsequent generations of Bratz dolls; and whether MGA misappropriated Mattel’s trade secrets.

Mattel’s “Employee Confidential and Inventions Agreement” required Bryant to communicate to Mattel “all inventions . . . conceived or reduced to practice by me (alone or jointly with others) at any time during my employment with [Mattel].” It also assigned to Mattel any rights, title and interest Bryant had in such inventions, which the agreement defined as “includ[ing], but [] not limited to, all discoveries, improvements, processes, developments, designs, knowhow, data computer programs, and formulae, whether patentable or unpatentable.” The agreement did not include the word “ideas”.
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Mattel executives later asserted in court that it was impossible for a place like Kickapoo High School to inspire anything as hip as Barbie's competitor, Braztz ... the principal of Kickapoo High School would fly to California to testify .. that her teenagers knew how to have fun; that they were tuned into pop culture ... MGA attorney's would bring evidence that Kickapoo High School had Brad Pitt as an alum

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/01/22/when-barbie-went-to-war-with-bratz
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Lobel expertly explains, much turned on MGA’s lawyer Jennifer Keller’s questioning of the Mattel C.E.O., Robert Eckert.

“Say I am eighteen, doodling away. I place my doodles in my parents’ house in one of the drawers of my teen-age closet,” Keller said. “Twenty years later, I am hired by Mattel. I visit my parents’ home and find the doodles. Does Mattel own them?”

“Yes,” Eckert said. “Probably, yes.”


tiesto

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3056 on: August 18, 2019, 11:19:22 AM »
I'm much more interested in CRPGs from a historical basis than trying to play through them so something like this is perfect for me. Beautiful hardcover, full color pages.

^_^

Potato

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3057 on: August 18, 2019, 10:52:30 PM »


I love Scott Lynch's world.

I've read a lot of fantasy and like most people I am sick to death of mediaeval-style worlds.

His characters are well formed and usually steer clear of becoming too much of a Mary Sue, even if Locke is a little too good at everything.

He had a very fast-paced writing style too which I like.
Spud

chronovore

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3058 on: August 18, 2019, 11:07:55 PM »
(Image removed from quote.)

I love Scott Lynch's world.

I've read a lot of fantasy and like most people I am sick to death of mediaeval-style worlds.

His characters are well formed and usually steer clear of becoming too much of a Mary Sue, even if Locke is a little too good at everything.

He had a very fast-paced writing style too which I like.

Other than your over-broad use of "Mary Sue," I agree with your post. Lynch's world is wonderful, and I can't wait for the next book.

Potato

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Re: What book(s) are you reading?
« Reply #3059 on: August 21, 2019, 09:50:18 PM »
Point taken. Compared to some others, Lynch's characters are very much not Mary Sues, but still, Locke is a little too good at being Locke. Doesn't mean I don't love reading his stories though.
Spud