Hello fellow Glibertarians! We’ve been reading, or in jesse’s case listening…or in JW’s case looking vacantly at pictures on the back of a Lucky Charm’s box and wanted to share our experiences with you! Gather round and share your latest reads in the comments (like we could stop you).
SugarFree
Nothing but British Apocalypse this month, starting with a tenth or twelfth re-read of John Wyndham‘s The Day of the Triffids (1952), easily the best killer-plants-eat-middle-class-England novel. Despite my commitment to cut down on re-reading to focus on material I always wanted to read but never have managed to get around to, Triffids was an overlap of my book-to-film read/watch project. After reading it again, I watched the 1962 film adaptation, as well as the 1981 and 2009 BBC TV miniseries.
Triffids is an oddly refreshing apocalypse to read in retrospect, relying on neither the dreary analogue politics of nuclear annihilation or the current vogue of climate change. Wyndham makes two changes to a familiar post-WWII England and lets the plot unwind: There are the huge plants called Triffids–poisonous, mobile and fecund–that everyone tolerates because they produce a valuable oil and manageable because in non-industrial settings their stinger can be docked and a comet that produces a cosmic light-show that blinds anyone who watches it. The protagonist, a worker on a triffid farm, wakes up in a hospital, eyes bandaged from an attack by the vicious vegetables that almost blinded him. (If all this sounds familiar, it is because the premise was taken in bits in pieces for the set-up for The Night of the Comet (1984), and the intros for both 28 Days Later (2002) and The Walking Dead (comic and TV show.) The protagonist stumbles around in London, avoiding packs of blind people who grow more violent in their desperation, finds himself a beautiful sighted girlfriend (who missed being blinded because she was sleeping off a massive hangover) and the struggle to survive begins. Slavers, plague, clueless goody-two-shoes and separation all afflict our lovers long before the killer plants become too much of a problem. A foster daughter and a couple of the friendly sort of blind folks later, they build themselves a comfortable if hardscrabble life on a lovely country estate, flamethrowers ever at the ready. (The last part led Brian Aldiss to dismiss this entire genre as “cozy catastrophes.”)
The 1962 movie is pretty garbage, discarding most of the plot for rubber Triffid suits and wooden acting. The 1981 miniseries the most accurate to the spirit and letter of the book, lifting dialogue straight from certain sections. The Triffids are fairly well done; modeled on pitcher plants and oddly pretty (you understand why people would have a deadly walking plant in their gardens.) The 2009 miniseries is pretty crap, using only the broadest outlines of the book (and stealing a plot point from 28 Days Later in a sly twist.)
Old Man With Candy and I both read The Death of Grass (US title: No Blade of Grass), 1956, a savage little exercise in doing what it takes to survive from John Christopher, best known as an author of children’s fantasy and science fiction novels. A virus attacks all the grasses of the world, wiping out more of the ready carbs and leading to worldwide famine. However, OMWC smartly declined to put himself through the terrible 1970 film adaptation, which changes the virus-famine to a namby-pamby environment horror story (think horrible folk guitar over stock footage of industrial waste and oil spill birds) that misses the point of the book.
I finished off the spree with J. G. Ballard‘s apocalypse tetralogy: The Wind From Nowhere (1961), The Drowned World (1962), The Burning World 1964; variant title: The Drought), and The Crystal World (1966). Ballard takes the four medieval elements (air, water, fire, and earth) and sets about gleefully destroying the world. They were a bit much to read back-to-back. Wind and Burning are fairly skippable, and Drowned tries to work in far too much Heart of Darkness. Drowned and Crystal incorporates the sort of nightmare logic that informs his later and more accomplished work and the writing is superb, full of lush prose about awful things–but all of them are flawed in their own way, and you would be better off reading Crash or High-Rise to experience Ballard.
jesse.in.mb
Oliver Pötzsch – The Hangman’s Daughter. Pötzsch digs into his own family history to write a detective novel set in an inter-war period (1660, so not *that* inter-war) Bavaria. The story focuses on Jakob Kuisl the town hangman, and the town physician. The title is a bit misleading because even though she’s in the story and has all of the hallmarks of a strong heroine (clever, headstrong, agile), she’s a relatively minor character. The setting and the story are fun and the presentation (Kindle In Motion) was something I hadn’t experienced before. It made me feel a bit like I was reading a children’s book, but the art was solid.
Randall Munroe – What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions. As a fan of XKCD for about as long as XKCD has been a thing, I was excited to finally take a crack at What If?, and it was breezy and delightful. The audio edition was narrated by Wil Wheaton, which probably should’ve annoyed me but his tone augmented the nerdy whimsy of it quite nicely.
John Scalzi – The Dispatcher. I have limited exposure to Scalzi’s early works (Old Man’s War has been near the top of my to-read list for a solid five years, but never quite gets there), and have heard his later stuff isn’t that great, but I enjoyed The Dispatcher as a thought experiment of a violent place (Chicago, natch) where violence has changed: when you’re murdered you feel it, but you return home unscathed after death. Much of the novella is presented as a conversation between a dispatcher (a licensed killer) and a CPD detective who are trying to find another dispatcher who has been violently abducted. Zachary Quinto brings a warm affability to the dispatcher which gives the moral discussions an interesting dimension.
Heroic Mulatto
Timothy Zhan – Thrawn. Because Thrawn.
Riven
Well… I’m testing on the material presented in this book on April 3rd, then I can start reading other books again. (Y’know, provided I pass…) I’m looking forward to finishing up the copy of the Kama Sutra that Swiss got me for Christmas. What, your friends wouldn’t get you a book like that? Get better friends. Mr. Riven and I also recently visited his parents and listened to about half of Jordan Peterson’s 12 Rules for Life on the drive there and back again over ~8 hours. We still have the last half to listen to, but what we did hear was some pretty solid advice with a good bit of dry humor. Much to my delight, Peterson is the narrator of his own audiobook, and I’m looking forward to the next road trip across the state so we can finish it.
SP
My extended road trip to visit OMWC’s Mom resulted in varied reading. I read a couple issues of The Jewish Journal (Palm Beach), which is really pretty informative, but not as informative as my MIL’s canasta ladies. I read many of those inserts that pharmacists include with medications. I read through and sorted out all my MIL’s tax documents. And, as indicated previously on this website, I read many, many, MANY wine bottle labels.
I downloaded The Complete Father Brown Mysteries for my Kindle app. Although there is some controversy of the “completeness” or lack thereof among the reviewers of this edition, for what I needed… mindless relaxation I could fit into small blocks of free time… this filled the bill nicely. Especially for $.99. In the 40 years since I last read them, I’d forgotten how gentle and charmingly written these short stories are. Perfect.
Swiss Servator
Beer labels, and lots and lots of contracts.
Rebel Yell. Stonewall Jackson was a very strange guy.
I was considering buying that book. Do you like it so far?
Fantastic, very readable.
I listened to that and read SC Gwynne’s “Empire of the Summer Moon”….he’s a very interesting and readable historian. Jackson was definitely brilliant and highly eccentric. Principled to a fault in a sense.
How was Empire? Rebel Yell is very well written.
Absolutely great. I recommended it to a half dozen of my friends and every single one thanked me and told me how much they enjoyed it. The Comanche wars are something I was more or less ignorant about until I read it. John Coffee Hays was a badass. Cool firearms history in there too.
“Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea” and “Escape From Camp 14 : One Man’s Remarkable Odyssey from North Korea to Freedom in the West”
Both are remarkable books peeking inside the curtain into the horror that is the DPRK. Fuck tankies.
(reading with my kid: “The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl : 2 Fuzzy, 2 Furious. I’d probably read this by myself if I could get away with it, because I love the character. Recommended for comic-book loving tweens/teens)
This is a good opportunity for a reminder that on Sunday, April Fool’s Day, the DPRK News twitter account is going to be tweeting “straight news” about North Korea. It will go back to its normal trolling self on Monday.
Have you read Dear Reader?
“Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea” is a very good book. It’s very well written: hard to put down. I’m somewhat surprised that a movie still hasn’t been made based on it.
A film besmirching the name of a communist regime? In this day of Hollywood?
I expect a movie about the life of Un’s sister first
Could we skip the part where they have to come up with embarrassing hagiographies on their own and just let them reprint state propaganda?
Nuh-uh! Many prestigious Lefties have assured me that North Koreans are living in a paradise of free healthcare and ski lodges thanks to the elimination of income inequality.
Dark Matter
I’m about 2/3 of the way through and its pretty decent so far – its about a guy that discovers how to put macro-sized objects (including humans) into quantum super-position, allowing them to traverse between alternate timelines. The “science” is total nonsense, but its still pretty fun.
The premise is that an alternate timeline version of the main character kidnaps himself and switches timelines with him. The book follows the man’s journey to get back to his original timeline. They do a lot of playing around with what could different timelines could look like for the U.S., which is a lot of fun to read.
I just finished this a couple of weeks back. I had hoped for a little more on the different timelines, but was pretty satisfied on how he wrapped it all up.
I read it last year – not bad.
I had to take a break from Red Card and Shadowfire, so I’m working on “Mechbay Murder”. It’s a murder mystery at a scripted combat sport arena involving giant robots.
I also picked up 12 Rules for Life, but I haven’t touched it yet. It was more of a purchase to piss off all of the leftist columns that were written to libel Peterson. I also bought it because I’ve heard so many interviews with Peterson which gave me hours of enjoyment, so I felt like throwing him $15.
Am I the only person who finds his voice prone to inducing narcolepsy?
No.
No. I am stuck about 15 minutes into his econtalk interview.
I like his voice. It sounds like he’s on the verge of death, and that turns me on.
I find his accent charming in a folksy way.
To me, he sounds like Kermit the Frog.
If you pumped Kermit full of Quaaludes, I might see some resemblance, albeit not a strong one.
How is that a book? Should not it be a list?
I found a list. 12. Pet a cat. I was specifically told not to pet animals on the street when I went to Peru.
He’s talking about Canadian cats, which I’m sure are much more polite.
The Checklist Manifesto, because I’m that boring.
Hitler’s Children: The Baader-Meinhoff Gang, on the recommendation of a glib. Interesting material, pretty bad writing.
Next up, Bryan Caplan’s The Case Against Education.
Please report back. I find Caplan to be the the worst kind of Edgelord-On-The-Spectrum when it comes to putting a title on and framing his book, but I enjoyed Selfish Reasons.
Re-reading James Michener’s “Hawaii.”
Great book and a great book about America. Readers just have to get past the initial journey, which drags on awhile.
“Centennial” is pretty decent as well, and covers the area where I live now – but you can skip the final chapter or two. Booooring.
Michener has always been a pleasure for me. Try some of the less known, like “Caravans” and, especially, “The Source”
… Hobbit
Just started Thomas Sowell’s Knowledge and Decisions; lots of good red meat in there. For dessert, David Drake’s RCN series. Just finished D-Day, by Stephen Ambrose. His depiction of Omaha Beach says a lot about the courage of your average troop.
Not sure how to answer this. Do you want the actual title or the one on the fake cover I use?
Just tell us which Manga you’re on.
Cartoon version of the youtube link on my handle.
I’ve been burned by you before. I’ll check it when I get home.
Reading about the Fallout games in lieu of playing them, lent is almost over!
Just finished 12 Rules and now I’m in between books.
“History of Llangynwyd Parish”; trying to confirm some family history. So if anyone wants to know who fell off a ladder in a small Welsh village during the 1700’s, let me know.
The other day I realized I’ve been Dead Peopling for many, many decades, having started as a young teen. I’m plotting out a few sometime-in-the-future road trips with Webdom to go visit all the ancestral homesteads in the mid-Atlantic, New England, and Appalachians.
Then I’ll start on Europe. While mostly Eastern European and Welsh locales, we still have cousins living in a 450 year old family home in Switzerland.
Fortunately my family stayed relatively sedentary once they arrived stateside, so I don’t have much traveling to do here. I was the fifth generation of my family raised in my house in Pennsylvania. The European side is a bit trickier; the Irish part had been taken care of with a trip to Galway, but the Welsh side needs some tidying up to find the specific villages. I did just confirm that great great great grandad was married in Llangynwyd though, so I’m getting closer.
My father’s bloodline is a touch muddier, though. We know great grandad came from a village that is now part of Romania, and that he had a Hungarian name. That makes sense, since the part of Romania has a very large population of ethnic Hungarians. Unfortunately the trail runs cold with him. I’m planning a trip to Romaniain a few years to try and get my hands on church records to see if I can find more, and to bother Pie in person if he hasn’t escaped by then.
We could be cousins! I need to re-look at my 3rd great-grandfather’s home town in Wales, but my maternal great-grandmother was from Hungary (on the border) and her husband was from Romania (on the border).
What part of PA are you in? My family was mostly Pittsburgh area. Coal miners and steel mill workers, of course.
I am envious of the long line of family in the same home.
My Mom has always been into genealogy. Until the past 10 years or so, my Dad never was. Now they take massive road trips running down county court records, gravesites and old family homesteads. Their latest big one took them out to meet cousins my Dad had never met. His Grandfather and great Uncle moved to Alberta from Nebraska in the 1900’s. The great Grand didn’t find the frozen plains to his liking and moved back, great great Uncle stayed. They hit both the Daks, Badlands, Banff and I can’t remember where all else.
So fun! I bet they had a terrific time.
I’m on the last 30 pages of Whirlwind and I’ll have completed James Clavell’s Asian saga. Next is lucid blue and shadow realm.
You managed to get the *full* edition of Whirlwind?
Lucky guy. That book was a kind of ‘how to’ book for me.
You stole helicopters from Iran?
Psst, do you need a secondhand chopper?
I’m in the market for a lightly used bell 212…
Low mileage, certified preowned, and you can bring it back and run it through the car wash for free
Shut up and take my money.
… there was that one time … ahem.
No, I used to travel a lot for work when I was younger. Seeing a relatively accurate write-up of how Bristow Helicopters’ staff actually did it (allowing for dramatic effect) was an inspiration in the event I had to make a quick exit from various places I went in the East.
Scary, but sounds cool.
Half right. Sounds cool.
On the scary part, I always get a laugh from that exchange in Get Shorty.
The nearest I got to really being scared was in 1988 in a sleepy little place named Bougainville decided it didn’t want to be subject to being ruled by Papua New Guinea. I had to exit stage left pretty damn fast. I doubt I was in any real danger, but you only get one life, and I’m rather attached to mine.
A Most Ingenious Paradox: The Art of Gilbert & Sullivan by Gayden Wren. Each chapter is about one of the operas, and while it may be just a very long review based on this guy’s personal opinions, it’s still very informative and helps me notice things about these works that I would have overlooked on my own. I also have a book of the original librettos (or, as close as you can get to original considering Mr. Gilbert’s chronic habit of tinkering with the works after opening night).
I’m actually not reading any novels right now (I did read a few Shakespeare plays though). I have tons of novels that I bought ages ago. Right off hand, I’m considering these:
– Last of the Mohicans by James Fenmore Cooper
– The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton (I found The House of Mirth to be very dull, but I’m willing to give her another chance)
– The Picture of Dorian Grey by Oscar Wilde
Dorian grey is great.
Finished Mary Beards’s “The Fires of Vesuvius” which details everyday Roman life. I am reading “Thunder Below!” by Gene Fluckey. Fluckey was a genuine badass of a submarine commander in WWII that received every recognition possible plus he innovated many things that are now assumed for attack subs. Once he ran out of things to sink he trained and launched the only ground attack on the Japanese home islands for the entire freaking war. His MoH citation reads like a novel.
Might have to check that out. I like “everyday life” narratives of history. It’s hard to motivate myself to read dull volumes of who was king over what regions, but for some reason, learning about life for the average person gets me more interested in the geopolitical and cultural situation at that time.
Yes. Social history is far more interesting to me.
Reading “Capitalism and Freedom” by Milton Friedman and “Snakes in the Eagles Nest,” a history of ground attacks on US air bases from 1940 to 1992.
Any idea why the author cut off at 1992? Khobar Towers was one of the biggest ground attacks against a US air base in recent years.
Probably because it was written in 1995.
Ah, that would be a good reason.
You could write a whole encyclopedia on attacks against air bases from Afghanistan alone now!
What am I reading? Error logs…
Just what I need, another webex.
Just finishing up 12 Rules and a large number of annotations in its margins, looking with anticipation at Rebecca West’s “Black Lamb and Grey Falcon” and Strock’s “disruptpolitics.us”
Also the much-anticipated epic “17.5 hours in Purgatory”, a new self-published volume by UCS.
Why would I want to bore my readers?
looking with anticipation at Rebecca West’s “Black Lamb and Grey Falcon”
Definitely, write what you think. I have had that on my list forever. I just moved to a new county that has it.
I’m bingeing Heinlein and Vonnegut thanks to y’all. After or amongst that, it’s Generation Kill, cuz the miniseries was so spot-on.
A Most Ingenious Paradox: The Art of Gilbert & Sullivan by Gayden Wren.
Have you seen Topsy-Turvy? I thought it was pretty entertaining.
I’ve heard of it; I might check it out sometime.
I always look forward to What Are We Reading day! So many interesting things get added to Mount To-Be-Read. Thank you everyone for sharing!
I forgot to add what I was listening to.
Almost wrapped up “The Secret Adversary” by Agatha Christie. It’s not a whodunnit, and I’m having some issues properly classifying the work.
Yeah, the Tommy & Tuppence books are really just breezy little reads. Not mysteries, really, not espionage, not character studies….
Ditto. Favorite posts all month.
I just finished SPQR XI, and started SPQR XIII today because someone from the LA County Overdrive got to XII before me.
I actually read the first book several years ago due to Fist’s recommendation. I decided this year to finish off the series.
I am listening to Twilight Company (a Star Wars Canon book) because I am really scraping the barrel for finding audiobooks at any of the 5 Overdrives I have access to.
I’m working on the last book in the Ottoman Cycle by SJA Turney. I’ll have to check out the SPQR series. I’ve read a couple of his Marius Mules books as well.
Does about 1,000 pages of technical documentation and built as specs for a phone system count? If not, then just catching up on some beer/brewing magazines and finally starting on Brewing Local.
I’ve been slacking on my reading as of late. I’m still on the same books as last month. I’m a bit theology heavy right now, so I’m looking for a good light read.
Leviathan?
I really wish book vendors would have two separate categories
1) Theology > Simple books for simple people
2) Theology > Actual theology
I have a hard time finding anything good. But Amazon will give me all the Joel Olsen Self-Help-Books-For-Churchgoer recommendations I can handle.
Any recommendations for something with a little more meat on the bone?
Search the university press publishers, like ucpress, for more serious stuff.
I bought a biblical history book for my wife that was interesting, but I can’t remember the name of it right now.
Then there’s always stuff like this, which should be on Q’s reading list.
Gotta check that one out.
“a good light read“
Still working away on Kristin Lavransdater and Shelby Foote’s 3 volume Civil War.
Both are quite excellent.
Amongst a bunch of forgettable airport thrillers, I made a first pass through Locusts on the Horizon. Normally I find ‘prepper’ books about as interesting and informative as an unflushed public toilet, but Locusts is very solid. Heavy emphasis on flexibility and staying mobile, which I heartily agree with.
In particular, the story of Charlie Monoxide deserves wide distribution.
Finished 12 Rules. Like I said last month, much better than expected. I had no exposure to Peterson before this. Bonus points for narrating his own book. Recommended
Howl’s Moving Castle – A great little book in the tradition of pleasant British books about folk tales and fantasy. I enjoyed the movie, but thought it was very disjointed and Howl didn’t make any sense to me. The book on the other hand was very fluid. A very happy little read. Recommended
Do Fathers Matter – This is (thankfully) a pop-science book, not a self help book. Very readable. Manages to get the point across that fatherhood is wildly understudied and its because of the shitty ideological biases of the chattering classes without ever making the reader feel like they have to reevaluate feminism. So, you know, not the way I would frame it, but it probably makes it more palatable to exactly the kind of people that need to read it. Bonus points for having the temerity that there are studies that fatherless homes tend to turn young women into sluts. Demerits for not mentioning how often this an other Red-Pill dogma is backed up by science. Bonus points for the author narrating his own book. Demerits for making me feel sad about a bring young boy I know who’s father died of cancer a few years ago. Recommended.
A Fire Upon the Deep – How on earth have I never gotten around to reading this? This was like one of the first books I ever put on my “Read later” list 20 years, and the last of that group to be picked up. I’m only halfway through, but I feel comfortable saying Its great. Recommended.
The Shepard’s Crown – The last Diskworld book. Read all the otherones fist. I thought that the “The Times Are Changing” theme in the last couple of books were a little too Whig-History for my taste, where the unbridled forces of Classical Liberalism steamroll over any problem. Handled much better here. The postscript may or may not have resulted in me shedding a single manly tear. Recomended
Thanks for the SF suggestion, I’ll have to check it out after I finish Dark Matter.
Re: Do Fathers Matter – it sucks that we even have to ask this. Society regularly spits upon fatherhood and it really bums me out when it isn’t driving me mad.
Fire Upon the Deep is near the top of my actual pile of sifi books.
The History of English Law before the Time of Edward I.
Showoff
It’s public domain now, brah.
Cheapskate
Does it make me any less of a cheapskate if I own a 1960s era hardbound copy?
Who’d you steal it from?
Who is paying you?! CIA????
Lemme think about it. As long as I can come up with some kind of snarky accusation to replace “Cheapskate” with, I guess you’re stuck with it.
Sorry.
He wants to emulate the Longshanks in bringing back old customs?
I’m reading Balko’s new book “The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist”. He may be suffering from acute TDS but it hasn’t affected his writing, it’s a very engrossing and traffic story that will give you great doubts about forensic analysis and our justice system in general. I highly recommend it.
Also thanks to…..Juvenile Bluster…or straffinrun..I think…for the recommendation!
I’m still an estimated 4 weeks out on borrowing the audio book from my library. I’m number 10 in line 🙁
If you were a real libertarian you would forfeit your access to a public good like libraries! Hypocrite!!
A real libertarian would tell you that library loans of books are rivalrous and excludable and therefor not a true public good.
But I’m a classical liberal, and I don’t mind government funding of institutions that build civil society depending on how its done.
My hometown library was privately funded originally until the local goons made it government run and ruined it over the next 80 years.
Why would you forfeit access to a conservatively dressed, smokin’ hot babes who’re just dying to tear off their glasses and get wild?
David Boaz’s The Libertarian Reader. I feel like I should go through it with a highlighter. So much goodness.
I’m slogging my way through Jordan Peterson’s 12 Rules for Life and Deschooling Society. The latter is written by a socialist who combines mind-blowing observations of what is wrong with public schooling with the most impractical and authoritarian ways of fixing the problem:
….
Cognitive dissonance is a real bitch
Have some supercilious condescension for lunch.
I’m all for respecting other people’s cultures and taking their feelings into account. But when was the last time you heard someone implore conservatives to respect the culture of coastal or urban-dwelling liberals?
We’re told that if you grew up around guns, then you’re right to worry that your culture could be eroded, and we need to understand and sympathize with your perspective. But here’s something that might surprise you: For millions of Americans, not having guns around is an important cultural value. It’s part of how we define the kind of places we’d like to live. Since most Americans don’t own guns, maybe that’s worthy of respect and consideration, too.
————-
But the gun culture of today, with so much fetishizaton of guns and an entire political/commercial industry working hard to spread and solidify the idea that guns are not just a thing you own but who you are, is what we’re now expected to show respect for. For instance, the idea that anyone should be able to own military-style rifles designed to kill as many human beings in as short a period as possible, for no real reason other than the fact that some people think they’re cool, is supposed to be a part of people’s culture, no matter how ludicrous it would have seemed to your grandparents.
This is a powerful line of argument.
I’m going to repent my sins, and accept the teachings of the High Church of Progressivism. I’m on my knees, begging for forgiveness.
Dear Bog, I was going to fisk that so damn hard, and then I decided there’s no point.
“the idea that anyone should be able to own military-style rifles designed to kill as many human beings in as short a period as possible”
Dear Lord am I sick of hearing this pointless bromide. It’s almost as bad as “common-sense gun control”.
Fuck off, you can’t have my guns.
Here’s the thing, I am not wanting to go into your home and dump a load of guns on your table.
You, on the other hand, are wanting to go into my home and take all of mine away.
I’m very much done arguing with these people. I’m, instead, preparing for the inevitable incremental banning of anything more powerful than a daisy red ryder.
This is all that needs to be said.
If you run into somebody who is emotes rather than thinks, it can be said this way.
You think they won’t come for the Red Ryder? Who’ll keep you from putting your eye out?
“But when was the last time you heard someone implore conservatives to respect the culture of coastal or urban-dwelling liberals?”
Every waking second for the last 9 fucking years!
Prior to that, it was every third second.
“But when was the last time you heard someone
imploredemand conservatives to respect the culture of coastal or urban-dwelling liberals?”FTFY.
Oh, the answer is “Always and forever”
written by a socialist who combines mind-blowing observations of what is wrong with public schooling with the most impractical and authoritarian ways of fixing the problem:
*huddles in corner, sobbing*
I’ve been slogging through “The Stone and the Flute”. I’ve considered tossing it aside but decided I’d slog through. The main character is a shitty person, and the book drags.
And then there’s this:
And when you say something is part of your culture, you’re placing it beyond reasoned judgment.
I’m a little unclear on this. Who’s placing guns beyond reasoned judgement?
I’m getting a powerful whiff of the “I know you are, but what am I?” argument.
I got about 3/4ths of the way through 12 Rules but then had to return it to (gasp!) the library. it was much more a slog than I was expected, but there are some good insights peppered throughout.
I just finished The Collapse of Parenting by Leonard Sax which had some good insights on how to be a parent and not your kid’s friend and still have them like you.
I also picked up The Culture of Fear by Barry Glassner. I haven’t made it out of the introduction yet, but whoever else read it underlined a few things and wrote “This is how Trump won.” No mention of Hillary not going to Wisconsin yet, however.
Your choice of avatar is sufficiently ironic.
Him?
“it was much more a slog than I was expected”
This. People for some reason have got it in their mind that it’s trite or a superficial self-help book. I found it to have many deep insights.
Is it a slog in the sense that (1) it has complex topics that require some thought to get through or (2) its boring as hell to read?
Like I said upthread, I have the book on my shelf, but I haven’t started on it yet. He’s so interesting to listen to – I hope his writing isn’t a snore-fest.
Definitely 1 (at least for me). I don’t mean slog in a derogatory sense. It’s not a hastily ghost-written superficial survey of contemporary culture. It’s philosophical and nuanced.
If you’ve read Sexual Personae by Camille Paglia, it’s kind of similar.
The rules themselves are actually the least interesting part of the book and in many chapters it’s a stretch to connect the rule with what he’s actually discussing. Like Rule 11: Don’t Stop Kids from Skateboarding is all about hero’s journey and inner struggle. It’s a very tangential connection to kids skateboarding.
I’d say more 1. I also think its written exactly as if he were speaking, which is a little distracting to me, because I can’t help hearing his voice. And unlike others above, I don’t care for his voice.
Okay well that’s encouraging. Thanks for the input guys.
Happy weekend! Something here for everyone.
http://archive.is/ca3Cc
I think 2 and 20 are the same girl; unless she’s been cloned. Either way I’ll take her. Or 1. Or 11. Or orgy.
I’ve seen #2 before (the picture), and yes #20 looks like the same woman. Putting Google to work, because I can’t remember where I saw #2 before, points me to Kiki Passo’s instagram page.
I’m still not feeling well, so I’ll stay away from the babes so they don’t get sick.
Finished up the last of the Terry Prachett only Discworld novels. What a great series.
Steam was the last regular novel and The Shepard’s Crown was an addition to the Tiffany Aching YA that also tied most of the Discworld characters.
He knew that The Shepard’s Crown was likely his last so he tied up some strings.
Steam was enjoyable but only a middling example of a typical DW novel.
if you enjoy fantasy/humor with often times biting social commentary, I highly recommend these novels. Real Laugh Out Loud moments. Very sad to have finished.
Oh shit, I knew I forgot something I read this month! I read that too.
I stopped at Unseen Academicals. He had already been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, and I thought some of the long-standing characters were playing in ways that I didn’t like. So I quit.
I have just discovered the magic of Discworld this month (after reading about it on TOS ages ago) and am on my third novel. Just too enjoyable.
Making Money was a warning bell for me, but after Unseen Academicals I gave up. I have all of the books up until then, I should go back and complete the series. Turns out there are only few after all.
Yeah, I stopped after Making Money, although the franchise was getting a bit stale for at least 8 books before that.
I met him at Noreascon IV (2004) right when Monstrous Regiment was published.. That was still solid.. Thud as well.. Making money was ok.. Unseen.. well… I gave up on Piers Anthony after a while as well.. there are lots of series that go beyond a good core story.. (Drizzt?) We all have our Heinlein.. WTF? moment.
Wait, we all stroke out and go nuts? I was hoping to avoid that.
After hearing a lot about Galaxy’s Edge series, I gave it a go and I’m hooked.
Ostensibly, it’s Star Wars with numbers filed off and a coat of grit (relative to original trilogy). Rebels aren’t either competent, Republic is ramshackle and corrupt, not outright evil, and the only Force user (so far) is trying to tear it down and build the Empire. Central characters are mostly from Republic Legion, the elite fighting force kinda like Clone Troopers from Clone Wars cartoon.
Six books in, I’m actually getting more of a subdued 40K vibe – Legion are Space Marines (game, not fiction), Republic Army is Imperial Guard, the Empire has their own Traitor Legion and follows a guy who wants to destroy the corrupt edifice using the power of magic/warp, there is an alien race that’s essentialy Orcs with Islamic sprinkling who are about to become major force, and (spoiler) a techno-biological life-hating AI commanding army of robots and cyborgs who is still hidden but plans to attack once other factions exhausted itself – kinda Necron, with slight Tyranid overtone (their origin is outside the galaxy).
It’s above-average military scifi, with about the same amount of politics as any non-political piece of media, but from the Conservative side (Republic is big on meaningless social gestures, some appointments are by gender and species, military is constantly defunded for supposed social spending but mostly politician enrichment because who could even think of fighting the Republic and so on). Second book (Galactic Scoundrels) is best by far, since it deals with smugglers and bounty hunters rather than the military.
Added to my growing “I’ll read this before I die.. I hope” list.
I’m reading this also. On Book 2.
I’m going on record: Gravity’s Rainbow is a piece of shit.
It had to be said.
Can we add Life of Pi to that list?
Someone cut off the last third of Pie?! the monsters!
I don’t remember that much of the book, but I was forced to read it in the summer in high school. I remember finishing it and thinking “damn, well that was boring as hell.”
I think that school teachers get wet about it because it has a bunch of religious references and the kid has this morally superior “all religions are equal” mindset.
It’s not good.
Every time I see that title, I think its a Neal Stephenson or Vernor Vinge title.
I tried to read it three times and never got more than about 30 pages into it. Rubbish.
… Hobbit
I’m reading this site called “glibertarians”, which is about what I’m reading, which is this site called “glibertarians”, which is about what I’m reading, which is this site called “glibertarians”… *Beeeeeep Westworld infinite brain loop*
The Red Cliffs of Zerhoun by Matthew Bracken and listening to yet another Perndergast audio book.
That one was amazingly good. Matt Bracken is a really cool guy, too.
Willful ignorance, or obdurate denial?
The attacks now come not just from the alt-right and anonymous Twitter louts. Since the weekend’s massive marches for gun control, more and more prominent figures in media and politics are aiming previously unfathomable public attacks at the youngsters.
What could possibly be leading an ever-growing number of people to chafe at being characterized as willing accomplices to murder? It’s a mystery.
It’s like the writer had never heard of naked opportunism before!
Especially when it’s those kids (and the adults controlling and encouraging them) that willingingly put themselves in the limelight, advocating positions that encourage more deaths and prevent law abiding free people from being able to defend themselves from criminals. They are the ones who are actually aiding abetting future murderers.
more and more prominent figures in media and politics are aiming previously unfathomable public attacks at the youngsters [who are aiming previously unfathomable public attacks at tens of millions of American citizens]
This horseshit is going to backfire on them. They are too slick, too polished and too blatant in their appeals to emotion. Wearing ‘Nice little Marxist’ t-shirts doesnt help either. They have convinced themselves inside their bubble that there is nothing to be ashamed of in being a Marxist. Wanna know who has blood on their hands?
I’m going on record: Gravity’s Rainbow is a piece of shit.
You’re dead to me.
Do I go to lunch or continue to wait for FedEx to show up? The second I’m gone that truck will be here with a missed delivery slip.
Uber Eats or Amazon Prime delivery.
They follow the Cable guy service model, which is the same one bulls use when “servicing” cows…
Stick it in, finish quickly, never see them again?
This is it
Stand up, loudly declare “Well I guess I’ll just go to lunch now” and stomp in place a few times. See if it tricks the universe.
Shwank and Hustler..
Juggs and Milf Magazine!
I’m reading “Hellerau: Die Idee von Gesamtkunstwerk” which is about the really interesting Hellerau garden city outside of Dresden where a lot of aesthetic currents that dominate the early twentieth century came together. This includes the sets of Adolph Appia, composers including Dalcroze and Stravinsky and choreographers including Nijinsky and Mary Wigman. Basically, everyone who was anyone in the arts came through Hellerau from about 1911-1913. Then WWI hit and director Dalcroze, being French Swiss, was booted out and it was over.
Got the book as part of a trip I took to see Dresden. Despite being nearly annhilated in WW2 Dresden is a very culturally rich city well worth a visit and we had a great time.
For semi-German speakers this book happens to be dual-language, so anything you don’t get you can read on the other page.
i cracked a book on Napoleon (“The Age of Napoleon” (1963), by JC Herold). about a month ago. have maybe gotten through… the forward (~30pp), and 20 pages of the actual thing. I keep being distracted. i would read a book a week when i was riding the subway every day. now, its something i actually have to set time aside and consciously do.
I do the vast majority of my ‘reading’ via audio book during my commute and at the gym. If I could convince the Y to let me use their PA system, I could listen while int he shower and get another 10 or 15 minutes in a day.
(begins to mention prior argument i’ve made suggesting audiobooks aren’t actually “reading”…. decides not to)
i
readconsumed John Haidt’s “righteous mind” and “happiness hypothesis” in the car recently. mainly because they were just coincidentally on my cell phone. but its also like the 2nd or 3rd time i think i’ve ‘listened’ to them, but confess that i can’t ever remember wtf they’re really about because (can’t help it, must make argument) listening is a passive process and it doesn’t make your front-brain engage and actually think about shit while you’re hearing it.begins to mention prior argument i’ve made suggesting audiobooks aren’t actually “reading”…. decides not to
As somebody who consumes a large number of fairly dense audiobooks, you’re right. It’s a different type of experience. It’s hard to slow down and digest a particularly deep passage when you’re in the car.
As a lysdexic person, I do better with audiobooks. I spend about ten hours a day reading/writing between work and reading the news. I don’t have the energy left over to read books on top of that, and audio is not taxing in the same way.
Well if you can’t remember if its the 2nd or 3rd time you’ve listened to it, you can’t be expected to remember the actual content of the audiobook.
” you can’t be expected to remember the actual content””
i think there’s a superficial degree of detail that you can grok by listening; you get the general jist of the thing, and could probably even summarize certain more-interesting parts
its just different. and has less retention. i think its like the difference between apprehension and comprehension; you’re not being forced to decode/re-encode the ideas, and you’re not engaging with the argument being made, you’re just browsing the outlines of it.
my thoughts on this issue came partly from the fact that i’ve always taken detailed notes in classes, at company meetings, in discussions with clients, etc. … but have almost never, ever, referred to my ‘notes’ after the fact for some recall purposes. because the process of ‘note taking’ is what turns the audible-content into something more like a reading process, and makes it stick.
I was making a joke, but here you go again making reasonable arguments and acting like I never made a joke in the first place.
I hear you on the note-taking. I’m exactly the same way. I write notes not to reference them later, but because it solidifies them in my memory. I think you are right when it comes to audiobooks too – but I think that it depends on the type of book.
If I’m looking for comprehension on nonfiction, reading is the best way to go, but I don’t really see any added benefit of reading over audio when it comes to most fiction. Some fiction might lose its bite when put into audio form.
Some fiction might lose its bite when put into audio form.
Some, particularly comedic stories, are better, even much better, when read by the right reader. The reader for the first several or so Flashman books absolutely improves them (and I strongly recommend the original Books-on-Tape audio Flashman books – they are awesome, if you can find them). The Discworld books also have had an excellent reader or two.
Some, particularly comedic stories, are better, even much better, when read by the right reader
I don’t see why the same couldn’t be said for non-fiction. If fiction is storytelling and a good storyteller can make a ‘meh’ book better in audio form, why wouldn’t non-fiction be lecturing and a good lecturer could improve a ‘meh’ book with his pacing and inflection.
Interesting. I think audiobooks for fiction are one thing – probably a fair equivalent to reading or, in my case since I am prone to skimming/skipping in fiction, perhaps even “superior”.
Non-fiction is different, though. Much depends on the quality of the writing. A truly superior writer of non-fiction can write clear, simple enough prose so that audio would probably be a fair equivalent. I found John Keegan’s military histories, for example, to be quite listenable.
There’s also the issue of how long a listening session is. For fiction, I can generally go hours (for long drives, there is no substitute for Elmore Leonard, IMO). Non-fiction I tend to start drifting after maybe an hour – my brain just needs to reset before engaging again.
Started doing audibles when I hike considering my reading time had been drastically limited and I prefer to use that then for entertainment reading rather than learning.
Once upon a time it was a “known fact” that Napoleon had more books written about him than any public figure. I wonder if this is still true?
Ken Bruen The Ghost of Galway Jack takes a case, Jack Fucks up, Jack goes on a booze/drug bender, Bad shit happens. It’s a familiar story and by the series should be four or five books too long by now, but Bruen’s writing buys him a good deal of leeway. And since he killed off most of the recurring characters this time perhaps he is putting the series to bed, of course, I thought the last few books all had a sense of finality about them and he keeps pumping out more. ***,
Robert McCarroll ShadowDemon Book 2 of UCS’ teen superhero team saga. A little all over the place for my taste, but I suppose comic books have lots of plotlines and magic and mutants and aliens and mad scientist and you name it. I’d prefer to see fewer irons in the fire and a more likable main character, but comic book novels aren’t generally my bag, and I assume UCS has a grand scheme in mind so perhaps it’s necessary for the continuing series. **
Harry Dolan Very Bad Men The third of his books I’ve read in the last two months, he’s quickly becoming my favorite new author. A crime magazine editor finds a killers confession in his mail and with his police detective girlfriend untangles a tale of corrupt cops and politicians that originated years ago with a failed bank robbery. Not as NIck and Nora cozy as I make it sound. ***½
OT: Interesting local news with a #MeToo component
Speculative interpretation apropros nothing. Liz Esty is so bad, there’s a chance the Republicans could win that district unless she’s ousted.
As with most politicians, it seems to be all about posturing when dealing with competitors, and all about cronyism when dealing with their own circle.
At night 49 in Burton’s A Thousand and One Nights.
… Hobbit
So, Thrawn – good as a standalone, or do I need to read up on the other Zahn Thrawn books?
I’m not HM, but I’d guess it’s OK to read on its own. Zahn’s Trilogy takes place many years after his rise, so there should be very little in there relevant to the new book. Plus, those books are AFAIK out as canon, while the new one is in canon, and so might just muddy the waters for no reason.
I mean, on one hand it’s HM, but on the other, it’s HM. So I guess it’s probably worth picking up. I’m curious if it requires familiarity with Rebels TV show, since Thrawn sometimes has a role on it…
Triffids sounds cool, I haven’t read that Scalzi novella. Redshirts was not good, but The Colapsing Empire made up for it somewhat.
I’m reading The Stranger Beside Me, Ann Rule. My wife has a thing for serial killers and told me I had to read it. Bumpy was a literal savage. I read Darwin’s Radio, Greg Bear earlier in the month. Don’t waste your time it ends stupidly. Having an infant has melted my mind so I may read some of the young adult fiction I have lying around we got for him, far in advance next.
I was a voracious reader for fifty years but now I find myself putting more books aside unfinished. Sick of the tropes and sick of the tripe. Nothing that I’ve read in the last five years has had the transformative effect. Now I just use books as a sleep-aid (can’t sleep without a book and earplugs).
Jordan Peterson’s “12 Rules For Life” and “Breeding and Training Versatile Hunting Dogs For Hunting and Hunt Tests”.
We have a friend in Montana who has a pack of beautiful bird dogs.