I have, yeah. I really liked it. Somehow, I wasn't aware of the book before picking it up so maybe the lack of expectation was a factor. Be sure to comment again once you've finished and let us know what you thought. Enjoy!Anyone read Flowers For Angernon? Considered to be a classic. I’m about halfway through and I like it so far but now blown away. This might be the first book that came highly recommended (in terms of being a highly regarded piece of literature from a wide variety of sources) that I’m slightly disappointed in. Of course, the book could finish strong in the second half and I could change my mind.
I just ordered this and Project Hail Mary. Stoked to learn more about the history of Crispr.
Not done yet, but legit excellent. Can't recommend enough.
I'll be honest. This book has been sat in my library for years. It's always been one that I've said I'll get around to, but something else always takes my fancy.
Today is the day that I'm now going to start it. I'm not sure how up to date this still is, but it's still interesting. I'm not sure if it's still relevant to say that Male and Female brains are different, or that we're not shaped by our environment. Guess I'll also need to read opposite views to come to my own conclusions. Anyway, can't wait to get stuck in.
The "arg book" looks interesting and really fun, but what a nightmare for the publisherStill on my fantasy kick but I am ready to hop off this train soon, I think I've had enough .....
Easily Greenwood's worst Forgotten Realms novel. It is slow, boring, and is kind of a bait and switch for the first third
The goddess of magic, Mystra, before taking Elminster on as one of her Chosen first transforms him into a woman so he can learn what it is like to live as one. It is in this form he first learns to wield magic. It lasts a good third of the book and the entire time he is acting wildly, wildly out of character from how we've learned to know Elminster from a dozen previously published books either featuring him or with him as a supporting character
And it never recovered from it. It could have been a fascinating twist I suppose, but Greenwood bungled it. Next up is something I bought years and years ago but never started:
Titled S. . Part novel, part weird-ish mystery akin to an alternate reality game. It comes with excerpts and "evidence" as if it were some researcher's book the reader came across. Here's a quick look at my copy with a little bit of the "evidence":
Toots - just came across this funny Cyril Connolly quote about Arthur Koestler right after I read your post - “Like everyone who talks of ethics all day long one could not trust him (Koestler) half an hour with one’s wife, one’s best friend, one’s manuscripts or one’s wine merchant.”
The attempted "cancelling" of Pinker was interpretation of some of his old tweets as sexist/racist along with guilt by association (tenuous connections to Epstein and some scientistic racists like Steve Sailer and Ron Unz). There are different intuitions about human nature that can't be resolved with current science, even within fields like evolutionary psychology and biological anthropology. Retrospectively looking back at some of the solid seeming positions from the 2000s when Pinker was most active suggests that there is often an unwarranted level of confidence in positions that get ahead of the data, spun into rhetoric about science denial or pseudoscience, within and between fields. And there are always popularizers like Rutger Bregman (linked in previous post) who take sides in ways that tell a subset of the general public what they want to hear, inviting skepticism from others, including experts.IDKFA Shai-Tan
It's been a long time since I read The Blank Slate but I would think its central insights would hold up well. Has the ideological resistance to evolutionary insights vis-à-vis human behavior decreased in the last 20 years? That would be hard to argue. Wasn't Pinker himself cancelled from some professional group(s) during the moral panic last summer?
I'm with you on evolutionary biology overreaching about what it can explain. But some insights like the ideological denial of sex differences, for example, has definitely been borne out and shows no signs of stopping. Entire academic fields are being created to deny reality about sex differences.The attempted "cancelling" of Pinker was interpretation of some of his old tweets as sexist/racist along with guilt by association (tenuous connections to Epstein and some scientistic racists like Steve Sailer and Ron Unz). There are different intuitions about human nature that can't be resolved with current science, even within fields like evolutionary psychology and biological anthropology. Retrospectively looking back at some of the solid seeming positions from the 2000s when Pinker was most active suggests that there is often an unwarranted level of confidence in positions that get ahead of the data, spun into rhetoric about science denial or pseudoscience, within and between fields. And there are always popularizers like Rutger Bregman (linked in previous post) who take sides in ways that tell a subset of the general public what they want to hear, inviting skepticism from others, including experts.
i don't know what to read next. i'm happy to buy a new book but was thinking maybe i should get around to books i've already got.
the book i wanted to buy was The Great Hunt (2nd book in the Wheel of Time series). the first book had me hooked but it felt overwhelming at times with the amount of names (of characters/places) thrown at me. it probably didn't help i was listening to the audiobook most of the time. the plot kinda dragged for a while where Rand is going from village to village to village to village and then the ending feels kinda rushed and underwhelming. i've heard that the 2nd book is meant to be better so i'm willing to give it a shot. not saying i will read all 14 books but i'm up for book 2.
books i have already that i might be interested in attemping again or starting:
The Simarillion - bought it in 2012 lol but read only a few pages. i've read the hobbit/lotr of course. also have Unfinished Tales but that's for after whenever i ever finish Silmarillion lol.
H.P Lovecraft Collection - i've read majority of the short stories but not read any of the actual novels like Shadow over Innsmouth, Shadow out of Time, At the Mountains of Madness, The Whisperer in Darkness.
Shakespeare - i bought MacBeth, Hamlet, Romeo & Juliet a while back. I tried Hamlet but was totally lost.
A Song of Ice & Fire - if i remember right I read the first and maybe the second book. Not sure if i should go back to it knowing it will likely never be completed which leads me to....
Kingkiller Chronicles - bought them about 6 years ago thinking book 3 would be out by the time i finished them.... i read about half of the first book.
Neuromancer - couldn't get into it first time
don't think i've read any of discworld. maybe when i was in high school but definitely not finished any of them.This may sound redundant, but have you tried Discworld? It's still fantasy but satirical in nature and helps (me anyway) take a break from serious fantasy works and dive into something a bit silly.
If you want to stick with books you already have, the only one I can advocate is Kingkiller! I'm not sure how accurate this is but apparently Rothfuss detangled one problem with Doors of Stone so...Maybe we'll get the last novel?...ETA someday
Close to finishing Project Hail Mary. Really damn good book.
Just finished. Highly recommend.I think the Rocky and Grace bromance is so well done, I didn't how much I needed a proper friendship in a book that much
It's really earnest and the sci-fi elements makes it even more endearing.
The end of the books feel a little more earned that what we had in the Martian.
The inverted structure of the book is really a stroke of genius IMHO as it keeps delivering good new revelation that really push the story forward.
The book has been picked up by Phil Lord and Chris Miller for adaptation with Ryan Gosling as Grace.
The same guy who did the screenwriting for The Martian is the same and It's looks like all the stars are aligned.
I really wonder how they are going to sell the general public on a giant Rock Spider as the friendly side kick but colored me intrigued
Start with "Thief of Time" and "Small Gods" then Google where to start certain storylines (for instance, books on Death start in a particular order)don't think i've read any of discworld. maybe when i was in high school but definitely not finished any of them.
where would i even start with those books?
The Resilience Shield was jointly developed by Dr Dan Pronk, Ben Pronk DSC and Tim Curtis. All are Australian Special Air Service Regiment (SAS) veterans with MBAs. Between them, they have over 60 years’ combined experience in leading high-performance teams, including in the most challenging of operational environments such as Afghanistan, Iraq, Sierra Leone, Timor Leste and on counter terrorism and special recovery operations.
The authors’ knowledge is unique. Through their own experiences, as well as applied research conducted over a period in excess of fifteen years, Dan, Ben and Tim sought to identify the constituent elements of stress and resilience and develop a model that was dynamic, multi-factorial and modifiable. The result was the Resilience Shield – a highly applied model of resilience that identifies the key characteristics of this mercurial quality and provides a framework for defence against the chronic and acute stressors that impact all of us on a daily basis. While this concept originated on the battlefield, Dan, Ben and Tim are firmly of the belief that the resilience secrets of elite soldiers are universally applicable, a belief reinforced by the successful implementation of Resilience Shield programs within organisations as diverse as elite policing units, business conglomerates and accounting firms.
I'm two chapters deep in this one, so still a long way to go. It's part two of a historical epic series that tells the story of Genghis Khan and his descendants. I really enjoyed book one, but there is one thing that almost puts me off.
In the current book and the first book, Genghis is the main character and the protagonist. Yet, it's hard to like him when I know he was probably the biggest mass murderer in human history.
However, this is still an action packed historical epic. Hopefully Mr Iggulden doesn't gloss over the mass murderer and makes Genghis out to be the hero throughout the series.