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What BOOK(s) are you reading?
- Sagrilarus
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Gary Sax wrote: Just picked up the new Atkinson history about the revolutionary war. Excited.
I just finished The Immortal 400 which is about the vaunted Maryland and Delaware units of Washington's army. A good read in a similar vein.
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RUTH BADER GINSBURG: A LIFE by De Hart. Kind of blasé bio of a totally fascinating person. I wish a better writer had access to RBG. She did not fuck around.
WIZARDS: MAGICAL TALES FROM THE MASTERS OF MODERN FANTASY by various. Gene Wolf has a story in here, Gaiman, Card (actually good!), and others. Just cool stories about wizards and magic.
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Followed that up by checking his Wikipedia page for fun facts. He was friends with Charlie Chaplin! In honor of Greene's eightieth birthday, the brewery founded by his great-grandfather (Greene King) used a special label!
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After that, I took a light break from history and read Lovecraft Country by Matt Ruff, which greatly disappointed me. I guess I was expecting a much better book and ended up with an okay summer read. It felt to me like a book that was patting itself on the back for its "daring" concept. I probably would have preferred it if it moved either heavier into the American racism or the cosmic horror. Instead it felt like a crappy amalgam of the two.
Then it was onto a trio of books on the Battle for Normandy: Overlord by Max Hastings, D-Day by Antony Beevor, and Six Armies in Normandy by John Keegan. Overall, I thought the three provided some good coverage though they each have their individual quirks. Keegan is much more positive on Montgomery than the other two and kind of underplays Montgomery's failings in Normandy. While all three are impressed by Germany's ability to defend in Normandy and their organizational fluidity, Hastings is definitely a little too far on the side of Wehrmacht worship. He talks about the amazing German defense and impressive ability to defend while barely mentioning the defensive advantages of the Norman terrain and only chalking it up to German defensive tactics. Two paragraphs later he will then mention how "well, yeah, the Allies managed to mount a defense against the German counterattack, but that was only because Norman terrain is soooo easy to defend. Anyone can do it!" All three were worth a read though.
I am currently reading Red Famine by Anne Applebaum on the Ukrainian famines of the 1920s and 1930s and the Soviet attempt to crush Ukraine's spirit. I'm a few chapters in and really enjoying it though it is very brutal in parts.
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RobertB wrote: Tore through N.K. Jemisin's Broken Earth trilogy. The books won back to back to back Hugos, and I can see why. I hope Hollywood comes to her house and drops a truckload of money on her doorstep. Then I hope they don't screw it up.
Oh, they would screw it up. I am sure it would be turned into a summer blockbuster. Big fancy rock CGI powers! Cool CGI rock eaters! Impressive CGI landscapes!
I very much enjoyed Broken Earth when I read it earlier this year. It was excellent and relied much more on character development than on fantasy tropes. My wife read her Inheritance trilogy, which she also liked a lot but not as much as Broken Earth. She is almost done with Dreamblood, but seems less impressed with that one. I might give one of them a try next time I need a nonfiction break.
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quozl wrote: I recently finished the Mistborn trilogy. I liked the first book. The other two I found tedious. Why does every novel need to be 750 pages now?
Continuing the Jemisin is awesome thoughts from above, all of her books are well under that with only two approaching 500 pages. Most of the rest are around 400 pages and do not feel like they have been truncated.
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Meddling Kids. Careened between amusing geek culture Easter eggs and tiresome geek culture Easter eggs. It was okay but not great, but at least fast and breezy.
Unprepared to Die. A combination true crime and music history book. It takes a dozen different Anglo-American murder ballads ("Stagger Lee," "Tom Dooley," etc.) and traces the history of both the song and the crime that inspired it. Fascinating to watch how music changes and morphs with the needs of its audience, and of course lurid true crime details are always gruesomely entertaining. Highly recommended.
Down the Great Unknown. History/outdoors. The story of the first exploration of the entire length of the Colorado River. Captained by a one-armed Civil War veteran who was more enthusiastic and optimistic than say "skilled" or "prepared." Surprisingly, not everyone died, even though the trip was full of boneheaded decisions, like "hey, our boats are so hard to portage past rapids due to all this food, so let's dump 500 pounds of it over the side. Surely there will be ample game in the desert!" A nice reminder that nature is not your friend, doubly so before the modern age when a helicopter comes to rescue you if you get a hangnail.
Agents of Dreamland. A novella, pretty entertaining. A bit like off-brand Delta Green.
Your Money or Your Life. A classic of personal finance that I finally got around to reading. I've been pretty on board with the FIRE movement for a while, so most of the messaging was old hat by the time I got to it. It still had some good exercises, like calculating your "real wage." That's your annual salary, minus everything you spend to make it (gas, clothes, alcohol to relieve stress, lunches out, drinks with coworkers, etc.), divided by all the hours you spend to make it (so not just your 40/week, but commuting time, time needed to unwind, time going to optional-but-not-really events, etc.). For most people it's a shockingly low number compared to what they're expecting. For me, my real wage is about $12 less per hour than what I make on paper. Even though I agreed with the overall message, I always need more frugality beaten into my brain. Highly recommended.
Common Sense on Mutual Funds. Another classic, by godfather and patron saint John Bogle. But, mostly telling me what I know: index funds are superior, fees charged by hotshot investment managers almost always cancel out whatever extra performance they can wring out of the market. So index, stay the course, don't try to time the market. I guess it's a testament to Bogle's influence that almost everyone agree with this except for people with a financial incentive to disagree, e.g. brokers.
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Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is still my favorite Carré, but the man is solid.
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quozl wrote: I recently finished the Mistborn trilogy. I liked the first book. The other two I found tedious. Why does every novel need to be 750 pages now?
I read the first book and was really lukewarm on it. I considered reading the others, hoping that they get better. Sad to hear that the first one was the best one! I wasn't compelled to read anything else by Sanderson, but I do have The Way of Kings quietly collecting dust on my to-read shelf.
I finished The Darkness that Comes Before by R. Scott Bakker while on vacation. I know I'm 15 years late to reading this, but I liked it. It's grimdark fantasy in the vein of like Steven Erikson or Joe Abercrombie, but not nearly as good as either of those guys, unfortunately. Bakker doesn't have any of the pitch-black humor of Abercrombie, nor any of the jaw-dropping scope or action of Erikson. But it was good. Really interesting world-building, once you get your brain wrapped around all the different cultures and nations. Bakker just drops you into the deep end with the crazy fantasy names, but if you keep at it, it all settles out eventually. I'm intrigued enough to keep reading, and I hope the second book is even better.
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