What are you reading now?
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wrote on 31 Mar 2021, 12:39 last edited by
Hey, Mik, do you like baseball? You might like his book Blockade Billy.
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Oh, started this today:
This is the 2nd (or 3rd, if you will) book in the Revelation Space "Inhibitor" trilogy. The first two books, "Revelation Space" and "Chasm City" are pretty contemporaneous, and "Redemption Ark" moves the story forward.
Reynolds' world-building, so far, is on a par with the Dune universe. It spans hundreds of years, and most of it is based on real physics, as understood today. Reynolds is/was a real astrophysicist, and he wanted to write stuff that didn't rely on magic, as in Star Trek (transporters, warp speed, etc).
This is, I think, the 4th or 5th book of his I've read in the last few months. All of the stories are intertwined, if not with characters, certainly with technology and history (some take hundreds of years apart). If I had to use one adjective, "sprawling" would be it.
This is hard, hard, science fiction. At times confusing because of interweaving story lines (as in "Chasm City"), but totally rewarding.
One reviewer commented that he loves books that make him work for enjoyment, they're not, if you will, "candy."
All of the books in the "Revelation Space Universe" qualify.
wrote on 4 Apr 2021, 01:01 last edited by@george-k said in What are you reading now?:
This is the 2nd (or 3rd, if you will) book in the Revelation Space "Inhibitor" trilogy. The first two books, "Revelation Space" and "Chasm City" are pretty contemporaneous, and "Redemption Ark" moves the story forward.
Halfway done.
Remarkable work. As I said, it's as complex and rich as "Dune" without the political/spiritual overtones.
If you're
@jollya science fiction fan, get into this world.As I said, it's not "candy," like Scalzi's stuff, because it makes you work for its attention. Just fabulous.
I'm tempted to, when I finish this one, go back and re-read the first book, simply because I feel like I missed so much. I loved "Redemption Space." Wait, perhaps I'll re-read "Chasm City" as well.
So good.
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wrote on 5 Apr 2021, 17:15 last edited by
Based on George's experience, I picked this one up. Fascinating book with an excellent review of the history of the diet industry. Having lived through the pronouncements, it is quite illuminating how long the experts have retained a machine model - calories in/calories out even in the face of continuous failure.
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Based on George's experience, I picked this one up. Fascinating book with an excellent review of the history of the diet industry. Having lived through the pronouncements, it is quite illuminating how long the experts have retained a machine model - calories in/calories out even in the face of continuous failure.
wrote on 5 Apr 2021, 17:30 last edited by@kluurs said in What are you reading now?:
Fascinating book with an excellent review of the history of the diet industry.
The thing I found amazing is how clearly he explains what could be pretty complicated physiology. As I said, I didn't find "The Cancer Code" quite as compelling, but certainly worth a read.
Perhaps that's because he really doesn't offer any suggestions, unlike "The Obesity Code."
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wrote on 7 Apr 2021, 04:33 last edited by
Reading Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. I don't usually read old tomes, but even after reading a few pages I was struck by how modern some of his ideas sound.
(The importance of free speech, equality before the law).
Good, simple writing.
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Reading Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. I don't usually read old tomes, but even after reading a few pages I was struck by how modern some of his ideas sound.
(The importance of free speech, equality before the law).
Good, simple writing.
wrote on 7 Apr 2021, 11:02 last edited by@xenon said in What are you reading now?:
Reading Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. I don't usually read old tomes, but even after reading a few pages I was struck by how modern some of his ideas sound.
(The importance of free speech, equality before the law).
Good, simple writing.
Conservatism has all the best ideas, sort of by definition - the test of time and all that. Don't attempt to convince a lefty of that though, they are convinced that everything conservatives have ever done for them, the blood, sweat and tears shed in defense of those good ideas, are nothing compared to making sure 6 year olds should be able to have gender reassignment surgery.
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Based on George's experience, I picked this one up. Fascinating book with an excellent review of the history of the diet industry. Having lived through the pronouncements, it is quite illuminating how long the experts have retained a machine model - calories in/calories out even in the face of continuous failure.
wrote on 7 Apr 2021, 11:52 last edited by@kluurs said in What are you reading now?:
it is quite illuminating how long the experts have retained a machine model - calories in/calories out even in the face of continuous failure.
There's a lot of money in obesity. Diet "foods" like Snackwell, weight loss plans like Weight Watchers, the advantages to food growers of keeping the population hormonally screwed up through use of things like GMOs and pesticides, etc which complicate weight control. Not to mention the immense profits flowing to the healthcare industry, not only from patients seeking help with their obesity, but to research in and treatment of obesity-related diseases like diabetes, cancer and heart disease.
And this is a bit of a stretch, because I doubt legislators think in these terms, but a population that doesn't feel well won't give you a lot of grief by way of informed protest; they're too tired. -
@xenon said in What are you reading now?:
Reading Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. I don't usually read old tomes, but even after reading a few pages I was struck by how modern some of his ideas sound.
(The importance of free speech, equality before the law).
Good, simple writing.
Conservatism has all the best ideas, sort of by definition - the test of time and all that. Don't attempt to convince a lefty of that though, they are convinced that everything conservatives have ever done for them, the blood, sweat and tears shed in defense of those good ideas, are nothing compared to making sure 6 year olds should be able to have gender reassignment surgery.
wrote on 7 Apr 2021, 12:28 last edited by Doctor Phibes 4 Jul 2021, 12:28@horace said in What are you reading now?:
Conservatism has all the best ideas, sort of by definition
Not to get into an argument about semantics, but it's actually classical liberalism where all the good ideas came from. Back in the 18th century, conservatives were a right bunch of assholes.
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wrote on 9 Apr 2021, 00:49 last edited by
Based on Copper's recommendation...
Only about ¼ of the way through it.
Funny, exciting and sad at the same time. This is one of the most "conversational" books I've read in a long time.
By that I mean, "OK, I'll let you buy me a
(cheap) Scotchbeer. Here's my story of how I became a shuttle astronaut. "Very much a "light" read, but worth the time. At the beginning he sows the seed of NASA's perceived invulnerabilty. You know things are going to go South, but I haven't gotten there yet.
With a testosterone-fueled swagger and a keen eye for particulars, Mullane takes readers into the high-intensity, high-stress world of the shuttle astronaut in this rough-hewn yet charming yarn of low-rent antics, bureaucratic insanity and transcendent beauty
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wrote on 15 Apr 2021, 20:54 last edited by
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wrote on 16 Apr 2021, 16:35 last edited by
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wrote on 16 Apr 2021, 17:31 last edited by
@kluurs said in What are you reading now?:
@george-k let me know what you think of that - I was thinking about that book.
All of the Linda Lark books are amazing.
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wrote on 16 Apr 2021, 18:18 last edited by
@kluurs said in What are you reading now?:
@george-k let me know what you think of that - I was thinking about that book.
I'm only a little bit into it. It's...engaging. Very homespun and unassuming.
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wrote on 18 Apr 2021, 02:39 last edited by
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wrote on 18 Apr 2021, 12:37 last edited by
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Because, well why not?
wrote on 18 Apr 2021, 13:30 last edited by -
wrote on 18 Apr 2021, 14:09 last edited by
@george-k im toward the end of abbadons gate
but im going slowly because im reading another book at the same time
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wrote on 18 Apr 2021, 15:01 last edited by
Right now I'm reading part of The World Almanac from 2016.
I'm reading the part of the book that has statistics about the physical size of each country in the world...square miles.
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I've had this book in PB for very many years. Haven't redd it. Books come and go, that one always remains, getting more and more tattered as time passes. Someday.
Thanks for your comment. Maybe someday will come a bit sooner now.
ETA: Another book that has that same easy style that absorbs you is The Russians by Hedrick Smith. He wrote it based on his experiences as the Moscow NYT Bureau Chief. IIRC, the emphasis was very much on everyday life in Russia, and not so much on politics. (I could be wrong about that, though.)
wrote on 18 Apr 2021, 16:01 last edited by Renauda 5 Aug 2021, 16:26@catseye3 said in What are you reading now?:
Another book that has that same easy style that absorbs you is The Russians by Hedrick Smith. He wrote it based on his experiences as the Moscow NYT Bureau Chief. IIRC, the emphasis was very much on everyday life in Russia, and not so much on politics. (I could be wrong about that, though.)
No you're not wrong. Smith did not venture into politics he focused on everyday life. I still have my copy that I read back when it came out in the late 1970s. One topic that Smith really did not understand though was Solzhenitsyn. Westerners had no clue about what Solzhenitsyn was on about then, nor did they understand him any better when he was in exile. It was only after he returned to Russia in the 1990s did Westerners begin to grasp how much he loathed Western liberalism and democratic values.
Did you know that Smith wrote a follow up book during the late Gorbachev era entitled The New Russians?
I should reread both books just to see how they stand in perspective of what has happened there in the last 30 years.