About to start Lanark by Alasdair Gray this morning. My partner gave me a copy when I was in rehab, and didn't get to it then on account of doing hot girl rehab shit. Anyone read it?
chapotraphouse
Banned? DM Wmill to appeal.
No anti-nautilism posts. See: Eco-fascism Primer
Vaush posts go in the_dunk_tank
Dunk posts in general go in the_dunk_tank, not here
Don't post low-hanging fruit here after it gets removed from the_dunk_tank
I heard good things about Alasdair Gray, but no, I haven't read this book.
Fiction: Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
Also fiction: The Prince by Nikocado Machiavado
I'm being funny but The Prince is truly fucking boring, I don't think I will be finishing it. I only picked it up bc I found it in a thrift store for next to nothing and got curious. Heart of Darkness is good though.
After this I will probably read an actual instructions book on gardening (Will Bonsall's Essential Guide to Radical, Self-Reliant Gardening), as the winter is soon over and I finally have a garden of my own.
The Prince is an important milestone in philosophy, I think, but I understand that milestones don't always make the best reading.
Working my way through "Blindsight" by Peter Watts. Fun little book about First Contact in an era when mankind's alienation from itself has reached a singularity-esque extreme.
Sounds 'ight.
I've been rereading Lies My Teacher Told Me by Loewen for like 2 months now. Almost done, it's been dragging and I'm avoiding it because he keeps showing his anti-communist and turning me off. I'm on the last two chapters now which are more meta than history, but that just made it worse because occasionally he'll flat-out praise capitalism.🤢 It's still a good intro to demythologizing US History, but I really wanna just read something else. I just hate leaving books unread, even if I've read them before. I've got a bunch of other interesting books to read like Perelman's Invention of Capitalism,Tottle's Fraud, Famine, and Fascism, and Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed, but I think I might just pick up some paranormal romance slop as a palate cleanser first. I need to get myself back into wanting to read.
Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed is what I intend to read.
That Sapolsky book is a lot of fun.
It is!
I just finished Dan Abnett's The Magos, and it was actually pretty fucking rad, the best Abnett WH40K novel I've read (actually, listened to the audiobook) so far (I read Xenos, Hereticus and Malleus and this one was vastly superior)
Now I'm reading Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson, and it's pretty dope too, but also at times as dry as the dust storms it describes. Very good hard sci-fi, which is something I do enjoy immensely.
Next, I'll go from WH40K slop to a bit of proper literature, something very grown-up, Grande Sertão: Veredas, by Guimarães Rosa, a great classic of Brazilian literature that I've been meaning to tackle for a very long time.
Now I'm reading Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson, and it's pretty dope too, but also at times as dry as the dust storms it describes. Very good hard sci-fi, which is something I do enjoy immensely.
I've been picking it up and putting it down on audio for a few weeks, and now that they're on Mars it's really got its hooks in me.
Just the descriptions of the geology is fascinating.
It is! I'm a sucker for hard sci-fi, and I would have been even happier if there were some stuff happening in space, orbital mechanics is my jam