[Applause]Everytime we finish a book we post here[Praise] (131)

1 Name: Bookworm : 2008-06-11 06:20 ID:CwXuimoY

http://4-ch.net/games/kareha.pl/1206548566/
This is a nice thread. Let's have a book edition.

I just read my first book by Haruki Murakami, "The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle". Murakami gets a lot of praise in these parts, and after reading this book, I can confirm that it isn't unfounded. The book to me felt a bit weaker towards the end, but I really liked hearing the stories of Nomonhan, Siberia, and such.

116 Name: Bookworm : 2023-01-31 09:44 ID:mBLbiRkM

Industrial Society and Its Future by Ted Kaczynski.
7/10
Ted has a lot of great stuff to say about technological determinism and the creeping effects on human autonomy and freedom. Sadly, too much of his book is spent analyzing leftism, and while he makes a good point it's poorly worded and takes up too much space. It's a shame because you can bring in the Frankfurt School and look at how their criticisms of instrumental reason sit with Ted's anti-technological revolutionism. Nevertheless, it's a good read and worth picking up. Just be careful where you download it. The last thing you want is to end up on a government watchlist.

117 Name: Bookworm : 2023-02-17 22:00 ID:Heaven

Ted is a dumbass who doesn't know jack shit about history, anthropology or economics. His conception of premodern societies is laughable, like he got it all from Hollywood films. He then goes on to give a list of gripes rooted more in American yeoman frontier ideology than anything to do with the effects of industrialization.
I really hate how this ignorant serial killer managed to attract an online following of disaffected young guys. Disaffected young guys who invariable find and read his ramblings on an electric beep-boop machine in their cushy, first world, air-conditioned bedrooms.

118 Name: Bookworm : 2023-03-12 06:36 ID:W0Tg43C/

Messages to the World - Osama Bin Laden translated by Bruce Lawrence

Bin Laden spoke with eloquence and clarity while being the most wanted man in human history. But in the translated interview with Aljazeera reporter Tayseer Allouni, Osama falls apart and comes off as an incoherent chunni whackjob. Other than that, it's pretty simple: America commits crimes around the world and are evil. Nothing new or special. One thing that surprised me was Bin Laden didn't really have much of a political vision of the future he wants to create and he doesn't come up with elborate theories like most paranoid whackjob political types.

4/10

119 Name: Bookworm : 2023-03-27 16:22 ID:K5fpBNQg

>>117
You have to give Ted credit where it’s due. His ideas about technological determinism are pretty on point even if he is just a serial killer.

120 Name: Bookworm : 2023-04-15 07:23 ID:Kl17Qsiy

I few months ago I finished reading Self-Made Man by Norah Vincent.
Well, it did not change in how I view men and women.
The problem is that most of her struggles in a social setting were due to the fact that she was afraid that people would discover that she is in drag, and if those people discovered it, they would harm her.
The prose was nice, very easy to read.

121 Name: Bookworm : 2023-11-13 05:10 ID:Heaven

All this thread does is remind me that I don't finish anything. I get a few good days, sometimes weeks of reading and then depression comes around and I don't feel like doing anything. I can force myself to read for about 20 minutes during those times and then my brain's noise/self-hate blocks out any further information so I can't even parse the words in a single sentence.

122 Name: Bookworm : 2023-11-22 15:35 ID:YU5XI3eE

>>110
shortly after writing this, I got distracted and never finished the sequel. well, I'm here now to announce that I did it! This month I finished the sequels: The Ocean of Years, and The Shores of Tomorrow by Roger MacBride Allen.

The Chronicles of Solace series was pretty good! It's a very tense yet slow experience and the author loves to summarise and revisit previous events, which can make it a bit boring to binge through and potentially frustrating for some - skimming is definitely recommended during the recaps at the start of each sequel, and for the first half of book 2, which really drags itself out. (I originally stopped reading due to boredom getting through book 2 but returned because the plot hook was interesting!) However, I found it lead to a very detailed cast and world, with the story culminating in a satisfying conclusion thanks to multiple converging plot threads tying together neatly. The only irk is some extreme handwaving of sci-fi mechanics at the closure of the book - despite a lot of thought put in to much simpler ones earlier.

Overall I think the concepts put forward by the series are a fascinating read, recommended if you want a slow burn classic sci-fi with a focus on time and space navigation and terraforming.

123 Name: Bookworm : 2023-12-15 22:07 ID:2ClFzGHs

Guerrilla Warfare by Che Guevara
Che's manual for a social revolution in oppressed third world countries. The basic strategy is to form small bands of men, win favor with the locals and carry out hit and run attacks on the oppressor forces. Once many people have been recruited and enough supplies have been stolen from the enemy, you split off a new band of guerrillas from the original one and in this manner the revolutionary force multiplies like self-replicating cells. The government army is incapable of dealing with this and forced to leave the combat zone, where the guerrillas form their own democratic government and can build permanent bases and supply their troops. The dictatorship slowly collapses as guerrilla forces overrun more areas and the army breaks down.

Che says guerrillas should be concerned with survival and not worry about superior enemy numbers or firepower because guerrillas can always escape encirclement and even if a massive chunk of the revolutionary army is destroyed all it takes is a handful of men to regenerate it. American and Israeli army officers have to read this as part of their training but they don't seem to learn anything from it. Good read.

124 Name: Bookworm : 2024-01-29 23:48 ID:wgK7dR/M

Art of Unix Programming by Eric S Raymond
Its full of pro-open source propaganda

125 Name: Bookworm : 2024-02-10 22:21 ID:YNPFs8xv

ed mastery by Lucas
very good, learn good stuff

126 Name: Bookworm : 2024-02-14 07:07 ID:8o1kbTIV

Steelworkers in America: The Nonunion Era by David Brody
Probably my first serious history book(though the posters here would not be impressed) and I wasn't disappointed. Brody has a focus on the community of an immigrant neighborhood and how steel men slowly dug their paws into it in order to disrupt any future strikes. It exposes their interest in "culture" as an attempt to portray the union men as ungrateful. So many truths in one read. Will dig deeper into the topic.

127 Name: Bookworm : 2024-02-27 17:24 ID:hSiE4Upp

This month I read all three books in the Southern Reach trilogy (Annihilation, Authority, Acceptance). I enjoyed book 2 the most. Interesting premise and engaging setting though it eventually becomes apparent that the setting is more of a vehicle for the author's environmentalism than a puzzle to be solved (at least in my interpretation). Despite this I think it remains a good read and is somewhat comparable to Roadside Picnic in a few areas.

I might read the new interquel novel releasing later this year, Absolution.

128 Name: Bookworm : 2024-03-16 18:37 ID:8o1kbTIV

They Closed Their Schools: Prince Edward County, Virginia, 1951-1964 by Bob Smith.

It's a very personal read due to the amount of interview sourcing Smith relies upon, and his use of differing stories to show how suffocating Southern civility was in determining the truth of any event is...okay? I noticed it but didn't think much about it.

I struggle to say anything substantial about it that wouldn't just be a summary of the events like my last post, but I do like the air of futility given at the end. The "Uncle Tom" of this story not viewing the children as ungrateful or too brash but rather doomed to fail, simply because the organization of white money in the county was too great, too swift, binding together at a level of organization the blacks could only dream of. That's almost definitely a major misreading, but it was my first impression of it.

129 Name: Bookworm : 2024-04-05 15:11 ID:aAgmjHzf

Piranesi by Susanna Clarke

A gripping read. Though very reminiscent of the sort of esoteric horror framework that made House of Leaves a hit, this is much more succinct and straightforward with its delivery at a brief 250 pages and offers a very satisfying conclusion, albeit with tantalisingly few unsolved threads to speculate about. Highly recommended.
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