Way lower brow than other entries, but I just finished the last Stormlight Archives book that released, Wind and Truth. Pretty on beat character moments and a few unexpected turns. Very cool page turner to settle down in the evening
Brave New World. I liked it
Finished or current?
Last finished book was “Oynx Storm”. A book from the Empyrean series. Book was OK, didn’t seem like much happened for such a long book.
Current reading “Empire of Silence”, book 1 of the Sun eater series. So far not bad. Writing style gets a bit confusing at times, but subject is good. Waiting to see where the story goes.
Onyx Storm is one I was considering, is it worth it? I do need books where shit happens
If you are that far into the series already then I say yes. It wasn’t a bad book.
I just personally felt like not much distinct events happened for such a long book. There are still good parts of the story and twists.
Nice one
The Langoliers! I liked it. I’ve never read any King before because I don’t like horror and my husband’s was like “well its the least horrory of his stuff” and it was but I say I dislike the ending cause it’s absolutely a horror ending. Spoilers for a story that came out in the 90s - I have no idea why they’re so happy when they realize they’re now in the future. Whose to say you are going to get dragged along into the normal time stream and not just watch it fucking slip away as you seem utterly unmoored from time??? Bros??? No celebration yet!!!
Open Veins of Latin America. Finished reading it today. It’s a 1973 book that explains some of the reasons for the massive underdevelopment of Latin American colonies. The general gist can be summed up as “it is a place full of riches, and the colonizers only want to extract everything and send it back to their masters” - that still applied to the industrialization efforts funded by foreign capital.
Although Spain and Portugal were the nominal masters, they, too, were fucking themselves over with debts to Dutch and English bankers back in 16th and 17th centuries, not to mention bad trade deals, effectively killing their own industries and those of their colonies.
EDIT: Galeano also exposed a lot of the shady deals made mainly by USA companies with governments in order to “develop” the southern countries, like ensuring that they’d get less taxes, better exchange prices and better credit options, that their goods would only be shipped by USA owned ships, etc. Not to mention that, during 1950-1970, the price of the commodities sold by Latin American countries kept falling (probably growing below inflation) and the income from the exports kept getting lower, despite larger volumes.
does it white?
this was the last one which i read. don’t try to find this book on google because this was written by my previous and previous grandma.
I reread Piranesi by Susanna Clarke.
Obviously the second time around I didn’t get to experience the same burning curiosity about the setting, nor the joy of piecing things together, but I still really enjoyed it.
Also currently about halfway through Quinn Slobodian’s Crack-Up Capitalism. Looking forward to his new book in a couple weeks.
‘Death in the City of Light’ by David King. It’s a true crime story about a serial killer in Nazi occupied Paris. Dude would trick Jews into thinking he was smuggling them out, then kill them. Truly diabolical.
Traffic by Tom Vanderbilt. Great look at the infrastructure and risk/reward of various methods of driving.
Akata Warrior, which is the 2nd book of a trilogy. Takes place in Nigeria. It follows the main character’s journey as they discover their place (and new powers) in a hidden magical society.
I read a book called The Spiritual Tourist by Mick Brown. Very easy read. It’s sort of half a travel story with some great moments and scenes from exotic locations and half an exploration of fringe religion.
Very enjoyable, although in an effort to remain neutral and open minded in tone he might have given some of the subjects a little too much benefit of the doubt. Still a very fun read, would recommend.
These are the plunderers: how private equity runs and wrecks America by Gretchen Morgenstern.
I just finished Ghost Story by Peter Straub and am currently reading The Rebel by Albert Camus.
Aside from what I’m currently reading, it was Mount Chicago by Adam Levin. You can read the preamble to decide if the book is for you; if you like it, you’ll like the book; if not, try his first novel instead, The Instructions.
The Art thief and about 70% in it. I’m amazed how the guy managed to get away for so long and even more amazed on something else but since I don’t know how to spoiler tag on the Mlem app - I can’t write it down.
Using Mlem you can insert a spoiler by tapping the spoiler icon (it looks like an eye) in the markdown toolbar above the keyboard. The markdown toolbar can be scrolled left and right; you’ll need to scroll to the see the option for it
Thank you! I didn’t know we could scroll through it, found it now.
I read this one last year. It’s crazy how strong this guy’s compulsion to steal art was. Apparently he believed that only he was able to appreciate the art at the level it deserved to be admired, and it was wasted sitting in a museum.
It’s crazy how strong this guy’s compulsion to steal art was.
Yeah! Even after
Spoiler
he got caught once in Switzerland and Anne-Catherine wanted him to stop. He continued.
What amazed me the most is the way he got caught. Anne-Catherine told him explicitly to steal with gloves on but he didn’t listen and poof he got caught the moment, he didn’t do it.
EDIT: I genuinely hate how Lemmy’s spoiler-tag system work. Can never get it to work decently.