Has it been a month already? Where does the time go? Time flies when you’re having fun, I guess. It’s been a fun 30 days or so, right? … Right?
Heroic Mulatto
I am currently reading Thrawn: Alliances by Timothy Zahn. Compared to the first entry in his reboot of the Thrawn trilogy, Zahn does a better job with his characterization of Grand Admiral Thrawn. In the first novel, I felt that Zahn played up the ‘fish out of water’ angle too much and Thrawn’s rise read much more like the diary of an Imperial officer with Asperger’s Syndrome who took too much colloidal silver. With Thrawn: Alliances, we see a Thrawn capable of simple and routine social interaction without shitting his pants mid-conversation. That having been said, as a character, Thrawn now seems to suffer from competence porn syndrome. Zahn has yet to find the middle ground where Thrawn can demonstrate that he is the galaxy’s absolute master of military tactics and strategy while still having a realistic and suitable foible. In the end, it could be that despite having created the character in the medium of print, Zahn’s Thrawn cannot compete with the quiet menace of Thrawn as depicted in the Star Wars: Rebels animated series.
jesse.in.mb
Andrew Mayne – The Naturalist (books 1-3). Ran through these on Audbile pretty quickly. They are easy enough procedurals although the second and third books lost some of the charm that the first book had because the main character had blossomed from a nerd to a thrill-seeking serial killer hunter by the second book.
Arkady Strugatsky – Roadside Picnic. I’d been chipping away at this for a while but had mostly stalled out. I’m glad that I took the time to finish it. The enigmatic ending was perfect for the story (although there’s still something that throws me off about Russian genre storytelling). The afterward by one of the authors is a delightful sampling of what it took to get a bowdlerized Roadside Picnic through the publishing process in the USSR.
I power skimmed a few the books in Humble Bundle’s Eat Like a Geek bundle. Nothing super exciting there. Ice Cube Tray Recipes was a good reminder that I have everything I need to make jello-shots, but a lot of the recommendations were banal for someone who frequently portions and freezes things like homemade chicken stock or caramelized onions in ice cube trays as is. Chinese Street Food looked intriguing. I’m waiting to hear back on a few books with recipes featuring a recently legalized “herb.” I mostly picked it up for the Medieval feasts and Edwardian cooking books, which I’m putting off until I have the chance to dig into them. I really enjoy modern takes on historical cooking such as The New Art of Cookery, A Spanish Friar’s Kitchen Notebook.
JW
I’ve been super busy lately, but I am always ready to make time for my favorite author, Chuck Tingle. His latest works have really opened my eyes to the importance of continuous consent and learning to be comfortable with the occasional dry spell. Mr. Tingle is likely the most erudite commentators on contemporary sexual discourse and is absolutely probably not a pen name of SugarFree.
SugarFree
I read the Ray Electromatic series by Adam Christopher, a science fiction spin on the oft-imitated Raymond Chandler genre. Set in an alternate 1960s where robots–the clanking metal variety–were introduced and then rejected by the public, the lead character is the last of his kind and the only one programmed to be a private detective. Working in a cliched LA full of secrets, lies and sin, Ray untangles mysteries–when he’s not working his sidejob as a hitman.
Riven
Well, I haven’t been able to do much reading outside of investment/work-related articles, but I can tell you about what’s on my bedside stand! …Get your minds out of the gutter; it’s just a big stack of books. OK, it’s a small stack of comic books and two proper books. The first one is Black Jack by our very own Moriah Jovan. Not my usual sci-fi or fantasy, but I am looking forward to branching out while still staying in some familiar territory. (Jack is an “uncouth bond trader,” so maybe there’ll be some interesting finance-related subplot(s)?) I bought this book–and the next one–last August. So. Super busy, or at least too busy to sit down and read a paperback. This month, though! Maybe! The other book is The Very Best of Charles de Lint, which was recommended to me by jesse.in.mb. He had me at “crow girls.” I’m sincerely hoping I can get to each of these in the next month, and give you guys a proper review at the end of April. Wish me luck. Or don’t. You’re adults.
mexican sharpshooter
I read an actual book during my vacation in Ireland. This time I picked 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus, by Charles C. Mann. Why would I do that? As it turns out most of the B&B’s I stayed in happened to have a TV, and quite frankly Irish TV is disturbingly British which means they must love their game shows…
At any rate, this book is thoroughly researched and suggests many of the lessons we were taught about life in Pre-Columbian America is, to be blunt, wrong. One of the myths that seems to perpetuate the most is that the Americas were an untouched, pristine wilderness when the first European settlers arrived. Not so. What is now postulated is the earliest Spanish explorers arrived in Florida and brought pigs with them. Why pigs? Because refrigerators weren’t invented yet and Spaniards like pork. Pigs often carry diseases and since they are mostly domesticated a plague could’ve jumped from humans to the pigs, or vice versa. Pigs escaped, became the invasive species they still are today, and came in contact with the Native Americans. The Native American’s, of course, had little immunity to these diseases and died in biblical proportions. The explorers left and decades later settlers arrived in time to find that nature had reclaimed most of the continent.
Its a thought-provoking point of view that if you are into history, I would certainly recommend.
Walden by Henry David Thoreau – It was on a short leash. I put it down not too much later than the last WaWR.
Political Tribes by Amy Chua – This book was the new hotness a few years ago, and I can see why. It is exactly what the title says. Chua does a great job of setting up a framework using international examples before turning to America. Recommended.
Bounty Hunters by Elmore Leonard – A fun little western romp. Recommended.
Forging Hephaestus by Drew Hayes – This should be a book I enjoyed. Its a super-villain book that relies on late silver / early bronze age genre convention to tell the story of a young apprentice working with a non-standard villian mentor. But the book is like 6,468,753 pages when it should probably be like 225. Not Recommended. Go read UnCivil Servants books instead.
Call of the Wild by Jack London – This is a really masterful book. I bitch about not liking litfic an say give me heroic lit any day instead. Well, this is heroic litifc. It is a story about masculinity and hierarchy and survival that could never be written today because the pool of scribes who understand these topics is dwindling fast. Recommended by both me and my 9 year old kid.
A Wizard of Earthsea – by Ursula K Le Guin. This is a really outstanind coming of age stories from before those stories where infested by the rot and cancer of YA convention. I’m really angry at myself for not reading this when I was 11 years old. Harry Potter never did anything for me, but this fits the Young-Wizard-Learning-How-To-Grow-Up-By-Way-Of-Fighting-Big-Bad that Potter did. But where was Potter was written by a woman with no real moral compass, Le Guin has a very, very firm opinion about right and wrong, growth and responsibility. I like to think that CS Lewis would readily approve of this book and say it is useful for growing men with chest. I plan on haivng Thing 1 read it soon. Recommended.
Galaxy’s Edge Part III and Part IV – They package up 2 book in each “part’ and I devoured 4 books this month. Its possible that some of them weren’t quite as strong as the earliest books, but I’m not sure. I do know that for the most part, they were incredibly entertaining. There were a few points where I really wonder WTF the authors are doing, where they are basically showing us “SEE, SEE HOW BAD THE BAD GUYS ARE BECAUSE THEY ARE SAVAGE BARBARIANS AND SEE, SEE HOW GOOD THE GOOD GUYS ARE BECAUSE THEY GET THEIR HANDS ON THE SAVAGE BARBARIANS AND THEN TORTURE AND EXECUTE THEM IN DARK ROOMS WHICH IS TOTALL DIFFERENT!!!” But I’m not yet sure if these “good guys” are supposed to be “good guys” or not, so we will see. I do know that the authors have a great handle on how rot and corruption in official bearocracies ruin institutions, and honestly, this kicked my ass on something I’ve been wavering on in my personal life, so I really appreciate that. Recommended.
Conscious Coaching by Brett Bartholomew. Honestly, I was just looking for something way, way, way out of left field for myself. So a self-help book written for athletic coaches that went viral a year ago seemed like an interesting exemplar to fill that roll. This was… well it was certantly a self-help book directed at someone other than me. However, I do something kind of like coaching when my Cub Scout troop, so there were a few take-aways that were valuable. I really struggle to connect with boys with behavior issues and who aren’t motivated by working in formal hierarchies, and this book had a few tips that can help me with those kids. So for that reason it was worth a read, but other than that Neither Recommended nor Telling you to Avoid.
Currently Reading Tiamat’s Wrath by James S.A. Corey. Its great so far, just like all the other books in the series. I love they way they blend Heinlein/Niven era sensabilities with some more modern sensabilities. They have a great ability to write about people who are very invested in identity without making a book about identity, which is a hard thing to do in 2018 apparently. Recommended.
Love Jack London’s books. He was a grade A asshole though.
Lots of good writers are terrible people I would not want to have anything to do with in real life.
But yeah. I had a nice talk with Thing 1 after he read CotW. We talked about how Buck was dominant. That didn’t make him “good.” And he did a lot of things we wouldn’t want Thing 1 to do. But its a good story because its true, not because its about a role model.
It was the first book he read where that was true, and he thought that was interesting and strange.
He’s reading Lord of the Flies soon… so yeah. I already told him its going to be like a kick in the teeth, but we read it so that when the real world kicks us in the teeth, we are ready.
“rot and corruption in official bearocracies ruin institutions”
jesse.in.mb hardest hit?
Currently reading this as well. Loving it so far, the way they write multiple character’s POV and keep it coherent is really well done.
Losing a little sleep because I read it in bed, and it’s always “One more chapter”, next thing I know, I’m looking at 4 1/2 or 5 hours of sleep.
I really need to stop doing that!
I miss reading, haven’t had the time
Not even for the articles in the porn mags?
I’ve just completed the first chapter (“Rule One: Stand Up Straight With Your Shoulders Back”) of Peterson’s Twelve Rules for Life. I’ve read a few self-help books over the years, but I have to admit, Peterson’s discussion really does stand head-and-shoulders (pun unintended) above anything I’ve read in the genre. As I’ve suggested before, I really don’t understand what anybody really finds all that controversial about him. I’m not completely sure I buy into what I understand to be his overarching philosophy (that we derive meaning by taking responsibility and meaning is life’s highest goal), but it’s not exactly an outrageous suggestion.
I think it was David French who wrote in his review that if you were raised in a Judaeo-Christian household there’s nothing new in that book. My reaction was that none of his rules was something I didn’t hear from my Dad growing up. I don’t read a lot of self-help books, but this one I enjoyed.
Yep. I really liked it as well.
I don’t care how dialed in you think you are, reminders like his are healthy.
Yeah, there was nothing new, but his perspectives and his rationales were really interesting and I thought very compelling.
his rationales were really interesting and I thought very compelling.
At least so far, that’s what I’m impressed by.
He’s controversial because he refuses to be forced by government fiat to call someone by their preferred pronoun. That’s it, that’s all, that’s everything. Otherwise, he’s just another huckster selling fool’s gold.
Which of what steps he recommends is fake/false?
I’d read that as a general disappointment with the promise of renewal that self-help books bring. They at best give you a chance to assess yourself and make incremental changes, but the market is so saturated they get sold as some point of rebirth.
I got all my life tips from RooshV already.
So many things make sense now.
Because what it actually takes to improve your life is discipline, thoughtfulness, and delaying gratification. (which is really what Peterson is preaching) As with most things the answer is simple. Simple is not a synonym for easy.
I read it and it didn’t improve my life. It only told me what I have to do to improve my life. Like fuck me, I’m not doing any of that.
None/none it’s like Jesse said, if you have to buy a book in order to get your shit together then you are probably either going to be led astray or haven’t the wit to tie your own shoelaces. Don’t get me wrong, JP pushes all of the right buttons for me but he’s too damn preachy and I’ve never been one to fall for a cult of personality.
Is he trying to lead by personality, rather than content?
Well, congratulations if you’re so perfect you can’t learn anything that might possibly be an improvement.
Don’t misconstrue my meaning guys. I like Jordan well enough but it’s just to damn pat.
Have any of you suffered through “couples therapy”?
Shortly before my divorce, yes.
His blasphemy is that he thinks men and women are different. Not only that but he believes that trying for equality of results is evil. People naturally organize into heirarchies and that’s a good thing.
I’ve been reading a lot about high availability in enterprise networks. Not exactly pleasure reading.
Thanks to Pine Tree for the Lord Peter Wimsey recommendation. I read the first three and really enjoyed them.
Leap recommended Tactical Barbell 2. It is chock full of conditioning goodness, even though I could barely move this morning.
Finally I dug out a couple of my fly-tying books. I think it’s time to rekindle that hobby.
Probably a stupid question, but is Tactical Barbell I worth reading?
I haven’t read it, but I will probably pick it up. The thing about 2 is that it really doesn’t matter what your heavy program is (I like 5/3/1), it is a separate block to build good conditioning base before going back to the heavy stuff. He has a lot in there for people with jobs that require a high degree of fitness (soldiers, cops, etc.), but plenty for people who just want to be better all around athletes.
Thanks
I did not find it worthwhile. Its just some very basic resistance routines and a lot of High Speed, Low Drag, Force on Force Delta Recon bullshit. You can get better programming from something like Juggernaut 2.0 or 5/3/1.
TB2 has the High Speed, Low Drag stuff too, but its the first book I ran into that had good prioritization and specificity for the different energy systems, which is why I recommended it to Tundra.
Thanks, Leap. I’ll skip it.
I’m assuming you didn’t recommend it to me because I already have the figure of Adonis and the strength of Hercules?
We’ll go with “yes.”
To be fair, that leopard skin would make just about anybody look badass.
I think more this Hercules
And this Adonis?
Billy? I thought it was the wisdom of Solomon, strength of Hercules, stamina of Atlas, power of Zeus, courage of Achilles, and speed of Mercury?
I used to have the body of a Greek god. Now I just look like a goddamn Greek.
I’ve actually started reading again. I stopped because my attention span disappeared. I read Song of the South by David Weber – the latest in his Bahzell Banakson series — , and I’m now reading his Shadow of Victory — the latest (I think) of his Honorverse novels.
I loved 1491. I reread it a little while ago.
I’m reading:
– The Bible, specifically the NKJV. I’m midway through I Samuel (I think) where the David plot is really starting to heat up.
– The Long Earth, by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter. It’s interesting so far. The premise is that a kook invents an easy-to-build device that lets the user travel across versions of Earth while remaining in the same physical space and time, such that if you flick the switch left you pop into the same physical location you’re in but in an alternate version of Earth, and then dumps it onto the Internet with assembly instructions. So far in the story our Earth is the only one with humans and the only with any kind of development. The most interesting parts so far are the ways that changes the world. Gold becomes almost valueless because you can just hop one Earth over and mine the same spot again. Robberies and prison escapes skyrocket until people figure out that the only way to keep people out (or in) a room is to put it underground. The labor economy gets real weird as people in lower economic strata just pick up sticks and leave for their own Earth.
– Plus the other stuff I was reading before, like SPQR.
The Long Earth
I liked The Long Earth and I think the second one was fine, but by the third book I no longer felt the need to revisit it.
Would have featured you as more of a “Girthy Earth” man. Hmm. Live and learn!
Proportionality is key.
Some of the reviews of the series I’d read were kinda lukewarm. I’m not a scifi guy and the only reason I started reading it was because I’m a huge Pratchett fan.
Yeah, I made it through the second book, but I’m not sure I’ll grab the third. I am a sci-fi guy, and still just picked it up because of Pratchett’s name.
Bathsheba then?
Jonathan *waggles eyebrows*
They do seem awful close…
Just bros broing out, bro.
No Homo!
And when I say “covenant”…
Not yet. Samuel just bought it. Saul keeps waffling between being a dick and not being a dick.
UPS Carrier Agreement
The C Programming Language (Kernigan and Ritchie)
Inventory Best Practices
Somebody please put me out of my misery.
*Drops a David Weber novel on your head*
Are you learning C for the first time? K&R may not be the best book. There are countless flame wars about whether or not it’s suitable anymore. I’m pretty neutral, but just thought I’d mention it. Either way, it’s a sad state of affairs that it’s probably the most exciting book on your reading list.
It’s review. It’s my original copy of the second edition from 1988.
Granted, modern libraries make most of it unnecessary, but the basics don’t change.
Oh man, I remember K&R from Intro to Programming in C like twenty years ago. I like to think a semester of C is what drew me to web development.
Different strokes for different folks I guess. Every time I look at getting good at web dev it makes me want to puke.
Granted, it sounds like you’re a lot older, so had the advantage of growing with the sickness instead of trying to dive into the pool now that it’s full of shit.
Yeah, when I was first exposed to the concept server-side JS wasn’t a thing. I did other stuff for awhile and then, when I started doing web stuff professionally, it was kind of the beginning of the “this is the hot new JS thing this week” nightmare. I’m glad that either it’s starting to settle down or I’m getting better at ignoring it.
I just realized I first started programming in the early 00’s….nearly 20 years ago. It was a minor though and didn’t become a core part of my job until a decade later.
Anyway, I’ve considered learning javascript, but the idea of it repels me. Backend engineering & DB stuff is great so far as I’m concerned. It’s having to go down the JS rabbit hole that bothers me.
The last time I wrote code was some time in 1993.
ES6 is a lot better. You can do a lot of stuff you used to pull in libraries like jQuery or Lodash for natively now. There’s much better support for object oriented and functional programming, even if it’s mostly just syntactic sugar. It’s still a whackadoo language, though, and between stuff like dependency hell with the npm ecosystem and how easy it is to write bad code that will still basically work I’ve got to say I have a love-hate relationship with it. When I step away and do stuff in Python, for instance, it’s like going to a day spa. Of course part of that is that you’re dealing with browser support issues, timing…for front-end stuff it’s a moving target.
Then your company IPO’d and you got fabulously wealthy. Now, if only you could find somebody with a beagle avatar to bequeath your fortune to!
Nap: I’ve considered picking up something like clojure-script, but the law of leaky abstractions always stays my hand. I’ve thought about raw JS, but then I think there are far more interesting things I’d rather spend my time learning.
Nope. I stopped writing code when I became a “systems” engineer. So I haven’t produced anything of value in 25 years.
“Backend engineering & DB stuff is great so far as I’m concerned. It’s having to go down the JS rabbit hole that bothers me.”
I have the exact same state of mind.
Look at it this way kinnath, you haven’t produced anything of negative value in 25 years.
Depends on your view of intellectual property and patents.
I guess I’m technically a systems engineer right now, and am mostly spending my days writing code. I would like to shift to something lower level I think. There’s too many projects begging for PLCs and ladder logic for me to be comfortable around here. I’d rather write JS full time. At least I don’t have to drag around pretty pictures in JS.
Depends on your view of intellectual property and patents.
We try, quite desperately, to spin our IP as a positive value. As soon as it goes negative, executives start wondering why they’re dumping millions of dollars into a cost center.
I remember seeing K&R’s book. I think I’ve read it, but I can’t remember when. I stopped writing C in ’08.
I hated that book. I always felt like I had started watching the second movie in a series. Things made sense, but I felt like I had missed out on a lot of previous stuff.
Of course, I was also a Pascal guy who was being forced to learn a new language in my last year of college.
Glibs. God help me, I’ve been reading Glibs.
…sorry. I am afraid there is nothing we can do for you.
Ah well, it was a good run while it lasted….
I’m about 20% done reading Digging Up Mother by Doug Stanhope. It’s a bit of biography of his mom and a lot of Autobiography about how she influenced him and his comedy.
I recommend it for anyone who likes dark comedy and or a interesting story. The 1st chapter alone is worth the price of admission. It describes his moms death, but made me laugh out loud several times.
Sounds too close to the bone. I prefer my misery more historical rather than personal.
Economics in One Lesson: A reread for the first book of my Raleigh Libertarian Reading Group. Figured I’d start with something accessible. Probably not much needs to be said about it on this board.
Mouseguard: An interesting tabletop RPG in an intersting setting. Luke Crane is one of the few game designers that has created a mechanical system that supports and encourages things other than a battle simulator. Going to run it with my friend in Maine and GF pretty soon here.
The One Ring: This is another interesting tabletop RPG based on Tolkein’s Middle Earth. It does a nice job of emphasizing the importance of travel, just as the books do, and is a fun low-magic setting. Getting stabbed is a big deal, something a lot of RPGs don’t convey well enough. I’m hoping to run this as an in-person game at some point, but maybe I’ll troll around online.
How does “The One Ring” compare to MERP?
It’s been a loooonnnnggg time since I read MERP. As I recall MERP was a simpler variation of Rulemaster. The One Ring is generally a simpler system. There are no tables. I’d say it’s still fairly crunchy, but probably somewhere in between D&D 5th and Numenera if that means anything to you.
It has a few notable things going for it:
-A system for travel that makes it an important part of the adventure (though it could do with a little more fleshing out).
-A system for characters succumbing to The Shadow through corruption or despair, which is really great
-Fellowship mechanics that encourage the characters to rely on each other.
-A downtime phase (that really could use fleshing out).
I can’t say a lot in direct contrast because I read, but barely got to play, MERP. I love reading roleplay system books, but I often don’t get to play them or only get to do a one-shot.
Oh, and magic for player characters is only barely a thing.
Also, the setting really shines (no shit hate), taking place in Mirkwood between the Hobbit and Fellowship.
MERP was a simpler version of Rolemaster, and ICE really wanted you to upgrade to Rolemaster. Eventually I broke down and started buying Rolemaster books so I could understand everything in the MERP sourcebooks.
I have played some D&D 5th edition. I’m not that impressed. I prefer the older D&D from the 80s and 2nd edition AD&D.
Rolemaster’s charts got annoying.
Rahm knows who the real culprit is.
“Let me be clear about something. The only reason Jussie Smollett thought he could take advantage of a hoax about a hate crime is because of the environment, the toxic environment that Donald Trump created,” Emanuel told a group of reporters on Thursday.
“This is a president who drew a moral equivalency between people who are trying to perpetuate bigotry and those who are trying to fight bigotry.”
Emanuel told Trump to stay out of Chicago’s affairs. “My recommendation is the president go to Opening Day baseball, sit on the sidelines and stay out of this,” he said.
There were no hate crimes under Obama.
Da. Tovarisch.
Really, if the man’s this powerful they’re better off just surrendering now and hoping for a merciful, swift death. The Trump of the Progressive Mind makes Genghis Khan look like Mr. Rogers.
The toxic environment is in Rahm’s head. And he created it himself.
“The only reason Jussie Smollett thought he could take advantage of a hoax about a hate crime is because of the environment, the toxic environment that Donald Trump created,””
So only two days after Rahm screamed to high heaven that Jussie should be held accountable for his hoax, Rahm is saying is that Jussie should not be held accountable,
Most likely, he is trying to thread the needle between being mayor of Chicago and aspiring to higher office. If we’re really, really lucky he’ll piss enough people off that he’ll never hold any public office of consequence again.
He has zero chance of any higher office. The Obama clan got their use out of him. At best he’ll become a lobbyist of some sort or take an academic position.
That doesn’t make any fucking sense. If the fear were genuine, people would not be engaged in hoaxes. The fact that he could engage in this hoax and get so much attention of it is a sign that the fear is fake and the toxic environment as such is being perpetuated by the hoaxers and their enablers.
Emanuel told Trump to stay out of Chicago’s affairs.
It wasn’t Trump who made it about himself.
What an asshole.
So Rahm is saying that because Trump has created a toxic environment of white supremacy, a black guy faked an attack by white people?
Wouldn’t black people be keeping their heads down, and not faking high-profile racial incidents, if we had a toxic environment of white supremacy? Why/how would that a fake white on black hate crime “take advantage of” that kind of toxic environment?
Robert McCarrol Lucid Blue and other Stories **½ Third book in a comic book novel series, the best of the lot so far. I think due to the short story format fitting the style of the genre better than a lengthy first-person narrative.
Alistair Maclean The Way to Dusty Death ***½ Starts out as a racing story and quickly turns into spy/crime novel. Quick read, the action starts and never slows down, maybe a bit dated, written in the early ’70s and it shows.
Xenophon Anabasis (In Progress/ No Rating) The classic that was the basis for the novel that was the basis for the movie The Warriors, so far its a slog, lots of marching stages and parasangs. If the story doesn’t pick up soon I’ll probably drop out.
John H Monnett Where a Hundred Soldiers Were Killed (IP/NR) A historical account of the massacre that was the backdrop of a fictional work I read last month, supposedly a rebuke of the accepted facts of the event, but not having known what those were it’s all new to me.
Man, I read a lot of MacLean when I was a teen and loved it. Couple of years back re-read Ice Station Zebra, which still stands up reasonably well.
Guns of Navarone was awesome.
Yeah, it seemed like most of my friends read that one – as did I.
Did you wear your reading gloves?
No, they were out getting dry cleaned. USC did toss in a narrowed gaze and I want to say at least one other inside Glib joke but I can’t remember what it was now. Also about half the dialogue seems to be the characters picking nits or arguing over semantics, I probably wouldn’t notice in any other book but knowing ( to the extent that one can from an online message board) this author’s peculiarities made me notice them in his characters.
That’s great. I bought the whole run of his books for my Kindle…shit, well over a year ago…and I still haven’t read them. I need to do that before I see him in May.
Hmmm…how do you have an author sign your e-book? Does Amazon have that figured out yet?
I’m reading Servant of the Underworld and it is killing me. I like the story, but the Aztec names are totally fucking with my impaired reading skillz.
+ 1 Huichlopotli
Give been reading Tom Woods Nullification, which has been enjoyable.
I’ve* dang phone
I’m reading A Higher Loyalty for a portrait of true bravery and patriotism and sacrifice. God bless James Comey, he tried so hard but we were undeserving. It’s a reread, actually, just to whet my appetite for Enemy of the People. Trump went to war on the media, but he was overmatched by real men like James Acosta. When I’m overcome with grief reading Comey, I pick up The Hellfire Club by Jake Tapper. He’s truly the Dan Brown of Beltway politics.
I don’t get a whole lot of reading done what with having to keep caught up on CNN, but with the slow news week I haven’t had to clock as much time watching. So I’m hitting the books! LOL!
Surely that epitome of heroic manliness styled Brian Stelter has written a book full of wisdom for us.
We demand book reviews!
A series. That was really good, Commodius!
In the sidebar of a Vox article (Oh, noes! Teh income inequalitiease!), there is a thing about how “the conservative media are incessantly badmouthing Gulag Barbie, and it’s hurting her poll numbers.”
Yeah, that’s it. The vast right wing media conspiracy is mansplaining over her, and gaslighting the American people. That’s gotta be it. Not “every time she opens her mouth, she says something monumentally stupid.”
That’s definitely not the problem.
I nominate gaslighting as the most misused word in the discourse of politics.
Not gaslighting: Pointing out what was actually said and the context in which it was said in order to derive an accurate understanding of what was meant
Gaslighting: Constantly rewriting what was said and dismissing the context in order to perpetuate a false narrative
Examples: “there were good people on both sides [of the debate about removing a statue of Robert E. Lee]”, “the Russians should recover Hillary’s emails [which had already been hacked by them and others and which she hid from, and destroyed, without consequence from the FBI]”
She promised to go to Appalachia to teach them dim-witted coal miners about the wonders of “The Great New Deal”.
Dis gon be gud!
I’m catching up on the more recent Hamish Macbeth books. They’re only lightweight cozy mysteries, but I enjoy them.
I just bought The Proviso, and will read that next.
I started reading Battle of the Revolutionary War a while back. Perhaps I’ll get back into it this weekend.
I just watched a multi-part adaptation of Tom Jones, produced by the BBC. Does that count?
Did you have the subtitles turned on?
What’s up Pussycat? I guess we could count that. Lot’s of people do. It’s not that unusual.
^ *sensible chuckle*
In New Zealand, a Democracy Turns Against Itself (2-Chili)
Under pressure, democracies have a nasty habit of acting like panicked crowds, suppressing anything frightening or just different in a search for security and conformity. That’s true in the United States as well as in New Zealand. It’s a habit worth breaking if liberal democracies are to rebut their critics and demonstrate their ability to remain bastions of freedom.
But to know that Brenton Tarrant himself chortled that “democracy is mob rule” in his manifesto, and that New Zealand’s government is living down to his predictions with its authoritarian reactions, you’d have to be free to read his words for yourself. For the moment, anybody doing so in that country risks stiff fines and arrest.
Damn. Two-chilly is still damn good. Him, Stossel and Remy are really still worthwhile. Lucy would be, too, but we can’t talk about her.
I think we can here.
It’s absolutely chilling how fast New Zealand clamped down on its own citizens.
As I am not a citizen of New Zealand, it is a bit more concerning to me the politicians in this country who are praising Ardern’s “leadership”. The same people who decry every one of Donald Trump’s brainfarts as tyranny are gladhanding an illiberal proto-tyrant.
Whenever a country in the Anglosphere turns further away from the principles of individual liberty every petty tyrant in the other countries sees it as an example and an opportunity. I wish it worked the other way.
It’s absolutely
chillingpredictable how fast New Zealand clamped down on its own citizens.There isn’t even a mainstream alternative. Left and right in most Western democracies today are generally in agreement that freedom of speech, due process rights, and the right to self-defense are, at best, inconveniences that need further regulation, and at worst, anachronisms that need to be abolished entirely.
Why in heaven’s name would anyone with a grain of sense want to live under a government whose officers include a “Chief Censor”? Note that this also implies that he/she/it has underlings happily censoring away.
I think it’s all a matter of what you’re used to. My kids will be acclimated to things our government does/will do that we find egregious, and will never think twice that that’s not how it was supposed to be.
Read Dumb Energy by Norman Rogers, which is okay, but not as thorough as I’d have liked. There are even more arguments against wind & solar power, but whatever.
Also, currently reading Mismatch, a critique of Affirmative Action – decent, but drier than the Sahara.
Ehh, shit. Mismatch.
Since you guys ignored it in the last thread is what we used to do in my town for fun https://youtu.be/KX0eTtBV3zc
It has become this https://youtu.be/47biOZD-nro
Tossed like ragdolls, every last one of them. I would believe you if you told me those weren’t real people riding that thing but stuffed potato sacks.
Lookout! the love seat comes in for the killing blow but seems to miss.
The funniest part is that at the bottom there is nothing but a ditch and pavement.
Holy fuck. Did any of them survive?
We’re made of sterner stuff. A few broken bones and the end of an era.
If you watch closely you’ll see the moment when all control was lost. Note the Dad skedaddling while the wayward couch hits his kids, sending everyone ass over teakettle. The crowning glory is the dude in the Chiefs jersey running to give aid and succor.
What am I reading. Tons of financial and investing web pages trying to find data on the total stock market valuation going back to WW2. Anyone know where I can find something like that?
While I was in greater Phoenix, visiting my dad and his wife, I cranked through Factfulness: Ten Reasons We’re Wrong About the World – and Why Things Are Better Than You Think. It’s a quick worthwhile read.
Since last month I finished REAMDE and have started “Don’ t Panic”, Neil Gaiman’s history of Hitchhikers.
I’ve got a first edition of Don’t Panic that was signed by Gaiman shortly after Douglas Adam’s death. One of the few books that I will not lend.
All my recent selections have been what Amazon Prime lets me read for free.
ARRL Ham Radio License Manual
I still have my 1967 edition that I used to pass my Novice, General, and Advanced in quick succession.
Mine is sitting somewhere in my dad’s house. I should probably dust off the license and make sure it hasn’t expired yet.
I think my last one expired in 1978. I think my old call sign is still available if I ever got a new license, but I’m no longer eligible for a 3 now that I’m living in 7 land.
Mine expired about 5 years ago. My call sign (a 7-lander) has gone back into the pool. If I get it again, I’d get a 5 now.
My buddy’s Dad when we were kids was an ex- Royal Navy radioman. He was really into the hobby but we just sorta laughed about it. Joke was on us, his service for twenty years meant that he never had to work another day in his life and could spend all of his free time twiddling knobs and drinking gin.
That sounds like a good gig:)
The downside: when I was being looked at by the Army pre-draft, they wanted me to do OCS and Signal Corps. And having an Extra and a 1st Class Radiotelephone, I couldn’t pretend that I was ignorant of that stuff. And this was Vietnam era, so that’s where I’d be immediately shipped. The average life expectancy of Signal Corps 2nd Lts was about a minute and a half.
Thank Yahweh I was able to stall and stall and stall until the draft ended.
I said “Royal Navy”, not some war-worthy branch of the service.
Good point.
Maybe. My dad went into the Signal Corps and spent 4 years launching weather balloons and rockets in Alaska.
Listening to the Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie which someone recommended last month. About halfway done and I think things are coming together. It’s better than his Shattered Seas triology which I belive was YA
Reading the Coming of Conan the Crimmerian. 28% through and unsure how I feel about it
Finished Witchy Winter per someone’s recommendation in the summer. The last half of the book was a major improvement, so much so I look forward to the third book
It may have been me recommending Witchy Winter. I really like his worldbuilding.
Single-handedly keeping Putin at bay via the power of Crom!
Does that one have a collection of short stories, or is that a full length novel? I can’t remember.
Oh yeah, short stories. Including The Tower of the Elephant, which was my favorite REH story for a long time.
I do think that is the best story so far
The one-off books that come after that trilogy are even better, I thought.
I’m rereading The Bonfire of the Vanities. When I read it the first time in the late 80s or early 90s I thought it was kind of over the top. Now I think it probably should be in the non-fiction category.
I loved that book, but I really love A Man in Full.
That might be my favorite novel ever. I can’t get SP to read it.
That’s a good one too.
The 60 Minute Man!
As a Richmonder, I enjoyed how Wolfe snuck some Richmond-specific background into Charlie Croker’s wife’s character.
I’d be interested in seeing a “What Are We Watching” post. With all the movies and series available on Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, YouTube, etc., it could be interesting to hear what the Glibs have found worthwhile to watch.
Awesome idea! Frees up the founders to do less important things like earning a living and feeding their families. Comment count goldmine!
I’d be interested in seeing a “What Are We Watching” post.
That might lose us the family friendly credential.
True Detective Season 3. Much better than Season 2, but still a pale imitation of Season 1.
Can’t disagree, but holy shit am I tired of the “multiple timeline” trope. And I almost bailed out because between 1/3 and 1/2 of the dialogue was completely unintelligible.
Haven’t watched True Detective, but when I was watching the second season of Luke Cage, I had to turn on the subtitles for the girlfriend because of the Jamaican characters. She had not had as much exposure to reggae and ska culture as I had.
I’ll have to check out season 3. I really enjoyed the first season and also found season 2 disappointing. We’ll pay for a month or two of HBO via Roku and binge watch a couple shows.
That’s an excellent idea! And this past month, we watched Inside the Mossad, The Death of Stalin, and old Hopalong Cassidy serials.
What Are We Watching
Back Door Moms. It’s a long series with a mess of a story-line that leaves a lot of loose ends.
Which one did you think was better, Back Door Moms 6 or Back Door Moms 7? I lean toward 7, but that’s because there was someone in that whom I actually knew (and I won’t mention her name, but her son is a particularly good natured commenter at Glibs whose name begins with W).
I always knew wdalasio was a bastard.
Idk. They all kind of run together like a train.
Or neopolitan softserve…
I find I’m left agape by the end of either.
F-dat. Back Door Moms isn’t worthy of wiping the ass of Back Door Moms 6.
You don’t need to throw your integrity into the woodchipper and flatter that “star” of #7 just to get on her good side. A $5 bill is all you need.
No spoilers! I haven’t made it past 3 yet!
Oh yeah as if OMWC watches Back Door Moms, we know your series of choice is Pulled Down Pullups.
I’ll be honest, I did not foresee the thread taking that direction when I proposed the idea.
I should have though. I really should have. Smh
My boss walked into my office to talk to my co-worker just as I read that. That one was a close call. I’d hate for him to think I’m spending Friday afternoon posting on a message board instead of working…
I actually laughed out loud and Wifey wondered why. That was an awkward conversation.
I always keep a puppy video in another tab ready to go for those moments.
In the last 24 months, the only thing I’ve watched was ~10 episode of a bread-baking anime with Thing 1 (HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION) and the first season of Aldnoah Zero, then the first episode of season two and said “Oh fuck this shit.” (NOT RECOMMENDED)
Actually, if you just pretend that Aldnoah Zero was 1 season, then I’d recommend it if you are the kind of person who ever said”GET IN THE ROBOT SHINJI.”
Hoarders.
Anyone here ever read Radixx? I remember loving that book when I was about twenty or so.
Yup. I’ve enjoyed several of Attanasio’s books; haven’t checked him out in awhile. A quick look at Amazon shows a number of books I may need to give some thought to.
Hello!!!
http://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2019/03/adjuncts-in-ww-ii.html
Rice and corn use in British brewing 1880-1950.
Actually that is a much longer topic, the link is only a few paragraphs.
The key takeaway is 10-15%. Not the 30-40% that Bud/Miller/Coors are using.
cool
I’m entertained that in that little write up they don’t consider sugar an adjunct. I did see someone calling out Bud for being bad for the environment for using rice instead of corn. I made it about half way through the article before the blood started shooting out of my eyes.
Adjuncts are non-malted grains. At least in British english.
About 1/2 way through “My Life on the Plains” (Trapping, Trading and Indian Fighting) by William Thomas Hamilton. First published in 1905. Interesting, easy to read. Hamilton spent 1842 to about 1900 helping to settle the west of the cowboy movies.
Just started Mojeaux’s Black Jack after devouring The Proviso, Dunham, and Paso Doble. May be addicted. Intervention unwelcome.
GT has a nib-on for Mojeaux’s naughty fiction! Gather ’round boys!
*blush* Thank you!
I’m reading some FDA guidance on pharmaceutical product labeling. Exciting stuff.
I’m reading us. Entertaining and a dash of piquant self deprecation. Tastes like autumn leaves and Rodney Dangerfield’s undershorts.
Dude, you slay me.
I’m only here until Saturday so be sure to buy your tickets in advance.
Broke my rule on not reading series until they are complete, and read Elven Winter, the second in the series. true to form, I had some continuity/recollection issues.
Good stuff, well written/translated. The elves have a real nasty side, the humans are a mixed bag, the bad guys (trolls) are Very Bad but have legitimate gripes with the elves. The third book is scheduled for early June. I’m really looking forward to it.
I actually might check that out. I might be giving up on Way of Kings soon. Life is too short to reread those books.
Book 1 is free with prime right now. Might have to check it out.
They have an actual release date set for the last book so I might give it a go a well. Can’t beat free.
Voyage to Kazohinia by Sándor Szathmári.
March 2019 Car & Driver and all the current Glib links (somebody has to do it).
Even the HM ones? You fool!
If it’s foolish to read HM links, then call me the court jester.
I don’t need nor want Porn-hub links in my browser history. I have a family-friendly web presence!
Especially the HM ones.
Just finished The Crown Tower by Michael Sullivan. Good read; sort of Sword-and-Sorcery meets the Odd Couple with some Butch and Sundance thrown in. Also went through all of the Odd Thomas books by Dean Koontz in a marathon session.
I’m reading beginner German type books as well as books about German culture, such as; German Men Sit Down To Pee (And Other Insights Into German Culture)
I’ve decide that I will be going to Germany before I turn 55 (I’d really like it to be a 50th birthday gift to myself) and I want to be able to converse in German before I get there.
“I am a jelly donut!”
Akshully…
Anyone else here get fed up to the gills with “magic realism”? I’ve read all of the important works and it seems more like a must read rather than a should read. It’s my own damn fault for being such a literary snob. I swear the next time someone dies and is whisked away on an enchanted frisbee to another, better plane of existence is gonna break me. Fuck you Roberto Bolano, you fucking hack!
No. But then, I’m not a literary snob and and haven’t read any of what my literary betters would call magical realism. (I don’t understand how The Alchemist can be considered MR, but for example, American Gods isn’t… or Making Money.)
Gaiman is so overrated.
I read American Gods and wondered what all the fuss was about.
He and his wife are the royalty of the cocktail circuit. He writes passable fantasy and she writes terrible music with a “message”. She performed topless just to poke the Patriarchy in the eye but judging by the footage, I’d wager she’d poked them in the toe.
She shaves her eyebrows but not her armpits. Such brave. Wow.
*shrug*
I was commenting on genre balkanization, not quality.
“Magic realism” always seems to be a weasel word. They can’t call it science fiction or even the slightly more respectable “speculative fiction” because it would end up in the nerd ghetto.
My main issue is that most MR seems to be written as science fiction (or fantasy lite) by people who haven’t or won’t read SF. So they recycle stuff that was old hat decades ago.
The only one I respect is Borges.
It’s always a plot that chugs along and “THIS” happens. Throws me for a loop and not in a finger up the butt-hole good way. Lacks focus.
Wasn’t The Satanic Verses considered MR? I think that is the only one I have read, and that was, what, 30 years ago, and I didn’t finish it.
Midnight’s Children is one hell of a read but the only one of his books that i’d recommend.
Windows 10 sucks. Why is my computer trying to act like a phone?
I am holding on to Win7 till my dying breath.
work machine, so I’m stuck with it. I’m clearly going to Linux with my home computers though.
A loooooooooooooooong time ago, like 20 years or so, I meant to build a Linux box. Just never got around to it.
I use Linux Mint, which is for the most part surprisingly easy.
Thanks for the downer. My work PC is scheduled for an upgrade this year.
Well maybe your IT department will have fucks to give when setting up the machine. That might help your experience.
If by fucks to give, you mean it’s pushed to my machine and if something goes wrong I can open a ticket, then I should be good to go.
*cries into pillow*
I am available for the upgrade in Oct 2018. So far I have been able to hold off.
Don’t worry about it. We switched over the last year and I didn’t here a single complaint. I’m not in IT, so there may have been some I didn’t hear about, but I have yet to hear a single person complain about Windows 10 at work…or anywhere else really other than here.
My co-worker hates it because it reboots on him over night all the time.
So far as I know, there’s a lot more in-built spying you can’t turn off.
Windows 7 was their high water mark.
This has got to be due to your IT dept. and not 10. My work PC usually stays on for weeks on end.
I actually think XP was their high-water mark, but I also like progress, so I embrace the good new versions. 10 isn’t perfect -none of them have been- but it’s pretty damn good. And I’d wager that most things the haters hate about 10 are due to how their employer’s IT department set it up.
These are the sort of existential questions The Matrix sought to address. Unfortunately, it was bogged down by patriarchal semiotics and gender norms.
I think Windows 10 is great. I don’t understand all the hate. It reminds me of:
Actually, more like:
107XP sucks. I am using7XP3.1 until I die.*rummages through junk drawer for 5.25 floppy with MS-DOS on it*
The truly hated upgrades were:
Windows 3.1
Windows CE
Windows ME
Windows XP (for Windows 2000 users)
Windows Vista
Windows 8
Windows 10
So most of them.
First computer I ever owned was a Gateway laptop running Windows ME that I bought with my own money. Fuck that computer with a poop-knife.
Vista and 8 were garbage. Well, I’m sure 8 is just fine on tablets (I had the mobile version of it on my phone and it was great) but to force it on people with PC’s was a terrible move.
ME was also hot garbage. 3.1 was more of a complete shift which caused people not to want to upgrade. Windows CE was for handheld devices (but was not good at it). Windows 10 isn’t the dumpster fire of the other versions I mentioned, but there’s a lot of things that they changed for the worse (automatic updates, Cortana, tiles on a desktop, etc.).
Auto updates: That’s really my only problem with it. I set my internet connection to “metered” so they don’t just go when ever they want, but yeah, no picking which ones you want anymore.
Cortana: Just turn her off
Tiles on the desktop: ??? You mean like 8? You can pick desktop mode or tablet (tiles) mode.
Work machine here. I’ve tried turning off Cortana, and the damned thing keeps popping up. And the tiles are for things like the start menu and such as well.
You don’t have the start button on your taskbar?
I was able to turn Cortana off on my work PC, and I thought they had us locked down as much as they could. Maybe there’s another level yet of IT control that your work went with?
Those were slightly disliked compared to the hatred directed to Natty Narwhal, friend.
I’m still using Win 3.x green rivets background.
In general, I stick to just a plain black background. No pictures, no pretty images, just basic black. Hell, I can go months without seeing my desktop.
Not Microsoft Bob?
I tried to hit just the ones with wide release. I also didn’t mention Windows 1 or Windows 2.
I was working retail at the time that Bob was released, and remember some machines that came with it. If I recall correctly, Compaq came out with their own “home” type interface to mimic it as well.
Windows XP was their peak. Everything between XP and 7 was unusable crap. I run 10 at work and 7 at hoe. 7 is better
Before starting my current job and having to run Win 7, my previous windows install was Windows ME RC0.
You can imagine the hot garbage that was.
Ha. I was that way with 2000->XP
My hard drive crashed so I have become one with the Borg. Stuff that I watch on YouTube is recommended on my TV and phone. If I click a link from here about shoes the adverts show up everywhere.
Explain this to the Wifey https://youtu.be/hi4pzKvuEQM
Maybe Clippy can help you with your problem?
I’d be interested in seeing a “What Are We Watching” post.
I recently watched a multi part (hours long) thing by some youtube goofball about how he made his own lathe, out of steel from the scrap yard and other random junk. Some of it made sense, some of it was even kind of an impressive exercise in problem-solving, and some of it was mindbogglingly dumb (Like “How did this kid ever live past twelve?” dumb).
The worst (most annoying) part was when he was doing version two of the headstock, and he had this shaft and bearings assembly scrounged from a who-knows-what, and he’s idly spinning the shaft by hand, and you can plainly hear, even in the youtube audio, that the bearings are junk. Not just kinda noisy, but totally fucked, like a coffee can full of rocks rolling down a sidewalk.
I applaud the sort of innovative thinking and boldly-go-ism required to embark on a project of that sort, but I halfway expected to see a “graphic content / grave personal injury” warning somewhere long the line.
About 1/2 way through “My Life on the Plains” (Trapping, Trading and Indian Fighting) by William Thomas Hamilton.
I was expecting the Custer version. Another guy who outlived any reasonable expectation.
*Which I have read. What a dope.
I think this is the only Custer book I have read
“Son of the Morning Star: Custer and The Little Bighorn”
I really enjoyed it but it’s been so long ago I’ve forgotten most of it. I recall a serious discussion with a friend about the Little Bighorn and the aftermath.
What am I reading?
A summons.
And a ton of past due bills?
These days I only read engineering/medical/physics/chemistry papers and do audio books otherwise when I hike.
I picked up a copy of Protector after the discussion here the other day. (I’ve read a few of the Known Space stories, but not a lot). About halfway through. Good stuff.
Alright, this entertains me. I’m curious if any other brewery is going to pick up the gauntlet.
If I was still in business, I would consider taking them up on the challenge. Although I don’t meet their qualifications, which makes it even better, as I would be their nemesis against their will.
I am still slogging through “Black Lamb and Grey Falcon”.
I tell you what I miss reading. The show info. in the TV Guide.
Prime wankin’ material, that.
“Six paragraphs on my boobs and how they fit into my uniform…”
Uuuuuuuunnnnnggggh!
I’m still getting through “The Go Programming Language”, but back-burnered it this week.
Re-reading Larry Correia’s “Son of the Black Sword” in preparation for “House of Assassins”, which is sitting on my Kindle.
Just finished “Exit Music” – just a few more Inspector Rebus books left.
Oh, and now I’ve got to add “Tiamat’s Wrath” to the pile – been a fan of The Expanse since book one.
New Rebus releases/released soon!
It released in January. I think it’s probably the last.
I guess I didn’t look close enough and just went off the New from Ian Rankin email. It’s a Rebus play, not a novel.
Thanks for saving me a couple of cents by not buying that.
Did you read The Complaints side-series? Considering it.
They are decent. He wound the Fox character back in to the Rebus series, so I think he realized that the supporting cast couldn’t center the stories.
A Slow Death: 83 Days of Radiation Sickness.
Sounds like a sunny beach read! If any of you haven’t, read The Greenlanders by Jane Smiley. It’s so bleak but absorbing that you’ll forget your will to live.
I’m reading Jim Butcher’s Codex Alera series. It’s decent, although his world building seems to carefully avoid locking him in.