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Topic: OT - Books

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Cincydawg

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Re: OT - Books
« Reply #140 on: March 28, 2023, 12:35:31 PM »


Speaking of great authors (not), I finished this a few months back and self published at Amazon under a pseud.  Beta gave me some great feedback on an earlier book about creating dissension and strife and I find it difficult to manage.  (If you want a copy, let me know and I'll mail you one free.)


betarhoalphadelta

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Re: OT - Books
« Reply #141 on: June 08, 2023, 06:16:17 PM »
So, not my usual genre...

The Last Thing He Told Me

Wife's friend read it in a day; loved it. Wife read it in a day; loved it. Wife's stepmom read it in a day; loved it. 

Wife told me I needed to read it. Especially because they made an Apple TV miniseries on it and she wanted me to read it so we could watch it together. I was a little worried that it might be sorta in the "chick lit" genre, but agreed. 

Read it in a day; really enjoyed it. 

The miniseries was also pretty good. 



Kris60

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Re: OT - Books
« Reply #142 on: June 09, 2023, 06:38:16 PM »
I like David Baldacci.  I’ve read 10-12 of his books now I guess.  Just finished two last week at the beach.  They always center around a FBI Agent/PI/cop trying to solve a case.  I’ve always liked that genre and if you are into that he’s a good read.

Cincydawg

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Re: OT - Books
« Reply #143 on: June 09, 2023, 06:56:08 PM »
Try John Sanford

MrNubbz

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Re: OT - Books
« Reply #144 on: June 11, 2023, 12:45:29 PM »
Read it in a day; really enjoyed it.

The miniseries was also pretty good.
And so it starts.......;D
Suburbia:Where they tear out the trees & then name streets after them.

CatsbyAZ

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Re: OT - Books
« Reply #145 on: April 30, 2024, 10:22:39 AM »
Finished reading Darkness At Noon by Arthur Koestler. A very 1984-ish read in its forceful warnings against totalitarianism, specifically the suffocation of the individual under Soviet Communism. Published in 1940, Darkness At Noon was very impactful in swinging much of Western Europe’s communist sentiments the other way. For example, in wake of the novel’s widespread reading across France, the national Communist Party lost a 1946 constitutional referendum it was favored to win. French journalists and academia agreed that the popularity of Darkness At Noon turned enough of France’s public against communism to the point its movement permanently lost credibility at a time most needed during Europe’s turbulent 1940s political scene.

The novel’s introduction highlights the key event Koestler, a defector of the Stalin’s Soviet Union, was driven to write Darkness At Noon – the Soviet show trial of prominent Bolshevik revolutionary Nikolai Bukharin:

“Bukharin and his twenty of his Soviet government colleagues were accused of a host of fantastic crimes, among them plotting to assassinate Lenin and Stalin, carve up the Soviet empire, and restore capitalism. Few people outside the Soviet Union believed these accusations, but after first denying the charges, Bukharin and his comrades inexplicably pleaded guilty. Koestler was electrified by these confessions. How could such a large portion of the Soviet establishment have spent months plotting against the government and Stalin without being discovered? How had powerful leaders such as Bukharin been transformed into impotent defenders and manipulated to confess to crimes they had clearly not committed? And why had the victims played their parts so willingly and gone so obediently to their deaths?”

My reaction to the novel is to resign it to the pile of how truly awful Russia’s history and Soviet Communism is, so awful it spawns its own vocabulary: Gulag, Collectivization, Cheka/NKVD, The Great Terror/Purge, Show Trials, Holodomor…



betarhoalphadelta

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Re: OT - Books
« Reply #146 on: Today at 04:58:18 PM »
A few that I've read recently:




This is one that will appeal to the economics/psychology geeks out there. A lot of economic theory rests on the idea that we are all rational actors, making decisions about all sorts of things based on a solid cost/benefit analysis and rationality. But not only is this not true, the ways in which we deviate from rational action are consistent and predictable. In essense, we have psychological tendencies that lead to not only taking irrational actions, but they are nearly universal across humanity so we mostly make the same ones no matter who we are.

It's not only interesting as a book, but I've long believed that certain psychological "blinders" that we all have as people are only something you can combat if you know that they exist and you're looking out for them. Confirmation bias, as I've mentioned here (but isn't a big one in the book), is an example of that. You have to proactively fight it to have any chance of even limiting its effect on you. I think most of what is in this book is the same. By having knowledge of the common errors we make, and the common ways that marketers/etc attempt to manipulate us based on those errors, you at least have a fighting chance of overcoming them and making rational decisions.




Neal is a sci-fi writer that I've read a TON of stuff from. He is very much topic-spanning, i.e. we're not talking "space opera" sci-fi, and he has done a lot of writing based on overlaying his stories on past history. Previously I've criticized him for not knowing how to finish a book, seeming to always fall back on some deus ex machina ending, but with his more recent stuff has seemed to really improve on that relative to his earlier works.

Termination Shock is set in near-future Earth, where the planet is starting to feel some much more significant effects of global warming than we are today. Nothing about this is "post-apocalyptic" or anything like that. But per the recent Houston flooding, Houston is significantly flooded to where most houses are up on stilts like coastal Florida or the Carolinas. Groups from various parts of the world that are concerned about sea level rise (like the Dutch, New Orleans, etc) are trying to figure out what to do about it. They cross paths with an ultra-rich guy who made his billions in filling stations across Texas and the Southwest, who introduces them to a geo-engineering project that he's about to start to try to bring down global temperatures. China and India stand to potentially be hurt by these actions, and of course that plays a part in the whole thing.

Overall, like most of Stephenson's work, it's an excellent page-turning read. Good character development and realistic actions by the characters, good plot and pacing, and multiple storylines that you don't necessarily recognize where they're going that weave into a good ending. And w/o any deus ex machina.

You don't have to be all in on climate change / global warming to enjoy it. It IMHO a decidedly non-political book, even if the subject matter is inexorably intertwined with politics.




Robinson is an author that I really like for his hard sci-fi. I first found him from his Red Mars trilogy, which was amazing. Like more of the hard sci-fi, the pacing is going to be slower, and there's going to be a lot more technical exposition. Think Tom Clancy an submarine novels, but for hard sci-fi. The Red Mars trilogy is really well written, and the character development over the course of the trilogy is some of the best I've ever seen. "Heroes" or "villains" are complex, multi-faceted, and dynamic, and you really see them change and evolve over the course of the series.

Ministry is also a climate change / global warming inspired book. It presents a harder-hit world than Termination Shock, in which a group set up by the UN called the Ministry for the Future is intended to advocate for all those future people (and animals) who haven't yet been born. Well, the Ministry becomes the linchpin for the worldwide push to reverse the effects of global warming, and in doing so enrages all the usual suspects who would be against it.

As with anything by Robinson, it is a well-written book. However, one area where I think it deviates from Termination Shock is that it IMHO ends up being overtly political from an anti-capitalistic perspective. I think it gets into some fantastical economics and certain areas were not really believable, if for no other reasons than my prior beliefs on economics makes it sound like it simply wouldn't happen / wouldn't work. The end result of where the world leads doesn't entirely sound to me like I'd like it very much.

So if that bothers you, don't read this book. Read the Red Mars trilogy instead. However, if you're the type that can hold your nose through those parts and still enjoy a good story, there's enough good in there to be worth it in my opinion.

 

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