What are you reading right now?

I really fail to understand why, maybe it is just for nostalgia, but I started to re read the Harry Potter books by TERF Queen J.K. Rowling herself. Right now, I'm going through the Chambers Of Secrets and It has been... Ok. I feel part of the magic is gone now that I've grown up and much of the books lose their charm when you know the mysteries Rowling tries to introduce. Maybe the story and narration will flare up after Globet Of Fire hopefully.
 
I just finished "Poorly Made in China" by Paul Midler

It was an exciting book where there was an A plot between an importer getting into the game and a fledgling chinese manufacturer alongside the troubles that came with it, and there are offshoot B plots that focused on the economic and cultural problems that often occured between the foreigners and chinese entrepreneurs

Overall it confirmed a lot of my own biases but at the same time explained a lot of things that I never thought about. It showed the intense pragmatism (?) that the Chinese have in dealing with orders, dealing with each foreigners, and dealing with each other. It helped me understand the tactics and problems with manufacturing and importing from China in a way that made sense

My only gripe is that the book was written way back in 2009 I think so things most likely have exacerbated a lot with the CCP being more brazen this past decade and more and more manufacturing being done in China. I do hope the author would make a semi-updated version of the book.

Either way, a definite recommendation for everyone. Easy to follow narrative and very informative.
 
Finished "And Then There Were None". Absolutely masterful writing and perfect length. Failed once again to find the killer (thought it was the first victim for being a relative unknown and rich, having an accomplice is as annoying as fake death pill but at least this isn't completely unjustified). It's kind of the inverse of The Oriental Express where everyone is the murderer but it is completely justified due to the limits of the law.

I read a bit on the adaptions, having the heroine not being a murderer completely destroy the narrative, especially as her defense gradually breaks down.
 
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Recently picked up a big collection of all Howard's Conan stories and they've been a lot of fun. Classic pulps have an undeniable charm that may feel a bit antiquated to some but they're also so unabashedly entertaining at the same time.
His letters back and forth with Lovecraft are pretty interesting reading as well.
 
Just got started on rereading the Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn trilogy by Tad Williams. The plan is to roll into the sequel books and new series.
 
currently reading 'Influence: Science and Practice' by Robert B. Cialdini. i recently read 'how to win friends and influence people' and im finding (pop) behavior psychology interesting. only about 1/4 of the way through it, but so far it is interesting. the thing i find is a lot of the stuff is 'well no shit' but it is the situation where it is only after they are pointed out do you realize how obvious they are.
 
I'm in the middle of "Blood and Iron: The Rise and Fall of the German Empire 1871–1918" by Katja Hoyer. Its a splendid little book centered on Bismark and the formation of the Second Reich.
 
I finished reading Dragon Teeth by Michael Crichton. I was mostly disappointed. Mostly I had heard my mother rave about Crichton; I read Pirate Latitudes and Micro (both posthumous works) in high school, which is so long ago I didn't real remember either. What I found was that the prose was very empty, I don't know as I'd outright say that it's bad writing but it doesn't feel like artistic writing. There's different ways you can engage a reader, of course, but compared to most other books I've read that were focused on their high concepts or their plots I thought it was still meandering and just empty. It also took a long time to shift out of its more history-like descriptions in Parts 1 and 2 (which was clumsy enough I thought he was describing real events) into a more conventional novel in Part 3, which was when it finally improved, but also got kind of derailed.

The premise of the book is that it's set in the Bone Wars, an episode from that period in the Victorian Era when both paleontology and archeology were really being pioneered (paleontology a little later). There were two main paleontologists who were operating in the American Plains, which apparently has a ton of fossils close to the surface (so does Central Asia), and they were douchebags so they spent all their efforts raiding each other, literally shooting to kill, stealing bones in raids, and sometimes smashing each others priceless fossils out of spite. In the novel the douchebaggery is portrayed one-sidedly, which I don't know if that's accurate or not.

From what I've read (just now after finishing it), Crichton is in that camp of authors who churned out a million books and whose talent was writing stuff that's good enough as opposed to be being very high quality.
 
Read Tower of Color: Part Deux. Had to drop it in the middle. Poor niggerinos, too much for my heart.

Decided to read something from my own place, for a change. To stop being post-colonial nigger. Going for "Północna Granica" (North Border) by Feliks Kres. Dude created somewhat original fantasy setting. No elves, no dwarf so far. But some kind of space AIDS freaks on the North.

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(My copy has more generic cover)
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I was hoping someone could recommend a good book on the IRA & or The Troubles
The book does not discuss the the IRA and troubles at all, but Cannadines Victorious Century basically discusses Irish independence from 1805 to 1910.

You can see how things get more extreme over time, and how Ireland influenced pretty much every social and geopolitical issue in Britain and later UK. Everything from expanding public education to supporting Greece against the Turks.
 
Finally had time to read again. Finished Casino Royale, Blood Meridian and The Hobbit.

Casino Royale isn't bad, an easy read and the parts dealing Bond's emotions are a bit wooden and hamfisted. The baccarat game was top notch.

Blood Meridian was the usual Cormac offering. Reminded me a lot of both The Road and No Country for Old Men. Not just stylistically but thematically.

Hadn't read The Hobbit since grade school and it's an absolute masterpiece. The narration is phenomenal.
 
I finished reading Dragon Teeth by Michael Crichton. I was mostly disappointed. Mostly I had heard my mother rave about Crichton; I read Pirate Latitudes and Micro (both posthumous works) in high school, which is so long ago I didn't real remember either. What I found was that the prose was very empty, I don't know as I'd outright say that it's bad writing but it doesn't feel like artistic writing. There's different ways you can engage a reader, of course, but compared to most other books I've read that were focused on their high concepts or their plots I thought it was still meandering and just empty. It also took a long time to shift out of its more history-like descriptions in Parts 1 and 2 (which was clumsy enough I thought he was describing real events) into a more conventional novel in Part 3, which was when it finally improved, but also got kind of derailed.

The premise of the book is that it's set in the Bone Wars, an episode from that period in the Victorian Era when both paleontology and archeology were really being pioneered (paleontology a little later). There were two main paleontologists who were operating in the American Plains, which apparently has a ton of fossils close to the surface (so does Central Asia), and they were douchebags so they spent all their efforts raiding each other, literally shooting to kill, stealing bones in raids, and sometimes smashing each others priceless fossils out of spite. In the novel the douchebaggery is portrayed one-sidedly, which I don't know if that's accurate or not.

From what I've read (just now after finishing it), Crichton is in that camp of authors who churned out a million books and whose talent was writing stuff that's good enough as opposed to be being very high quality.
As far as Crichton goes, Andromeda Strain (well, 99% of it at least) and Jurassic Park are both fantastic but really the only ones by him to go out of your way to read.
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I made a point recently to read all of the fiction Lovecraft wrote, since I had only read Cool Air before. He definitely deserved the praise for his narration, with few stories that dip in quality beyond passable. It helps that most of his writing was short-form.
I’m kind of disappointed on how little racism there actually is in his writing. They way people discuss Lovecraft, you would think every story he wrote had some sort of jab at people Lovecraft did not like, but that really isn’t the case. One story has the bad future essentially being New York City being ran by Asians, and the other being about how the rioters during the Boston Police Strike were black commies (an interesting commentary since Lovecraft himself was a socialist). Criticism of the trope of indescribable horrors was extant in his time, and he addressed it in one story, but even shotgunning his fiction doesn’t wear out it’s welcome.
 
Lovercraft was a prolific writer of letters, its in these that his views on atheism, racism and other based subjects come to light.
As far as Crichton goes, Andromeda Strain (well, 99% of it at least) and Jurassic Park are both fantastic but really the only ones by him to go out of your way to read.
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I made a point recently to read all of the fiction Lovecraft wrote, since I had only read Cool Air before. He definitely deserved the praise for his narration, with few stories that dip in quality beyond passable. It helps that most of his writing was short-form.
I’m kind of disappointed on how little racism there actually is in his writing. They way people discuss Lovecraft, you would think every story he wrote had some sort of jab at people Lovecraft did not like, but that really isn’t the case. One story has the bad future essentially being New York City being ran by Asians, and the other being about how the rioters during the Boston Police Strike were black commies (an interesting commentary since Lovecraft himself was a socialist). Criticism of the trope of indescribable horrors was extant in his time, and he addressed it in one story, but even shotgunning his fiction doesn’t wear out it’s welcome..
 
Speaking of Crichton, I just finished "Fragment" by Warren Fahy (published 2009) a few days ago. He's definitely trying to be Crichton-esque, though I'd say the book is more akin to James Rollins, Michael McBride, or Greig Beck's works, but he gets close to Crichton's scifi thrillers.

"Fragment" is about a tiny island discovered in the Pacific (by an admittedly annoying Animal Planet-meets-the Real World type reality show on a private yacht) that turns out to be completely untouched by other life for at least half a billion years, so that its lifeforms have evolved into a completely alien direction from the rest of the planet.

Has some reasonably gory scenes (hence my Greig Beck comparison), along with a touch of "Andromeda Strain" or "Jurassic Park" style laboratory scenes, particularly a detailed autopsy of a unique rodent-crustacean species. And there's a few scientific lectures from a professor characters early on, that are clearly just the author's personal theories (though fairly well thought out). Lots of interesting descriptions of various creatures (and carnivorous plants), with more creativity than you usually see in these sorts of books.

Overall, not a bad attempt at copying Crichton, better than McBride in my opinion. I'm a bit disappointed that the author apparently never wrote anything else like it, as it's a decent first novel. He is a touch too obsessed with describing footwear, though.

Apparently he made a lot of artwork for the book's creatures, some featured in this review video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e4yIdfp-_TE
 
After having sit on my shelf for a long time, I finally cracked open the A Song of Ice and Fire series. About 150 pages into A Game of Thrones. Let's see how far I'll get. Never watched the show by the way.
Well, I actually finished A Game of Thrones. Before reading A Clash of Kings, I'm reading Fire & Blood.
 
Evola runs the gambit from esoteric gobble-de-gook to some of the most on-point dissections of psychology available outside of the German language proper.
This hour of audiobook from this particular work is crammed-packed, probably more densely than anything I've come across, with extremely important analysis on psychology and sociology. The guy who reads this is also excellent, and does other Evola audiobooks.
 
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