Hard Rock Ag-elujah
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Although I've finally succumbed to an audiobook for this, which I'm enjoying.
I loved this. Gripping storytelling and it made me realise how much of this period of our history is hidden
My reading has been a bit off this year. No 5 stars (yet) for anything. Going to try this one next, only 200 pages and good reviews.
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As a "historian", I love so many eras, but 17th century Britain was an absolute RIOTI loved this. Gripping storytelling and it made me realise how much of this period of our history is hidden
17th Century always delivers: war, plague, death, fire, great fashionAs a "historian", I love so many eras, but 17th century Britain was an absolute RIOT
One of the worst books I have ever read. I hated it so much.a little tangential but - what is the book you've read recently / last year or two ish that you just really couldn't stand, or couldn't finish?
I saw Matt Haig's name under a review on a back cover recently and it reminded me how much I could not cope with The Midnight Library when forced to read it for a (short lived) book club. genuinely so paper thin and badly written, and it was everywhere for ages.
agreed! I'm not sure I ever finished it despite getting pretty close. I feel Murakami is a bit of as one trick pony, all these ill-defined female characters with cute n' sexy ears, the wells, the missing cats, the missing women, the male hero losing it psychologically... I really liked Norwegian Wood for how it left all the surrealist shit behind and just told a miserable story.Harukami’s The Wind-up Bird Chronicle was a hate crime (towards the reader). It started well but then it soon became obvious that it was leading nowhere, just several plots and lose ends. It’s a fucking scam of a book.
(And yet it had some magical passages that you can’t totally disregard it either, which is all the more infuriating)
agreed! I'm not sure I ever finished it despite getting pretty close. I feel Murakami is a bit of as one trick pony, all these ill-defined female characters with cute n' sexy ears, the wells, the missing cats, the missing women, the male hero losing it psychologically... I really liked Norwegian Wood for how it left all the surrealist shit behind and just told a miserable story.
I hate read itActively hated hated HATEDBret Easton Ellis’ The Shards. I forced myself to finish it just to see if was as predictable as I thought it was going to be and it WAS!
Just confirming that this is stunningly good. The smallest details written so delicately and powerfully.Reading the new(ly translated) Jhumpa Lahiri at the minute, Roman Stories. Brilliant as per usual. I just love her and think she's my favourite writer.
Oh God SING IT SWEETCHEEKS!the case of a big sector of the left cornering itself more and more in PURITY TESTS that take you nowhere but towards a QUASI-RELIGIOUS AUTHORITARIAN/HYPOCRITICAL way of life. And, of course, and as the author points out repeatedly, there is a danger that by doing that it is LOSING PEOPLE to the IDENTITY POLITICS of the right (nation, religion, etc) rather than recruiting them to the universalistic causes of the left.
The first one is Cancelled: The Left Way Back from Woke from Umut Ozkirimli, which presents the case of a big sector of the left cornering itself more and more in PURITY TESTS that take you nowhere but towards a QUASI-RELIGIOUS AUTHORITARIAN/HYPOCRITICAL way of life. And, of course, and as the author points out repeatedly, there is a danger that by doing that it is LOSING PEOPLE to the IDENTITY POLITICS of the right (nation, religion, etc) rather than recruiting them to the universalistic causes of the left.
"they"?human behavior and why they behave how they behave always fascinates me, and this book examine it from many angles.
Robert Sapolsky - Behave, great book if you want to understand human behavior.
human behavior and why they behave how they behave always fascinates me, and this book examine it from many angles.
ooh! I have The Bee Sting lined up as my first January read, although I'm a bit scared cos it looks massive. excited to dive in.I just finished The Bee Sting by Paul Murray. I think it's among the best books I ever read. I saw a Tiktok about the books nominated for the Booker Prize and this one interested me the most. It's a fairly long novel about a family thats falling apart after a major financial issue. I don't want to give away too much, but the way it's written, from different perspectives, is unlike anything I've read before.
Filmed as ‘Head On’ and with a gratuitous shot of Alex Dimitriades wanking….ooh! I have The Bee Sting lined up as my first January read, although I'm a bit scared cos it looks massive. excited to dive in.
if you like the multiple perspectives thing I'd try The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas, which I'm reading again now for what must be the fourth or fifth time... prob my all time fave.
I'm also reading his debut novel Loaded which is quite a slim, first person story about a young, horny and jobless gay Greek in Melbourne - it's a fucking revelation. some of the writing is so good and so funny it makes me scream. main themes - hedonism, boredom and nihilism.
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The Bee Sting was long, but really easy to read and engaging. I read it in a week, which I almost never do.ooh! I have The Bee Sting lined up as my first January read, although I'm a bit scared cos it looks massive. excited to dive in.
if you like the multiple perspectives thing I'd try The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas, which I'm reading again now for what must be the fourth or fifth time... prob my all time fave.
I'm also reading his debut novel Loaded which is quite a slim, first person story about a young, horny and jobless gay Greek in Melbourne - it's a fucking revelation. some of the writing is so good and so funny it makes me scream. main themes - hedonism, boredom and nihilism.
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