factolvictor, to bookstodon
@factolvictor@dice.camp avatar

I’m reading Star Wars Ahsoka (trying to finish my books TBR this month) and I must say I really like her. It’s an interesting character and a nice addition to SW stellar crew. But I think it’s so upsetting all this discourse of “not being a Jedi” just because she doesn’t belong to the Jedi Temple Studio 54. So, to be a Jedi you must be a member of a country club and that’s it? @bookstodon

Sobex,
@Sobex@sciences.re avatar

@justin @factolvictor @bookstodon what’s the exact title of this book (or better reference) ?

oceaniceternity,
@oceaniceternity@sakurajima.moe avatar

@atobsmith @factolvictor @bookstodon The jedi is just a drinking club with a force prblem I guess.

pivic, to bookstodon
@pivic@kolektiva.social avatar

‘It’s totally unhinged’: is the book world turning against Goodreads? https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/dec/18/goodreads-review-bombing

I hate Goodreads. The site is just a continuation of Amazon as a surveillance capitalist nightmare, one that's never updated. Bugs are rife.

I prefer Bookwyrm and The StoryGraph:

https://bookwyrm.social
https://thestorygraph.com

@bookstodon

Jennifer,
@Jennifer@bookstodon.com avatar

@pivic @bookstodon I hate Goodreads, I had an account in its early days and loved how I could add all the books I own to an online library, but a lot of the reviews are just mean. I deleted my account a long time ago. I've read about the recent review bomb campaigns against new authors and it's awful but not surprising. It's such a toxic culture there.

antonioderosa,
@antonioderosa@mastodon.uno avatar
johnrakestraw, to bookstodon
@johnrakestraw@mastodon.online avatar

I have so many more unread books on our shelves than I'll ever read. Each of those books is somewhere on my TBR
list. I'm thinking that I might complement my #TBR list with a #NTBR list. There are so many (and more and more)
books, and I have so little (and less and less) time in front of me when I might read them. Obviously, winnowing
the collection would help to declutter our small space, but might it also declutter my mind?
https://johnrakestraw.com/post/from-the-tbr-pile-to-the-ntbr-pile/. @bookstodon #reading #books

StefanieH,
@StefanieH@mastodon.social avatar

@johnrakestraw @bookstodon I hear you regarding the constraint of physical space! That's the main issue for me!

ajlewis2,
@ajlewis2@vivaldi.net avatar

@johnrakestraw @bookstodon

You said in your article "one has to be very careful when one considers getting rid of books that one urgently needs to read... I have to admit that there’s something freeing about it."

I'm currently reading Walking on Water by Anthony De Mello. He mentions detachment often in regard to freedom, including spiritual freedom. He gives this exercise: Take these books (hard to separate from) and say to them "How precious you are and loved, but you are not my life. I have a life to live and a destiny to fulfill different from you." That seems to be a way to get rid of something with care.

NatureMC, to writers
@NatureMC@mastodon.online avatar
pyperkub,
@pyperkub@mastodon.social avatar

@NatureMC @bookwyrm @writers while I didn't dig deep, I'm not sure how bookwyrm would prevent fake review bombing... tho federated instances could block, but it's still lots of content moderation...

NatureMC,
@NatureMC@mastodon.online avatar

@pyperkub Of course but here real people and admins are working for that. I also think that with the size of the servers here, a bombing would be noticeable due to the size of the data. @bookwyrm @writers

gvrooyen, to random
@gvrooyen@c.im avatar

My most profound read of the year was "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" by Richard Rhodes. Although I rarely check in on that other platform nowadays, I happened to see @mrnugget wax lyrical about the book. Since he personally recommended most of my other best reads of 2023 I knew I had to dig into it.

Occasionally a book, play, or film just reaches into your worldview and imposes a shift. This book did that for me; one of very few.

Atomic Bomb is not a new book – in two weeks it will be 38 years old. Nor is it a light read: The paperback weighs in at 896 pages. I read the excellent audiobook during runs and travels. The books are somewhat hard to get hold of.

"The Making of the Atomic Bomb" might be the greatest literary gesamtkunstwerk I have read. It's a historical work that reads like a novel. It's a collection of biographies that artfully dramatizes the subjects' lives. It's a book about science that makes much of nuclear physics wonderfully accessible. It's the best exposition of 20th century history I've found, including the Cold War. It presents political science in an accessible way. Towards the end, it confronts the reader with the terrible ethics of our capability, but without deigning to prescribe. Yet most of all, it is a beautifully philosophical work, and Rhodes has this Beethovian sense of pace where he can be describing an aspect of history in a scholarly tone for a while and then suddenly modulate into the philosophy of human nature.

Just picking a random example, here is Rhodes casually describing the young Niels Bohr's relationship with his brother, Harald:

"In my whole youth,' Bohr reminisced, my brother played a very large part ... I had very much to do with my brother. He was in all respects more clever than I.' Harald in turn told whoever asked that he was merely an ordinary person and his brother pure gold, and seems to have meant it."

In the very next paragraph, with a perfect sense of pace, Rhodes suddenly pulls the relaxed reader into philosophy, to segue into a scientific concept:

"Speech is a clumsiness and writing an impoverishment. Not language, but the surface of the body is the child's first map of the world, undifferentiated between subject and object, coextensive with the world it maps until awakening consciousness divides it off. Niels Bohr liked to show how a stick used as a probe – a blind man's cane, for example – became an extension of the arm."

From there the text flows from biography to science again.

I had read John Hersey's "Hiroshima" many years ago, but the latter part of "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" brought the reality home again much more deeply. I am left with that concern that as a society we are caught in Kundera's unbearable lightness of being, where the bloody events of the late 40s have turned into "mere words, theories, and discussions, have become lighter than feathers, frightening no one." There is an infinite difference between a Hiroshima that occurs only once in history, and a bombing that eternally returns.

Read this book.

#reading

kristianeleigh, to bookstodon
@kristianeleigh@cupoftea.social avatar

Whatcha reading, @bookstodon ??

My current read…

scentedmeat,
@scentedmeat@norcal.social avatar

@kristianeleigh @bookstodon @kimlockhartga It's on my list! Really liked the Devabad books!

westerling,
@westerling@wandering.shop avatar

@kristianeleigh @bookstodon

I just finished reading this and thought it was a lot of fun. I look forward to the next one.

I just finished a re-read of Tehanu, by Ursula K. Le Guin.

stina_marie, to horror
@stina_marie@horrorhub.club avatar

Today I worked on some art for a bit, read a fantastic book of eldritch horror, & now we're going to visit a haunted house via ROSE RED which I haven't watched since it originally aired. All in all, a wonderful day filled w my favorite things.

Hope you all read, watched, or made something spooky! 👻

Guess I should bust out my Diary of Ellen Rimbauer tonight.

@horror

stina_marie,
@stina_marie@horrorhub.club avatar

@horror This was sillier than I remembered but the premise is still super fun. For every bad bit of acting & cringe-y dialogue, there are Melanie Lynskey, Nancy Travis, & Julian Sands totally invested & bringing it.

P.S. God, I miss Julian Sands. His charisma is amazing; he should've been a top leading man.

howler0502,
@howler0502@mastodon.social avatar

@stina_marie @horror I loved Rose Red! I wish it would get a Blu-Ray release.

ElleSabine, to romancelandia
@ElleSabine@romancelandia.club avatar

I as The Witness by Nora Roberts. Despite the hundreds of she’s written, I’m a 48yo Roberts virgin; she’s always been the of my mother & MIL’s generation. ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ I love good plots that don’t rely on dramatic breakups & makeups. While very white & not written specifically with this diagnosis of the FMC, she very much seemed to me as high-functioning autistic. @romancebooks @romancelandia
https://amzn.to/3RDvDjU

herhandsmyhands,
@herhandsmyhands@romancelandia.club avatar

@ElleSabine @romancebooks @romancelandia
This is very much one of my favorite Nora Roberts' books, and worthy of being her 200th published noel.

https://herhandsmyhands.wordpress.com/2012/05/03/the-witness-by-nora-roberts/

oceaniceternity, to bookstadon
@oceaniceternity@sakurajima.moe avatar

@bookstadon I'm currently #reading "Mod: A very British style". I anticipate finishing it it today. I've had some interesting music recommendations from the book (Two Tones and The Specials) that I've followed up, and I have thoroughly enjoyed the explanation of the political philosophy of dandyism.

#books

oceaniceternity,
@oceaniceternity@sakurajima.moe avatar

@bookstadon I should probably plug it into storygraph

ExcessivelyDiverting, to bookstodon
@ExcessivelyDiverting@romancelandia.club avatar
forpeterssake,
@forpeterssake@mastodon.xyz avatar

@ExcessivelyDiverting @bookstodon
Huh. I wasn't that impressed with what I saw of Sanditon Season 1, but maybe I'll have to give it another look!

ExcessivelyDiverting,
@ExcessivelyDiverting@romancelandia.club avatar

@forpeterssake @bookstodon I kept in mind that it's a novel Austen didn't finish so S1 was not going to be as Austen-esque as I wanted. BUT, taking Austen out of the picture, and thinking of it as just a period piece, I really enjoyed it!

JD_Cunningham, to bookstodon
@JD_Cunningham@sunny.garden avatar

Setting the perfect tone for this collection of twenty-three tales of Baba Yaga is the spell-poem by Stephanie M. Wytovich that opens it. The stories that follow are traditional and modern, set in Slavic forests or a swamp in the American Deep South. Two of the stories are interesting variations on our Hansel and Gretel tale, another is told by the Baba Yaga's hut on chicken legs, and in one Baba Yaga falls in love.

The Baba Yagas vary too, they are ancient and young, beautiful and ugly, cruel and compassionate, but she is always a powerful figure who is closely connected to the natural world.

Into the Forest was edited by Lindy Ryan with an introduction by Christina Henry, and the stories are by women fantasy and horror writers who bring a welcome feminist sensibility to many of them. There are some very strong selections, but the collection does have a few weaker choices.

A couple of the stories are bursting the seams of a short story and could be developed into novels. The perfect kind of eerie anthology to cozy up with through the dark, cold months.
@bookstodon

otter,

@JD_Cunningham @bookstodon This sounds great, thanks!

duanetoops, to bookstodon
@duanetoops@mstdn.party avatar
bunnytown,
@bunnytown@apobangpo.space avatar

@duanetoops @bookstodon
Thank you for this!
I loved the words and images.
So timely, this morning.
🌱

duanetoops,
@duanetoops@mstdn.party avatar

@bunnytown @bookstodon my pleasure! Thank you for reading! And for your incredible support! Not sure I'll ever be able to thank you enough!

ElleSabine, to romancebooks
@ElleSabine@romancelandia.club avatar

I Gnome Sweet Gnome by Elva Birch ( 2/Lawn Ornament Shifters) today because rn it’s (not sure how long that will last), and because the cover & title made me laugh. This shorter-length Christmas story takes rom-com almost to absurd . Get ready for a jewel thief owl shifter to meet her mate as a Norwegian gnome factory owner. @romancebooks
https://amzn.to/3NlwpzF

image/jpeg
A screenshot featuring an Amazon Kindle eBook page for "Gnome Sweet Gnome (Lawn Ornament Shifters Book 2)" with a highlighted promotional offer showing the Kindle price as $0.00, indicating it is available for free at the time.

Mr_Blott,

I don’t know what’s worse, the titlegore or the thumbnail 🤢

Narayoni, to bookstodon
@Narayoni@mastodon.social avatar

Oh yes, Behemoth, I agree with you on this; the cat is indeed an ancient and inviolable animal!
(from The Master And Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov)

@bookstodon @bookstadon

dragoniff2,
@dragoniff2@kolektiva.social avatar

@Narayoni @bookstodon @bookstadon
“The cat . . . is for the man who appreciates beauty as the one living force in a blind and purposeless universe.”

  • H.P Minecraft
Narayoni, to bookstodon
@Narayoni@mastodon.social avatar

The devil and his entourage have certainly left the Soviet investigators in a tizzy!

(A quotation from The Master And Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov, P&V translation)

@bookstodon @bookstadon

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