ofalkaed6 hours ago
William Gass - The Tunnel. For the past year or so I have been trying to come up with a good way to help people understand it without explaining it all away. Think I have mostly figured out how to do it, just need to spend a month or two heavily annotating the book and taking notes, and then make a website. So many books these days have terrible online resources that do more damage than good, indices and annotations which seem to index and annotate by whim with no sense of scope or purpose. Quite a few seem like they were personal projects in the creators process of understanding the novel and while I think it is great they shared it all with the world, I wish they had used what it taught them to edit their indices and annotations before they uploaded them.
Been dragging my feet on this since I don't really feel like learning all the web stuff, have not made a webpage in 20 years. Eventually I will get to it, or maybe I will find an accomplice.
chistevop3 hours ago
I'd love to be your accomplice for this.
I have my own idea too regarding a book website, but different from yours. I've been thinking about it.
I had a personal Facebook account where I posted interesting quotes from books l read. My Facebook wall was just an agglomeration of interesting quotes I found either from books I read, or movies I watched, or things I found online.
It was like my own personal archive, but yet publicly shared for people to see because those quotes were too good not to be seen by others. Facebook memories made it even more exciting as I could see quotes from years ago that sometimes captured how I was feeling that same day I saw the memory.
But then few months ago my Facebook got suspended for "account integrity" issues and my appeals have failed. I've accepted I'd never get my Facebook back.
So now I've just been storing quotes on my personal notes app, but it's not satisfying that I can't share them with the world.
My idea was to build a website where I can share those quotes and people can comment on them and share their own quotes too. Just a quote website lol. Quotes from books, movies, etc. Profound stuff.
But then the more I think about it, it's like a social network again and I'm not sure I want the stress of that. Moderation and stuff.
humbleferret9 hours ago
Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life by William Finnegan
No better way to be reminded there is a big difference between someone that surfs for fun and someone who is a surfer.
Surfing parts aside, this book taught me to appreciate the different parts of your life around your 'obsession' as you get older.
bwb9 hours ago
I loved this book, slow start, but pure magic after that.
mikewarot10 hours ago
1632 by Eric Flint - It's an alternative history in which the real town of Mannington, Virginia is fictionalized as "Grantville" and thrown back in time to 1631 Germany, causing it's citizens to band together, and kick off the American Revolution more than a Century Early.
It's a fascinating study of society and the infrastructure that makes civilization work. Their struggles to avoid starvation and being over-run by the armies of the 30 years war are gripping reading.
It was so popular it spawned a community of writers and a series that lived until the authors demise a few years ago.
jll2920 hours ago
Torn between
It's a poem published in 1979 by the son of a physics Nobel prize winner, and it's about consciousness and artificial intelligence, and how they relate to mathematical proofs, music compositions (especially Baroque organ music) and visual art. It is full of self-references.
It's a twelve-episode science mystery called "TAOCP"... eagerly awaiting episode 4c! It's full of passion, hard facts, proofs, code fragments, even music scores and of course jokes.
jjice8 hours ago
The most impactful for me was Your Money or Your Life by Vicki Robin and Joe Dominguez. Made me have a more direct association of time and money and made me focus on the fact free time is more valuable than money (to me) beyond a pretty minimal point.
Read it at 18 while working at a hardware store. Probably the best thing that could've happened to me.
chistevop8 hours ago
Did it make you leave the hardware store or what?
ratracer202516 hours ago
- Lost Connections by Johann Hari (Life, Overcome depression) - 1946: The Making of the Modern World : Sebestyen, Victor (History, WWII) - Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
chistevop16 hours ago
I've seen Sapiens mentioned a lot, but I've read that it's been criticized by the scientific community as not being accurate, so I just haven't read it because of that.
Aro_oj11 hours ago
It's a self-help book called Secrets of Divine Love. It helped me with clearing out so much in my life that I used to worry about. It is a slow read; otherwise, one gets bored other than that, I enjoyed each and every bit of it.
saluki9 hours ago
Project Hail Mary, I laughed out loud and mocked the premise of the book but it was a great read, one of my best reads ever. Very well done.
chistevop8 hours ago
I read "The Martian", found it an okay read and didn't bother to read this one. I'll reconsider.
pajamasam13 hours ago
Tracers in the Dark: The Global Hunt for the Crime Lords of Cryptocurrency by Andy Greenberg was exceptionally well researched and told.
bwb9 hours ago
Killer of Men by Christian Cameron
Helped me reboot in my early 30s, fantastic series.
ramanhere14 hours ago
Made to Stick by Chip and Dan Heath (its about why some ideas stick and other dies)
sexyman4814 hours ago
Kama Sutra Illustrated.
LeonardoTolstoy16 hours ago
Middlemarch by George Eliot. Well worth a read, possibly the greatest English novel ever written.
chistevop8 hours ago
Hard to choose for myself who made the post.
But some of my favorites are -
1. God: The Failed Hypothesis Book by Victor J. Stenger
2. The God Delusion Book by Richard Dawkins
3. Berlin: The Downfall 1945 Book by Antony Beevor
4. A Song of Ice and Fire Novel series by George R.R. Martin
5. A Short History of Nearly Everything Book by Bill Bryson
6. Billions and Billions Book by Carl Sagan
7. Flowers for Algernon Short story by Daniel Keyes
8. I'm Glad My Mom Died Book by Jennette McCurdy
9. Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for Bin Laden--from 9/11 to Abbottabad Book by Peter Bergen
10. Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space Book by Carl Sagan
11. The Metamorphosis Novella by Franz Kafka
12. The Selfish Gene Book by Richard Dawkins
Gun to my head, pick one? The God Delusion.
world2vec12 hours ago
"The Baron in the Trees" by Italo Calvino.
HenryBemis15 hours ago
Books: Siddartha: to think about myself and my changes/voyage through life.
Half-time: to think what-the-hell-comes-next (only if you are 40+)(it won't resonate with a 20yo)
Systemantics, Nexus: if you work in mega-big-corpos this will save your life
Hold on to your kids, The anxious generation: if you got kids
Strong Fathers Strong Daughters: (and mothers/sons) if you got kids (too Christian-y for my taste but an amazing 'manual' to manage the relationship with your kid(s))
1984, Animal Farm, Gulag Archipelago: ...
Light on Yoga: (also do practice yoga, it's good for most-if-not-all)
You asked for "one book"... but.. life.. is not 'one' thing. Systemantics (and Dilbert) have helped me stay afloat at work. Siddartha gave me a perspective in live about myself, the different 'people' I have been throughout my life.All the listed ones are books I read and read again every few years. They shaped me the first time I read them, keep me 'grounded'/taking stock/thinking the 'change' in me and my life. I see them as a 'check-diff' and how I have changed/evolved/devolved since the last time I read it/them.
adyashakti21 hours ago
Bṛhadāraṇyakopaniṣad, without a doubt. not for the faint of heart or the ignorant.
proximityfactor16 hours ago
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