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Procrastireader

Procrastireader

Joined May 2016

review
Procrastireader
On Bullshit | Harry G. Frankfurt
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Pickpick

There I was, adrift. It was 11/9. And what should arrive in the mail but "On Bullshit." This is a serious monograph (67 pp) on the subject that attempts to define its subject, placing it outside the truth/lie continuum, but finding it more dangerous to the truth than lies, because truth-tellers & liars both acknowledge that there IS a truth, but BSers are "unconnected to a concern with the truth." Five necessary stars.

Procrastireader This is a nice little hardback (about 4" x 6"). Buy it, read it, then send it to your 3 Congresscritters & tell them to keep it in their pocket, next to their Constitution. 7y
Hooked_on_books Very timely! 7y
8 likes2 comments
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Procrastireader
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Pickpick

I was in tears trying to read several paragraphs of the first three pages of this book aloud. Tears as in "fits of uncontrollable laughter, giggles, guffaws and a strange 'heee, heeeee' noise I make trying to get myself back under control." You know, those kinds of tears. A follow-up (greatly delayed) to "Notes From A Small Island," Bryson once again tours his adopted home (and its inhabitants) with wit and affection (and homicidal irritation).

Procrastireader As with all of Bryson's books, it's 4.8 out of 5. If you're looking for an antidote to your politics-engendered dysphoria, here it is. I also highly recommend my other post, Amor Towles' "A Gentleman In Moscow." 7y
MrBook Nice review! 7y
Gissy I need something like this! 7y
12 likes2 stack adds3 comments
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Procrastireader
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Pickpick

Delightful--a wonderful homage to The Russian Novel, with all the asides, detailed observations, manners and mores, wit and stoicism, and love of Russia you would expect, but in a significantly less-dense delivery. Character creates story, and the author uses quotidian details to lead the reader to a satisfying intersection of Fate and persona. 4.8 out of 5--I can't recommend this novel highly enough. Wonderful in every way.

Procrastireader I am posting this and Bill Bryson's "The Road To Little Dribbling" as antidotes to all the angst and anxiety we've all been feeling in this ghastly political season. Read and be healed. 7y
MrBook Nice review here too! 😊👍🏻 7y
Gissy I am reading it! 7y
11 likes3 comments
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Procrastireader
The Making of Donald Trump | David Cay Johnston
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Mehso-so

If you have somehow gotten this far in life without knowing what a schmeckle DT is, then this brief overview should fill in some gaps, but if you're looking for something with depth and breadth, this may not be quite enough. Not up to the author's usual standard of clarity, but *lots* of citations for further reading, plus an index.

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Procrastireader
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The Thinking About War Pack. Cannot recommend the top 3 in this stack highly enough--all thought-provoking and well-written. Looking forward to the rest. Are you one of those readers who starts on a subject and must keep drilling down and spreading out? I know I am.

8 likes1 stack add
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Procrastireader
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Who went to the CostCo book table? I did. I went to the CostCo book table. And I am now the last person in the English-speaking world to have read The Girl On The Train. Which was very good, as it happened.

PenguinInFlight I haven't read it yet...but I finally bought it! 😂 8y
Procrastireader @PenguinInFlight every reader's journey begins with a single step...into the bookstore. Congratulations. 😄 8y
KTOHARA I‘m reading it right now! To be fair, I had heard of it! I usually read non-fiction. ‘‘Tis an ebook from the library. 5y
8 likes1 stack add3 comments
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Procrastireader
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Mehso-so

A low-key Nordic mystery/ police procedural, in the vein of the Kurt Wallander series--but not as angsty. One of the most interesting parts was the stunning difference in the entire understanding of how an investigation is handled between a similar American procedural and this one. It's not the first of the series, but it is the first for me, so that may account for my feelings of disconnection from Van Veeteren.

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Procrastireader
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Pickpick

This and "Ghettoside" are now in contention for my Christmas books. This is a meditation on the value--no, the necessity--of community to human beings, and how little American society enables or celebrates it. Junger uses examples as varied as soldiers at war, early colonists who preferred Native American culture to their own and Londoners during the blitz. The fact that I've been thinking these things myself in no way influences my ?????

8 likes1 stack add
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Procrastireader
Ball | Mary Sullivan
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Pickpick

If you have a little girl or boy and a toy-crazy dog, or any one of those things, this adorable super-size board book is for you. There is one actual word (repeated many times)--no spoilers from me!--but the drawings tell the charming story. Highly recommended!

8 likes1 stack add
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Procrastireader
Superman: For Tomorrow | Brian Azzarello, Jim Lee
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OK--in a totally-non-book-related moment, I would like to report that I just spent a moment or two hurling myself around the house as the US 4x100 free relay team won gold. Michael Phelps is (consults thesaurus...still consulting....uh.....I'll have to get back to you)
Current book nerd, former swim nerd

MrBook 😎👍🏻👌🏻 8y
6 likes1 comment
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Procrastireader
The City of Mirrors | Justin Cronin
Mehso-so

This is the third book of a trilogy--kind of Cronin's answer to "The Stand." Throughout the characters have had depth and the world-building has been detailed and compelling. It's possible the book deserves a "Pick" and it suffered because it's just been too long since I read book 2. I did enjoy it, but there's a 1st-person backstory narration by an unlikeable character that goes on for 40 pgs, isn't useful & kills the momentum.

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Procrastireader
Himalaya | Michael Palin, Basil Pao
Pickpick

While not as funny as Pole to Pole or Around The World in 80 Days, this is a worthy addition to the "Michael Palin travelogue" oeuvre. I read it as a follow up to Into Thin Air. (Weirdly, Palin arrives at a memorial at Annapurna for one of the main climbers who survived the '96 Everest season.). The book chronicles his journey across the mountain range from Pakistan to Bangladesh. I definitely want a summer hut and a yak in Bhutan.

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Procrastireader
Into Thin Air | Jon Krakauer
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Pickpick

Watching "Everest" on HBO. If you haven't read this book, you should. I am a flatlander & afraid of heights. Krakauer opens up the world of mountaineering and the particular conditions--overcrowding, overconfidence, bad luck, bad weather, human error--that led to this calamity. Big recc.

ej0728 It's a shame the movie couldn't capture the horror of that event. Harrowing tale, and so elegantly written. 8y
Procrastireader @ej0728 it's weird -- I can't stop watching the movie. It makes me want to reread the book to clarify details, but there's something compelling about the film. Tho I did have to see it 3x to get it straight in my mind. 8y
ej0728 @Procrastireader Ha! I too have watched it at least 4 times. Every time it's on HBO I stop and watch. The director said its not based on the book, so I keep watching it to see if maybe it is and they're lying to me 😅. Love the actor playing Krakauer, I wished they would have used him more 8y
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Procrastireader @ej0728 I find almost all the performances interesting. Jake G's take on Scott Fischer is weirdly opaque, John Hawke can do no wrong. The scene where Rob Hall decides to help Doug summit just grabs me every time--tho no one knows if they really did. 8y
ej0728 @Procrastireader I completely agree with you about Hawke, he's fantastic in everything. The only character I really disliked was Beck played by Josh Brolin. I don't enjoy Brolin as an actor and didn't find his portrayal very convincing. 8y
Procrastireader Beck Weathers was apparently kind of full of himself, so it's hard to know if the feels are from the character or the performance. I go back & forth w/ Brolin. He's given some top-notch performances. 8y
7 likes6 comments
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Procrastireader
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Pickpick

Exploring the cutting edge of theoretical physics--no equations or formulae required. Excellent real-world analogies, 16 completely comprehensible visual examples, a sprinkling of humor, good history of ideas, great presentation of new concepts. Seriously, fascinating. Check it out!

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Procrastireader
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Pickpick

Now that I can't remember what books I've read five minutes after I finish them, I find some kind of record-keeping system really necessary. This is the one for me. It's kind of like the Tardis--not too big but surprisingly roomy inside.

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Procrastireader
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Pickpick

Terrific--a portrait of a regular family that crashes headlong into our ultimate unknowability to each other, especially the inherent gulf between parents and teens. Well written, unflinching and insightful. Highly recommended.

6 likes3 stack adds
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Procrastireader
Make Me | Lee Child
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I'm not sure why, but lately these books have been my 'palate cleanser' between weightier tomes. Do I need violent revenge fantasies, or just the feeling that wrongs can be righted, evil people done and dusted, and that there is uncomplicated competence in the world? 🤔

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Procrastireader

...black men.
They were the nation's number one crime victims. They were the people hurt most badly and most often, just 6 per cent of the country's population but nearly 40 per cent of those murdered.

Procrastireader I read this on page 6 of this book and I cannot get it out of my head. 8y
Hooked_on_books This book is so, so good. I learned a lot from it. 8y
Dylangrrl This was an amazing book -- great taste!! 8y
3 likes1 stack add3 comments
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Procrastireader
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Procrastireader And my first post had a typo😑 8y
3 likes2 stack adds1 comment