What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

User avatar
TheReal_ND
Posts: 26030
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 6:23 pm

Re: What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

Post by TheReal_ND » Sun May 26, 2019 7:28 pm

Image

First book I've sat down and read in a long while. I've been listening to a lot of Horus Heresy era Warhammer audiobooks too. It's pretty good if you like Warhammer40k but it's basic bitch grim dark sci-fi war stuff.

User avatar
Hastur
Posts: 5297
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 2:43 am
Location: suiþiuþu

Re: What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

Post by Hastur » Mon May 27, 2019 2:50 am

GloryofGreece wrote:
Tue May 21, 2019 10:49 am
"Call of Cthulhu": Lovecraft, and why Horror is Reactionary"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JxWPVlxoSn0
Good one. Thanks!
Image

An nescis, mi fili, quantilla prudentia mundus regatur? - Axel Oxenstierna

Nie lügen die Menschen so viel wie nach einer Jagd, während eines Krieges oder vor Wahlen. - Otto von Bismarck

User avatar
GloryofGreece
Posts: 2987
Joined: Fri Feb 17, 2017 8:29 am

Re: What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

Post by GloryofGreece » Mon May 27, 2019 8:56 pm

The good, the true, & the beautiful

User avatar
Ex-California
Posts: 4114
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2016 11:37 pm

Re: What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

Post by Ex-California » Tue Jun 18, 2019 6:09 am

Another great Stephenson so far

Image

It is set in the Shaftoe-Waterhouse world...
No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session

User avatar
Speaker to Animals
Posts: 38685
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 5:59 pm

Re: What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

Post by Speaker to Animals » Tue Jun 18, 2019 8:52 am

Image


This is actually a really interesting book.

brewster
Posts: 1848
Joined: Tue Dec 06, 2016 6:33 pm

Re: What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

Post by brewster » Tue Jun 18, 2019 9:49 am

California wrote:
Tue Jun 18, 2019 6:09 am
Another great Stephenson so far

Image

It is set in the Shaftoe-Waterhouse world...
Yeah? I read some reviews and it sounded like Stephenson in "unreadable" mode. He's basically become "editor proof", bad for a writer. He, GRRM, Rowling & King all are free to run off the rails. It's been a long time since I thought a NS book was unreservedly great, Seveneves was pretty good, but as usual the last 3rd was weird as fuck, same as even as far back as Diamond Age.
We are only accustomed to dealing with like twenty online personas at a time so when we only have about ten people some people have to be strawmanned in order to advance our same relative go nowhere nonsense positions. -TheReal_ND

User avatar
Ex-California
Posts: 4114
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2016 11:37 pm

Re: What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

Post by Ex-California » Tue Jun 18, 2019 10:14 am

I just started part 2 in the book; if he doesn't tie the first two parts together it will be a mess, but he usually has a way of resolving everything that makes it awesome. I like the weirdness of the last 3rd
No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session

User avatar
Fife
Posts: 15157
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 9:47 am

Re: What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

Post by Fife » Wed Jun 26, 2019 5:44 am

How about some real history on fire?


A review of Dabney on Fire: A Theology of Parenting, Education, Feminism, and Government (2019) by Zachary Garris, ed.

https://www.abbevilleinstitute.org/revi ... 5a168a81a3

Image
During his lifetime, Southern theologian and writer Robert Lewis Dabney was most notably known for his 1866 biography of General “Stonewall” Jackson (The Life and Campaigns of Lieut.-Gen. Thomas J. Jackson) and for his post-war apologia for the Southern cause, A Defense Of Virginia, And Through Her, Of The South, In Recent And Pending Contests Against The Sectional Party (1867). But his renown as a theologian and philosopher were also well-established. In addition to serving as chief of staff for Second Corps under Stonewall Jackson, and being a Professor of Systematic Theology at Union Seminary in Virginia (until 1883), he also served as Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy at the newly-founded University of Texas until his retirement in 1894. His volumes Practical Philosophy and Sensualistic Philosophy of the Nineteenth Century and his membership in the Royal Philosophical Society of Great Britain attest to his expertise and international fame.


. . .

More so, state-run education sought to impose an unnatural equality on all. “Providence, social laws, and parental virtues and efforts, do inevitably legislate in favor of some classes of boys,” he declared. “If the State undertakes to countervail that legislation of nature by leveling action, the attempt is wicked, mischievous, and futile.” Indeed, Dabney questioned “whether the use merely of letters is not education, but only one means of education, and not the only means.” True education involved more than simply the use of letters. Most citizens had traditionally found education through their various professions, a training of the “moral virtues by the fidelity and endurance” with which they earned their livelihood. The laboring man “ennobles his taste and sentiments by looking up to the superior who employs him. If to these influences you add the awakening, elevating, expanding force of Christian principles, you have given the laborer a true education…a hundred fold more true, more suitable, more useful, than the communication of certain literary arts, which he will almost necessarily disuse.”

Almost alone among writers of the late nineteenth century, Dabney saw the distinct danger of the new public school system being used by “demagogues, who are in power for a time, in the interests of their faction.” And his most serious indictment of public education has become a question that has only become more critical since then: what happens to religious instruction if the state takes over the teaching of children? Given the status of post-war relations between church and state and changing constitutional interpretations, the state could not endorse one religious belief over another. State-sponsored education would become secularized. But if education were not Christian, then it would inevitably become anti-Christian. “He that is not with his God is against Him,” Dabney repeated. Could education really be education if it educated “the mind without purifying the heart?” Dabney answered: “There can be no true education without moral culture, and no true moral culture without Christianity.”

heydaralon
Posts: 7571
Joined: Thu Mar 16, 2017 7:54 pm

Re: What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

Post by heydaralon » Wed Jun 26, 2019 1:48 pm

Finished the Hundred Years War by Desmond Steward. Really good intro to a complex conflict. Henry V, Edward of Woodstock, John II (John the Faggot), and Edward III (Edward the Baller), Nicholas Hawkwood, and Phillip of Burgundy are all cool ass dudes (except John). Apparently Charles VII hung out with child murdering Satanists. Not making this shit up. Crazy shit.
Shikata ga nai

User avatar
TheReal_ND
Posts: 26030
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 6:23 pm

Re: What Book Are You Reading at the Moment?

Post by TheReal_ND » Wed Jun 26, 2019 6:57 pm

The bible.