• Bart
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    20 days ago

    I just started reading Assata’s autobiographical. Really like they way it’s writing, can’t wait for later this week, when I have lots of time to read it.

  • knfrmity
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    21 days ago

    I recently finished Of Monsters and Mainframes by Barbara Trruelove. A little random but a fun read.

    I’ve just started Metal From Heaven by August Clarke, which seems like a really fun class conscious workers’ revenge story but I’m having a hard time getting into the almost poetic narrative style.

    • SaymazOP
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      edit-2
      21 days ago

      Please let me know whether it has the typical “Their intentions were noble but their methods were wrong” ending or not once you’re finished reading it.

      • knfrmity
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        7 days ago

        It does not! I was pleasantly surprised. The author does a good job of illustrating the effects of material conditions on a person and the class struggles within a society without being heavy handed or preachy about it.

        The author’s acknowledgements even call out Marx, Federici, and Césaire.

        • SaymazOP
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          7 days ago

          There goes another book into my ‘To be read’ list. Thank you for informing me.

  • Envylike
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    21 days ago

    Ancillary justice, book 1 so far. Got recommended it as I am a huge gestalt consciousness fan.

  • haui
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    21 days ago

    What is dias y noches which he seems to be reading?

  • Magicicad
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    21 days ago

    Inching my way through George Politzers Elementary Principles of Philosophy. It’s finals season so I get bits in when I can.

  • Kultronx
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    18 days ago

    Finished the Jakarta Method. Very eye opening, the worldwide connections between Indonesia and Brazil/Chile. Now I’m trying to re-read Capital, and also listening to an audiobook of the Divine Comedy, very amusing. Also, the Lemmygrad Study Group selection “Blood in my Eye” by George Jackson. I was really inspired by reading Soledad Brother last year, and this is cementing those feelings from last year.

  • cucumovirus
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    20 days ago

    I’m still just slowly going through Losurdo’s Democracy and Bonapartism, and I think I might start Dubliners by James Joyce as my next fiction book.

    P.S. my notification didn’t work, not sure what’s up with that

    • invent_the_future
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      19 days ago

      I just finished Joyce’s Finnegan’s Wake this week, hardest book I’ve ever read but the most singular experience I’ve ever had reading a book

      • cucumovirus
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        18 days ago

        I’m also very curious about it, it’s on my list, but I probably won’t get to it until later on. I’ve heard it’s quite disorganized and chaotic without having a straight forward plot. So, you liked it then overall?

        • invent_the_future
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          18 days ago

          Honestly I don’t know if I liked it or not, I liked the experience of reading it, it’s fun particularly out loud as it is very melodic, but I wouldn’t read it again, it’s densely written. It does present the more Eastern notion of cycles and circles of life and history which I found interesting, but I also found some underlining bigotry in certain passages which was weird.

          I’d recommend it to anyone who wants to have a totally new experience reading a book, although I myself didn’t approach it like that as I stumbled upon the book by chance and wasn’t all that familiar with what awaited me.

  • vema
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    18 days ago

    Still slowly going through the books I mentioned in a previous thread (The Kaiser’s Holocaust: Germany’s Forgotten Genocide and the Colonial Roots of Nazism, and Civilian-Driven Violence and the Genocide of Indigenous Peoples in Settler Societies). Set them aside for a little bit because I started reading The Devil’s Milk: A Social History of Rubber as I was looking for some historical information on rubber production. I think today I’ll pick one of these three and make some more progress in it.

    • SaymazOP
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      18 days ago

      The Devil’s Milk: A Social History of Rubber

      Flabbergasting title!