What are you reading right now?

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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby stefano » Tue Feb 08, 2011 1:42 pm

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Amazon review: Ferguson does not so much provide a synoptic survey of the British empire since the 17th century, as an arresting argument about why it arose, and how it fell. Ferguson's emphasis throughout is on the pursuit of economic profit and military might.

Piracy overseas and a taste for sugar and spice at home, combined with an unerring ability to vanquish rival European powers such as the Dutch and French in the dash for stash and status across the globe. But Ferguson is also alive to the peculiarities of British dominion: the manly and Christian civil service--less than a thousand strong--who ruled India, missionaries such as Livingstone, who explored and mapped as they preached and the barons of empire--Rhodes, Curzon, and Kitchener--who found in empire an outlet for their homoeroticism.

The book is brilliant and persuasive on trade and buccaneering before 1750, on India, on the late Victorian imperial mentalité, and on the two world wars, but less convincing on the empire of white settlement, and strangely silent on the most difficult colony of all, Ireland. In the end, Ferguson's penchant for polemic gets the upper-hand--the book closes with a controversial balance-sheet of the gains and losses of the British imperial experience--but he provides a riveting read nonetheless.


I'm halfway through it, it's very well done. He really sat down and did his homework: the whole text is full of useful economic and demographic data, charts and maps. I'm reading a borrowed copy but reckon I should get my own one for reference.
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby stefano » Sat Jun 04, 2011 4:09 pm

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I thoroughly enjoyed this. Wheen makes a stand for old-school rationality, taking pot shots at homoeopaths, creationists, Thatcherites, Deepak Chopra, the Chicago school, deconstructionists, the hysterical mourning for Pricess Diana, the dotcom bubble, Edward de Bono and just about everything about Tony Blair. Really funny, and well written. I marked a few sentences:

Had they been in a fit state for ratiocination, delegates might have wondered how the second sentence related to the first, and what any of it actually meant: happily, however, they were far too busy sobbing an sighing to demand anything as vulgar as coherence - which was, of course, Gore's purpose in including this pointless parable.

Following the distinguished example of God, who condensed the laws of righteousness into ten easy-to-understand instructions, these authors insists that the laws of success are finite and can be briefly enumerated.

Also had to look up a few words, I love it when an author makes me do that. A cool one is Torschlusspanik, a German word for the panic when a door is about to shut and everyone rushes through it.
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby marycarnival » Sat Jun 04, 2011 4:14 pm

Alaya wrote:Margaret. Always Magaret.

Moral Disorder

I'm drownDing in Canadians. :)


Ha! I'm finally getting around to reading The Year of the Flood...it's awesome so far. Going to read Oryx and Crake next, I think. Then I'll almost be caught up on my Margaret.
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby Hammer of Los » Thu Jan 12, 2012 9:28 am

...

I am reading Grant Morrison's Supergods: Our World in the Age of the Superhero.

It makes for fascinating reading, it really does.

Who can crack the Code X?

...
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby Hammer of Los » Sat Jan 14, 2012 9:46 pm

...

Next up, Chris Knowles.

...
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby Jeff » Fri Feb 17, 2012 8:36 pm

A recent anthology, Cthulhu's Reign, (review here), which poses the question, What will it be like when the stars come right? "Generally speaking, this is not a book for optimists."

Just when I thought I couldn't be scared by mythos fiction, I read Ian Watson's "The Walker in the Cemetery." Not for the faint of anything. So I probably shouldn't have.
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby justdrew » Sun Feb 19, 2012 2:15 am

02:11:07 - THE STARS ARE ALIGNED, CHANGE WILL COME.
CHANGE WILL COME FROM STRENGTH
FROM THE MAN WHO FOUND HIS STRENGTH IN A TINY DANK CELL THOUSANDS OF MILES FROM HOME
HE WILL RENEW AMERICA
By 1964 there were 1.5 million mobile phone users in the US
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby AhabsOtherLeg » Tue Feb 21, 2012 12:17 pm

stefano wrote:Image

Piracy overseas and a taste for sugar and spice at home, combined with an unerring ability to vanquish rival European powers such as the Dutch and French in the dash for stash and status across the globe.


I have a theory that one of the prime motivations of empire-building among the ruling class (maybe not a fully concious motivation) is to give themselves an excuse to deport a significant part of the (specifically) young and male population abroad during times of hardship, shortage, or unrest at home, so as to lessen the likelihood of internal revolt. Britain never quite managed it's richly-deserved revolution (not counting the Civil War, which didn't quite work out) because it sent all the most active of it's poor and oppressed abroad, as soldiers, sailors, tinkers, spies, slaves, explorers, privateers, etc.

What I mean is, Empire is a means of controlling the common people of the homeland, first and foremost - though the conquered peoples suffer worst, and also give the underclass of the homeland a convenient out-group and enemy to take out their frustration on. The conquest and treasure in other lands is just a welcome by-product from the need of the ruling classes to retain power in their own kingdoms. Once empire is set up and institutionalized, though, the system becomes self-sustaining, and an end in itself.

Don't know if that's an original idea. Probably not. Marx or somebody is bound to have come out with it at some point.

stefano wrote:Also had to look up a few words, I love it when an author makes me do that. A cool one is Torschlusspanik, a German word for the panic when a door is about to shut and everyone rushes through it.


The Germans have a knack for summing up quite complex interactions in single words. I like it.

EDIT: I'm reading Myths of Britain by Michael Senior. It's alright.
"The universe is 40 billion light years across and every inch of it would kill you if you went there. That is the position of the universe with regard to human life."
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby Hammer of Los » Sat Feb 25, 2012 8:02 am

...

By the way I also read the Francis Wheen Stefano mentioned above.

I was unimpressed with the parts I read. Sorry bout that.

That guy thinks he knows everything.

But he knows nothing about real mumbo jumbo.

That's fer sure.

...
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby dada » Fri May 18, 2012 10:53 pm

The Assassinations: Probe Magazine on JFK, MLK, RFK and Malcolm X Edited by James DiEugenio and Lisa Pease (Thanks christs4sale!)

Strange Sea Stories and Legends: "From Ghost Ships and Cannibalism to Dashing Pirates and Man-Eating Sharks - True-Life Adventures and Incredible Lore of the Sea" by Bill Wisner (found in the trash)

Wired: The Short Life and Fast Times of John Belushi by Bob Woodward (also found in the trash)

A Maggot by John Fowles

The First and Last Freedom by J Krishnamurti
Both his words and manner of speech seemed at first totally unfamiliar to me, and yet somehow they stirred memories - as an actor might be stirred by the forgotten lines of some role he had played far away and long ago.
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby Handsome B. Wonderful » Sat May 26, 2012 11:34 am

Sinister Forces trilogy by Peter Levenda. I'm currently reading book three.
Born we are the same, within the silence, indifference be Thy name
Torn we walk alone, we sleep in silent shades
The grandeur fades, the meaning never known- 'Born' Nevermore
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby harry ashburn » Sat May 26, 2012 1:48 pm

right now?.... this.
A skeleton walks into a bar. Orders a beer, and a mop. -anon
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby Jeff » Sat May 26, 2012 2:15 pm

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The propagandist uses a keyboard and composes a symphony.
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby Simulist » Sat May 26, 2012 3:33 pm

I'm rereading The Cracking Tower by Jim DeKorne. Although I'm not at all on board with the 2012 narrative that I'd inferred from his subtitle (I should also add that my concerns were not born out at all in his penetrating analysis), I think a lot of Jim, and his insights in this book are worthy of very serious consideration, in my opinion.

Image

At the very end of his book, Jim wrote, "This book was written specifically for you and about thirty or so of your brothers and sisters." I think at least a couple of the people he's referring to probably post at Rigorous Intuition.
"The most strongly enforced of all known taboos is the taboo against knowing who or what you really are behind the mask of your apparently separate, independent, and isolated ego."
    — Alan Watts
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Re: What are you reading right now?

Postby Hammer of Los » Sun May 27, 2012 10:11 pm

...

That one looks good Sim.

Perennial Philosophy?

That's just the teachings of all ages. It ain't no secret to me.

I just finished rereading George R R Martin's mosaic novel Wild Cards. The first one. Anyone remember that?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_Cards

But really I need to get on with turning the pages of the long lost gaianomicon.

And I am trying to catch up on rereading the Manly Hall too.

And Neville Goddard.

And so much more!

War in Heaven materials too!

Oh deary me!

I shouldn't read those again should I?

I just wish those rock musicians would stop writing all those songs directly to me.

Has anyone else read Kyle Griffin? He's got a net presence again now. I might mail him one day. Maybe he can help.

...
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