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What book(s) are you reading right now?

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dainthomas

Lifer
Dec 7, 2004
14,935
3,914
136
Listening to The Great Hunt by Robert Jordan on audible.

Also reading "Blind Fear" by Webb and Mann (3rd in the series). Got pulled into the series by Steel Fear, I found the plot of a serial killer onboard an aircraft carrier to be intriguing.
 

BudAshes

Lifer
Jul 20, 2003
13,990
3,346
146
Listening to The Great Hunt by Robert Jordan on audible.

Also reading "Blind Fear" by Webb and Mann (3rd in the series). Got pulled into the series by Steel Fear, I found the plot of a serial killer onboard an aircraft carrier to be intriguing.
I loved Wheel of Time back when I was a pre-teen/teen. Fun series with lots of good characters although the shear number of words would now would prohibit me from reading it again. Tried watching the new show though and it felt like one of those terrible WB teen shows from the 2000s. Not sure if the books weren't as good as I remember or the show just completely whiffed.
 

akugami

Diamond Member
Feb 14, 2005
6,210
2,552
136
Love the WoT. Still do. But Robert Jordan needed a swift kick in the rear to get him on track. He could have reduced the series by at least 3 books by cutting out stuff that didn't add to the story. There were side stories that I felt didn't even really add to any character or plot development. They were just kind of there.
 
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JujuFish

Lifer
Feb 3, 2005
11,440
1,053
136
Just started The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle. Hasn't grabbed me yet, but I have high hopes.
 

JujuFish

Lifer
Feb 3, 2005
11,440
1,053
136
I agree, great series. I just discovered it recently and have gone through the entire series as audiobooks. The Narration is some of the best I've heard. I'm waiting for the audiobook for the new one. I rarely start unfinished series because I hate waiting.
I listened to the sample on Audible and it just sounds like a poor man's Patrick Warburton impression. I don't think I could deal with that, regardless of the writing.
 

dainthomas

Lifer
Dec 7, 2004
14,935
3,914
136
I loved Wheel of Time back when I was a pre-teen/teen. Fun series with lots of good characters although the shear number of words would now would prohibit me from reading it again. Tried watching the new show though and it felt like one of those terrible WB teen shows from the 2000s. Not sure if the books weren't as good as I remember or the show just completely whiffed.

I can tell you it's a lot easier to listen to Jordan's exceedingly verbose descriptions than to read them. Overall it still holds up pretty well for me.

I like the casting in the show (particularly Moiraine, Lan, and Rand) but some of the changes they made are head scratchers. We'll see if season two can get back on track.
 
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SMOGZINN

Lifer
Jun 17, 2005
14,359
4,640
136
I can tell you it's a lot easier to listen to Jordan's exceedingly verbose descriptions than to read them. Overall it still holds up pretty well for me.

I like the casting in the show (particularly Moiraine, Lan, and Rand) but some of the changes they made are head scratchers. We'll see if season two can get back on track.
I listened to the entire series back to back last year, it took almost all year, listening at about 4.5 hours a day with a few days of 8+ hours when I was traveling. The only reason his verbose writing is better in audio is because you can kind of just tone it out for a while.
I also listened to it at 1.25 speed, which helps as well as the narrator on some of the books speaks a bit slow.
 
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Thump553

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
12,839
2,625
136
I listened to the entire series back to back last year, it took almost all year, listening at about 4.5 hours a day with a few days of 8+ hours when I was traveling. The only reason his verbose writing is better in audio is because you can kind of just tone it out for a while.
I also listened to it at 1.25 speed, which helps as well as the narrator on some of the books speaks a bit slow.
I'm picturing an audiobook narrated by Alvin the chipmunk.
 
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May 11, 2008
22,565
1,471
126
"Blitzed" from Norman Ohler.

It is about the widespread use of drugs during nazi Germany like pervitin which is basically crystal meth AKA Methamphetamine. Think "Breaking Bad".
And how Hitler also was empowered by drugs.
If i remember correctly, adolf hitler was trained by theatrical people to perform to give his speeches and presentations a lot more oompf , kind of like having had a mediatraining...
Add the stimulating drugs to make him more emotional in a weird motivating way...

Als add the invention of the magnetic tape "Magnetophon Audio Tape Recorder" around 1935 and AC-bias for magnetic tape around 1940 so that he could give his presentation without sound distortion everywhere in Germany at roughly the same time without the need of a wireless radiosetup and that would make him at the time even more powerful.

In reality, in those days and before 1800-1900 and beyond , a lot of drugs was for a short time widely and legally available in the western world. Only after all mishaps because of substance abuse by people who are no longer sane enough to use it responsible, most drugs became illegal.
But that is the caveat with drugs, it does affect your mental processes and with the sad parts, the dissapointing parts and the cruel parts of everyday life going on as time happens, you might make wrong decisions. And those decisions can result in dramatic events...
Something to think about.

Anyway, it is a good book and also focuses on Pervitin. A meth pil that was even advertised for the public , for housewives, for every day men...
And Hitler was once a human but life and disease happened and perhaps drugs also happened. Making him and his gathering as they where...

Fun fact is that one of the chapters is called : "High Hitler". Imagine that in "Allo allo" style : "High Hitlah !"
Or : "Sieg High !"

The magnetic tape part has nothing to do with the book but it explains his media power hitler had at that time.
Excert from the article about the origin of magnetic tape :

"
Joining AEG and BASF in 1938, the Reichs-Rundfunkgesellschaft (RRG) became the third branch of the Magnetophon R&D effort. Starting in 1940, the RRG successfully applied AC-bias to the new recording technology. RRG engineer Walter Weber discovered the AC-bias application through a combination of systematic research and a bit of luck. Weber was not the first to apply AC bias to magnetic recording, although he evidently had no knowledge of the earlier work. The engineer’s success was due to his ability to recognize immediately the practical value of his discovery and to use it to improve the Magnetophon’s recording quality.

Weber had been experimenting with phase-cancellation circuits in an attempt to reduce the distortion and noise of DC-bias recordings. An amplifier in a test set-up went into oscillation, accidentally creating an AC-bias current in the record circuit. It took some systematic engineering detective work before Weber found what had happened and could recreate the phenomenon.
"
Magnetic moments in magnetic tape have hysteresis. This hysteresis causes distortion when you record sound as analog information directly. And the AC-Bias is a way to record audio without the hysteresis of the magnetic moments in the magnetic tape to influence the information : In this case the analog audio.



pervitin-thumb-570x392-123230.jpg
 
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SMOGZINN

Lifer
Jun 17, 2005
14,359
4,640
136
I'm picturing an audiobook narrated by Alvin the chipmunk.
Not really. A good audiobook player will pitch correct the audio to the speed to make it sound normal. It just sounds like someone talking fast. It works well up to about 1.5 speed, after that and I can tell that the audio is not right, but it still does not have that chipmunk sound, it just has a weird tone to it.
 
May 11, 2008
22,565
1,471
126
"Blitzed" from Norman Ohler.

It is about the widespread use of drugs during nazi Germany like pervitin which is basically crystal meth AKA Methamphetamine. Think "Breaking Bad".
And how Hitler also was empowered by drugs.
If i remember correctly, adolf hitler was trained by theatrical people to perform to give his speeches and presentations a lot more oompf , kind of like having had a mediatraining...
Add the stimulating drugs to make him more emotional in a weird motivating way...

Als add the invention of the magnetic tape "Magnetophon Audio Tape Recorder" around 1935 and AC-bias for magnetic tape around 1940 so that he could give his presentation without sound distortion everywhere in Germany at roughly the same time without the need of a wireless radiosetup and that would make him at the time even more powerful.

In reality, in those days and before 1800-1900 and beyond , a lot of drugs was for a short time widely and legally available in the western world. Only after all mishaps because of substance abuse by people who are no longer sane enough to use it responsible, most drugs became illegal.
But that is the caveat with drugs, it does affect your mental processes and with the sad parts, the dissapointing parts and the cruel parts of everyday life going on as time happens, you might make wrong decisions. And those decisions can result in dramatic events...
Something to think about.

Anyway, it is a good book and also focuses on Pervitin. A meth pil that was even advertised for the public , for housewives, for every day men...
And Hitler was once a human but life and disease happened and perhaps drugs also happened. Making him and his gathering as they where...

Fun fact is that one of the chapters is called : "High Hitler". Imagine that in "Allo allo" style : "High Hitlah !"
Or : "Sieg High !"

The magnetic tape part has nothing to do with the book but it explains his media power hitler had at that time.
Excert from the article about the origin of magnetic tape :

"
Joining AEG and BASF in 1938, the Reichs-Rundfunkgesellschaft (RRG) became the third branch of the Magnetophon R&D effort. Starting in 1940, the RRG successfully applied AC-bias to the new recording technology. RRG engineer Walter Weber discovered the AC-bias application through a combination of systematic research and a bit of luck. Weber was not the first to apply AC bias to magnetic recording, although he evidently had no knowledge of the earlier work. The engineer’s success was due to his ability to recognize immediately the practical value of his discovery and to use it to improve the Magnetophon’s recording quality.

Weber had been experimenting with phase-cancellation circuits in an attempt to reduce the distortion and noise of DC-bias recordings. An amplifier in a test set-up went into oscillation, accidentally creating an AC-bias current in the record circuit. It took some systematic engineering detective work before Weber found what had happened and could recreate the phenomenon.
"
Magnetic moments in magnetic tape have hysteresis. This hysteresis causes distortion when you record sound as analog information directly. And the AC-Bias is a way to record audio without the hysteresis of the magnetic moments in the magnetic tape to influence the information : In this case the analog audio.



View attachment 83364


I am reading this book, and while reading it...
At the time during the Weimar era, 3 major medicine manufacturers were also controlling 80 percent of the cocaine markt in the world at that time...

That made me think of something funny...
It was always mentioned that the Nazi germans had fled to Argentina for example...

Well, i definitely think it was Cuba...

That dudes name was not Pablo Escobar but Ludwig Escobarz... :grinning:
Continuing the family business...:fearscream:
 

mikeymikec

Lifer
May 19, 2011
21,028
16,281
136
'The Song of Achilles' by Madeline Miller

It's a sad story but I enjoyed reading it. The first book by her, 'Circe', is a lot more depressing IIRC (I read it a few years ago).

The 'Wayward Children' series by Seanan McGuire

As I've enjoyed her 'Toby Daye' and 'Incryptid' series, I thought I'd give this series a whirl (currently in book 3). This one is about children who have inadvertently slipped into fantasy realms (e.g. alice in wonderland style nonsense realms, underworld realms etc) and then were thrown back into this one and promptly dumped by their parents into what purports to be a therapy boarding school of sorts but is actually a safe harbour for children who are having trouble fitting into this reality. I was worried that it was going to be a Harry Potter mystery format with different characters, but it seems to be happily going all over the shop. My only issue with this series is the Amazon ebook pricing of stories in this series that are novella in length yet priced like any other novel.

'Starship Titanic' by Douglas Adams and Terry Jones

I was looking for something to read and picked this up on Amazon for 99p. Novella. Amusing. I'm wondering whether there's anything that can support the idea that one of the aliens considers to be obvious when encountering traffic jam on earth that transport systems are meant to go faster when more people are using them, not slower :)
 

Stiff Clamp

Senior member
Feb 3, 2021
933
356
136
The Worship of the Serpent, by John Bathurst Deane

Funny how the serpent was widely embraced. I was inclined to buy a gold serpent I discovered in a store, to hang on my wall, but as I was reading this book at the time . . . made me reconsider.
 

SKORPI0

Lifer
Jan 18, 2000
18,483
2,418
136
20231007_122255.jpg
Borrowed from the public library, 25 chapters, 443 pages + 25 pages acknowledgements and index for a 3 weeks period, maybe renewal for another 3 weeks.
Also a audio book file narrated by Patrick Stewart himself, 18 hours 50 minutes.
 
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Muse

Lifer
Jul 11, 2001
40,884
10,224
136
View attachment 86796
Borrowed from the public library, 25 chapters, 443 pages + 25 pages acknowledgements and index for a 3 weeks period, maybe renewal for another 3 weeks.
Also a audio book file narrated by Patrick Stewart himself, 18 hours 54 minutes.
He just looks so straight up! I bet that's great.

I'm again working on several non-fiction books, some bought some borrowed:

Rare Earth: Why Complex Life is Uncommon in the Universe. Evidently, the primer.

Two books on or by Spinoza
 

Mai72

Lifer
Sep 12, 2012
11,562
1,741
126
The bible? :D

Its about this dude named Jesus, and he wants your soul! Kinda scary IMO.
 
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akugami

Diamond Member
Feb 14, 2005
6,210
2,552
136
The bible? :D

Its about this dude named Jesus, and he wants your soul! Kinda scary IMO.

Thought it was about an illegal immigrant cartel pushing their product, by force if needed, with lots of killing, and a little bit of incest.
 

Muse

Lifer
Jul 11, 2001
40,884
10,224
136
Thought it was about an illegal immigrant cartel pushing their product, by force if needed, with lots of killing, and a little bit of incest.
I don't know. I've never even checked it out of the library. I see snippet quotes of it here and there, Ezekiel 14:27, stuff like that. It's just why believe in something just because someone in some "sacred" screed said something? I quote William Blake, many other people, things they said that resonate with me. I have never quoted the bible IIRC. The notion by itself is distasteful. Those things always strike me as really weird.
 

GodisanAtheist

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2006
8,347
9,730
136
Y'all need to read The Jefferson Bible (Aka the life and morals of Jesus of Nazareth). Basically distills the Gospels down to what Jesus actually said and throws away the rest.

Jefferson (and Adams and quite a number of founders) that there was a core of truth to the bible in the form of Jesus' teachings, and the rest of the Bible was a truckload of superstitious bullshit meant to control the masses (Literally, Jefferson said "it is no more difficult to find the core of Jesus' message than it is to sift diamonds from a dungheap").

Cuts the bible down from a very bullshitty 750,000 words to a much more manageable 35,000 words.
 
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MrSquished

Lifer
Jan 14, 2013
26,067
24,397
136
Reading

The Sea of a Tranquility for my book club and reading Shift, book two in the silo trilogy
 
Jul 27, 2020
28,173
19,203
146
The notion by itself is distasteful. Those things always strike me as really weird.
No offense but is there a fear deep down that you might get affected by what you read?

There's trashy novels and poorly written books that don't deserve anyone's attention.

You may not agree with everything the bible says (and I would recommend the Jefferson one too) but I would be surprised if you don't agree with a single thing the bible says. There's goodness in religious books but unfortunately, it is overshadowed by stuff taken out of context or whatever was the norm when those books were written (or revealed) and people of those times did not have that much aversion to some of the disturbing or controversial notions. Remember, once upon a time, it was pretty normal for a caveman to hit a cave woman on the head and take her as his slave/property.