My black cat should be called Maldoror, but I was overruled.

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What did you like about this?? I’m considering reading it very soon

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Battle Royale gets a meh from me. While it describes a lot of graphic violence (which I love) the story just seemed to go on and on and on. Honestly, I skipped over about 12 deaths at the end just to get to the conclusion. And I mostly did that to see how the end differed the movie, since the movie is so surreal. There were aspects that I liked quite a bit (fascism+pop aesthetic), but it could have been about 400 pages shorter.
The writing itself is also awkward. This could be due to the fact that it’s a translation, but I don’t think it’s all due to that. It felt immature to me.

Anyway, The Hunger Games is clearly [an even worse version] of this story.

I love PKD and this is probably my favourite. Hope you enjoy it.

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Just finished Dune having accidentally bought a collection of the 6 Frank Herbert Dune novels on my Kindle app. Surprised myself in really enjoying it, I normally have a pretty low threshold for sci-fi. Might have a break before the next one though…

Also recently finished Kim Gordon’s ‘Girl In The Band’ which was fine as a fairly shallow autobiography but felt like a wasted opportunity for anything more than that.

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Reading List 2019

  • The Dispossessed : Ursula K. Le Guin
  • Practical Ethics : Peter Signer
  • Cyclonopedia : Reza Negarestani
  • Embassytown : China Miéville
  • Xenofeminism : Helen Hester
  • The Word For World Is Forest : Ursula K. Le Guin
  • The Accelerationist Reader : Robin Mackay
  • Collected Shorts : H. P. Lovecraft
  • Assemblage Theory : Manuel DeLanda
  • Rasselas : Samuel Johnson
  • Inventing The Future : Nick Srnicek

Reading List 2018

  • Hermeneutics : John D. Caputo
  • Tao Te Ching : Lao Tzu
  • Letters From A Stoic : Seneca
  • Animal Farm : George Orwell & Russel Baker
  • Last Chance To See : Douglas Adams & Mark Carwardine
  • The Arabian Nights : Anonymous
  • The Stack : Benjamin H. Bratton
  • The Futurological Congress : Stanislaw Lem
  • The Handmaid’s Tale : Margaret Atwood
  • The Cyberiad : Stanislaw Lem
  • Ishmael : Daniel Quinn
  • Godforsaken Sea : Derek Lundy
  • The Tao Of Pooh : Benjamin Hoff
  • The Te Of Piglet : Benjamin Hoff
  • The Book Of Five Rings : Miyamoto Musashi
  • Hagakure : Tsunetomo Yamamoto
  • Don’t Sleep There Are Snakes : Daneil L. Everett
  • On Trails : Robert Moor
  • The Sixth Extinction : Elizabeth Kolbert
  • The Empty Mirror : Janwillem Van De Wetering
  • Industrial Society And Its Future : Theodore Kaczynski
  • Animal Liberation : Peter Signer
  • On Food And Cooking : Harold McGee
  • Finite And Infinite Games : James P. Carse

Reading List 2017

  • Pictures From The Water Trade : John David Morley
  • A Calendar Of Wisdom : Tolstoy
  • The Art Of War : Sun Tzu
  • Superintelligence : Nick Bostrom
  • Kokoro : Natsume Soseki
  • From Ai To Zombies : Eliezer Yudkowsky
  • In Praise Of Darkness : Jorge Luis Borges
  • Self-sufficient Sailor : Lin Pardey
  • Travels In Hyperreality : Umberto Eco
  • North To The Night : Alvah Simon
  • Smoke Gets In Your Eyes : Caitlin Doughty
  • The Fungi Of Yuggot : H. P. Lovecraft
  • In The Dust Of This Planet : Eugene Thacker
  • The Japanese Art Of Decluttering : Marie Kondo
  • Zen And The Art Of Motorcycle Maintenance : Robert M. Pirsig
  • Meditations : Marcus Aurelius

Reading List 2016

  • Seraffyn’s Oriental Adventure : Lin & Larry Pardey
  • Guns, Germs & Steel : Jared M. Diamond
  • Predictable Irrational : Dan Ariely
  • How Not To Die : Michael Greger
  • The China Study : T. Colin Campbell
  • Letter To My Father : Franz Kafka
  • Le Ton Beau De Marot : Douglas Hofstadter
  • Beyond Good & Evil : Friedrich Nietzche
  • The Circle : Dave Eggers
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obligatory: they’re making a new Dune movie and I can’t fucking wait.

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The Word for World is Forest is really great!

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Currently reading The Fifth Season by NK Jemisin and it’s not doing much for me yet. Anybody here think it’s worth continuing, or if it didn’t resonate early, should I put it down?

Aside: I am now at the age where I don’t “power through” on reading books that aren’t for me, and I have to say it’s glorious to put down a book that’s doing nothing for me and instead read something that’s great.

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I think it’s worth sticking with, but depends on what you like. I feel like it takes a while for you to get your bearings, but the story lines do all come together, and books two and three are a more straightforward narrative (less jumping around chronologically, e.g.). The lack of certain kinds of exposition is part of what appealed to me about it, but I could see it being a turn-off.

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Thanks. I’m all good with lack of exposition, and in fact prefer it, but the world-building and different stakes in different timelines wasn’t working for me so much. I just had a nice after-dinner read and really enjoyed that section, so along with what you’ve written, I think I’ll continue. Thanks again!

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I am a huge Deleuze and Guattari fan, and Goodman applies their thinking in a very interesting and original manner to sound, considered as vibration. It really was an eye opener for me. A warning, though: if you do not like Deleuze and Guattari’s style of writing, you probably won’t enjoy this book, either.

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Yah I did, very much! I had to spend a day or so thinking about what actually happened, and the epilogue likewise gave me food for thought.

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In case you didn’t know, there was a film called Southland tales starring the Rock and Justin Timberlake (I know) that is full of references to flow my tears. It’s an enjoyable movies even if only for the references

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I highly recommend this and the first book in this series, The Children of Time. It’s very sciencey sci-fi but the world that he’s building is a crazy one.

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Robert Macfarlane - Underland. An incredible writer and fills me with ideas.

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I cmd+f’d just for this book… my duuuuude!
This book is such a mindfuck and definitely my favorite read of all time, blows his other stuff out of the water as well in my opinion!

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dipped back into HD collected this weekend.

not coincidentally, my partner’s scholarship / art:

http://yesfemmes.com/issues/fandom/on-mysteria-hds-mystical-hysterical-poetics

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nice :slight_smile:
'Like unbearable pain, the mystical experience also ruptures language, space, and time. In the wake of this dissolve, new images are offered. They rise up from depths or descend into a body from above. -c.cronin

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Mark only died two years ago and wrote a lot after Capitalist Realism. To talk about him as “dated,” or about technology “in his day” or “things [he] wasn’t around to see” (more like: “You’re talking about things I haven’t done yet”) artificially casts him as an artifact of the past, which is an especially bad fit for someone so uncommonly prescient.

Potential collectivities populate his published writing going back to the mid-90s, and I’d say his search for workable new ones became increasingly central and urgent in the last 10-12 years, culminating in the unfinished Acid Communism.

Robin Mackay:

I’ve been trying to think of what remains after the physical body’s gone, when the singularity of a life can no longer rely on that frail support and needs other carriers. I try to think about it in a way I think he’d appreciate: in terms of an abstract, impersonal force acting in the present tense. The spectre isn’t a matter of pretending he’s still here in person—as if the notion of a ‘person’ wasn’t precisely what was at issue—or of commemoration or superstition, but—to use a word of his own invention—a question of hyperstition: What is the Fisher-Function? How did it make itself real, and how can we continue to realise it? Many of us naturally feel a need to ensure this is a moment when the force he brought into our world is redoubled rather than depleted. And to do so, to continue his work and our own, we have to try to understand his life, and the consequences of his death, at once horrifying and awakening, as a part of the Fisher-Function. And I don’t simply mean the intellectual contributions that we can appreciate, extend, take forward into the future; I also mean what we need to learn in terms of looking after ourselves and each other, right now.

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