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4 votes
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Margaret Atwood TERF Twitter controversy
7 votes -
Human history gets a rewrite
13 votes -
Excerpts from the Atlas of Poetic Botany
5 votes -
I left poverty after writing 'Maid.' But poverty never left me
6 votes -
Analytic Number Theory book club ending today
3 votes -
How to discern good "big history" books from bad ones?
4 votes -
Deep Work: The secret to achieving peak productivity
7 votes -
Our next trip to integer partitions
2 votes -
Our trip to the prime number theorem
9 votes -
The 'Shoulder Check' problem, or when snippets of LGBT life feel out of place to others in fiction
9 votes -
Denmark now has two Little Mermaids. The famous one is suing.
7 votes -
The end of ownership: How big companies are trying to turn everyone into renters
29 votes -
💖 The tale of Tiffany 💖
15 votes -
What's a good book to (re)learn chess fundamentals?
Most people online seem to favor a practical approach to learning chess, but I tend to prefer something more structured, with a bit of theory, concepts, and explanations. I'd also rather use my...
Most people online seem to favor a practical approach to learning chess, but I tend to prefer something more structured, with a bit of theory, concepts, and explanations. I'd also rather use my physical board instead of an app. I already know how to play chess, but I'd like to give it another good and see if I can achieve a higher level than before, starting from the beginning. Any suggestions?
12 votes -
Ian Manuel, survivor of excessive child punishment, tells his story
9 votes -
One Tenth of a Second
5 votes -
Kiki’s Delivery Service: More relevant than ever
8 votes -
Our need to get drunk in company may be innate
4 votes -
Mycroft and the Patent Trolls
7 votes -
Are plants animals like any other?
5 votes -
Queer readings of The Lord of the Rings are not accidents
12 votes -
The Emergence of the Global Heartland
4 votes -
Can anyone recommend a good collection of Greek mythology for children?
When I was a kid I loved the stories of ancient Greek mythology and I think my daughter would enjoy them too. What are some good collections for a 7-year-old? Her name is Ariadne, so I’d be...
When I was a kid I loved the stories of ancient Greek mythology and I think my daughter would enjoy them too. What are some good collections for a 7-year-old? Her name is Ariadne, so I’d be especially interested in ones that feature that character as more than a footnote (though preferably the less traumatizing versions of those particular stories).
14 votes -
Meet America's newest Chess Master, 10-year-old Tanitoluwa Adewumi
3 votes -
Impossible Worlds
3 votes -
Thinking and Being
4 votes -
Political Epistemology
4 votes -
Madhouse at the End of the Earth: A brief history of people losing their minds in Antarctica
5 votes -
Children books and short stories about death
I need to read some fiction children books about death (for research) -- any age group preferably for young children. Stories both realistic and fantasy/fantastical that doesn't gloss over the...
I need to read some fiction children books about death (for research) --
any age grouppreferably for young children.Stories both realistic and fantasy/fantastical that doesn't gloss over the suffering and pain children can experience, possibly with dark overtones.
Stories featuring Death as a character would be great too.
Thanks!
6 votes -
Book review: Are We Smart Enough To Know How Smart Animals Are?
4 votes -
A summary of the book "Why Nuclear Power Has Been a Flop" by Jack Devanney
16 votes -
Book review: Progress and Poverty by Henry George
3 votes -
Foundations of Geopolitics
10 votes -
How do you read books that defy interpretation, logic, semantics or even language itself?
After loving Waiting for Godot in the theater years ago, I recently tried to read the novel Molloy, by Samuel Beckett, in the Portuguese translation. It was a humbling experience. Most of the time...
After loving Waiting for Godot in the theater years ago, I recently tried to read the novel Molloy, by Samuel Beckett, in the Portuguese translation. It was a humbling experience. Most of the time I did not know who was talking, where they were talking, to whom they were talking, or what they were trying to talk about. The words were definitely arranged in interesting ways that pleased me at times, but I can't really say if what I was doing could be qualified as reading.
Half the book doesn't even have paragraphs, it is just one continuous block.
Maybe that is the point? I don't know. Critics do seem to get a lot more from these than I do, to the point that I ask myself "are they just deluding themselves, creating meaning where there is none just to justify their very existence? Wouldn't a work with little to no meaning render critics useless anyway?".
I don't know, I'm rambling. I'm looking at Molloy defeated, like one day I looked at Joyce's Ulysses.
Maybe I should read these books without thinking, like listening to music with lyrics in a language I don't speak (I can kinda do that in a movie, but a movie is only 2 hours...).
Maybe I'm not worthy.
6 votes -
Recommend a piece of fiction that gives a specific feeling, regardless of genre or medium
I've been looking lately for something new to read/watch/listen to/play and I've been chasing a particular feeling that some of my favorite works have given me in the past. It's something that's...
I've been looking lately for something new to read/watch/listen to/play and I've been chasing a particular feeling that some of my favorite works have given me in the past.
It's something that's hard to describe succinctly, so it's not exactly easy to just google search for something, and usually just telling people I like x thing gets me y recommendation which is maybe a similar style or genre but doesn't really elicit the particular feeling that I'm after.
I figure other folks might have a similar problem, so I thought it might be fun to have a thread for requests for works that make you feel a certain way, regardless of genre or medium.
I'll start mine in the comments and other folks feel free to ask for requests as top-level comments as well!
22 votes -
The Golem and the Jewish Superhero
7 votes -
‘The Secret Apartment’ is the story of a Vietnam vet who claims to have lived in Veterans Stadium for years
9 votes -
The best advice I've ever gotten for writing fiction
9 votes -
Sarah Moss wins the American Philosophical Association's 2020 Sanders Book Prize for her book, 'Probabilistic Knowledge'
4 votes -
Book review: The Cult Of Smart
18 votes -
Tracing the roots of pop culture transphobia
20 votes -
Empowering picture books with Black characters
5 votes -
Book review: Crazy Like Us
4 votes -
Campaigns & Companions will delight RPG fans who are obsessed with their pets
6 votes -
Abandoning all hope: The divine comedy by Dante, explained
3 votes -
The best books on The Philosophy of Language
4 votes -
StoryBundle: The Greatest Hits Game Bundle (eBooks)
3 votes -
My new obsession: Bookbinding
9 votes -
Five tips for writing your first novel
12 votes