24 votes

Topic deleted by author

57 comments

  1. [3]
    Deimos
    (edited )
    Link
    I read all of Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup on Saturday, it was great. It's the story of Theranos, a tech company that claimed to have created revolutionary blood-testing...

    I read all of Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup on Saturday, it was great. It's the story of Theranos, a tech company that claimed to have created revolutionary blood-testing equipment. The company was valued at close to $10 billion, received hundreds of millions of dollars in investments, had massive partnerships with companies like Walgreens and Safeway, and a board of directors filled with huge names.

    Except that it turns out that their technology didn't work, and they had been basically faking or lying their way through everything. It's a fascinating story, with the book written by the investigative journalist who was key in exposing them in the first place.

    11 votes
    1. [2]
      Comment deleted by author
      Link Parent
    2. rake_tm
      Link Parent
      I remember hearing about this company several years back when they first made the deal with Walgreens. Every now and again you would hear a short bit about them, but nothing substantial really hit...

      I remember hearing about this company several years back when they first made the deal with Walgreens. Every now and again you would hear a short bit about them, but nothing substantial really hit the news until everything fell apart. It really is amazing how such intelligent people can do such dumb things.

      1 vote
  2. [10]
    spctrvl
    Link
    Moving Pictures, by Terry Pratchett. Just finished Witches Abroad, another of the Discworld series, and that might be one of my favorite books of all time.

    Moving Pictures, by Terry Pratchett. Just finished Witches Abroad, another of the Discworld series, and that might be one of my favorite books of all time.

    7 votes
    1. [5]
      Comment deleted by author
      Link Parent
      1. [4]
        spctrvl
        Link Parent
        Yeah, it is. So far, I've read Equal Rites, Wyrd Sisters and Witches Abroad, and they're all fantastic. But the only non-Witches Discworld book I've read was Guards! Guards!, so for all I know,...

        Yeah, it is. So far, I've read Equal Rites, Wyrd Sisters and Witches Abroad, and they're all fantastic. But the only non-Witches Discworld book I've read was Guards! Guards!, so for all I know, the other series might be even better.

        3 votes
        1. Krael
          Link Parent
          The Death books are also top notch stuff. Mort and Reaper Man are two of my favorites out of the entire Discworld setting.

          The Death books are also top notch stuff. Mort and Reaper Man are two of my favorites out of the entire Discworld setting.

          3 votes
        2. rake_tm
          Link Parent
          You can't go wrong with any Discworld books really, but my favorites are any books with the luggage, Rincewind, or Death.

          You can't go wrong with any Discworld books really, but my favorites are any books with the luggage, Rincewind, or Death.

          3 votes
        3. [2]
          Comment removed by site admin
          Link Parent
          1. spctrvl
            Link Parent
            I saw the movie for Going Postal and I really enjoyed it, so that one's definitely on the short list. I loved Guards too and will probably likewise finish that series up soon.

            I saw the movie for Going Postal and I really enjoyed it, so that one's definitely on the short list. I loved Guards too and will probably likewise finish that series up soon.

            3 votes
    2. [5]
      biox
      Link Parent
      Which order would you recommend reading the Discworld series in, if any?

      Which order would you recommend reading the Discworld series in, if any?

      1 vote
      1. [4]
        spctrvl
        Link Parent
        Here's the guide I'm using. The thing about Discworld is that it's comprised of a bunch of little mostly independent sub-series that share the same universe. People usually say to start with...

        Here's the guide I'm using. The thing about Discworld is that it's comprised of a bunch of little mostly independent sub-series that share the same universe. People usually say to start with Guards! Guards!, but I'd say Equal Rites is at least as good.

        2 votes
        1. [3]
          biox
          Link Parent
          Beautiful, exactly what I was looking for. Thanks!!

          Beautiful, exactly what I was looking for. Thanks!!

          1 vote
          1. [2]
            J-Senior
            (edited )
            Link Parent
            I read them in chronological order which might be easier cause the sub-series reference events from each other

            I read them in chronological order which might be easier cause the sub-series reference events from each other

            1 vote
            1. super_james
              Link Parent
              I think it basically doesn't matter so long as you don't read them in published order. The colour of Magic and Light Fantastic really aren't the same kind of book.

              I think it basically doesn't matter so long as you don't read them in published order. The colour of Magic and Light Fantastic really aren't the same kind of book.

              1 vote
  3. [2]
    nepeckman
    Link
    I'm currently starting Ancillary Justice, by Ann Leckie. Picked it up because I heard good things and looking forward to checking it out!

    I'm currently starting Ancillary Justice, by Ann Leckie. Picked it up because I heard good things and looking forward to checking it out!

    6 votes
    1. [2]
      Comment deleted by author
      Link Parent
      1. Tenar
        Link Parent
        What specifically is good about it? It's on my reading list but might be bumped up higher if you think it should be ;)

        What specifically is good about it? It's on my reading list but might be bumped up higher if you think it should be ;)

  4. [4]
    precise
    Link
    I'm now reading The Craft of Intelligence by former CIA director Allen Dulles. As Director of Central Intelligence and the CIA therein, he ruled during an era overrun with McCarthyism. He oversaw...

    I'm now reading The Craft of Intelligence by former CIA director Allen Dulles. As Director of Central Intelligence and the CIA therein, he ruled during an era overrun with McCarthyism. He oversaw coup d'états in both Iran and Guatemala, he also oversaw the Bay of Pigs. He was positioned in the CIA in one of the most interesting times of the American Intelligence Community's history. That said, I am a huge privacy advocate. I've decided to read his book in an effort to view the other side, what historical motivations have been for foreign and domestic surveillance in the United States and around the world, and how they relate to the present and the future. I am looking for parallels in motivations, as it seems we don't often learn from history and are doomed to repeat it.

    6 votes
    1. [3]
      NoblePath
      Link Parent
      Slightly related, I'm reading John Le carre the honorable schoolboy. Spy stuff is interesting.

      Slightly related, I'm reading John Le carre the honorable schoolboy. Spy stuff is interesting.

      1 vote
      1. [2]
        Steppenfox
        Link Parent
        I love le Carré! Only problem is he ruined a bunch of other spy stuff for me, I just don't find it as interesting as that harshly realistic style. His books are to spy fiction what the Wire is to...

        I love le Carré! Only problem is he ruined a bunch of other spy stuff for me, I just don't find it as interesting as that harshly realistic style. His books are to spy fiction what the Wire is to cop shows.

        2 votes
        1. NoblePath
          Link Parent
          How're you going to keep 'me down on the farm after they've read la carre?

          How're you going to keep 'me down on the farm after they've read la carre?

          2 votes
  5. [4]
    Krael
    Link
    I'm currently getting caught up on Ward. It's an on-going sequel to the somewhat-famous web serial "Worm". Basically it's a deconstruction of the superhero genre as a whole. Top notch stuff.

    I'm currently getting caught up on Ward. It's an on-going sequel to the somewhat-famous web serial "Worm".

    Basically it's a deconstruction of the superhero genre as a whole. Top notch stuff.

    5 votes
    1. [2]
      Comment deleted by author
      Link Parent
      1. Krael
        Link Parent
        It's pretty damn good. Combat scenes are just as richly detailed in Ward as they were in Worm, if not moreso. The pacing outside of fights is a little slower than it was in Worm, but that's to be...

        It's pretty damn good. Combat scenes are just as richly detailed in Ward as they were in Worm, if not moreso. The pacing outside of fights is a little slower than it was in Worm, but that's to be expected with a larger main cast. Overall, it's not better or worse than the original, just different.

        That said, the pacing will drive you insane if you're reading it as chapters are released. I've been taking 2-3 month breaks from it then catching up all at once, and that's been working out pretty well for me. Just have to make sure I wait until the current arc actually finishes, because god damn it is frustrating to see your epub go dry in the middle of a fight.

        2 votes
    2. [3]
      Comment deleted by author
      Link Parent
      1. [2]
        Krael
        Link Parent
        There's a scraper on github you can use to generate an ebook, but actually sharing ebooks is strongly discouraged by the author, since it throws a wrench into publication plans.

        There's a scraper on github you can use to generate an ebook, but actually sharing ebooks is strongly discouraged by the author, since it throws a wrench into publication plans.

        3 votes
        1. [2]
          Comment deleted by author
          Link Parent
          1. Tenar
            Link Parent
            fwiw i think the print release has been in the make for a loooong time; if your main concern is supporting the author you'd be better off using the ebook scraper or asking for it, and donating via...

            fwiw i think the print release has been in the make for a loooong time; if your main concern is supporting the author you'd be better off using the ebook scraper or asking for it, and donating via his patreon (although it looks like he's making quite some money already).

            tangent: I recently read Pact and was a bit disappointed in it, although the author himself basically affirmed that at the end of the serial.

            1 vote
  6. [4]
    Algernon_Asimov
    Link
    Last week, I found a secondhand hardback copy of an old sci-fi book I like, so I'm re-reading Murasaki, a shared-world novel written by a bunch of Nebula-winning authors. Meanwhile, my current...

    Last week, I found a secondhand hardback copy of an old sci-fi book I like, so I'm re-reading Murasaki, a shared-world novel written by a bunch of Nebula-winning authors.

    Meanwhile, my current bedtime reading is Between The Strokes Of Night, because someone mentioned Charles Sheffield in a recent thread here, so I decided to revisit this book.

    4 votes
    1. [4]
      Comment deleted by author
      Link Parent
      1. [3]
        Algernon_Asimov
        Link Parent
        Not necessarily. For example, I wouldn't recommend it to people who don't like science fiction. I also wouldn't recommend it to people who don't want a novel that changes writing style every few...

        I don't doubt that You would recommend it

        Not necessarily. For example, I wouldn't recommend it to people who don't like science fiction. I also wouldn't recommend it to people who don't want a novel that changes writing style every few chapters. I wouldn't recommend it to anyone who dislikes the works of the authors who contributed. And so on.

        However, I might recommend it to people who like hard science fiction, and I might recommend it to people who like some of the writers who contributed, and I might recommend it to people who want a story about planetary exploration and first contact between alien species.

        4 votes
  7. zauzazu
    Link
    I'm reading a book by an entomologist who creates a taxonomic system to classify those little plastic fish that soy sauce is served in, as if they were actual animals. It's only available in...

    I'm reading a book by an entomologist who creates a taxonomic system to classify those little plastic fish that soy sauce is served in, as if they were actual animals. It's only available in Japanese so It having to read it bit by bit using Google translate.

    3 votes
  8. zoec
    Link
    I'm reading the poems of Konstantinos Kavafis, translated by Aliki Barnstone (Greek -> English).

    I'm reading the poems of Konstantinos Kavafis, translated by Aliki Barnstone (Greek -> English).

    3 votes
  9. eelnave
    Link
    I became a Stephen King addict in the last year. I picked up The Dead Zone from the library but haven't really had a chance to get into it yet. I also bought From A Buick 8 in a library book sale...

    I became a Stephen King addict in the last year. I picked up The Dead Zone from the library but haven't really had a chance to get into it yet. I also bought From A Buick 8 in a library book sale and I hadn't heard of that one so I'm excited to read it!

    3 votes
  10. mat
    Link
    I am currently reading Revenant Gun, the third and final book in Yoon Ha Lee's excellent Machineries of Empire series. It's not much of a spoiler to say that Shuos Jedao is back from the dead...

    I am currently reading Revenant Gun, the third and final book in Yoon Ha Lee's excellent Machineries of Empire series. It's not much of a spoiler to say that Shuos Jedao is back from the dead again, and the internal and external conflicts and power struggles of the hexarchate continue. Like the previous books it's pretty "soft" by sci-fi standards because of the strange, reality altering, effects of calendrics but it's by no means bad for that. Lee's universe is weird but it's consistent. Definitely recommended, start with Ninefox Gambit.

    2 votes
  11. pipsy
    Link
    I picked up Dragons of Eden today from a local bookstore. No idea when I'll get to it, perhaps this weekend.

    I picked up Dragons of Eden today from a local bookstore. No idea when I'll get to it, perhaps this weekend.

    2 votes
  12. KapteinB
    Link
    I'm reading Jo Nesbø's books about detective Harry Hole. He's probably best known internationally these days for the disastrous film adaptation of the sixth book in the series, The Snowman. I've...

    I'm reading Jo Nesbø's books about detective Harry Hole. He's probably best known internationally these days for the disastrous film adaptation of the sixth book in the series, The Snowman. I've so far refrained from seeing the film, but I finished the book last year, and it was great. As was the seventh book (Panserhjerte/The Leopard) that I finished last week. I finished the book while in an airport, waiting for a flight, so I immediately bought and started reading the eight book (Gjenferd/Phantom), and it seems very promising.

    My biggest criticism on The Leopard would have to be that it relies too heavily on a sort of deus ex machina, an invented computer system that supposedly gives the user easy access to all sorts of digital traces by exploiting government-mandated back-doors in the hardware and software that forms the Internet. The system featured briefly in some of the earlier books, but takes a more central role in this one. It is however interesting to note that this book was published in 2009, and this computer system is described as somewhat similar to a system later described in documents leaked by Edward Snowden.

    2 votes
  13. parenthesis
    Link
    I'm reading Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky. I love books that explore alien cultures, and this does that with an interesting twist. I'd definitely recommend it.

    I'm reading Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky. I love books that explore alien cultures, and this does that with an interesting twist. I'd definitely recommend it.

    2 votes
  14. [2]
    userexec
    Link
    Reading The Traitor God by Cameron Johnston for a book club meeting tomorrow. It's a super gritty fantasy novel that takes place in an extremely stratified society controlled by a bureaucracy of...

    Reading The Traitor God by Cameron Johnston for a book club meeting tomorrow. It's a super gritty fantasy novel that takes place in an extremely stratified society controlled by a bureaucracy of mages. The main character was involved in the death of a god, but had his memories of the incident locked away and now lives in exile with the understanding that so long as he never returns, his friends will be protected. His friend is brutally murdered, so he returns to the empire to do some murdering of his own.

    The book falls into the sub-genre of "grimdark" fantasy, with considerable violence (think GoT) and a good number of morally questionable actions from a hero who's mostly good, but is very much as capable of hate as love. At times I felt the protagonist went a little too iamverybadass, but it's still been a very entertaining read in a pretty fresh fantasy world.

    2 votes
    1. Tenar
      Link Parent
      Sounds interesting, putting it on the list (holidays coming up and grimdark is pretty good for casual reading); you say it's pretty fresh, what makes it so?

      Sounds interesting, putting it on the list (holidays coming up and grimdark is pretty good for casual reading); you say it's pretty fresh, what makes it so?

  15. what
    Link
    I'm trying to (re)read House of Leaves. I wasn't able to finish it last time, it's a very... difficult book, and I don't even think it's that good, but it's very weird and different, and kind of...

    I'm trying to (re)read House of Leaves. I wasn't able to finish it last time, it's a very... difficult book, and I don't even think it's that good, but it's very weird and different, and kind of feels like a challenge to me.

    2 votes
  16. ryanstills
    Link
    I am currently reading Machine Learning for Developers. My buddy and I are starting work on a Sims clone as a side project. I am also reading a fan made Heroes of Warcraft D&D 5e player's guide.

    I am currently reading Machine Learning for Developers. My buddy and I are starting work on a Sims clone as a side project. I am also reading a fan made Heroes of Warcraft D&D 5e player's guide.

    2 votes
  17. zowesiouff
    Link
    I've started reading Eliezer Yudkowsky's Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality which has completely hooked me in, even though it's sitting at a whooping 661K words and I've 0 chance of...

    I've started reading Eliezer Yudkowsky's Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality which has completely hooked me in, even though it's sitting at a whooping 661K words and I've 0 chance of finishing it in a reasonable timeframe.

    2 votes
  18. spectrehawntineurope
    Link
    Just finished The Call of Cthulhu it was pretty good. Quite short but very expressive. Thinking i'll read The Trial by Franz Kafka next.

    Just finished The Call of Cthulhu it was pretty good. Quite short but very expressive. Thinking i'll read The Trial by Franz Kafka next.

    2 votes
  19. [4]
    rake_tm
    Link
    I am currently reading the Old Man's War series. It's OK, but really I just needed something to read. I haven't found any sci-fi that has kept me engaged that much since finishing The Nexus...

    I am currently reading the Old Man's War series. It's OK, but really I just needed something to read. I haven't found any sci-fi that has kept me engaged that much since finishing The Nexus trilogy and Neal Stephenson's latest book. My main problem with a lot of sci-fi books is that they are so short, as soon as I get into them they are over. Why can't more authors pump out 1,000 page novels to actually keep me going for a little while :)

    1 vote
    1. [3]
      wise
      Link Parent
      What did you think of The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O.? It honestly wasn't my favourite Stephenson's book. The protagonist didn't seem very realistic to me, and to be honest that has been my feeling...

      What did you think of The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O.? It honestly wasn't my favourite Stephenson's book. The protagonist didn't seem very realistic to me, and to be honest that has been my feeling with a lot of female-protagonist, male-writer novels I've read. Maybe it is something else and I rationalize it this way, but yeah it kind of felt weird at times.

      Also I went in expecting another Snow Crash but that was a very high bar haha.

      2 votes
      1. rake_tm
        Link Parent
        Overall I enjoyed it, but I would agree it wasn't my favorite Stephenson book. I really wasn't expecting Snowcrash since nothing else he has done since was the same, but I think in my head I was...

        Overall I enjoyed it, but I would agree it wasn't my favorite Stephenson book. I really wasn't expecting Snowcrash since nothing else he has done since was the same, but I think in my head I was prepared for another book similar to the Baroque Cycle series, which obviously it wasn't really. I guess I liked it more than Zodiac, The Interface, and Reamde, but not as much as most of the others.

        1 vote
      2. super_james
        Link Parent
        Weird my girlfriend & I thought D.O.D.O was far better female characterisation than any of Stephenson's other stuff & we attributed it to his female co-author Nicole Galland.

        Weird my girlfriend & I thought D.O.D.O was far better female characterisation than any of Stephenson's other stuff & we attributed it to his female co-author Nicole Galland.

        1 vote
  20. [5]
    DrewDru
    Link
    I just finished American Gods. It was amazing. I loved every bit of it. Now I'm halfway through Carrie by King

    I just finished American Gods. It was amazing. I loved every bit of it. Now I'm halfway through Carrie by King

    1 vote
    1. [4]
      Steppenfox
      Link Parent
      American Gods is excellent-there's another book in that world, called Anansi Boys. It's less sprawling, but still excellent.

      American Gods is excellent-there's another book in that world, called Anansi Boys. It's less sprawling, but still excellent.

      2 votes
      1. [2]
        spectrehawntineurope
        Link Parent
        Can you tell me what it was that you particularly liked about american gods? I read it recently and was kinda underwhelmed. I'd seen it recommended so often and it just seemed to drag on with the...

        Can you tell me what it was that you particularly liked about american gods? I read it recently and was kinda underwhelmed. I'd seen it recommended so often and it just seemed to drag on with the book being almost entirely Shadow being introduced to people. Also, are you american? just wondering if not being an american is what limited my enjoyment of it.

        2 votes
        1. Steppenfox
          Link Parent
          I'm not American, but I do love mythology a lot, so there's that. I enjoyed a lot of things about it, but I do agree it's not exactly tightly written - but I love the way it reveals...

          I'm not American, but I do love mythology a lot, so there's that. I enjoyed a lot of things about it, but I do agree it's not exactly tightly written - but I love the way it reveals characterisation through action. Wednesday, Czernobog, Mr Nancy, Laura; I fell like I've met these people, at the same time as knowing I've never met anyone quite like them. Then that understanding plays very neatly into the twist.

      2. DrewDru
        Link Parent
        Yep, definitely going to read that too.

        Yep, definitely going to read that too.

        1 vote
  21. eve
    Link
    Slowly making my way through The Burning Maze by Rick Riordian. There's so many books I need to read, I really have to buckle down lol.

    Slowly making my way through The Burning Maze by Rick Riordian. There's so many books I need to read, I really have to buckle down lol.

    1 vote
  22. poopascoopa
    Link
    I'm working through East of Eden and It Can't Happen Here right now.

    I'm working through East of Eden and It Can't Happen Here right now.

    1 vote
  23. Steppenfox
    Link
    I'm reading a collection of poetry (from about 1914 till about 1935), as well as one of GK Chesterton's Father Brown books. I'm really enjoying both, Father Brown makes a much more interesting...

    I'm reading a collection of poetry (from about 1914 till about 1935), as well as one of GK Chesterton's Father Brown books. I'm really enjoying both, Father Brown makes a much more interesting sleuth than Holmes in my opinion.

    1 vote
  24. luffy
    Link
    Mindfulness in Plain English, it's a hands-on book written by a Buddhist chaplain. I have the physical version of the book, but it's free to read on many websites, including this one.

    Mindfulness in Plain English, it's a hands-on book written by a Buddhist chaplain. I have the physical version of the book, but it's free to read on many websites, including this one.

    1 vote
  25. DragonfireKai
    Link
    I'm reading So You've Been Publicly Shamed by Jon Ronson, and Unsong by Scott Alexander. Shamed is very interesting, because it's written in a very soul searching manner, Ronson came up with the...

    I'm reading So You've Been Publicly Shamed by Jon Ronson, and Unsong by Scott Alexander.

    Shamed is very interesting, because it's written in a very soul searching manner, Ronson came up with the idea of the book when he thought the the power of the internet to shame people was some new equalizer that was going to be a great force for good after he used it to get some academics who were using his identity on a twitter-bot to shut it down, so he resolved to get right in the heart of the next major public shaming outrage he found, and things got dark, fast.

    Unsong is a web serial alternate history novel where the Apollo 8 mission, rather than passing by the moon, crashed into the great crystal sphere surrounding the earth, allowing God's divine light back into the world, and bringing back angels, demons, and the power of the Kabbalah. It's a web serial, so sometimes the prose is clunky, but it's also hilarious at times, shades of Terry Pratchett. Like when the forces of hell take over Siberia, and march on Moscow, but the Soviets hold the line, prompting president Nixon to form an alliance with the devil to wipe out the soviet menace, thus spawning the idiom that "only Nixon could go to Hell."

    1 vote
  26. Tenar
    Link
    (read the last paragraph if you want to have some hope) I just finished reading a few sci-fi, ""easy"" books (i.e. books you can read without thinking too much, while sitting at the beach with a...

    (read the last paragraph if you want to have some hope) I just finished reading a few sci-fi, ""easy"" books (i.e. books you can read without thinking too much, while sitting at the beach with a cocktail), so I decided to read something non-fiction, and I've been intrigued by anarchism in general for a bit so I decided to read something with substance on it: "Anarchism: From Theory to Practice" by Daniel Guérin.

    It's super interesting so far because he talks about it from a wide perspective, trying to include all the different schools of thought in anarchism (while commenting very early on about how that word is kind of bad because most everyone who hears it thinks Mad Max instead of what most people who advocate for anarchism mean; a lot of it falls under a broad umbrella with quite a few different names). On the other hand (so far at least) he doesn't pick one thought and say "and this is the right one", but puts people in their historic context so that you can better understand why they would have chosen/thought what they did, and instead of vaguely paraphrasing he tries to quote people directly so that he's interpreting their thoughts as little as possible, and letting them talk for themselves instead.

    Also, in one of the most recent bits I read from his book he talks about how a few of the people most well known for anarchism went through different phases in their lives wrt their political philosophy. He talks about a few people that started out very anarchist and "mellowed out" or went in a different direction, but also about people who started out somewhere else completely and ended up becoming more anarchist as times go on. And what's neat is that there wasn't judgment. There was just a sense of "sometimes people change in what they believe and that's OK". And I feel like that's something we could use more of? In fact a similar thought-pattern is what keeps me coming back here to ~, the fact that here people seem to be OK with changing their opinions as time goes on.

  27. gerikson
    Link
    I'm reading "The Command of the Ocean" by N.A.M. Rodger, which is a high-level historical overview of the Royal Navy from the English Republic to the end of the Napoleonic Wars.

    I'm reading "The Command of the Ocean" by N.A.M. Rodger, which is a high-level historical overview of the Royal Navy from the English Republic to the end of the Napoleonic Wars.