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59 votes
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Book publishers see surging interest in the US Constitution and print new editions
10 votes -
What are you reading these days?
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction or poetry, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk about it a bit.
10 votes -
Terry Pratchett estate launches ‘Discworld graphic novel universe’
25 votes -
Unbound goes into administration: Crowdfunders for book projects dropped by publisher 'won't receive refunds', authors told
7 votes -
George R.R. Martin says 'The Winds of Winter' is 'the curse of my life'
45 votes -
Pay what you want for every Wheel of Time book (supporting the ACLU)
40 votes -
Tildes Book Club - How is it going with Elder Race?
This is just to check in and ask how you are progressing with our April book, Elder Race by Adrian Tschaikovsky.
10 votes -
Minneapolis local bookstores
I am going to be in Minneapolis soon and I have 1 free day which I want to spend going to local bookstores. Does anyone have a favorite local store in the city? I particularly like going to...
I am going to be in Minneapolis soon and I have 1 free day which I want to spend going to local bookstores. Does anyone have a favorite local store in the city? I particularly like going to bookstores with good SFF sections, and also lots of book club/staff picks; and also to used bookstores with good SFF fictions. It's my first time in Minneapolis so every local bookstore there will be new to me!
12 votes -
Which challenging book was worth the effort for you?
"Challenging" is up to your own interpretation: length, word choice, writing style, subject matter, etc. Whatever the challenge, you had to put in more effort than normal to read the book, but you...
"Challenging" is up to your own interpretation: length, word choice, writing style, subject matter, etc.
Whatever the challenge, you had to put in more effort than normal to read the book, but you came out on the other side feeling like it was worth it.
What's that book?
What makes it challenging?
And why do you feel it's worth it?
38 votes -
Peter Watts on ‘Blindsight’, ‘Armored Core’ and working with Neill Blomkamp
23 votes -
Kindle modding wiki
24 votes -
Peter David - The TARDIS at Pooh Corner (1983)
7 votes -
What are you reading these days?
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction or poetry, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk about it a bit.
15 votes -
Kerry Greenwood, Australian author of Phryne Fisher murder mysteries, dies aged 70
7 votes -
What do Audible narrators sound like?
13 votes -
Speculative fiction recommendations featuring fabric or fiber arts?
I've decided to try fantasy bingo this year. The most obviously challenging category for me on the reddit list is the challenge to find a book I will enjoy featuring fiber or fabric crafting or...
I've decided to try fantasy bingo this year. The most obviously challenging category for me on the reddit list is the challenge to find a book I will enjoy featuring fiber or fabric crafting or artistry.
Does anyone have suggestions?
I have read and enjoyed Surrender None by Elizabeth Moon which fits but I want to read something new and save rereads for the end of the year if I get stuck. Surrender None fits at least two bingo categories as it is also a story about disrupting systems.
8 votes -
Romance author Ali Hazelwood cancels UK tours over doubt she could 'safely' return to US
23 votes -
Recommendations, specific folk tales: Sisphyus and others
Hello, not sure if this belongs in books? Because I am looking for all forms of story telling (with an emphasis on folk tale, however). Are there any other stories out there similar to: Sisyphus,...
Hello, not sure if this belongs in books? Because I am looking for all forms of story telling (with an emphasis on folk tale, however).
Are there any other stories out there similar to: Sisyphus, "There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly", and the Herculean task of slaying the hyrda?
For me the theme is, if you don't deal with the root problem, you're screwed/can't win.
Doesn't have to be English based, but I'll need a translation if it's not.
Thank you in advance!
12 votes -
Books are the new luxury
5 votes -
“Some hard and important lessons”: One of the most promising local news nonprofits looks back — and ahead. Even critics support the mission.
13 votes -
Tildes Book Club - off topic - question re spinoff/ parallel to Storygraph
User and book club ping recipient Maevens said that it would help them if the book and questions were posted to Storygraph, so I created a basic book club template, but I haven't done anything...
User and book club ping recipient Maevens said that it would help them if the book and questions were posted to Storygraph, so I created a basic book club template, but I haven't done anything with it yet.
What do you all think? Options include simply posting the book title each month, posting the book title and the discussion questions each month or posting and including a link to the Tildes book club discussion. I'm going to do something minimal regardless, to honor Maevens' request but I want to know what you all think and whether there are things you specifically don't want me to do.
Bottom line, the two book clubs could run in parallel with crossover and links, or they could be essentially separate. Please advise.
9 votes -
Houston is experiencing a 'reading renaissance' as small bookstores open across the city
17 votes -
Meta wins emergency arbitration ruling on tell-all book, Careless People by former employee Sarah Wynn-Williams - book promotion to be limited
89 votes -
What are you reading these days?
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction or poetry, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk about it a bit.
16 votes -
Border-straddling library raises $140K for renovations after US limits Canadian access
19 votes -
What are some good stories told from non-human perspectives?
Animals, robots, AIs, aliens, sentient rocks, etc. Anything counts as long as it's not human! And "stories" can count for novels, short stories, comics, etc.
36 votes -
What are your personal reading "rules?"
Don't think of "rules" in the question as necessarily a hard-and-fast thing (though it certainly can be if you work that way!). It can be interpreted as "guidelines" or "parameters" or "workflow"...
Don't think of "rules" in the question as necessarily a hard-and-fast thing (though it certainly can be if you work that way!). It can be interpreted as "guidelines" or "parameters" or "workflow" or whatnot.
I'm interested in learning about what guides your reading habits and choices. Stuff like:
- How do you choose what to read next?
- Do you read one book at a time or jump between multiple titles?
- How/why do you choose between physical/ebook/audiobook for a given title?
- How do you decide to stop reading a book you don't like (if at all)?
- Do you have a specific "spot" for reading?
- Do you have any particular reading rituals?
- When do you decide whether a book is worth a re-read?
- Do you track/rate your books?
- How much do you learn about a book before you read it?
- How do you manage your "TBR" (to be read) list (if at all)?
- etc.
Don't think of this as a survey where you have to answer each question, but more that those questions are all trying to get at the idea that I want to hear about the decisions you make about reading itself. Anything and everything you feel is relevant is fair game!
30 votes -
Dag Solstad, a towering figure of Norwegian letters admired by literary greats around the world, has died aged 83
7 votes -
Professional writer endorses short story written by OpenAI's new creative writing model
18 votes -
Why Dua Lipa is so good at asking questions
19 votes -
Poetry discussion: Everything by Srikanth Reddy
Hi tildizens, the NYC subway often has posters with a poem and artwork on them which provide some relief from the ads that decorate the trains. On my commute today, I found this poem by Srikanth...
Hi tildizens, the NYC subway often has posters with a poem and artwork on them which provide some relief from the ads that decorate the trains. On my commute today, I found this poem by Srikanth Reddy quite tantalizing.
Everything
by Srikanth Reddy
She was watching the solar eclipse
through a piece of broken bottlewhen he left home.
He found a blue kite in the foreston the day she lay down
with a sailor. When his name changed,she stitched a cloud to a quilt
made of rags. They did not meet,so they never could be parted.
So she finished her prayer,& he folded his map of the sea.
Unfortunately, the single piece of related online discourse I can find is a two-line comment on a 2008 blog post of the poem. So tell me: do you like this poem? What do you make of it? Is it about a couple that splits up due to infidelity (as Google's gemini ai told me) or people that are connected despite having never met (as Mistral's le chat claims)? What of the kite? Why is it blue? Why might his name have changed? To me, it seems he must be a sailor (but different than the one she lays with?) and she relatively poor. We're reading a lament of a missed connection, perhaps.
13 votes -
The magical humanism of Sir Terry Pratchett
22 votes -
Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI by Yuval Noah Harari
3 votes -
Tildes Book Club - Hyperion - An invitation to crowd source cultural references and allusions
I'm about 5 percent into the book Hyperion and I am already noticing that the author is drawing on a rich context of cultural background knowledge from a wide variety of sources and disciplines....
I'm about 5 percent into the book Hyperion and I am already noticing that the author is drawing on a rich context of cultural background knowledge from a wide variety of sources and disciplines.
This thread is a place to collect observations about culturally laden content within the book that might enhance understanding. It is not a place to spoil the plot.
No obligation, but feel free to contribute what you see.
24 votes -
What works do you think should be added to the literary canon?
(Inspired by some discussion over at the The New Lifetime Reading Plan topic) Which authors or texts do you feel deserve a place in the literary canon, but don't currently have one? There is, of...
(Inspired by some discussion over at the The New Lifetime Reading Plan topic)
Which authors or texts do you feel deserve a place in the literary canon, but don't currently have one?
There is, of course, not one singular, well-defined "canon" -- so interpret "the canon" as "the classics" or "required reading" or "most important works of literature" or however else you care to define it.
In particular, consider areas that the canon tends to overlook: female authors, eastern perspectives, plays (besides Shakespeare's works), etc.
29 votes -
BookFusion: upload, organize, read, share and sync your eBooks
25 votes -
What are you reading these days?
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction or poetry, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk about it a bit.
19 votes -
Waiting for a book in paperback? Good luck. Publishers increasingly give nonfiction authors one shot at print stardom, ditching paperbacks as priorities shift.
26 votes -
Has anyone read the books listed in the New Lifetime Reading Plan by Clifton Fadiman?
13 votes -
What are you reading these days?
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction or poetry, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk about it a bit.
17 votes -
Tildes Book Club discussion - February 2025 - Born a Crime by Trevor Noah
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
This is the eleventh of an ongoing series of book discussions here on Tildes. We are discussing Born a Crime by Trever Noah. Our next book will be Hyperion by Dan Simmons at the end of March.
I don't have a particular format in mind for this discussion, but I will post some prompts and questions as comments to get things started. You're not obligated to respond to them or vote on them though. So feel free to make your own top-level comment for whatever you wish to discuss, questions you have of others, or even just to post a review of the book you have written yourself.
For latecomers, don't worry if you didn't read the book in time for this Discussion topic. You can always join in once you finish it. Tildes Activity sort, and "Collapse old comments" feature should keep the topic going for as long as people are still replying.
And for anyone uninterested in this topic please use the Ignore Topic feature on this so it doesn't keep popping up in your Activity sort, since it's likely to keep doing that while I set this discussion up, and once people start joining in.22 votes -
What is a book that every 13-year-old boy should read?
Thirteen is a difficult age for most. It's a time of transition from childhood into early adulthood. I'm keen for book recommendations you think a 13-year-old should read. Specific topics I'm keen...
Thirteen is a difficult age for most. It's a time of transition from childhood into early adulthood.
I'm keen for book recommendations you think a 13-year-old should read. Specific topics I'm keen to be covered, either directly or through metaphor, are:- Confidence
- Development
- Fitness / Nutrition / Physical Health
- Mental Health
- Finance
- Ethics
But really, anything you think one could tackle at that age and benefit from having read the content.
I've specified boy, because it is a boy who I wish to pass these recommendations on to, and I think that perhaps the advice would be different for a girl.
38 votes -
These five books might make you a better friend
10 votes -
Play my /r/fantasy bingo card as a game of Connections
11 votes -
What’s a book that we were never supposed to be able to read?
I’m jumping off of the controversy about the release of Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman mentioned here. Regarding the question: it means that something stood in the way of that particular book...
I’m jumping off of the controversy about the release of Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman mentioned here.
Regarding the question: it means that something stood in the way of that particular book “getting out” but, for better or for worse, it did. This could be the author’s direct wishes, government or publisher censorship, it being found or leaked, etc.
- What are some of those books?
- Are they worth looking into?
- Does the fact that we weren’t “supposed” to read them change how we understand or appreciate them?
- If the author themself didn’t want their works published (such as Kafka), what do we have to take into account when deciding to go against those wishes?
- What do we gain/lose by respecting/ignoring those wishes?
Also, I’m open to answers that involve parts of books rather than the whole books themselves, since I know there are many books out there that were partially censored or edited and have since been restored.
22 votes -
What are some books for which the critical/public opinion has flipped over time?
The flip can be from widely liked to widely disliked, or it can go the opposite direction. Also, it doesn’t have to be based solely on the book itself (though it certainly can be). Maybe the...
The flip can be from widely liked to widely disliked, or it can go the opposite direction.
Also, it doesn’t have to be based solely on the book itself (though it certainly can be).
- Maybe the actions of the author changed the perception of the book.
- Maybe a bad sequel tanked the esteem of the original story in hindsight.
- Maybe cultural changes now cast the book in a different light.
- etc.
Whatever the case: what’s a book where opinion has flipped, and why do you think people’s opinions changed?
38 votes -
[SOLVED] What's the scifi book?
I'm looking for a book I read in middle school where people are factory farmed for their parts before they hit puberty by organic mech of some sort, but the protagonist escapes and is hunted but...
I'm looking for a book I read in middle school where people are factory farmed for their parts before they hit puberty by organic mech of some sort, but the protagonist escapes and is hunted but is able to hide in an abandoned (ship?) with some others and starts to fight back? For the life of me, my search skills are failing.
10 votes -
What are your favorite books with an unreliable narrator?
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
I haven’t read many books that explore unreliable narrators. I would love some recommendations.
31 votes -
A glimpse behind the bookshelves in Russia's small-town libraries
10 votes