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The purpose of this group is to discuss books.

Location: #culture
Members: 50
Latest Activity: May 2

Discussion Forum

Consider the Fork: A History of How We Cook and Eat, by Bee Wilson

Started by Dallas the Phallus. Last reply by Dallas the Phallus Apr 4. 10 Replies

Two words: Absolutely fascinating. I'm listening to this on CD right now, and I just have two CDs left. This is a truly enjoyable book. It is expertly written, entertaining, and well-researched. We take a lot for granted in our modern culinary…Continue

Tags: cutlery, culture, utensils, cooking, history

1960s Science Fiction Novels Everyone Should Read

Started by Michel. Last reply by Michel Feb 20. 4 Replies

I'm a HUGE science-fiction fan (not the movies, the books) and I stumbled upon this list of 1960s classics everyone should have read and was reminded again of how little I know even if I have a wall covered floor to ceiling with shelves full of…Continue

Tags: classics, 1960, science fiction

Believing the lie, Elizabeth George

Started by Marianne Feb 7. 0 Replies

Elizabeth George is a tremendous writer when it comes to psychological thrillers and one can put the emphasis on "psychological".The twists and turn of the story, very well written, keep the reader engrossed an in full alert mode.  She delves deeply…Continue

The strange world of online book reviews

Started by Adriana. Last reply by Adriana Jan 21. 8 Replies

Hello book lovers, I'd like your opinion on a NYT article about how online book reviews are being used as a weapon to "destroy" books or writers. It is about a book about Michael Jackson, not very complimentary of the dead star, and his fans,…Continue

Tags: sockpuppetry, online, internet, review, book

On Bullshit - Harry G. Frankfurt

Started by Michel. Last reply by Chris Sep 27, 2012. 3 Replies

Now, I haven't read this book, but it looks really interesting. It makes a novel (to me) distinction between liars who understand the truth, and bullshitters who simply don't care. I'm glad someone is seriously studying the concept of bullshit in…Continue

Tags: Harry G. Frankfurt, lies, truth, bullshit

Raven’s Gate, by Anthony Horowitz

Started by Dallas the Phallus. Last reply by Marianne Sep 18, 2012. 3 Replies

Raven’s Gate, by Anthony HorowitzI ran across this audio book at the library, not knowing anything about it or the author. But it was the kind of book I tend to like—supernatural horror and mystery. In many ways the book is completely unoriginal.…Continue

Tags: audio books, fiction, witchcraft, supernatural, books

Birds of a lesser paradise

Started by Adriana. Last reply by Adriana Aug 17, 2012. 1 Reply

I bought this book on the recommendation of a science blogger for summer reader. It is…Continue

Tags: fiction, reading, book

Inside the Human Genome-A Case for Non-Intelligent Design

Started by Jim Hudlow. Last reply by Adriana Jul 26, 2012. 2 Replies

First an appology...I wrote this and sent as a 'message' to all members rather than post this as a discussion...sorry...newbie in the house! I just finished this book by John Avise. I really enjoyed it though I was looking up terms and rereading for…Continue

Her God Problem

Started by Michel. Last reply by Bill May 28, 2012. 2 Replies

When a good writer puts her shoulder to the wheel of reason we get a book like …Continue

Tags: Canon, , The, , Nathalie, Angier', science, religion, Edge, , essay, , My, God, More…Problem"

Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions, by Dan Ariely

Started by Dallas the Phallus. Last reply by Dallas the Phallus May 18, 2012. 10 Replies

This has been on my list for some time, and I finally got around to listening to the audio book. Fascinating book. It is informative, funny, and well-written. The audio book was also read by a competent narrator, just don't ask me his name at the…Continue

Tags: bias, psychology, economics, behavioral economics, self-deception

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Comment by Marianne on May 2, 2013 at 11:48pm

Linwood Barclay :  Bad Move

                          Bad Guys

I am halfway into Bad Guys and still devouring it.  The first one, Bad Move, was a hilarious thriller and I couldn't  believe this sequel could be better;  and it is.

So I guess this is for mystery thriller book lovers who migh like some pepper into them.

Comment by Dallas the Phallus on April 3, 2013 at 7:53pm

Hmmm....yeat another book I should add to my list. This definitely looks like something that would appeal to me. 

Death on the Installment Plan

Death on the Installment Plan is a novel by author Louis-Ferdinand Céline, published in 1936. The most common, and generally most respected English translation is Ralph Manheim's.

Ferdinand, Céline's alter ego, is a doctor in Paris, treating the poor who seldom pay him but take every advantage of his availability. The action is not continuous but goes back in time to earlier memories and often moves into fantasy, especially in Ferdinand's sexual escapades; the style becomes deliberately rougher and sentences disintegrate to catch the flavour of the teeming world of everyday Parisian tragedies, struggles to make a living, illness, venereal disease, the sordid stories of families whose destiny is governed by their own stupidity, malice, lust and greed.

Though at times off-putting due to its idiosyncrasies and apparent redundancies, the novel is considered among many of Céline's fans as his most accomplished work. It offers a profound vision of the nature of individual human existence, rooted in suffering and inertia. The anti-heroic genius of Ferdinand's search for a livable life in 20th century Paris forms a direct literary metaphor for modern humanity: to search and search again for happiness and meaning in a complex world and to often come up empty. Or more precisely, to find words, stories, experiences, and ideas that stretch the boundaries of consciousness while providing little or no structure with which to assign any meaning to life as a whole. Life becomes merely a subjective personal experience in the midst of madness and savagery. It is considered beautiful in itself but with overtones of profound suffering and a lack of moral prerogatives, always at the mercy of the strange human forces that are both within and without. To Céline, we become our own history and our own suffering. As such we live, accumulating the pain, confusion, and death that life allows us to have on installment.

Comment by doone on March 3, 2013 at 1:24pm

Why Religion Remains

MAR 3 2013 @ 12:33PM

Reviewing A.C. Grayling’s forthcoming book, The God Argument: The Case Against Religion and for Humanism, Bryan Appleyard sighs at the outspoken atheist’s approach to religion:

Like it or not, religions are here to stay. Grayling sort of gets round this by ignoring the primary argument for their continued existence – that religion is a beneficial adaptation. He argues that religion is kept in place by, in essence, political power. This is altogether too weak and too inconsistent to explain the prevalence of religion and most thinkers accept some sort of evolutionary explanation. If you do accept at least some version of the adaptive argument – or, indeed, if you are a believer – then the study of religion becomes an obligation. Religious faith is not remotely like the belief in fairies; it is a series of stories of immense political, poetic and historical power that are – again, like it or not – deeply embedded in human nature. Seen in that light, to dismiss all religious discourse as immature or meaningless is to embrace ignorance or, more alarmingly, to advocate suppression. It will also make it impossible for you to understand the St Matthew Passion, Chartres Cathedral and the films of Andrei Tarkovsky.

Comment by Adriana on February 14, 2013 at 5:28pm

I think you guys will enjoy the following book: "Answers for Aristotle" by Massimo Pigliucci. I posted my review here

Comment by Michel on January 12, 2013 at 10:30am

Cover for new edition of Orwell's 1984 is brilliant

Comment by Don on January 2, 2013 at 9:12am

Right, Adriana, and his words here are straight from the heart.

Comment by Adriana on January 2, 2013 at 9:10am

I love maurice Sendak, thanks Don!

Comment by Don on January 1, 2013 at 1:32pm

Here's a wonderful illustrated clip from a Terry Gross interview with the great Maurice Sendak.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TH2OaaktJrw

Comment by doone on November 28, 2012 at 7:10am

How to find a book to read

Comment by Adriana on November 17, 2012 at 9:10am

Thanks, Jim, I have that book on my reading queue, I'll post my opinion when I'm done. I may not get to it for a bitt, though. Long reading queue...

Here's a nice interview with Dr. Firestein that shows where he is going with his book. Little excerpt:

Whatever fact you seemed to have uncovered is likely to be revised by the next generation. That’s the difference between science and many other endeavors.  Science revels in revision. For science, revision is a victory. In religion, or astrology, or any other belief system, revision is a kind of defeat. You were supposed to have known the answer to this. But the joy of science is that it’s about revision.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/04/22/stuart-firestein-a...

 

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