andyjohnson0 2 hours ago

Cormac McCarthy's Border Trilogy. As with some of his other work, the punctuation can be a challenge and the prose can sometimes border on the ponderous, but I'm enjoying it. Currently about half way through.

card_zero 3 hours ago

I read The Whispering Mountain by Joan Aiken and was struck by similarities to Pratchett, for instance the part where the main character heroically defeats monsters in a wood by using knowledge gleaned from an old encyclopedia that he carries everywhere, and how he ſpeakſ like thiſ when reading aloud from it, and the part about underground camels in Wales. It references The Far-Distant Oxus at one point, which I want to read (a pony adventure story written in 1937 by teenagers).

(I know the long s wasn't really used at the ends of words, that was just a hurried example.)

chairmansteve 3 hours ago

Post Soviet Britain by Abby Innes. Excellent so far (70 pages in).

Crossing the Unknown Sea by David Whyte. Also excellent. Nearly finished it.

ValtteriL 4 hours ago

Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre (1923)

  • kratom_sandwich an hour ago

    How do you like it?

    • ValtteriL an hour ago

      I'm 3/4 through it.

      It's been quite entertaining to read how he went from picking off bucket shops to going bust on Wall Street and how he proceeded from there. Old-fashioned writing that goes straight to the point.

      His art-like approach to speculation is refreshing after spending time on /r/quant. I cannot say if any of his high-level speculation wisdom hold water anymore, though.

      Would recommend!

chistev 4 hours ago

On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century by Timothy D. Snyder

shawn_w 7 hours ago

Currently: Moby-Dick and Termination Shock. (That the former gets brought up a lot in the latter is a coincidence.)

SMAAART 8 hours ago

Ideaflow: The Only Business Metric That Matters, by Jeremy Utley

jus3sixty 7 hours ago

“How Can I Help” by Linda Hand