What are you reading?

Cheesy topics (like the Cheese Curds thread) go here. Topics that aren't Packer related will be moved here as well.

Mmmm.... cheese.

Moderators: NCF, salmar80, BF004, APB, Packfntk

User avatar
BF004
Huddle Heavy Hitter
Reactions:
Posts: 13862
Joined: 17 Mar 2020 16:05
Location: Suamico
Contact:

Post by BF004 »

APB wrote:
16 Jul 2022 11:26
With all the recent media comparisons to the 1949 released George Orwell classic, 1984, I decided to give it a read.

Wow.

First of all, it's a good read. The story flows nicely with characters you can relate to and include storylines that are eerily similar to trends in modern day society. The twists and turns are engaging and ultimately the ending leaves you emotionally jarred.

And yes, there are definite modern parallels you can draw from the story written over 70 years ago. Some of it was unbelievably similar! I'm purposefully trying to be vague for those of you who have not read it as to not spoil it.

But anyway, I enjoyed the book and would certainly recommend reading it if you have not already done so.
FYI for some of us lazies out there :lol:

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1 ... 0503684707
Image

Image

User avatar
APB
Reactions:
Posts: 8220
Joined: 20 Mar 2020 06:53
Location: Virginia

Post by APB »

APB wrote:
21 Jul 2022 18:30
And now I’m on to The Martian by Andy Weir.

I must admit, I wasn’t terribly hyped about starting this book mainly because I didn’t think the movie was all that good. Based upon book reviews and awards, though, I decided to give it a shot.

I’m about 1/3 through and boy am I glad I did! The Mark Watney character in the book is fun, brilliant, sometimes hapless, and hilariously crude as he navigates his way through survival on the Red Planet - all things not conveyed by Matt Damon in the screen portrayal. The story, too, just reads so much better than the big screen is able to convey.

As I said, I’m only 1/3 of the way through but I already give it a big thumbs up and highly recommend.
Finished the book. Really, really good book!

Rewatched the movie. Now I think it sucks even more!

User avatar
RingoCStarrQB
Reactions:
Posts: 4177
Joined: 24 Mar 2020 19:56

Post by RingoCStarrQB »

Cheesehead Chatter :hide:

User avatar
mnkcarp
Reactions:
Posts: 421
Joined: 03 Jun 2020 16:51

Post by mnkcarp »

APB wrote:
25 Jul 2022 14:11
Rewatched the movie. Now I think it sucks even more!
When Matt Damon said they were going to "science the &%$@ out of this" I tuned right out. It's still a running joke in our house.

User avatar
BF004
Huddle Heavy Hitter
Reactions:
Posts: 13862
Joined: 17 Mar 2020 16:05
Location: Suamico
Contact:

Post by BF004 »

I really liked the movie, but can’t compare it to the book though, haven’t read it.
Image

Image

User avatar
APB
Reactions:
Posts: 8220
Joined: 20 Mar 2020 06:53
Location: Virginia

Post by APB »

BF004 wrote:
29 Jul 2022 06:47
I really liked the movie, but can’t compare it to the book though, haven’t read it.
Based upon what I've witnessed from your forum persona, I highly recommend you read the book. You'll love the Mark Watney book character.

User avatar
Raptorman
Reactions:
Posts: 3580
Joined: 23 Mar 2020 19:39
Location: East coast of Florida

Post by Raptorman »

APB wrote:
16 Jul 2022 11:26
With all the recent media comparisons to the 1949 released George Orwell classic, 1984, I decided to give it a read.

Wow.

First of all, it's a good read. The story flows nicely with characters you can relate to and include storylines that are eerily similar to trends in modern day society. The twists and turns are engaging and ultimately the ending leaves you emotionally jarred.

And yes, there are definite modern parallels you can draw from the story written over 70 years ago. Some of it was unbelievably similar! I'm purposefully trying to be vague for those of you who have not read it as to not spoil it.

But anyway, I enjoyed the book and would certainly recommend reading it if you have not already done so.
Read 1984 so long ago I hardly remember it. I should read it again. That and "Helter Skelter". That I read when it came out. Be warned, it's not for the squeamish.

But on a positive note, this thread has inspired me to pick up a book and read. It's been a while. The last book I read was "To rescue the Republic" by Brett Baier. A good book on U.S. Grant and trying to heal the country after the Civil war.

User avatar
RingoCStarrQB
Reactions:
Posts: 4177
Joined: 24 Mar 2020 19:56

Post by RingoCStarrQB »

Raptorman wrote:
30 Jul 2022 21:53
APB wrote:
16 Jul 2022 11:26
With all the recent media comparisons to the 1949 released George Orwell classic, 1984, I decided to give it a read.

Wow.

First of all, it's a good read. The story flows nicely with characters you can relate to and include storylines that are eerily similar to trends in modern day society. The twists and turns are engaging and ultimately the ending leaves you emotionally jarred.

And yes, there are definite modern parallels you can draw from the story written over 70 years ago. Some of it was unbelievably similar! I'm purposefully trying to be vague for those of you who have not read it as to not spoil it.

But anyway, I enjoyed the book and would certainly recommend reading it if you have not already done so.
Read 1984 so long ago I hardly remember it. I should read it again. That and "Helter Skelter". That I read when it came out. Be warned, it's not for the squeamish.

But on a positive note, this thread has inspired me to pick up a book and read. It's been a while. The last book I read was "To rescue the Republic" by Brett Baier. A good book on U.S. Grant and trying to heal the country after the Civil war.
I highly recommend When Pride Still Mattered.

User avatar
mnkcarp
Reactions:
Posts: 421
Joined: 03 Jun 2020 16:51

Post by mnkcarp »

Listening to East of Eden at the moment. I've read it twice, but it's still one of my favorites and I like getting 25 hours of a book for one credit on Audible instead of the usual 5-10 hours of most modern novels. I might go back and listen to 1984, after all the talk here, but it's so bleak. I always preferred the equal/opposite dystopia in Aldous Huxley's Brave New World.

User avatar
Labrev
Reactions:
Posts: 6635
Joined: 25 Mar 2020 00:01

Post by Labrev »

Value, Price, and Profit by Karl Marx! 🤓

Also, a dense textbook on Political Economy by Soviet scholars. xD
“Most other nations don't allow a terrorist to be their leader.”
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”
—Magneto

User avatar
Trudge
Reactions:
Posts: 1769
Joined: 24 Mar 2020 19:06
Location: Green Bay, WI

Post by Trudge »

1984, Read chapters ep2 season6, I dont know where to put them, then today I read the rest of it.

Now I kinda wanna read Animal Farm again.
Us reads viewers a fur. Thats guys a weeks shared reds.

Never forget where you came from....

User avatar
APB
Reactions:
Posts: 8220
Joined: 20 Mar 2020 06:53
Location: Virginia

Post by APB »

Trying to find out more about Robert Kennedy Jr. since he announced his candidacy for President in 2024. Just started his recent NYT bestseller The Real Anthony Fauci.

If I’ve gleaned anything this far, it’s that Kennedy has no love for Tony Fauci, and for apparent good reason. The actual data and subsequent actions by Fauci are reprehensible. Haven’t gotten far enough into the book that details Bill Gates’ role in all of it but the tidbits offered so far do not favor him at all. Looking forward to getting some time to really see what Kennedy has to say.

Image

User avatar
TheGreenMan
Reactions:
Posts: 1709
Joined: 23 Mar 2020 07:01
Location: Iowa

Post by TheGreenMan »

image.png
image.png (54.82 KiB) Viewed 8008 times
Attachments
image.png
image.png (148.87 KiB) Viewed 8008 times
Image
RIP JustJeff

User avatar
Waldo
Reactions:
Posts: 980
Joined: 19 Mar 2020 10:33

Post by Waldo »

I have History of the Medieval World on my wishlist, haven't gotten to that one yet.

Willink
Reactions:
Posts: 391
Joined: 24 Mar 2020 19:12
Location: Ithaca

Post by Willink »

The Master and Margarita - Bulgakov

The Geography of Nowhere - Kunstler

For you guys interested in medieval history I highly recommend A Distant Mirror by Tuchman, came out almost fifty years ago but probably my favorite on the subject. I have Joachim Whaley's Germany and the Holy Roman Empire sitting waiting for me to start next.

User avatar
Waldo
Reactions:
Posts: 980
Joined: 19 Mar 2020 10:33

Post by Waldo »

I'm most of the way through The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World by David Anthony.

Man oh man what a book. A firehose of proof written right on the precipice of DNA based archeology that is fully compatible with the window DNA opened, unlike most European histories pre-DNA. Virtually all European men are descendants of these people, not Mesopotamia.

Next I want to read Barry Cunliffe's latest book about the Celts, a successor to this one chronologically (tho ofc different authors, though Anthony reference's Cunliffe's work, hard not to in the field of european history). He was one of the leaders of the Celtic from the west theory that was thoroughly trounced by dna evidence, which his latest book acknowledges, unlike his previous.
Last edited by Waldo on 21 Jun 2023 10:43, edited 2 times in total.

YoHoChecko
Reactions:
Posts: 9712
Joined: 26 Mar 2020 11:34

Post by YoHoChecko »

recently finished on audible and would recommend:

Partisans by Nicole Hemmer
Spoiler
A theory that Reagan was not the beginning of the modern conservative era, but actually the end of the previous era. Highlights specific players and movements from the 1990s through the 2010s to examine how the party has changed and what it cares about and how it came to be that way (she's a conservative media scholar)
Elite Capture by Olufemi O. Taiwo
Spoiler
A very short, but well-constricted critique by an African-born Marxist challenging the ideas of liberalism and woke rhetoric from the left. He makes the case that deferring to the most relevant minority in any given room likely still empowers the opinions of an elite, rather than of the people, leaving a broad culture thinking they are doing right by the working oppressed but instead glomming onto ideas and word choices formulated by elites.
Why Liberalism Failed by Patrick J. Deneen
Spoiler
A well-written book with an incomplete thesis basically indicating that the whole liberal experiment--the traditional liberalism which would contain both our conservative agrarian founders and our more progressive urban founders--will inevitably lead to an overbearing government as people focus more on their own individualism so thoroughly that only a government power can come in and pick up the pieces and provide the structure that a more communal orientation would have don outside of government. A really strange "conservative" anti-founding ideology book. Like he wants to try something wholly new, but fails to propose what it might look like. Written to appeal to all walks, but clearly a conservative book
The Bitter End by a handful of researchers
Spoiler
A look back on the 2020 election (and the campaigns that led to it) using insane amounts of data and analysis to get to the roots of what was driving voting behavior. These authors have done this post-election for the past 3 elections now. Very insightful.
So that's a moderate author who studies conservative media, a full-on marxist who is (not in his words) criticizing the establishment left culture of orthodoxy as elitist; a conservatism who believes the whole American experiment based on liberty is and was always doomed to lead to self-involved people deferring their power to an overlord; and political scientists examining how thoroughly Trump lost the 2020 election and how people felt about various people and issues along the way, right up through January 6th.

Narrow topics, broad ideologies. Encourage every one.

User avatar
Nips
Reactions:
Posts: 4
Joined: 21 Jul 2023 21:49

Post by Nips »

Been on a sports biography kick of late.

Recently finished 'Path Lit by Lightning' about Jim Thorpe.

Pretty fascinating insight and very well written.
This team makes me drink!

Once ate some squirrel gumbo.True story!

User avatar
TheGreenMan
Reactions:
Posts: 1709
Joined: 23 Mar 2020 07:01
Location: Iowa

Post by TheGreenMan »

Waldo wrote:
26 May 2023 16:05
I have History of the Medieval World on my wishlist, haven't gotten to that one yet.
It was good. 3/4 the way through "The History of the Renaissance World". I can applaud the effort that Susan Wise Bauer has put forth in this "trilogy", but by the time you reach Renaissance book it becomes such a high level view of history that it becomes very difficult to remember events as you make your way through. I did not have this problem with "Ancient History" one, but it really becomes evident by the time you reach the final book.
Image
RIP JustJeff

User avatar
TheGreenMan
Reactions:
Posts: 1709
Joined: 23 Mar 2020 07:01
Location: Iowa

Post by TheGreenMan »

Nips wrote:
22 Jul 2023 21:02
Been on a sports biography kick of late.

Recently finished 'Path Lit by Lightning' about Jim Thorpe.

Pretty fascinating insight and very well written.
For some reason I don't find myself reading sports/player biographies. I end up picking up a "big" release, the last one I think being "Leader of the Pack" - Aaron Rodgers, and I don't think I ever read it. Maybe I can't get myself to read sports biographies because I already spend a huge part of my life watching sports.
Image
RIP JustJeff

Post Reply