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kyscg's reviews
249 reviews
Better Living Through Algorithms by Naomi Kritzer
challenging
emotional
hopeful
inspiring
lighthearted
reflective
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
4.5
this was strangely motivational, i wish it were a much longer story. i am going to go and draw
From Dawn to Decadence: 1500 to the Present: 500 Years of Western Cultural Life by Jacques Barzun
challenging
informative
inspiring
slow-paced
3.0
Very comprehensive, very illuminating, took me a long time to finish. I collected a bunch of quotes that I really enjoyed reading...
"Perform the acts of faith and faith will come", by Ignatius of Loyola
"Science has cut Man down to size and broken his pride: Copernicus removed him from the center of the universe; Darwin reduced him to the status of animal; and Jung dethroned his intellect and put instinct in its place"
"The importance attached to Time in the West is a distinctive trait: Swift’s Gulliver looks at his watch so often that his hosts the Brobdingnagians think he is consulting his god"
"As Goethe’s Faust says at the start of his adventure, ‘In the beginning was not the Word, but the Act.’ The Word—an abstraction—comes after"
"Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson rank with Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, and it is hard to think of a third partnership of equal renown. Indeed, in a fundamental sense they are the same pair, bent on a similar quest but in a different costume, 300 years apart"
"Finding oneself is a misnomer. A self is not found but made"
"Perform the acts of faith and faith will come", by Ignatius of Loyola
"Science has cut Man down to size and broken his pride: Copernicus removed him from the center of the universe; Darwin reduced him to the status of animal; and Jung dethroned his intellect and put instinct in its place"
"The importance attached to Time in the West is a distinctive trait: Swift’s Gulliver looks at his watch so often that his hosts the Brobdingnagians think he is consulting his god"
"As Goethe’s Faust says at the start of his adventure, ‘In the beginning was not the Word, but the Act.’ The Word—an abstraction—comes after"
"Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson rank with Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, and it is hard to think of a third partnership of equal renown. Indeed, in a fundamental sense they are the same pair, bent on a similar quest but in a different costume, 300 years apart"
"Finding oneself is a misnomer. A self is not found but made"
The Third Reich at War by Richard J. Evans
challenging
dark
informative
reflective
slow-paced
4.5
First of all, I am super relieved that this trilogy is done. Reading these books was really hard, and very taxing on my brain. While the third part was, relatively, the easiest to digest, it was still very much academic. However, that is not a criticism of the book, but more an admission of my shortcomings when it comes to reading nonfiction. I already DNF'd The Great Terror last year so I didn't want to make it a habit and I slogged through.
I would say the effort pays off. You learn so much more when you pay attention to how all the different threads in the late third reich stem from and end in Hitler's fanatical obsession with eliminating the Jews of Europe. At times, you wonder why they didn't just shake off this obvious disadvantage they were saddling themselves with (the logistics and energy needed to conduct the Holocaust). But without this fundamental stupidity, Hitler and the Nazis would have been just another bunch of rabble-rousers.
I read William Shirer's famous Rise and Fall of the Third Reich a few years ago and I even have it on my books-that-everyone-must-read list but even that massive tome feels like popular history compared to Evan's work. Richard Evan's does a brilliant job in making it clear, and then underlining, the fact that no German accidentally found themselves in the middle of the Third Reich. Each and every one of them actively contributed to its establishment, continuation, and maintenance.
As far as this book goes, Nazi Germany goes to war, and wipes out entire generations of European men. The tide of the Nazi storm seemed unstoppable until it crashed against the Soviet breakwater at Stalingrad. Rule number one in the art of war is to never march on Moscow. The Soviets were always winning what was now a war of attrition, and the Ostfront becomes horribly bloody and inhuman. The Holocaust is in full swing, and reading those chapters make you sick to your stomach.
There are narrations of Nazi era jokes sprinkled throughout the book and the rest of the contents of the book are so dark that these jokes provide much needed comic relief. So much so that they need not even be particularly funny. One peeve I have with the trilogy is how Evans doesn't use German words for organizations and posts and stuff. This made it annoying for me to search for them while I was reading.
Definitely the best, overtakes Shirer's work in my opinion for factual correctness, sensitivity, and intellectual comprehensiveness.
I would say the effort pays off. You learn so much more when you pay attention to how all the different threads in the late third reich stem from and end in Hitler's fanatical obsession with eliminating the Jews of Europe. At times, you wonder why they didn't just shake off this obvious disadvantage they were saddling themselves with (the logistics and energy needed to conduct the Holocaust). But without this fundamental stupidity, Hitler and the Nazis would have been just another bunch of rabble-rousers.
I read William Shirer's famous Rise and Fall of the Third Reich a few years ago and I even have it on my books-that-everyone-must-read list but even that massive tome feels like popular history compared to Evan's work. Richard Evan's does a brilliant job in making it clear, and then underlining, the fact that no German accidentally found themselves in the middle of the Third Reich. Each and every one of them actively contributed to its establishment, continuation, and maintenance.
As far as this book goes, Nazi Germany goes to war, and wipes out entire generations of European men. The tide of the Nazi storm seemed unstoppable until it crashed against the Soviet breakwater at Stalingrad. Rule number one in the art of war is to never march on Moscow. The Soviets were always winning what was now a war of attrition, and the Ostfront becomes horribly bloody and inhuman. The Holocaust is in full swing, and reading those chapters make you sick to your stomach.
There are narrations of Nazi era jokes sprinkled throughout the book and the rest of the contents of the book are so dark that these jokes provide much needed comic relief. So much so that they need not even be particularly funny. One peeve I have with the trilogy is how Evans doesn't use German words for organizations and posts and stuff. This made it annoying for me to search for them while I was reading.
Definitely the best, overtakes Shirer's work in my opinion for factual correctness, sensitivity, and intellectual comprehensiveness.
The Third Reich in Power, 1933-1939 by Richard J. Evans
challenging
informative
slow-paced
4.0
Great book, very very well written
Not very entertaining, but that's not the point of the book. At times it felt like something was wrong with me for subjecting myself to this 40 hour plus history lecture but it was worth it. I would love to have physical copies of the trilogy to use as reference material.
Not very entertaining, but that's not the point of the book. At times it felt like something was wrong with me for subjecting myself to this 40 hour plus history lecture but it was worth it. I would love to have physical copies of the trilogy to use as reference material.
Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
adventurous
lighthearted
mysterious
tense
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
2.75
"Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again..."
I thought the book started way too slow, and never came to the point. Rebecca was introduced very well, but everything else was a slog. Things get interesting after Danvers starts antagonizing the new bride, and my reading pace ramped up right until the final twist. Very well done.
The main character is super neurotic, and that did not endear me to her at all. Imagine this book if she didn't overthink everything. But then I guess it's only natural, so I wont judge.
I thought the book started way too slow, and never came to the point. Rebecca was introduced very well, but everything else was a slog. Things get interesting after Danvers starts antagonizing the new bride, and my reading pace ramped up right until the final twist. Very well done.
The main character is super neurotic, and that did not endear me to her at all. Imagine this book if she didn't overthink everything. But then I guess it's only natural, so I wont judge.
The Coming of the Third Reich by Richard J. Evans
informative
reflective
slow-paced
3.75
great book, I felt it was more of an academic text at times but it was very illuminating.
A Blueprint for Dismantling Society.
A Blueprint for Dismantling Society.