Josh's bookshelf: all en-US Sat, 19 Oct 2019 06:32:21 -0700 60 Josh's bookshelf: all 144 41 /images/layout/goodreads_logo_144.jpg Columbus: Great Adventure 6751888 0 Jill Tattersall 0517131455 Josh 0 0.0 1991 Columbus: Great Adventure
author: Jill Tattersall
name: Josh
average rating: 0.0
book published: 1991
rating: 0
read at: 2009/12/07
date added: 2019/10/19
shelves:
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The author is Paolo Emilio Taviani, not Jill Tattersall.
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The Girl in the Road 18297954 Stunningly original and wildly inventive, The Girl in the Road melds the influences of Margaret Atwood, Neil Gaiman, and Erin Morgenstern for a dazzling debut.

Meena, a young woman living in a futuristic Mumbai, wakes up with five snake bites on her chest. She doesn't know how or why, but she must flee India and return to Ethiopia, the place of her birth. Having long heard about The Trail -- an energy-harvesting bridge that spans the Arabian Sea -- she embarks on foot on this forbidden bridge, with its own subculture and rules. What awaits her in Ethiopia is unclear; she's hoping the journey will illuminate it for her.

Mariama, a girl from a different time, is on a quest of her own. After witnessing her mother's rape, she joins up with a caravan of strangers heading across Saharan Africa. She meets Yemaya, a beautiful and enigmatic woman who becomes her protector and confidante. Yemaya tells Mariama of Ethiopia, where revolution is brewing and life will be better. Mariama hopes against hope that it offers much more than Yemaya ever promised.

As one heads east and the other west, Meena and Mariama's fates will entwine in ways that are profoundly moving and shocking to the core. Vividly imagined and artfully told, written with stunning clarity and deep emotion, The Girl in the Road is a true tour de force.]]>
323 Monica Byrne 0804138842 Josh 0 to-read 3.46 2014 The Girl in the Road
author: Monica Byrne
name: Josh
average rating: 3.46
book published: 2014
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2014/01/22
shelves: to-read
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Leaves of Grass 417727 Leaves of Grass, which includes the 1892 "deathbed" edition preferred by Whitman, all the prefaces to the editions of Leaves of Grass, 45 poems and 28 passages from poems excluded from successive editions, 22 previously unpublished poems, and 43 poems and 60 manuscript fragments never before collected–the fragments comprise over half of those in existence.

A special section, Whitman on His Art, contains prose statements on his role as an artist, taken from his notebooks, letters, conversation, and newspaper articles. This is followed by an especially rich selection of criticism. It begins with Whitman's own anonymous review and presents a wide range of the diverse opinions that have been held since by critics and by poets. Harold Blodgett's concluding essay discusses the pattern of Whitman's critical fortunes.]]>
1008 Walt Whitman 0393093883 Josh 0 4.34 1855 Leaves of Grass
author: Walt Whitman
name: Josh
average rating: 4.34
book published: 1855
rating: 0
read at: 2013/04/07
date added: 2014/01/19
shelves:
review:

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<![CDATA[The Hand of God: A Journey from Death to Life by the Abortion Doctor Who Changed His Mind]]> 1061019
?A wrenchingly honest book about taking the hard way to the truth. Bernard Nathanson provides a chilling tour of the moral squalor of the ?culture of death,� and a compelling testimony to the possibility of beginning anew.� ?RICHARD JOHN NEUHAUS, Editor-in-Chief, First Things

?In The Hand of God , Dr. Nathanson gives outstanding personal witness to the ?Gospel of Life.� Amen to the Gospel; and Amen to this witness. I am personally privileged to have observed his journey and have been thrilled by every step along the way.� ? JOHN CARDINAL O’CONNOR

?When Bernard Nathanson exposes the abortion culture we listen, because Bernard Nathanson has been there. He was not only there, he led it. Now begins the long road back, led by The Hand of God .� ?JOSEPH M. SCHEIDLER, Director, Pro-Life Action League]]>
206 Bernard Nathanson 089526174X Josh 5 Freaky little tome by a hurt hombre... abortion activist, co-founder of NARAL, abortion provider, overseer of New York's Women's Services ('granddaddy of clinics')... and also anti-choice emotionalist, co-creator of the Reagan-era propaganda film The Silent Scream, a Catholic convert... and (this last might be incongruous) Joyce scholar, yes, ill memoirist saddled with dark thoughts: Bernie Nathanson, ruined enough as a man that he starts out the big tale of his conversion on the issue of abortion and his discovery of God and Pope with three chapters on his dad, his hurt ill awful godless dad -- triple the number of chapters dedicated in this irregular book to the propaganda film that's the only reason anyone remembers Nathanson. It's an odd and really frightening volume, if you let it speak to you on its own terms, if you accept that those weird strained terms might in their way be sincere... The words "I am afraid" appear finally on the last page. Really on the last page. And their sentiment undoubtedly is the origin of it all: this book; Nathanson's conversion; Nathanson's activism; The Silent Scream. He scared himself... ventured out to the realm where there is no ethics, but instead of just pontificating or writing philosophy about it or dreaming up a fiction about guys named Raskolnikov, Dr. N went, he says now, and lived according to the no-ethics principles, killed, he says now, according to those principles: he did work in that space, in that void, work that whatever you think of it certainly is irrevocable in one, maybe several important ways... He did his work out there alone in the cold of space. Absent an ethics. (Now I don't really take him at his word when he says he had no ethics concerning abortion at the time of his pro-choice laboring. I don't believe that.) He had no affirmative ethics but there wasn't any set of principles in the way of his working to legalize, then promote and execute, abortion, and so that's the work he sort of fell into, he says, and time's passed, and he's aged, and he's gotten broken down, and he's gotten hurt, and he's left thinking about the coldness of the space, left with his life, with actions that he can't undo, and it feels to him now from the vantage of the writing of the book grotesque beyond conception. Twice this cat compares himself to Adolph Eichmann. That's how twisted it all feels when he looks back. It could be an existential novel, this book. But the power here stems from his having really done all these things, having done them into what he wants us to say he regarded as the void; the power stems from the horror he feels retrospectively when he remembers that void. This book is a recoil at the thought of the void. It's a dodgy, sententious, tendentious, pretentious as shit cry of really pitiable agony. To those of us still friendly with void-oriented ethical frameworks there's something here at least worth witnessing. Eh.

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4.11 1996 The Hand of God: A Journey from Death to Life by the Abortion Doctor Who Changed His Mind
author: Bernard Nathanson
name: Josh
average rating: 4.11
book published: 1996
rating: 5
read at:
date added: 2013/05/21
shelves:
review:

Freaky little tome by a hurt hombre... abortion activist, co-founder of NARAL, abortion provider, overseer of New York's Women's Services ('granddaddy of clinics')... and also anti-choice emotionalist, co-creator of the Reagan-era propaganda film The Silent Scream, a Catholic convert... and (this last might be incongruous) Joyce scholar, yes, ill memoirist saddled with dark thoughts: Bernie Nathanson, ruined enough as a man that he starts out the big tale of his conversion on the issue of abortion and his discovery of God and Pope with three chapters on his dad, his hurt ill awful godless dad -- triple the number of chapters dedicated in this irregular book to the propaganda film that's the only reason anyone remembers Nathanson. It's an odd and really frightening volume, if you let it speak to you on its own terms, if you accept that those weird strained terms might in their way be sincere... The words "I am afraid" appear finally on the last page. Really on the last page. And their sentiment undoubtedly is the origin of it all: this book; Nathanson's conversion; Nathanson's activism; The Silent Scream. He scared himself... ventured out to the realm where there is no ethics, but instead of just pontificating or writing philosophy about it or dreaming up a fiction about guys named Raskolnikov, Dr. N went, he says now, and lived according to the no-ethics principles, killed, he says now, according to those principles: he did work in that space, in that void, work that whatever you think of it certainly is irrevocable in one, maybe several important ways... He did his work out there alone in the cold of space. Absent an ethics. (Now I don't really take him at his word when he says he had no ethics concerning abortion at the time of his pro-choice laboring. I don't believe that.) He had no affirmative ethics but there wasn't any set of principles in the way of his working to legalize, then promote and execute, abortion, and so that's the work he sort of fell into, he says, and time's passed, and he's aged, and he's gotten broken down, and he's gotten hurt, and he's left thinking about the coldness of the space, left with his life, with actions that he can't undo, and it feels to him now from the vantage of the writing of the book grotesque beyond conception. Twice this cat compares himself to Adolph Eichmann. That's how twisted it all feels when he looks back. It could be an existential novel, this book. But the power here stems from his having really done all these things, having done them into what he wants us to say he regarded as the void; the power stems from the horror he feels retrospectively when he remembers that void. This book is a recoil at the thought of the void. It's a dodgy, sententious, tendentious, pretentious as shit cry of really pitiable agony. To those of us still friendly with void-oriented ethical frameworks there's something here at least worth witnessing. Eh.


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<![CDATA[This Common Secret: My Journey as an Abortion Doctor]]> 1175376
In America the reproductive justice debate is reaching a new pitch, with the Supreme Court weighted against women's choice and state legislatures passing bills to essentially outlaw the practice of abortion. With This Common Secret , Dr. Susan Wicklund chronicles her twenty-year career in the vanguard of the abortion war. Growing up in working-class rural Wisconsin, Susan made the painful decision to have an abortion at a young age. It was not until she became a doctor that she realized how many women shared her ordeal of an unwanted pregnancy. . . and how hidden this common experience remains.

Now, in this raw and riveting true story, Susan and the patients she's treated share the complex, anguished, and empowering emotions that drove their own choices. Hers is a calling that means sleeping on planes and commuting between clinics in different states -- and that requires her to wear a bulletproof vest and to carry a .38 caliber revolver. This Common Secret reveals the truth about the reproductive health clinics that anti-abortion activists mischaracterize as damaging and unsafe. This intimate memoir explains how social stigma and restrictive legislation can isolate women who are facing difficult personal choices -- and how we as a nation can, and must, support them.]]>
268 Susan Wicklund 158648480X Josh 5 4.30 2007 This Common Secret: My Journey as an Abortion Doctor
author: Susan Wicklund
name: Josh
average rating: 4.30
book published: 2007
rating: 5
read at:
date added: 2013/04/21
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review:
The first half of this memoir's just mindblowingly compelling and can't help but move you if you're in any way interested in women's reproductive health. By taking us with her on the journey into providing abortions Dr. Wicklund shows us the compassion that motivates her career, and lets the dark turns and supreme difficulties of her everyday life as a doctor surprise us just as deeply as they shocked her.
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<![CDATA[The Renaissance: Studies in Art and Poetry]]> 609042
The Renaissance (1873) at once became the touchstone for the decadent imagination for a generation of Oxford undergraduates. Pater was shocked at the reaction his book inspired: 'I wish they would not call me a hedonist, it gives such a wrong impression to those who do not know Greek.'.

The book had begun as a series of idiosyncratic, impressionistic critical essays on those artists that embodied for him the spirit of the Renaissance; by collecting them and adding his infamous Conclusion, Pater gained a reputation as a daring modern philosopher. But The Renaissance survives as one of the most innovative pieces of cultural criticism to emerge from the nineteenth century.]]>
208 Walter Pater 019283553X Josh 0 3.98 1873 The Renaissance: Studies in Art and Poetry
author: Walter Pater
name: Josh
average rating: 3.98
book published: 1873
rating: 0
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date added: 2013/04/07
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<![CDATA[Seven Pillars of Wisdom: A Triumph]]> 57936 Seven Pillars of Wisdom is an unusual and rich work. It encompasses an account of the Arab Revolt against the Turks during the First World War alongside general Middle Eastern and military history, politics, adventure and drama. It is also a memoir of the soldier known as 'Lawrence of Arabia'.

Lawrence is a fascinating and controversial figure and his talent as a vivid and imaginative writer shines through on every page of this, his masterpiece. Seven Pillars of Wisdom provides a unique portrait of this extraordinary man and an insight into the birth of the Arab nation.]]>
784 T.E. Lawrence 0385418957 Josh 0 3.88 1926 Seven Pillars of Wisdom: A Triumph
author: T.E. Lawrence
name: Josh
average rating: 3.88
book published: 1926
rating: 0
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date added: 2013/04/07
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<![CDATA[The Letters of Abélard and Héloïse]]> 151390
This is the revised edition of Betty Radice's highly regarded translation, in which Michael Clanchy, the biographer of Abélard, updates the scholarship on the letters and the lovers. This volume includes Abélard's remarkable autobiography and his spiritual advice to Héloïse and her nuns, as well as a selection of the 'lost love letters' of Abélard and Héloïse, letters between Héloïse and Peter the Venerable, two of Abélard's hymns, a chronology, notes and maps.]]>
383 Pierre Abélard 0140448993 Josh 0 3.77 1133 The Letters of Abélard and Héloïse
author: Pierre Abélard
name: Josh
average rating: 3.77
book published: 1133
rating: 0
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The Roots of Romanticism 84713

For Berlin, the Romantics set in motion a vast, unparalleled revolution in humanity's view of itself. They destroyed the traditional notions of objective truth and validity in ethics with incalculable, all-pervasive results. As he said of the Romantics "The world has never been the same since, and our politics and morals have been deeply transformed by them. Certainly this has been the most radical, and indeed dramatic, not to say terrifying, change in men's outlook in modern times."


In these brilliant lectures Berlin surveys the myriad attempts to define Romanticism, distills its essence, traces its developments from its first stirrings to its apotheosis, and shows how its lasting legacy permeates our own outlook. Combining the freshness and immediacy of the spoken word with Berlin's inimitable eloquence and wit, the lectures range over a cast of the greatest thinkers and artists of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, including Kant, Rousseau, Diderot, Schiller, Schlegel, Novalis, Goethe, Blake, Byron, and Beethoven. Berlin argues that the ideas and attitudes held by these and other figures helped to shape twentieth-century nationalism, existentialism, democracy, totalitarianism, and our ideas about heroic individuals, individual self-fulfillment, and the exalted place of art. This is the record of an intellectual bravura performance--of one of the century's most influential philosophers dissecting and assessing a movement that changed the course of history.]]>
192 Isaiah Berlin 0691086621 Josh 5 In lucid and sonorous language Berlin here argues concisely for both the definability and the significance of romanticism as a "great revolution in consciousness." He finds the ultimate origins of the romantic reaction to the Enlightenment in the German pietist movement and moves from there to discuss its elaboration by other, mostly German theorists, and its contemporary (at least at the time of the 1965 lectures on which this book is based) manifestation in the form of existentialism. The "great revolution" (SPOILER) he claims is the renunciation of ultimate truth and ultimate universal order in favor of the singular, the personal, even the arbitrary, and the celebration of private commitment to private (even made-up or delusional) values. England and the minutiae of aesthetic theories are conspicuous in their absence.]]> 4.32 1965 The Roots of Romanticism
author: Isaiah Berlin
name: Josh
average rating: 4.32
book published: 1965
rating: 5
read at:
date added: 2013/04/06
shelves:
review:

In lucid and sonorous language Berlin here argues concisely for both the definability and the significance of romanticism as a "great revolution in consciousness." He finds the ultimate origins of the romantic reaction to the Enlightenment in the German pietist movement and moves from there to discuss its elaboration by other, mostly German theorists, and its contemporary (at least at the time of the 1965 lectures on which this book is based) manifestation in the form of existentialism. The "great revolution" (SPOILER) he claims is the renunciation of ultimate truth and ultimate universal order in favor of the singular, the personal, even the arbitrary, and the celebration of private commitment to private (even made-up or delusional) values. England and the minutiae of aesthetic theories are conspicuous in their absence.
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<![CDATA[How to Do Things with Fictions]]> 13687134
Witty and approachable, How to Do Things with Fictions challenges the widespread assumption that literary texts must be informative or morally improving in order to be of any real benefit. It reveals that authors are sometimes best thought of not as entertainers or as educators but as personal trainers of the brain, putting their willing readers through exercises designed to fortify specific mental capacities, from form-giving to equanimity, from reason to faith.

Delivering plenty of surprises along the way—that moral readings of literature can be positively dangerous; that the parables were deliberately designed to be misunderstood; that Plato knowingly sets his main character up for a fall; that metaphor is powerfully connected to religious faith; that we can sustain our beliefs even when we suspect them to be illusions�How to Do Things with Fictions convincingly shows that our best allies in the struggle for more rigorous thinking, deeper faith, richer experience, and greater peace of mind may well be the imaginative writings sitting on our shelves.]]>
266 Joshua Landy 019518856X Josh 5 4.00 2012 How to Do Things with Fictions
author: Joshua Landy
name: Josh
average rating: 4.00
book published: 2012
rating: 5
read at:
date added: 2013/03/31
shelves:
review:
A modest, astute, practical account of one way of using books. Landy articulates a portion of what a lot of us probably feel regarding the fiction we tend to go back to again and again: that it's doing work beyond entertainment and well beyond any simple kind of information-delivery, insight-delivery, pedagogy-delivery. He argues that literature, some literature, has a formative effect. That its best use is to train readers' minds not in rote facts or rote ethics but in the particular methods of thinking and methods of being that are at work in the particular text.
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History of My Life 180434
Casanova explored to the full all the possibilities eighteenth-century Venice offered by way of love and profit before being imprisoned, escaping from jail, and fleeing from the city to begin travels that took him across Europe. In Moscow and London, Berlin and Constantinople, he met the famous men and women of his time—Catherine the Great, Voltaire, Louis XV, Rousseau—and recorded his encounters for the memoirs he wrote in retirement at the end of his life.

History of My Life is by turns touching, thrilling, wonderfully comic, and quite irresistible. The present edition, which includes approximately one third of Casanova's enormous (and unfinished) book, contains all his major adventures and all his greatest affairs of the heart.]]>
1512 Giacomo Casanova 0307265579 Josh 0 4.07 History of My Life
author: Giacomo Casanova
name: Josh
average rating: 4.07
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The Adderall Diaries 6397953
In the spring of 2007, a brilliant computer programmer named Hans Reiser stands accused of murdering his estranged wife, Nina. Despite a mountain of circumstantial evidence against him, he proclaims his innocence. The case takes a twist when Nina’s former lover, and Hans’s former best friend, Sean Sturgeon, confesses to eight unrelated murders that no one has ever heard of.

At the time of Sturgeon’s confession, Stephen Elliot is paralyzed by writer’s block, in the thrall of Adderall dependency, and despondent over the state of his romantic life. But he is fascinated by Sturgeon, whose path he has often crossed in San Francisco’s underground S&M scene. What kind of person, he wonders, confesses to a murder he likely did not commit? One answer is, perhaps, a man like Elliott’s own father.

So begins a riveting journey through a neon landscape of false confessions, self-medication, and torturous sex. Set against the backdrop of a nation at war, in the declining years of the Silicon Valley tech boom and the dawn of Paris Hilton’s celebrity, The Adderall Diaries is at once a gripping account of a murder trial and a scorching investigation of the self. Tough, tender, and unflinchingly honest, it is the breakout book by one of the most daring writers of his generation.
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208 Stephen Elliott 1555975380 Josh 4 3.47 2009 The Adderall Diaries
author: Stephen Elliott
name: Josh
average rating: 3.47
book published: 2009
rating: 4
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date added: 2011/11/17
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<![CDATA[The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico, 1517-1521 (English and Spanish Edition)]]> 5637302 478 Bernal DĂ­az del Castillo 0374503842 Josh 5 4.25 1568 The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico, 1517-1521 (English and Spanish Edition)
author: Bernal DĂ­az del Castillo
name: Josh
average rating: 4.25
book published: 1568
rating: 5
read at: 2009/12/07
date added: 2010/10/25
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The Deer Park 131791 "The Deer Park" is the story of two interlacing love affairs. Sergius O'Shaugnessy is a young ex-Air Force pilot whose good looks and air of indifference launch him into the orbit of the radiant actress Lulu Meyers. Charles Eitel is a brilliant director wounded by accusations of communism--and whose liaison with the volatile Elena Esposito may supply the coup de grace to his career. As Mailer traces their couplings and uncouplings, their uneasy flirtation with success and self-extinction, he creates a legendary portrait of America's machinery of desire.]]> 398 Norman Mailer 0349109974 Josh 0 3.26 1955 The Deer Park
author: Norman Mailer
name: Josh
average rating: 3.26
book published: 1955
rating: 0
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date added: 2010/05/15
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Ancient Evenings 131797 709 Norman Mailer 0349109702 Josh 0 3.46 1983 Ancient Evenings
author: Norman Mailer
name: Josh
average rating: 3.46
book published: 1983
rating: 0
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date added: 2010/05/15
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An American Dream 131793 288 Norman Mailer 0375700706 Josh 0 3.45 1965 An American Dream
author: Norman Mailer
name: Josh
average rating: 3.45
book published: 1965
rating: 0
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date added: 2010/05/15
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The Executioner's Song 12468 Norman Mailer tells Gilmore's story--and those of the men and women caught up in his procession toward the firing squad--with implacable authority, steely compassion, and a restraint that evokes the parched landscapes and stern theology of Gilmore's Utah. The Executioner's Song is a trip down the wrong side of the tracks to the deepest sources of American loneliness and violence. It is a towering achievement--impossible to put down, impossible to forget.

Winner of the 1980 Pulitzer Prize

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1056 Norman Mailer 0375700811 Josh 0 4.06 1979 The Executioner's Song
author: Norman Mailer
name: Josh
average rating: 4.06
book published: 1979
rating: 0
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The White Album 421 The White Album records indelibly the upheavals and aftermaths of the 1960s. Examining key events, figures, and trends of the era—including Charles Manson, the Black Panthers, and the shopping mall—through the lens of her own spiritual confusion, Joan Didion helped to define mass culture as we now understand it. Written with a commanding sureness of tone and linguistic precision, The White Album is a central text of American reportage and a classic of American autobiography.]]> 224 Joan Didion 0374532079 Josh 0 4.06 1979 The White Album
author: Joan Didion
name: Josh
average rating: 4.06
book published: 1979
rating: 0
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date added: 2010/05/15
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The Year of Magical Thinking 7815
From one of America's iconic writers, a stunning book of electric honesty and passion. Joan Didion explores an intensely personal yet universal experience: a portrait of a marriage–and a life, in good times and bad–that will speak to anyone who has ever loved a husband or wife or child.

Several days before Christmas 2003, John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion saw their only daughter, Quintana, fall ill with what seemed at first flu, then pneumonia, then complete septic shock. She was put into an induced coma and placed on life support. Days later–the night before New Year's Eve–the Dunnes were just sitting down to dinner after visiting the hospital when John Gregory Dunne suffered a massive and fatal coronary. In a second, this close, symbiotic partnership of forty years was over. Four weeks later, their daughter pulled through. Two months after that, arriving at LAX, she collapsed and underwent six hours of brain surgery at UCLA Medical Center to relieve a massive hematoma.

This powerful book is Didion's attempt to make sense of the "weeks and then months that cut loose any fixed idea I ever had about death, about illness . . . about marriage and children and memory . . . about the shallowness of sanity, about life itself."]]>
227 Joan Didion 1400078431 Josh 0 3.94 2005 The Year of Magical Thinking
author: Joan Didion
name: Josh
average rating: 3.94
book published: 2005
rating: 0
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The Waves 46114 The Waves introduces six characters—three men and three women—who are grappling with the death of a beloved friend, Percival. Instead of describing their outward expressions of grief, Virginia Woolf draws her characters from the inside, revealing them through their thoughts and interior soliloquies. As their understanding of nature’s trials grows, the chorus of narrative voices blends together in miraculous harmony, remarking not only on the inevitable death of individuals but on the eternal connection of everyone. The novel that most epitomizes Virginia Woolf’s theories of fiction in the working form, The Waves is an amazing book very much ahead of its time. It is a poetic dreamscape, visual, experimental, and thrilling.]]> 297 Virginia Woolf 0156949601 Josh 0 4.17 1931 The Waves
author: Virginia Woolf
name: Josh
average rating: 4.17
book published: 1931
rating: 0
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A Room of One’s Own 18521 A Room of One's Own is an extended essay by Virginia Woolf. First published on the 24th of October, 1929, the essay was based on a series of lectures she delivered at Newnham College and Girton College, two women's colleges at Cambridge University in October 1928. While this extended essay in fact employs a fictional narrator and narrative to explore women both as writers and characters in fiction, the manuscript for the delivery of the series of lectures, titled Women and Fiction, and hence the essay, are considered nonfiction. The essay is seen as a feminist text, and is noted in its argument for both a literal and figural space for women writers within a literary tradition dominated by patriarchy.]]> 112 Virginia Woolf Josh 0 4.22 1929 A Room of One’s Own
author: Virginia Woolf
name: Josh
average rating: 4.22
book published: 1929
rating: 0
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To the Lighthouse 59716
As time winds its way through their lives, the Ramsays face, alone and simultaneously, the greatest of human challenges and its greatest triumph—the human capacity for change.]]>
209 Virginia Woolf Josh 0 3.81 1927 To the Lighthouse
author: Virginia Woolf
name: Josh
average rating: 3.81
book published: 1927
rating: 0
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Mrs. Dalloway 14942 194 Virginia Woolf 0151009988 Josh 0 3.80 1925 Mrs. Dalloway
author: Virginia Woolf
name: Josh
average rating: 3.80
book published: 1925
rating: 0
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<![CDATA[Notes from Underground, White Nights, The Dream of a Ridiculous Man, and Selections from The House of the Dead]]> 17876 Notes from Underground, White Nights, The Dream of a Ridiculous Man, and Selections from The House of the Dead (150th Anniversary Edition)

The compelling works presented in this volume were written at distinct periods in Dostoyevsky's life, at decisive moments in his groping for a political philosophy and a religious answer. From the primitive peasant who kills without understanding that he is destroying life to the anxious antihero of Notes from Underground—who both craves and despises affection—the writer's often-tormented characters showcase his evolving outlook on our fate.

Thomas Mann described Dostoyevsky as "an author whose Christian sympathy is ordinarily devoted to human misery, sin, vice, the depths of lust and crime, rather than to nobility of body and soul" and Notes from Underground as "an awe- and terror- inspiring example of this sympathy."]]>
233 Fyodor Dostoevsky 0451529553 Josh 0 4.19 1864 Notes from Underground, White Nights, The Dream of a Ridiculous Man, and Selections from The House of the Dead
author: Fyodor Dostoevsky
name: Josh
average rating: 4.19
book published: 1864
rating: 0
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date added: 2010/05/15
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The Gambler 12857 The Gambler, Dostoevsky reaches the heights of drama with this stunning psychological portrait.]]> 188 Fyodor Dostoevsky Josh 0 3.95 1866 The Gambler
author: Fyodor Dostoevsky
name: Josh
average rating: 3.95
book published: 1866
rating: 0
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The Idiot 12505 667 Fyodor Dostoevsky 0679642420 Josh 0 4.22 1869 The Idiot
author: Fyodor Dostoevsky
name: Josh
average rating: 4.22
book published: 1869
rating: 0
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Crime and Punishment 7144 671 Fyodor Dostoevsky Josh 0 4.26 1866 Crime and Punishment
author: Fyodor Dostoevsky
name: Josh
average rating: 4.26
book published: 1866
rating: 0
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The Brothers Karamazov 4934
This award-winning translation by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky remains true to the verbal inventiveness of Dostoevsky’s prose, preserving the multiple voices, the humor, and the surprising modernity of the original. It is an achievement worthy of Dostoevsky’s last and greatest novel.]]>
796 Fyodor Dostoevsky 0374528373 Josh 0 4.36 1880 The Brothers Karamazov
author: Fyodor Dostoevsky
name: Josh
average rating: 4.36
book published: 1880
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Walden and Other Writings 716873 Introduction by Ralph Waldo Emerson
Commentary by Van Wyck Brooks and E. B. White

Naturalist, philosopher, champion of self-reliance and moral independence, Henry David Thoreau remains not only one of our most influential writers but also one of our most contemporary. This unique and comprehensive edition gathers all of Thoreau's most significant works, including his masterpiece, Walden (reproduced in its entirety); A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers; selections from Cape Cod and The Maine Woods; as well as "Walking," "Civil Disobedience," "Slavery in Massachusetts," "A Plea for Captain John Brown," and "Life Without Principle." Taken together, they reveal the astounding range, subtlety, artistry, and depth of thought of this true American original.

Includes a Modern Library Reading Group Guide]]>
802 Henry David Thoreau 0679783342 Josh 0 3.96 1854 Walden and Other Writings
author: Henry David Thoreau
name: Josh
average rating: 3.96
book published: 1854
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Infinite Jest 6759
Set in an addicts' halfway house and a tennis academy, and featuring the most endearingly screwed-up family to come along in recent fiction, Infinite Jest explores essential questions about what entertainment is and why it has come to so dominate our lives; about how our desire for entertainment affects our need to connect with other people; and about what the pleasures we choose say about who we are.

Equal parts philosophical quest and screwball comedy, Infinite Jest bends every rule of fiction without sacrificing for a moment its own entertainment value. It is an exuberant, uniquely American exploration of the passions that make us human—and one of those rare books that renew the idea of what a novel can do.]]>
1088 David Foster Wallace Josh 0 4.26 1996 Infinite Jest
author: David Foster Wallace
name: Josh
average rating: 4.26
book published: 1996
rating: 0
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Inherent Vice 5933841 Part noir, part psychedelic romp, all Thomas Pynchon - private eye Doc Sportello comes, occasionally, out of a marijuana haze to watch the end of an era as free love slips away and paranoia creeps in with the L.A. fog

It's been awhile since Doc Sportello has seen his ex-girlfriend, Shasta Fay. Suddenly out of nowhere she shows up with a story about a plot to kidnap a billionaire land developer whom she just happens to be in love with. Easy for her to say. It's the tail end of the psychedelic sixties in L.A., and Doc knows that "love" is another of those words going around at the moment, like "trip" or "groovy," except that this one usually leads to trouble. Despite which he soon finds himself drawn into a bizarre tangle of motives and passions whose cast of characters includes surfers, hustlers, dopers and rockers, a murderous loan shark, a tenor sax player working undercover, an ex-con with a swastika tattoo and a fondness for Ethel Merman, and a mysterious entity known as the Golden Fang, which may only be a tax dodge set up by some dodgy dentists.

In this lively yarn, Thomas Pynchon, working in an unaccustomed genre, provides a classic illustration of the principle that if you can remember the sixties, you weren't there . . . or . . . if you were there, then you . . . or, wait, is it . . .hang on. . .what]]>
369 Thomas Pynchon 1594202249 Josh 0 3.79 2009 Inherent Vice
author: Thomas Pynchon
name: Josh
average rating: 3.79
book published: 2009
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Vineland 59721
An old nemesis, federal prosecutor Brock Vond, storms into Vineland at the head of a heavily armed strike force. Soon Zoyd and his daughter, Prairie, go into hiding while Vond begins a relationship with Zoyd's ex-wife and uses Prairie as a pawn against the mother she never knew she had.

Part daytime drama, part political thriller, Vineland is a strange evocation of a twentieth-century America headed for a less than harmonic future.]]>
480 Thomas Pynchon 3499136287 Josh 0 3.75 1990 Vineland
author: Thomas Pynchon
name: Josh
average rating: 3.75
book published: 1990
rating: 0
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V. 5809 640 Thomas Pynchon 2020418770 Josh 0 3.97 1963 V.
author: Thomas Pynchon
name: Josh
average rating: 3.97
book published: 1963
rating: 0
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The Crying of Lot 49 2794 The Crying of Lot 49 opens as Oedipa Maas discovers that she has been made executrix of a former lover's estate. The performance of her duties sets her on a strange trail of detection, in which bizarre characters crowd in to help or confuse her. But gradually, death, drugs, madness, and marriage combine to leave Oedipa in isolation on the threshold of revelation, awaiting the Crying of Lot 49.]]> 152 Thomas Pynchon 006091307X Josh 0 3.70 1966 The Crying of Lot 49
author: Thomas Pynchon
name: Josh
average rating: 3.70
book published: 1966
rating: 0
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<![CDATA[Naked Lunch: The Restored Text]]> 7437 Naked Lunch is one of the most important novels of the twentieth century, a book that redefined not just literature but American culture. An unnerving tale of a narcotics addict unmoored in New York, Tangier, and ultimately a nightmarish wasteland known as Interzone, its formal innovation, taboo subject matter, and tour de force execution have exerted a significant influence on authors like Thomas Pynchon, J. G. Ballard, and William Gibson; on the relationship of art and obscenity; and on the shape of music, film, and media generally. Naked Lunch: The Restored Text includes many editorial corrections to errors present in previous editions, and incorporates Burroughs’s notes on the text, several essays he wrote over the years about the book, and an appendix of 20 percent new material and alternate drafts from the original manuscript, which predates the first published version. For the Burroughs enthusiast and the neophyte, this volume is a valuable and fresh experience of this classic of our culture.]]> 289 William S. Burroughs 0802140181 Josh 0 3.48 1959 Naked Lunch: The Restored Text
author: William S. Burroughs
name: Josh
average rating: 3.48
book published: 1959
rating: 0
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Tropic of Cancer (Tropic, #1) 249 Tropic of Cancer, Henry Miller’s masterpiece, was banned as obscene in this country for twenty-seven years after its first publication in Paris in 1934. Only a historic court ruling that changed American censorship standards, ushering in a new era of freedom and frankness in modern literature, permitted the publication of this first volume of Miller’s famed mixture of memoir and fiction, which chronicles with unapologetic gusto the bawdy adventures of a young expatriate writer, his friends, and the characters they meet in Paris in the 1930s. Tropic of Cancer is now considered, as Norman Mailer said, "one of the ten or twenty great novels of our century."]]> 318 Henry Miller 0802131786 Josh 0 3.69 1934 Tropic of Cancer (Tropic, #1)
author: Henry Miller
name: Josh
average rating: 3.69
book published: 1934
rating: 0
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<![CDATA[Tropic of Capricorn (Tropic, #2)]]> 250 Tropic of Cancer chronicles his life in 1920s New York City. Famous for its frank portrayal of life in Brooklyn's ethnic neighborhoods, and Miller's outrageous sexual exploits, Tropic of Capricorn is now considered a cornerstone of modern literature.
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348 Henry Miller 0802151825 Josh 0 3.84 1939 Tropic of Capricorn (Tropic, #2)
author: Henry Miller
name: Josh
average rating: 3.84
book published: 1939
rating: 0
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The Fool's Progress 118541 The Fool's Progress, the "fat masterpiece" as Edward Abbey labeled it, is his most important piece of it reveals the complete Ed Abbey, from the green grass of his memory as a child in Appalachia to his approaching death in Tuscon at age sixty two. When his third wife abandons him in Tucson, boozing, misanthropic anarchist Henry Holyoak Lightcap shoots his refrigerator and sets off in a battered pick-up truck for his ancestral home in West Virginia. Accompanied only by his dying dog and his memories, the irascible warhorse (a stand-in for the "real" Abbey) begins a bizarre cross-country odyssey--determined to make peace with his past--and to wage one last war against the ravages of "progress.""A profane, wildly funny, brash, overbearing, exquisite tour de force." -- The Chicago Tribune]]> 528 Edward Abbey 0805057919 Josh 0 4.21 1988 The Fool's Progress
author: Edward Abbey
name: Josh
average rating: 4.21
book published: 1988
rating: 0
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Dusk and Other Stories 174626
The collection received the 1989 PEN/Faulkner Award.]]>
157 James Salter 0865473897 Josh 0 4.00 1988 Dusk and Other Stories
author: James Salter
name: Josh
average rating: 4.00
book published: 1988
rating: 0
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<![CDATA[Ask the Dust (The Saga of Arturo Bandini, #3)]]> 46227 "Fante was my god." —Charles Bukowski, in his introduction to Ask the Dust

Arturo Bandini, a young, struggling Italian-American writer living in a seedy hotel in 1930s Los Angeles, falls hard for the elusive, mocking, unstable Camilla Lopez, a Mexican waitress. The pair embark on a strange and strained love-hate relationship, which slowly, but inexorably, descends into the realm of madness.

Ask the Dust is one of the truly great, yet unsung, American novels of the twentieth century. A tough and unsentimental story with a soft and tender heart, it remains as fresh and affecting as the day it was written.]]>
165 John Fante 0060822554 Josh 0 4.17 1939 Ask the Dust (The Saga of Arturo Bandini, #3)
author: John Fante
name: Josh
average rating: 4.17
book published: 1939
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<![CDATA[Repeat Until Rich: A Professional Card Counter's Chronicle of the Blackjack Wars]]> 6623114
At twenty-four, Josh Axelrad held down a respectable and ominously dull job on Wall Street. Adventure was a tuna fish sandwich instead of the usual turkey for lunch. Then one night, a stranger at a cocktail party persuaded him to leave the nine-to-five behind and pursue an unlikely the jackpot. The stranger was a blackjack card counter, and he sold Axelrad on the vision of Vegas with all its intrigue, adventure- and cash.

Repeat Until Rich is Axelrad's taut, atmospheric, and darkly hilarious account of ditching the mundane and entering the alternative universe of professional blackjack. Axelrad has one thing in common with his Jon Roth, the leader and a former options trader; Neal Matcha, a recovering lawyer; Aldous Kaufman, a retired math Ph.D. candidate. They all thrived in the straight world, found success boring, and vowed to make life more exotic. Axelrad adopts Roth's philosophy-"repeat until rich"-and from his strategy and skill spring hasty retreats across casino floors, high-speed car chases, arrests on dubious grounds, and the massive cash paydays that make it all worthwhile.

Along the way, he unveils the tactics and debunks the myths of professional card counters. In team play, he's either the "big player," who bets the big money, or the "controller," who subtly coordinates the team's betting while wagering only the minimum himself. Counting is not illegal, and it's less intellectually daunting than its MIT-level mystique suggests. With clarity and wit, Repeat Until Rich proves the old gambler's maxim that "if you can tip a waiter, you can count cards." But it also proves how zealous, even forceful, casino bosses can be in "backing off" counters-seeing past their undercover methods and banning them from the tables. Josh soon grows to love all this trouble, and discovers, more than the money, what he needs most of all is the rush.

Filled with actual bad guys, chase scenes, and high stakes, Repeat Until Rich offers an intoxicating, unprecedented view of the dangerous allure of living off the cards and one's wits.]]>
272 Josh Axelrad 1594202478 Josh 5 3.50 2010 Repeat Until Rich: A Professional Card Counter's Chronicle of the Blackjack Wars
author: Josh Axelrad
name: Josh
average rating: 3.50
book published: 2010
rating: 5
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When prose suggests a real man lurking somewhere in back of the page, you go to your knees and clasp hands and mouth "thank you" and you cry.
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An American Tragedy 331319
Based on an actual criminal case, 'An American Tragedy' was the inspiration for the film 'A Place in the Sun', which won six Academy Awards and starred Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift.]]>
859 Theodore Dreiser 0451527704 Josh 0 3.96 1925 An American Tragedy
author: Theodore Dreiser
name: Josh
average rating: 3.96
book published: 1925
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The Cry of the Sloth 6510090 224 Sam Savage 1566892317 Josh 5 funny, touching, troubling 3.12 2009 The Cry of the Sloth
author: Sam Savage
name: Josh
average rating: 3.12
book published: 2009
rating: 5
read at: 2009/12/12
date added: 2010/03/20
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funny, touching, troubling
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Essential Tibetan Buddhism 1623389 Excerpts from rarely published tantric practice texts complement Geshe Chaykawa's Seven Point Mind Training and selections from Nagarjuna's Five Stages. Master teachers from all the major schools - Longchempa, Nagarjuna, Shantideva, Atisha, and Tsong Khapa - speak to the modern reader, providing advice on how to integrate Tibetan Buddhism into daily life.
Further enhanced by explanatory notes and a bibliography designed to serve as an introductory course, Essential Tibetan Buddhism is a unique guide to this rich spiritual tradition, invaluable to newcomers and seasoned students alike.]]>
336 Robert A.F. Thurman 0062510487 Josh 5 buddhism
Noteworthy: Tse Chokling Yongdzin Yeshe Gyaltsen's telling of the story of the Buddha's life and Enlightenment is ornate, gothically beatific, a little nuts, reminiscent thematically of Christian myth. Neat. ]]>
3.60 1995 Essential Tibetan Buddhism
author: Robert A.F. Thurman
name: Josh
average rating: 3.60
book published: 1995
rating: 5
read at:
date added: 2010/03/13
shelves: buddhism
review:
Thurman's 50-page condensed introductory history of Buddhism in Tibet is what I bought this for, in retrospect. That man can write a condensed introductory history of Buddhism in Tibet. The bulk of the remainder is texts (poems, narrative, commentary) from the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, which as a note to myself comes off rather religiously, when you look at it.

Noteworthy: Tse Chokling Yongdzin Yeshe Gyaltsen's telling of the story of the Buddha's life and Enlightenment is ornate, gothically beatific, a little nuts, reminiscent thematically of Christian myth. Neat.
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<![CDATA[Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind: Informal Talks on Zen Meditation and Practice]]> 402843
So begins this most beloved of all American Zen books. Seldom has such a small handful of words provided a teaching as rich as has this famous opening line. In a single stroke, the simple sentence cuts through the pervasive tendency students have of getting so close to Zen as to completely miss what it’s all about. An instant teaching on the first page. And that’s just the beginning.

In the forty years since its original publication, Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind has become one of the great modern Zen classics, much beloved, much reread, and much recommended as the best first book to read on Zen. Suzuki Roshi presents the basics—from the details of posture and breathing in zazen to the perception of nonduality—in a way that is not only remarkably clear, but that also resonates with the joy of insight from the first to the last page. It’s a book to come back to time and time again as an inspiration to practice, and it is now available to a new generation of seekers in this fortieth anniversary edition, with a new afterword by Shunryu Suzuki’s biographer, David Chadwick.
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138 Shunryu Suzuki 0834800799 Josh 0 currently-reading 4.21 1970 Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind: Informal Talks on Zen Meditation and Practice
author: Shunryu Suzuki
name: Josh
average rating: 4.21
book published: 1970
rating: 0
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Henderson the Rain King 52783 341 Saul Bellow 0140189424 Josh 0 3.77 1959 Henderson the Rain King
author: Saul Bellow
name: Josh
average rating: 3.77
book published: 1959
rating: 0
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<![CDATA[The Essential Writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson]]> 716872 Introduction by Mary Oliver
Commentary by Henry James, Robert Frost, Matthew Arnold, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and Henry David Thoreau
Ěý
The definitive collection of Emerson’s major speeches, essays, and poetry, The Essential Writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson chronicles the life’s work of a true “American Scholar.� As one of the architects of the transcendentalist movement, Emerson embraced a philosophy that championed the individual, emphasized independent thought, and prized “the splendid labyrinth of one’s own perceptions.� More than any writer of his time, he forged a style distinct from his European predecessors and embodied and defined what it meant to be an American. Matthew Arnold called Emerson’s essays “the most important work done in prose.�
Ěý
INCLUDES A MODERN LIBRARY READING GROUP GUIDE]]>
880 Ralph Waldo Emerson 0679783229 Josh 5 4.37 1983 The Essential Writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson
author: Ralph Waldo Emerson
name: Josh
average rating: 4.37
book published: 1983
rating: 5
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date added: 2010/01/20
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<![CDATA[Elbow Room: The Varieties of Free Will Worth Wanting]]> 2078
In "Elbow Room," Dennett shows how the classical formulations of the problem in philosophy depend on misuses of imagination, and he disentangles the philosophical problems of real interest from the "family of anxieties' they get enmeshed in - imaginary agents, bogeymen, and dire prospects that seem to threaten our freedom. Putting sociobiology in its rightful place, he concludes that we can have free will and science too. "Elbow Room" begins by showing how we can be "moved by reasons" without being exempt from physical causation. It goes on to analyze concepts of control and self-control-concepts often skimped by philosophers but which are central to the questions of free will and determinism. A chapter on "self-made selves" discusses the idea of self or agent to see how it can be kept from disappearing under the onslaught of science. Dennett then sees what can be made of the notion of acting under the idea of freedomdoes the elbow room we think we have really exist? What is an opportunity, and how can anything in our futures be "up to us"? He investigates the meaning of "can" and "could have done otherwise," and asks why we want free will in the first place.We are wise, Dennett notes, to want free will, but that in itself raises a host of questions about responsibility. In a final chapter, he takes up the problem of how anyone can ever be guilty, and what the rationale is for holding people responsible and even, on occasion, punishing them.

"Elbow Room "is an expanded version of the John Locke Lectures which Dennett gave at Oxford University in 1983.]]>
248 Daniel C. Dennett 0262540428 Josh 0 to-read 3.85 1984 Elbow Room: The Varieties of Free Will Worth Wanting
author: Daniel C. Dennett
name: Josh
average rating: 3.85
book published: 1984
rating: 0
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Only Revolutions 40152 Only Revolutions is unlike anything ever published before, a remarkable feat of heart and intellect, moving us with the journey of two kids, perpetually of summer, perpetually sixteen, who give up everything except each other.]]> 360 Mark Z. Danielewski 0375421769 Josh 0 3.24 2006 Only Revolutions
author: Mark Z. Danielewski
name: Josh
average rating: 3.24
book published: 2006
rating: 0
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<![CDATA[Christopher Columbus: The grand design]]> 4125124 573 Paolo Emilio Taviani 085613922X Josh 0 to-read 4.50 Christopher Columbus: The grand design
author: Paolo Emilio Taviani
name: Josh
average rating: 4.50
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<![CDATA[Admiral of the Ocean Sea: A Life of Christopher Columbus]]> 1413941 680 Samuel Eliot Morison 0316584789 Josh 0 4.15 1942 Admiral of the Ocean Sea: A Life of Christopher Columbus
author: Samuel Eliot Morison
name: Josh
average rating: 4.15
book published: 1942
rating: 0
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<![CDATA[City of Sacrifice: The Aztec Empire and the Role of Violence in Civilization]]> 65142
In City of Sacrifice, Carrasco chronicles the fascinating story of Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital, investigating Aztec religious practices and demonstrating that religious violence was integral to urbanization; the city itself was a temple to the gods. That Mexico City, the largest city on earth, was built on the ruins of Tenochtitlan, is a point Carrasco poignantly considers in his comparison of urban life from antiquity to modernity.

Majestic in scope, City of Sacrifice illuminates not only the rich history of a major Meso american city but also the inseparability of two passionate human urbanization and religious engagement. It has much to tell us about many familiar events in our own time, from suicide bombings in Tel Aviv to rape and murder in the Balkans.]]>
288 DavĂ­d Carrasco 0807046434 Josh 0 3.68 1999 City of Sacrifice: The Aztec Empire and the Role of Violence in Civilization
author: DavĂ­d Carrasco
name: Josh
average rating: 3.68
book published: 1999
rating: 0
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The Road 6288
A father and his son walk alone through burned America. Nothing moves in the ravaged landscape save the ash on the wind. It is cold enough to crack stones, and when the snow falls it is gray. The sky is dark. Their destination is the coast, although they don’t know what, if anything, awaits them there. They have nothing; just a pistol to defend themselves against the lawless bands that stalk the road, the clothes they are wearing, a cart of scavenged food—and each other.

The Road is the profoundly moving story of a journey. It boldly imagines a future in which no hope remains, but in which the father and his son, “each the other’s world entire,� are sustained by love. Awesome in the totality of its vision, it is an unflinching meditation on the worst and the best that we are capable of: ultimate destructiveness, desperate tenacity, and the tenderness that keeps two people alive in the face of total devastation.]]>
241 Cormac McCarthy 0307265439 Josh 0 to-read 3.99 2006 The Road
author: Cormac McCarthy
name: Josh
average rating: 3.99
book published: 2006
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John Adams 2203
In this powerful, epic biography, David McCullough unfolds the adventurous life-journey of John Adams, the brilliant, fiercely independent, often irascible, always honest Yankee patriot -- "the colossus of independence," as Thomas Jefferson called him -- who spared nothing in his zeal for the American Revolution; who rose to become the second President of the United States and saved the country from blundering into an unnecessary war; who was learned beyond all but a few and regarded by some as "out of his senses"; and whose marriage to the wise and valiant Abigail Adams is one of the moving love stories in American history.

Like his masterly, Pulitzer Prize-winning biography Truman, David McCullough's John Adams has the sweep and vitality of a great novel. It is both a riveting portrait of an abundantly human man and a vivid evocation of his time, much of it drawn from an outstanding collection of Adams family letters and diaries. In particular, the more than one thousand surviving letters between John and Abigail Adams, nearly half of which have never been published, provide extraordinary access to their private lives and make it possible to know John Adams as no other major American of his founding era.

As he has with stunning effect in his previous books, McCullough tells the story from within -- from the point of view of the amazing eighteenth century and of those who, caught up in events, had no sure way of knowing how things would turn out. George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, John Jay, the British spy Edward Bancroft, Madame Lafayette and Jefferson's Paris "interest" Maria Cosway, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, the scandalmonger James Callender, Sally Hemings, John Marshall, Talleyrand, and Aaron Burr all figure in this panoramic chronicle, as does, importantly, John Quincy Adams, the adored son whom Adams would live to see become President.

Crucial to the story, as it was to history, is the relationship between Adams and Jefferson, born opposites -- one a Massachusetts farmer's son, the other a Virginia aristocrat and slaveholder, one short and stout, the other tall and spare. Adams embraced conflict; Jefferson avoided it. Adams had great humor; Jefferson, very little. But they were alike in their devotion to their country.

At first they were ardent co-revolutionaries, then fellow diplomats and close friends. With the advent of the two political parties, they became archrivals, even enemies, in the intense struggle for the presidency in 1800, perhaps the most vicious election in history. Then, amazingly, they became friends again, and ultimately, incredibly, they died on the same day -- their day of days -- July 4, in the year 1826.

Much about John Adams's life will come as a surprise to many readers. His courageous voyage on the frigate Boston in the winter of 1778 and his later trek over the Pyrenees are exploits that few would have dared and that few readers will ever forget.

It is a life encompassing a huge arc -- Adams lived longer than any president. The story ranges from the Boston Massacre to Philadelphia in 1776 to the Versailles of Louis XVI, from Spain to Amsterdam, from the Court of St. James's, where Adams was the first American to stand before King George III as a representative of the new nation, to the raw, half-finished Capital by the Potomac, where Adams was the first President to occupy the White House.

This is history on a grand scale -- a book about politics and war and social issues, but also about human nature, love, religious faith, virtue, ambition, friendship and betrayal, and the far-reaching consequences of noble ideas. Above all, John Adams is an enthralling, often surprising story of one of the most important and fascinating Americans who ever lived.]]>
751 David McCullough 0743223136 Josh 0 4.07 2001 John Adams
author: David McCullough
name: Josh
average rating: 4.07
book published: 2001
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The Communist Manifesto 30474 The Communist Manifesto, Marx and Engels' revolutionary 1848 summons to the working classes, is one of the most influential political theories ever formulated. After four years of collaboration, the authors produced this incisive account of their idea of Communism, in which they envisage a society without classes, private property, or a state. They argue that increasing exploitation of industrial workers will eventually lead to a revolution in which capitalism is overthrown. Their vision transformed the world irrevocably, and remains relevant as a depiction of global capitalism today.]]> 288 Karl Marx 0140447571 Josh 0 3.67 1848 The Communist Manifesto
author: Karl Marx
name: Josh
average rating: 3.67
book published: 1848
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The Scarlet Letter 12296 279 Nathaniel Hawthorne 0142437263 Josh 0 3.43 1850 The Scarlet Letter
author: Nathaniel Hawthorne
name: Josh
average rating: 3.43
book published: 1850
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Ulysses 338798
According to Declan Kiberd, "Before Joyce, no writer of fiction had so foregrounded the process of thinking". Ulysses chronicles the peripatetic appointments and encounters of Leopold Bloom in Dublin in the course of an ordinary day, 16 June 1904. Ulysses is the Latinised name of Odysseus, the hero of Homer's epic poem the Odyssey, and the novel establishes a series of parallels between the poem and the novel, with structural correspondences between the characters and experiences of Bloom and Odysseus, Molly Bloom and Penelope, and Stephen Dedalus and Telemachus, in addition to events and themes of the early 20th-century context of modernism, Dublin, and Ireland's relationship to Britain.

The novel is highly allusive and also imitates the styles of different periods of English literature. Since its publication, the book has attracted controversy and scrutiny, ranging from an obscenity trial in the United States in 1921 to protracted textual "Joyce Wars." The novel's stream-of-consciousness technique, careful structuring, and experimental prose—replete with puns, parodies, and allusions—as well as its rich characterisation and broad humour have led it to be regarded as one of the greatest literary works in history; Joyce fans worldwide now celebrate 16 June as Bloomsday.']]>
783 James Joyce Josh 0 3.72 1922 Ulysses
author: James Joyce
name: Josh
average rating: 3.72
book published: 1922
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Moby-Dick or, The Whale 153747 "It is the horrible texture of a fabric that should be woven of ships' cables and hawsers. A Polar wind blows through it, and birds of prey hover over it."

So Melville wrote of his masterpiece, one of the greatest works of imagination in literary history. In part, Moby-Dick is the story of an eerily compelling madman pursuing an unholy war against a creature as vast and dangerous and unknowable as the sea itself. But more than just a novel of adventure, more than an encyclopaedia of whaling lore and legend, the book can be seen as part of its author's lifelong meditation on America. Written with wonderfully redemptive humour, Moby-Dick is also a profound inquiry into character, faith, and the nature of perception.

This edition of Moby-Dick, which reproduces the definitive text of the novel, includes invaluable explanatory notes, along with maps, illustrations, and a glossary of nautical terms.]]>
720 Herman Melville 0142437247 Josh 5 3.53 1851 Moby-Dick or, The Whale
author: Herman Melville
name: Josh
average rating: 3.53
book published: 1851
rating: 5
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<![CDATA[Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work]]> 6261332
Called "the sleeper hit of the publishing season" (The Boston Globe), Shop Class as Soulcraft became an instant bestseller, attracting readers with its radical (and timely) reappraisal of the merits of skilled manual labor. On both economic and psychological grounds, author Matthew B. Crawford questions the educational imperative of turning everyone into a "knowledge worker," based on a misguided separation of thinking from doing. Using his own experience as an electrician and mechanic, Crawford presents a wonderfully articulated call for self-reliance and a moving reflection on how we can live concretely in an ever more abstract world.]]>
241 Matthew B. Crawford 1594202230 Josh 0 to-read 3.74 2009 Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work
author: Matthew B. Crawford
name: Josh
average rating: 3.74
book published: 2009
rating: 0
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Cryptonomicon 816 Cryptonomicon zooms all over the world, careening conspiratorially back and forth between two time periods—World War II and the present. Our 1940s heroes are the brilliant mathematician Lawrence Waterhouse, crypt analyst extraordinaire, and gung-ho, morphine-addicted marine Bobby Shaftoe. They're part of Detachment 2702, an Allied group trying to break Axis communication codes while simultaneously preventing the enemy from figuring out that their codes have been broken. Their job boils down to layer upon layer of deception. Dr. Alan Turing is also a member of 2702, and he explains the unit's strange workings to Waterhouse. "When we want to sink a convoy, we send out an observation plane first... Of course, to observe is not its real duty—we already know exactly where the convoy is. Its real duty is to be observed... Then, when we come round and sink them, the Germans will not find it suspicious."

All of this secrecy resonates in the present-day story line, in which the grandchildren of the WWII heroes—inimitable programming geek Randy Waterhouse and the lovely and powerful Amy Shaftoe—team up to help create an offshore data haven in Southeast Asia and maybe uncover some gold once destined for Nazi coffers. To top off the paranoiac tone of the book, the mysterious Enoch Root, key member of Detachment 2702 and the Societas Eruditorum, pops up with an unbreakable encryption scheme left over from WWII to befuddle the 1990s protagonists with conspiratorial ties.]]>
1152 Neal Stephenson Josh 0 4.24 1999 Cryptonomicon
author: Neal Stephenson
name: Josh
average rating: 4.24
book published: 1999
rating: 0
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Blue Highways 63832 Hailed as a masterpiece of American travel writing, Blue Highways is an unforgettable journey along our nation's backroads.
William Least Heat-Moon set out with little more than the need to put home behind him and a sense of curiosity about "those little towns that get on the map-if they get on at all-only because some cartographer has a blank space to fill: Remote, Oregon; Simplicity, Virginia; New Freedom, Pennsylvania; New Hope, Tennessee; Why, Arizona; Whynot, Mississippi."
His adventures, his discoveries, and his recollections of the extraordinary people he encountered along the way amount to a revelation of the true American experience.]]>
428 William Least Heat-Moon Josh 0 to-read 4.03 1982 Blue Highways
author: William Least Heat-Moon
name: Josh
average rating: 4.03
book published: 1982
rating: 0
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Emile, or On Education 326679 501 Jean-Jacques Rousseau 0465019315 Josh 0 to-read 3.63 1762 Emile, or On Education
author: Jean-Jacques Rousseau
name: Josh
average rating: 3.63
book published: 1762
rating: 0
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Big Book of Blackjack 1182373
The world's greatest blackjack player, the legendary Arnold Snyder, shows beginning and advanced players everything they need to know to beat the game of casino blackjack. From the rules of the game to advanced professional strategies, Snyder's guidance and advice runs the gamut of strategies needed to successfully beat the casino-with the odds! Snyder should he's been a professional player and the guru for serious players for more than 25 years. This book includes winning techniques never before published in a nationally distributed book. 27 easy-to-read chapters and tons of tips make the book both profitable and fun.]]>
336 Arnold Snyder 1580421555 Josh 5 3.97 2006 Big Book of Blackjack
author: Arnold Snyder
name: Josh
average rating: 3.97
book published: 2006
rating: 5
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Blackjack Wisdom 1182379 185 Arnold Snyder 0910575061 Josh 5 4.44 1998 Blackjack Wisdom
author: Arnold Snyder
name: Josh
average rating: 4.44
book published: 1998
rating: 5
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<![CDATA[Blackbelt in Blackjack : Playing 21 as a Martial Art]]> 1182372 328 Arnold Snyder 1580421431 Josh 5 4.11 1983 Blackbelt in Blackjack : Playing 21 as a Martial Art
author: Arnold Snyder
name: Josh
average rating: 4.11
book published: 1983
rating: 5
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Professional Blackjack 236920 352 Stanford Wong 0935926216 Josh 5 4.12 1980 Professional Blackjack
author: Stanford Wong
name: Josh
average rating: 4.12
book published: 1980
rating: 5
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<![CDATA[People Are Unappealing: Even Me]]> 1966395
People Are Unappealing tells the strange, funny, and sometimes filthy stories of Sara Barron’s twisted suburban upbringing and deranged attempt at taking the Big Apple by storm–first as an actor (then a waiter), then a dancer (then a waiter), then a comic (then a waiter). It’s there that she meets the ex-boyfriend turned street clown. The silk pajama-clad poet. The OCD Xanax addict who refuses to have sex wearing any fewer than three condoms.

Barron has a knack for attracting the unattractive. People Are Unappealing is her wickedly funny look at the dark side of humanity.]]>
224 Sara Barron 0307382451 Josh 5 3.65 2008 People Are Unappealing: Even Me
author: Sara Barron
name: Josh
average rating: 3.65
book published: 2008
rating: 5
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