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shawnpuerto

macrumors member
Dec 2, 2014
70
2
Not reading anything right now... :( Finished a book, and can't decide what to read at the moment. So I'm just leafing though an old Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine!
 

MICHAELSD

macrumors 603
Jul 13, 2008
5,409
3,404
NJ
Rereading chapters from UCLA's screenwriting book, Cut to the Chase. Very sound principles. I am looking forward to working with a teacher who wrote a chapter in this.

Which major are you pursuing at UCLA? I was just discussing applying there earlier. Film/business would be the perfect dual majors for me but from my understanding they don't offer film in the dual major program.
 

fitshaced

macrumors 68000
Jul 2, 2011
1,741
3,632

I read Animal Farm for the first time yesterday. I'm sure I saw an animated version on the TV when I was a kid. The book is truely incredible and so applicable today when freedoms are being sacrificed for reasons we're not fully informed on. The characters are all true to real life demographics.

Spoiler.

The last paragraph, even though I knew what was coming, left me feeling just like the other animals (pigs aside). Suckered by those we trust.

I did find it funny when the pigs confessed to crimes and then were slaughtered. Then the other animals came forward, apparently forgetting what their fate was going to be, and confessed to other crimes (even though they were mostly only dreams) and then were slaughter. And then more animals did the same after that.

I'm trying to find the best version of 1984 on the kindle but there seems to be a lot of versions that are either cut down or unlicensed rewrites. Anyone know which one to go with?
 
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Scepticalscribe

macrumors Ivy Bridge
Jul 29, 2008
63,832
46,278
In a coffee shop.
I read Animal Farm for the first time yesterday. ………..

I did find it funny when the pigs confessed to crimes and then were slaughtered. Then the other animals came forward, apparently forgetting what their fate was going to be, and confessed to other crimes (even though they were mostly only dreams) and then were slaughter. And then more animals did the same after that.


This was an allegory, or metaphor for what are known as the Stalinist 'Show Trials', where the ruling class devoured sections of itself, and Orwell treats it brilliantly with devastating insight and a peerless understanding of their actions, motivations, causes and consequences.

The Soviet version of the what were called 'Show Trials', occurred between 1936-39, whereas the 'Show Trials' in the postwar newly communist countries of Central and Eastern Europe took place between 1949 and 1954 (and only slowly crawled to a halt after the death of the dictator in 1953).

In both situations, they involved people who had worked together and fought together, served together in Government, sometimes for a decade or more, people who knew each other very well, who had sometimes married one another's siblings, or served as godfather to one another's children, or as best men at each other's weddings, decide to kill one another in the name of paranoia and ideology.

The upshot of all of this, was that in each of these countries one wing of the party destroyed the other, fabricating charges to confer a legitimacy to the proceedings and persuading those charged, thorough coercion and other tactics, to confess.

Outside of the communist world, they were known as 'Show Trials' because, of course, they were not genuine trials. Those on trial were not guilty of what they had been charged with. Often the very charges went beyond the completely creative into the utterly, bizarrely, ludicrous, as when those charged (who were mostly former Cabinet Ministers, or Politburo members), in what was then Czechoslovakia, in 1949, were charged with the manifest absurdity of having been 'Trotskyist-Titoist-Zionist-Bourgeois-Nationalist traitors, spies and saboteurs' - a charge sheet that could hardly have been more contradictory - and proceeded to plead guilty and beg the state to kill them as was its right.

However, these utterly absurd charges - and their mostly guilty pleas - were an attempt to grant legitimacy, legal and ideological, to state sponsored mass murder. The trick, however, was to persuade these former leaders to plead guilty, and to beg to be executed, and this was done with torture, sensory deprivation, emotional blackmail, a desire to protect their relatives who remained free, and deeply compromised pleas on the part of interlocutors designed to appeal to their ideological fervour.

In essence, the Show Trials were an attempt at an annihilation of the elite, a possible settling of scores, a wiping out of anyone who could, perhaps, provide an alternative leadership within the apparatus of the Communist Party. Jews and the intelligentsia were disproportionately targeted, as were people who had lived abroad (and might have been exposed to alternative ideas).

In both the Soviet Union, and later, in Eastern Europe, they developed into a veritable bloodbath, a chain reaction of self-inflicted carnage, whereby anyone who had any sort of connection to any of the accused was deemed to be contaminated and therefore, guilty by association.

The Show Trials, in turn, (because the accused usually pleaded guilty) gave rise to nation wide bloodbaths in the form of State sponsored 'Purges' whereby anyone with links to the deceased accused became a suspect for fresh interrogation and imprisonment. Thus, many hundreds of thousands of people in the former Central & Eastern Europe, and millions - several million - in the Soviet Union, were, to use the coy euphemism of the time 'repressed'.
 
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Scepticalscribe

macrumors Ivy Bridge
Jul 29, 2008
63,832
46,278
In a coffee shop.
In addition to the usual books about politics, history, conflict, and so on that I usually read (not to mention my default setting for relaxation which includes a surprising amount of fantasy), I recently ordered a number of books on some other topics, including a few written by individuals who had grown up in, and subsequently left, the Amish.

The first of these books arrived yesterday. Called 'A Memoir: Why I Left The Amish' it is a very interesting and thought provoking read, and is written by Saloma Miller Furlong.
 

kazmac

macrumors G4
Mar 24, 2010
10,086
8,627
Any place but here or there....
Which major are you pursuing at UCLA? I was just discussing applying there earlier. Film/business would be the perfect dual majors for me but from my understanding they don't offer film in the dual major program.

Unfortunately, just continuing ed right now. When finances change it would definitely be one of the colleges I'd apply to. I've had some excellent teachers for creative writing (fiction and screenwriting.)

I wish you all the best of luck with school.

Back on topic, I am rereading Hunter of Sherwood Knight of Shadows by Toby Venables. The sequel, Red Hand, should be here any day now and I can't wait to get another glimpse his utterly psychotic Robin Hood.
 

JamesMike

macrumors 603
Nov 3, 2014
6,473
6,102
Oregon
Started 'The Last Coyote', a Harry Bosch novel. He reopened the murder case of his mother, and is trying to cope with his home being condemned.
 

MICHAELSD

macrumors 603
Jul 13, 2008
5,409
3,404
NJ
Unfortunately, just continuing ed right now. When finances change it would definitely be one of the colleges I'd apply to. I've had some excellent teachers for creative writing (fiction and screenwriting.)

I wish you all the best of luck with school.

Back on topic, I am rereading Hunkter of Sherwood Knight of Shadows by Toby Venables. The sequel, Red Hand, should be here any day now and I can't wait to get another glimpse his utterly psychotic Robin Hood.

Ah, it sounded like you had a teacher at UCLA. Surprisingly their tuition costs are relativeky low. I had initially planned to apply to USC but $40k in tuition costs per year are unjustifiable. But I'm digressing from the thread again :).

Best of luck to you as well!
 

Savor

Suspended
Jun 18, 2010
3,742
918
I read like 11 books within a month a couple months ago. Needed a break from reading. I really do like reading biographies and autobiographies. I enjoy reading about real life and experiences although there are too many names that get thrown around. My fav was actually the Mike Tyson book "Undisputed Truth". But many were excellent as I am very picky. Console Wars, Steve Jobs (Isaacson), Michael Jordan:The Life, Eleven Rings (Phil Jackson), Dream Team, Shaq Uncut, Heavier Than Heaven, Wiseguy, and reread The Game (Neil Strauss) and Catcher in the Rye. I do read some sci-fi and fantasy but I prefer watching those stories in the tv/film medium.

Right now, I am probably going to read Tina Fey's "Bossy Pants."
 

fitshaced

macrumors 68000
Jul 2, 2011
1,741
3,632
Started 'The Last Coyote', a Harry Bosch novel. He reopened the murder case of his mother, and is trying to cope with his home being condemned.

Really liked that one. The one before it though, The Concrete Blonde', was probably my favourite Bosch book.
 

kazmac

macrumors G4
Mar 24, 2010
10,086
8,627
Any place but here or there....
Ah, it sounded like you had a teacher at UCLA. Surprisingly their tuition costs are relativeky low. I had initially planned to apply to USC but $40k in tuition costs per year are unjustifiable. But I'm digressing from the thread again :).

Best of luck to you as well!

I did have a teacher at UCLA continuing education. This woman wrote a chapter in the book I mentioned and she's in the top two teachers I take classes with there.

An out of state resident like myself would be paying close to USC prices for UCLA so it's all relative.

Good luck.

And I am reading Toby Venables Red Hand. Interesting plot thus far.
 

EricNau

Moderator emeritus
Apr 27, 2005
10,725
267
San Francisco, CA
Just started reading The Road by Cormac McCarthy. Only a few pages in, and I'm curious to see where it leads. Not sure what to think yet.

Also just started listening to In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex by Nathaniel Philbrick. I'm enjoying it a lot so far.
 

shawnpuerto

macrumors member
Dec 2, 2014
70
2
I am planning on starting Mr. Sammler's Planet by Saul Bellow tonight. Hopefully I'll finish it in a few days!
 

Scepticalscribe

macrumors Ivy Bridge
Jul 29, 2008
63,832
46,278
In a coffee shop.
And yet another book on the Amish. This one is by Ira Wagler, and is called "Growing Up Amish".

The post yesterday brought quite a few books, I am delighted to report. While I don't much care for the way Amazon treat their workers, or, for that matter, squeeze out bricks-and-mortar stores which cannot carry such a wide range of stock, I must concede that it is an extraordinarily useful service, nonetheless.
 

a.guillermo

macrumors regular
Jan 12, 2015
109
3
Started Stephen King's Duma Key last night. I picked it up at a used book store for $1. I read the first 100 pages last night, and have to say that I really enjoy it!
 

kmj2318

macrumors 68000
Aug 22, 2007
1,669
712
Naples, FL
Antifragile. Rereading one of my favorite books by one of my favorite authors. It's about how systems benefit from disorder and are weakened by consistency.

No Country For Old Men. I love the movie and finally got around to reading it. I really like McCarthy's sparse writing.

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. It's good but maybe too stylized for me.

Seeking Wisdom. A good introduction to mental models. Why smart people fall for biases, and ways that people can overcome them. Based on the work of Robert Cialdini and Daniel Khaneman, and with input from Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger.

Stress Test. A humanized account of fighting the financial crisis by central banker Tim Geithner. Critics on the left see him as a puppet for Wall Street. Critics on the right believe he’s a socialist bent on destroying capitalism. But he's just someone trying to choose the least bad option in a time of crisis.

I read a lot, so I like reading multiple books at a time instead of plowing through a book every couple days.
 

JamesMike

macrumors 603
Nov 3, 2014
6,473
6,102
Oregon
Started a history book, 'Madison'Gift: Five Partnerships That Built America', been interested in James Madison contribution to America's beginning.
 

pachyderm

macrumors G3
Jan 12, 2008
9,911
4,821
Smyrna, TN
...
No Country For Old Men. I love the movie and finally got around to reading it. I really like McCarthy's sparse writing.
...

agreed. loved that the movie followed the book so closely as well.

finished wind up bird chronicles.

i really did enjoy it. i guess it was a supernatural thriller of sorts...?

reading sputnik sweetheart also by haruki murakami
 

SandboxGeneral

Moderator emeritus
Sep 8, 2010
26,482
10,051
Detroit
Yesterday I finished Wool Omnibus Edition (Wool 1 - 5) (Silo series). A 5-volume set by Hugh Howey. I'd been reading it nearly daily for a few weeks and by yesterday I was 60% through it. I started reading it yesterday morning around 9 am I think and pushed all day with small breaks until I finished it last night around 8 pm.

It's a great read and I enjoyed it a lot. I killed the battery on the iPad Mini too in reading all day on it. I had 25% left by the time I was done.

I'll start a new book today, but haven't decided on which one yet. I have several in my Kindle library waiting to be read. My choices right now are these in no particular order:


I'll post back once I make a choice, unless anyone cares to push me towards one particular title over the others.
 

pachyderm

macrumors G3
Jan 12, 2008
9,911
4,821
Smyrna, TN
Yesterday I finished Wool Omnibus Edition (Wool 1 - 5) (Silo series). A 5-volume set by Hugh Howey. I'd been reading it nearly daily for a few weeks and by yesterday I was 60% through it. I started reading it yesterday morning around 9 am I think and pushed all day with small breaks until I finished it last night around 8 pm.

It's a great read and I enjoyed it a lot. I killed the battery on the iPad Mini too in reading all day on it. I had 25% left by the time I was done.

I'll start a new book today, but haven't decided on which one yet. I have several in my Kindle library waiting to be read. My choices right now are these in no particular order:


I'll post back once I make a choice, unless anyone cares to push me towards one particular title over the others.

i really enjoyed the martian...
 
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