What books are you all reading this weekend? Any topic counts!
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1010 sats \ 2 replies \ @Athena_Alpha 4 Nov 2023
The Psychology of Money - Morgan Housel
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309 sats \ 1 reply \ @cryotosensei 5 Nov 2023
How are you finding it so far?
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413 sats \ 0 replies \ @Athena_Alpha 5 Nov 2023
One of the best traditional finance books hands down. It's not a technical read with data and charts etc etc (so don't expect that), but it's what 99.9% of average, normal plebs need to hear and execute on with their finances (along with Bitcoin of course)
Other notable ones in no particular order include...
- Early Retirement Extreme - Jacob Fisker
- The Millionaire Next Door - Thomas Stanley
- A Random Walk Down Wall Street - Burton G. Malkiel
- The Bitcoin Standard - Saifedean Ammous
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987 sats \ 2 replies \ @okpj 4 Nov 2023
The Fourth Turning
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503 sats \ 1 reply \ @elvismercury 4 Nov 2023
I'm thinking this topic will be the topic of the next "book club" I do after Broken Money. (The scare quotes are bc I have an idea to make it less dependent on the book.)
I'm skeptical of a lot of things in that book, but the big picture around cyclical history has some very interesting consequences that I think are relevant.
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152 sats \ 0 replies \ @okpj 4 Nov 2023
Never trust a fortune teller!
…But if someone tells you X will happen in 30 years, and it happens, it’s worth analyzing how and why they came to their conclusions. Could be obvious, could be luck, could be insight, could be occulted knowledge. Could also be bullshit.
Signed,
Hopeful member of the Hero Generation
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738 sats \ 0 replies \ @oraltosun 4 Nov 2023
Finland: The Country of White Lilies - Grigory Spiridonovich Petrov
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738 sats \ 1 reply \ @td 4 Nov 2023
The Master and Margarita by Bulgakov is the best book. Big words, I know.
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543 sats \ 0 replies \ @elvismercury 4 Nov 2023
I've read this, and didn't love it, and then read part of a second translation, thinking maybe that was the problem. Nope.
Some people are so passionate about this book. I wish I could feel it.
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962 sats \ 3 replies \ @jamesmagoo 4 Nov 2023
The Minimalist Entrepreneur - Sahil Lavingia
Short & great
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403 sats \ 1 reply \ @k00b 4 Nov 2023
I like Sahil a lot. He was a relatively authentic entrepreneur before there were many.
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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @jamesmagoo 11 Nov 2023
yeah he's great
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @evanbaer 4 Nov 2023
added to cart
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645 sats \ 0 replies \ @anon 5 Nov 2023
Fiat Food by Matt Lysiak. Reads like a crime story. Insightful and describes why we shouldn’t trust governments on anything. Also accurately depicts who decides on what you can purchase in the grocery stores.
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340 sats \ 2 replies \ @beorange 4 Nov 2023
Not just this weekend, because the book is massive, but at the moment I'm reading "Capital in the Twenty-First century" by Thomas Piketty.
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311 sats \ 1 reply \ @lightwalker 4 Nov 2023
Not sure about how long it may take you, but
"Fiat Food" by Matthews Lysiak
And
"The Fiat Standard" by Saifedean Ammous
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543 sats \ 0 replies \ @Signal312 5 Nov 2023
I read Fiat Food recently, it was really good. It also changed my perspective from being somewhat skeptical of current food "science" to full blown disbelief and eating far more meat and animal products. And trying hard to eat close to zero processed foods.
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604 sats \ 0 replies \ @Signal312 5 Nov 2023
I'm re-reading one which is an old favorite of mine - Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China. It's the true story of three generations of a Chinese family, the grandmother was a concubine of a warlord, the mother was a communist official, and the daughter experienced the Cultural Revolution as a teenager and young adult.
You learn about the fascinating and disturbing history of the 20th century in China, and how the communist revolution was experienced through the eyes of these three women. The stories are amazing. Particularly interesting was the story of the author's father, who tried hard to be a just man during and after the communist revolution, but was completely crushed by the cultural revolution.
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403 sats \ 0 replies \ @td 5 Nov 2023
We are creating a little microcosm of history for future generations to study right here. “Footnote: sn304392”.
What I mean is what are the books of the avant garde of this community? How do they compare worth next year?
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374 sats \ 0 replies \ @k00b 4 Nov 2023
@BlueSlime recently found The Invisible Hand in Virtual Worlds ... I haven't received it yet, but I'm looking forward to it.
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335 sats \ 0 replies \ @bataroot 4 Nov 2023
How To Think Clearly
— Paul Rosenberg
https://freemansperspective.com/pauls-books/
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309 sats \ 0 replies \ @Athena_Alpha 5 Nov 2023
We have a ton of Bitcoin Books listed if anyone is looking for a good read, many of which some have recommended below :)
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309 sats \ 0 replies \ @cryotosensei 5 Nov 2023
<Say Yes To No>
This book is written by Greg Cootsona, a pastor who’s a passionate musician. Incidentally, two identities that I hardly feel any affinity with. But perhaps because this book is written from a lens so refreshingly different from mine, I enjoyed reading it tremendously.
I love how this book dwells on getting close to your soul. “It takes time to feel time” consists of simple words but packs a truth so profound that I suspect it will take me years to unpack its entire meaning. Recently, I said nope to presenting at a conference during teachers’ protected time in June 2024. It wasn’t difficult for me to decline the opportunity.
However, given my tendency to embrace novel challenges, I knew very well that this was something that I would value highly in years to come. Nonetheless, when I read that “you can say yes to the luxury of time”, I knew that I had made the right decision. More downtime is good for me to examine the rhythms of my work life and analyse how I roll with the ebb and flow of time. I wrote in my rejection email that I wanted to have a schedule that is “as uncluttered as possible”; I guess listening to my instincts is the best thing to do.
I particularly enjoyed the section about how musicians must practise the fundamentals of their musicality diligently for years so that they hone their skills to a level in which infusing spontaneity is something they inject easily and delightfully. Again, I have a relatable anecdote. So, I stayed back today to crack my brains at the Escape Room activity that we were to organise for students next week. And I tried out Pictory.AI for the first time ever. Basically, I tried not to see it as a chore but instead, as a chance to experiment with all those fancy AI tools out there.
Teaching is a chaotic profession in which you are expected to achieve great things with fractional attention, so I don’t know whether I would always have the mental capacity and emotional bandwidth to invest in upgrading my skills. Sometimes, after finishing all the myriad non-teaching tasks, I just wanna scamper home and take a nap. But I’m reminded that I can only improvise when I have put in the time to master my craft.
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10 sats \ 2 replies \ @kr 4 Nov 2023
A new book shop opened down the street from me, picked up Clear Thinking by Shane Parrish this week
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374 sats \ 1 reply \ @k00b 4 Nov 2023
I'm surprised book shops are opening and not closing. Maybe we are flippening back.
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417 sats \ 0 replies \ @kr 4 Nov 2023
this one is actually part of a large corporate book chain, but i’ll take what i can get haha
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @02502a95e5 6 Nov 2023
The Order War by L. E. Modesitt Jr.
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