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What books are you all reading this weekend? Any topic counts!
i just started in dubious battle by steinbeck. never read it before, but i loved grapes of wrath and east of eden, and it came highly recommend
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Started & finished The Mandibles yesterday. Still browsing for that next read.
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Would you recommend it?
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I would. It did feel a little too on the nose at times with its politics but overall character development, story pacing & content created a book I couldnt put down. Highly recommend to any book reader
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"The Sovereign Individual" by James Dale Davidson and William Rees-Mogg
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For those wanting a teaser or spoiler.... Here's a SN summary that I often link to.
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Management in the New World: Pocket Guide To Managing Remote Teams https://amzn.to/3uaIReR
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Gong with Malcolm Gladwell - What the Dog Saw
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I'm not reading a book, I'm making my way through this as I research and write my next book:
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I'm currently going through Ready Player One again, one of my favs
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World Without Cancer: The Story of Vitamin B17 by G. Edward Griffin
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not reading it this weekend, but thought i’d share one of my favorite books ever
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Didn't see that coming. Why is this one of your favorites?
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152 sats \ 1 reply \ @kr 12 Nov 2023
so many interesting ideas in there, and lots of them can’t be explained by numbers or logic or “rational” thinking
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I own the book after listening to the author on a podcast a few years ago and finding him deeply insightful, but then when the book arrived I had other things to think about. Will escalate in the queue based on your rec, thank you.
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The Secret History by Donna Tartt.
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Picked this up based on the recommendation and had a hard time putting it down.
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So fucking good. One of the best books I've ever read.
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<Secrets of the Millionaire Mind>
Written in plain English and peppered with stories, this book by T. Harv Eker had me hooked till the end, despite the continuous partial attention syndrome I suffer due to the end-of-year hustle.
Warning ⚠️: this book requires you to believe in the workings of the Universe. Otherwise, your mind will subconsciously reject some parts as psychobabble. For example, he advocates reciting declarations because they carry energy and help you communicate with the Universe, changing your body at the cellular level at the same time. You have to be comfortable with concepts like the Law of Attraction in order to be open-minded to his wisdom.
Which I am, I suppose. The part about developing oneself to be a money magnet and becoming a huge container resonated strongly with me because he suggested that the Universe abhors a vacuum and will rush in to fill up your money tank. I love both the metaphysical explanation and the imagery it conjured in my mind.
I think the main issue is that at the core of it all, I don’t particularly care about money. Perhaps I can attribute this to my late mum, who used to say “不要做金钱的奴隶。(Don’t be enslaved to money.” So, all this while, I have been focused on doing FUN and NOVEL things, even when they need me to take a pay cut. I’m glad that this book stimulated me to reflect on my money blueprint. I think for the sake of my children, I need to modify her 名言 (famous words) to something like “let money be your trusty multiplier”. I want them to have a balanced relationship with money rather than framing it in terms of a skewed master-servant power imbalance.
T. Harv Eker wrote about 17 wealth files that depict the differences in the ways of thinking between rich and poor people. Now I have read tons of financial literacy books, but I still took away 2 new ideas from Secrets. The first is to save for a joyous day (as opposed to a rainy day). I think this alleviates the fear and insecurity most of us have in regard to money because we now tackle saving from a position of strength and optimism. The second idea is to channel 10% of your monthly income to a “play” account so that your soul gets nourished.
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Devil's Chessboard about the genesis of the CIA, Allen Dulles and his brother and what they did in Guatemala, Indonesia. Also how USA trafficked the valuable Nazi's after WWII; hung the others (poorly) - Some fascinating and at times gruesome tales.
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