What books are you all reading this weekend? Any topic counts!
446 sats \ 1 reply \ @mango 30 Dec 2023
Just picked up - Siddhartha- Hermann Hesse
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @siggy47 30 Dec 2023
Great book that sent me on a Buddhism journey. As an added bonus Hesse is a great writer. Enjoy!
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303 sats \ 0 replies \ @Coyote_Cosmico 30 Dec 2023 freebie
https://m.stacker.news/10013
Recommended in this thread by @gd
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284 sats \ 0 replies \ @Lux 30 Dec 2023
https://i.postimg.cc/JhbScKqs/Screenshot-2023-12-30-at-16-13-16-The-Secret-Barrister-Oceanof-PDF-com-The-Secret-Barrister-The.png
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284 sats \ 0 replies \ @hasherstacker 30 Dec 2023 freebie
I think it would be nice to finish 2023 and start 2024 with:
- "Fiat Ruins Everything" by Jimmy Song,
2 "The Bitcoin Standard" by Saifedeen Ammous and
3 "The Broken Money" by Lyn Aden.
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133 sats \ 0 replies \ @cryotosensei 30 Dec 2023
<A Beginner’s Guide to Japan>
Come next year, I aim to be more intentional in my reading, to adopt a “hunting” (as opposed to “searching”) mindset to water my mind more strategically. What better way to start this quest than reading Pico Iyer, one of the most famous travel writers on Japan?
Immediately, I was humbled by his writing. I picked up this book because it contained short observations and provocations. You know, concise ruminations that would be easy to speed through during those pockets of time so precious to a working parent. I didn’t fancy the title “A Beginner’s Guide to Japan” - because surely I’m more than a beginner! I’m married to a Japanese lady and am raising bicultural kids! Surely, this book is beneath me!
Right off the bat, Pico Iyer explains in his introduction that he considers himself a beginner to Japan. That’s why he titled his book as such, despite the fact that he has lived in a Japanese suburb with his Kyoto-born wife and kids for a staggering more than 32 years.
Who am I not to call myself a beginner?!
I think I have been indoctrinated too much by the working world. All this relentless talk about developing your forte/domain expertise so that you can craft a niche and rise above others to be a leader/coach/mentor and dazzle others as a More Knowledgeable Other. Such thinking conditions me to be in the perpetual state of “selling” myself.
I have forgotten how I was raised during those civics and moral education (好公民) lessons in elementary school. 做人要谦虚。 (One must strive to be humble.) Pico Iyer seems to have honed this trait into an art form.
3 chapters in. I’m still only at the beginning of this journey, but there’s already so much to appreciate in Iyer’s book. Stay tuned for more Kai Le Sensei’s insights.
https://m.stacker.news/10018
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489 sats \ 0 replies \ @beef_yogurt 30 Dec 2023
Fiat Ruins Everything by Jimmy Song
https://m.stacker.news/10049
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76 sats \ 0 replies \ @odium 30 Dec 2023
How Nations escape poverty - The Rise of the Dragon and White Eagle
(Dragon = Viet nam
White eagle = Poland)
https://m.stacker.news/10021
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48 sats \ 0 replies \ @dgy 30 Dec 2023
Gradually, Then Suddenly by Parker Lewis. The book arrived last week and is really a high quality book with high resolution figures (no cheap illegible screenshots).
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30 sats \ 0 replies \ @stacksatstoday 30 Dec 2023
Currently reading this...
Cancer Step Outside the Box by Ty M Bollinger
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @MerryOscar 31 Dec 2023
#372338
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @BTC_Bellzer 31 Dec 2023
I'll knock out Saifedean's The Fiat Standard & Dave Grohl's The Storyteller this weekend
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @030e0dca83 30 Dec 2023
Finally I finished with Mastering Bitcoin. Now I'm gonna get my brain rest and start to read a couple of poems and novels. Today I'll start to read Eugene Onegin A.Pushkin
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @kr 30 Dec 2023
it’s not a book, but in many ways it’s even more valuable and concise.
i’m reading the 2023 Stone Ridge investor letter: #371348
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @edgarpaula 30 Dec 2023 freebie
https://m.stacker.news/10015
Bitcoin, a decentralized digital currency, is booming. The rulers of the main global powers, founded on the fear that this technology poses a danger to the sovereignty of countries and to the general population, articulate the creation of a global governance structure to combat digital crimes.
Meanwhile, in a routine investigation, CIA agent Claire Atkins discovers a mysterious shed and suspects that it is connected to an international network of pedophilia and child trafficking that makes use of cryptocurrencies. To deepen the investigations, she seeks the help of the greatest enthusiast (and perhaps the creator himself) of this technology, the economist and programmer Ulrich Fersen.
In a frantic chase that involves hackers, high-tech robots, artificial intelligence and influential politicians, they discover that facing the system may be the only way out.