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What book is everyone reading at the moment? Part 2.

Re-reading Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, because I forgot what a great snapshot of Victorian natural history it was. Also I think submarines are cool.
I liked the sci-fi take, The Nautilus Sanction . What's better than a giant submarine? A giant time-travelling submarine...
Oh god, the narrator. He has this... Tired tone of voice and also reads the book pretty slowly. As if he's had to narrate every single audio book sold one at a time and is just so done by the time he got to mine. Hoping that he'll grow on me.
Most playback tools have a speed setting, maybe set it to 1.25x speed?
 
I liked the sci-fi take, The Nautilus Sanction . What's better than a giant submarine? A giant time-travelling submarine...

Most playback tools have a speed setting, maybe set it to 1.25x speed?
Maybe you can increase the playback speed?
Oh my god, I always listen to audio books at 1x speed unless it's one I really hate (like That Book), and I had completely forgotten that option existed. 1.2x speed improved the narration so much.
 
Oh my god, I always listen to audio books at 1x speed unless it's one I really hate (like That Book), and I had completely forgotten that option existed. 1.2x speed improved the narration so much.
I had the opposite problem once. I had hit the button by mistake and spent several minutes saying to myself "Why are they talking so fast?"
 
He just cited the Stanford prison experiment as an example of how quickly people can be led to treat others terribly if they're given authority over them and allowed to be horrible to them. As far as I know, the Stanford experiment has been criticized in newer times (for example, one wonders if people pre-disposed to cruelty and power abuse would be more likely to sign up for such an experiment). Still an interesting read so far.
 
He just cited the Stanford prison experiment as an example of how quickly people can be led to treat others terribly if they're given authority over them and allowed to be horrible to them. As far as I know, the Stanford experiment has been criticized in newer times (for example, one wonders if people pre-disposed to cruelty and power abuse would be more likely to sign up for such an experiment). Still an interesting read so far.
I just saw the recent documentary and for the most part, the participants were "playing the roles" they were assigned.
 
The Inimitable Jeeves, P.G. Wodehouse

A collection of earlier Jeeves and Wooster short stories (linked together by internal revisions that establish a timeline), this group of tales features recurring characters Aunt Agatha, cousins Claude and Eustace, school chum Bingo Little and his fiancee (a different woman each time) and other familiar folk who flit through Bertie's life and necessitate Jeeves's exerting the old cerebellum from time to time. The plots get a bit repetitive, but the stories are funny (the two best are "The Great Sermon Handicap" and "The Purity of the Turf"). A pleasant way to pass an afternoon.
 
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For light relief I'm re-reading Bill Knox's excellent Webb Carrick series. A rather different take on the police procedural se on a fishery protection vessel in the north of Scotland in the 60s/70s.
 
I've sworn off reading serious novels for now.

War and Peace was just too damn much.

The first time I read it, I had to watch the movie in order to understand what the hell had happened. I won't deny that it's a great story, but damn it, talk about turning a two-hundred-page novel into a 1,000+page one. I mean, it took Tolstoy almost three pages (in small type no less) to describe the Kazachok dance, also spelled Kazatsky or Kazachoc, and that was short compared to most of the other descriptive passages in the book.

I think reading it twice was more than enough times.

Anyway, I've been reading more Perry Mason books and watching the two Enola Holmes movies, and I've put on hold the books that they're based on. It's in order to substitute for my Stranger Things addiction until the new episodes come out on Netflix.

The reason is because Enola Holmes (Sherlock Holmes's baby sister) is actually being played by Millie Bobby Brown who played Eleven in the Stranger Things series.

I'm also addicted to the Wednesday series and the upcoming new season, but that's another story all together.


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I'm halfway through Alexander McCall Smith's latest No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency book, The Great Hippopotamus Hotel.

It's more of what you'd expect, and I'm glad of that.
 
The String of Pearls, Thomas Preskett Prest (?)

In the old-time comic strip Pogo, the citizens of the Okefenokee swamp spent a few days discussing in meta fashion the components of a newspaper. Someone, possibly the turtle Churchy la Femme, asks why the paper even contains a stupid thing like a daily horoscope. Howland Owl astutely replies that astrology is useful because "It tells a man when it's a bad day to get shaved 'cause the barber is 'bout to turn lunatic."

Which brings us to The String of Pearls, the original version of Sweeney Todd and Mrs. Lovett's dodgy pie shop. Later versions expanded the situations, characters, and plot to a three-decker, 800-page epic but here is where the Sweeney Todd franchise began. This is a novella that appeared as a serial from 1846 to 1847. It is a penny dreadful, with emphasis on the dreadful part.

The prose is purpler than the thumb of a cross-eyed carpenter. Short as it is, the plot creeps along randomly, often pausing to catch its breath. "But ere we linger over Johanna's anguished tears, it behooves us to give the reader a minute description of her room, which comprised six surfaces, including a floor, which lay horizontal below all and supported the furnishings, which in due course we shall descent upon in great detail, and next on the four edges of the floor there stood four vertical walls incloasing the rest and serving to keep off alike the burning sun of high summer and eke the bitter icy winds of that season termed by those individuals who speak the English tongue, winter....."

Dreadful indeed. The plot involves the murderous barber Sweeney Todd, described as so repulsive that everyone who meets him instantly realizes he must be evil as hell. So of course when a newly returned sailor, Thornhill, stops in for a shave, he immediately tells the fiendish-looking Todd that a presumed drowned man, Mark Ingestrie, entrusted him with a string of pearls to be delivered to Mark's sweetheart, Johanna Oakley, and these pearls came from oysters so noble they ranked between dukes and earls, and the gol-dang string was valued at 12,000 pounds. In modern terms, that would be the equivalent of the gross national product of Poland.

Sweeney yanks a lever, the chair dumps Thornhill down 20 feet into a secret stone tunnel leading from the barbershop to the burial vaults beneath St Dunstan's to the oven room of Mrs Lovett's pie shop ("Like Mum and Dad used to make!"). Todd relieves the body of the pearls, butchers it, delivers the prime cuts to Mrs Lovett's basement, and in the vaults beneath the church, he dumps the offal.

("I say, Padre, these past Sundays I've noticed a horrid stench in this church."

"So have I. It's awful!"

"Yes, I rather thought it was.")

By the way, Thornhill's loyal dog knows the tea, hangs about for a few chapters accusing Todd of murder, and then vanishes. He has company. A good many human characters show up, go nowhere, and go away. Sprinkle in a ton of poor slop boys, abandoned orphan girls, and random people who drop by to insist on chapter-long digressions, enthusiastically explaining to each other things they both already know, and those god-awful pauses for descriptions, and the result is dreadful. If you want a penny dreadful that gives value for your money, go for Varney the Vampire.
 
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I'm halfway through Alexander McCall Smith's latest No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency book, The Great Hippopotamus Hotel.

It's more of what you'd expect, and I'm glad of that.
The Great Hippopotamus Hotel only took me 3 days to read and was like catching up with a good old friend.

I'd give it 4 out of 5 stars because

there was a couple of bits about talking shoes that seemed unnecessary.
 
So, um, I'm quite a bit of the way into The [Drumpf] Cult, and it has indeed made the MAGA movement cult make more sense to me. It details the kind of manipulation techniques the Kleinkind-Führer uses, and how many of them they have been employed before by both the CIA and cult leaders. Really unsettling.
 
I think I'll try to get into my backlog of written books. Never Let Me Go, Ship of Theseus, and Max, Miesha, and the Tet Offensive, although the last one is a brick that's really intimidating.

Then again, Ship of Theseus is pretty intimidating, too. You have to follow the plot of the book, the scribblings in the margins, and on top of that there's (probably optional) puzzles to solve along the way. Love it, though.
 
Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone
and
Everyone on This Train Is a Suspect
By Benjamin Stevenson, Australian author, I believe.

The first one was good enough to make we want to read the second in the series of Kindle crime-author turned detective stories, which I enjoyed a lot.

Looking forward to the next one.
 
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Cop Hater, Ed McBain

This is the first 87th Precinct novel, first published in 1956. McBain was a pseudonym adopted by Evan Hunter for his police procedurals.

He's an excellent writer under either name. The 87th Precinct series went on for an extraordinarily long run of 49 years, and gradually the novels became denser and longer. Cop Hater began as a paperback original, a modest novel not far from a potboiler. In his intro, McBain notes that he sold the concept on the basis of creating mysteries with a composite detective: a whole squad of precinct detectives. Then he had to research real police forces. And create a completely fictional city - we don't even know its name. However, it's like a woman....

For a first entry, Cop Hater is an absorbing read. Someone is shooting and killing the detectives of the squad, with no apparent motive, one every few days, and the others set out on a dogged search for the murderer. McBain has a good ear for dialogue (though he admits he at first imitated the clipped tones of Dragnet, radio version). He merges vivid description with action deftly. My God, he loved weather! The mystery reaches a satisfying conclusion, and the reader comes away with the impression of having met people with varied and memorable personalities. Though some perform heroic acts, the cops are not heroes, just flawed yet gifted people doing dangerous, difficult jobs.

I liked it.
 
Finished this and also read a swedish history book about the swedish Count Axel Von Fersen. Great book about Fersens astonishing career and his private life (being Marie-Antoniette lover) and his brutal ending.

Currently reading: Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
Finished this and also The Giant, O'Brian by Hilary Mantel. Both where excellent.
Tonight I will dive into The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco.
 

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