Excession (Culture, #5)

Multiple POVs in quick succession dealing with unknown unknowns, not a good book to fall asleep to as I keep getting lost. Someday…

2024.07.13 · 1 min · Iain Banks

Assyria: The Rise and Fall of the World’s First Empire

** Adventures in history and the land of Nod ** This may be the perfect book to fall asleep to. I know almost nothing about Assyria, but every night am excited to learn. There’s little ability for an author to assemble a plot, since we know so little about the Assyrian empire. Missing a few chapters cannot cause a reader to miss the plot - our historical record is already full of holes. The vignettes What we do have contains the rangu of skullduggery of history and civilization building that you would expect. I fell asleep to this book for a month, read and forgot chapters multiple times, and honestly still don’t remember too much about the Assyrian empire. But I did sleep well!

2024.04.25 · 1 min · Eckart Frahm

Nuclear War: A Scenario

**Gone in 60 Minutes ** “Nuclear War, A Scenario” begins with the premise of the United States being entirely obliterated. This could only happen by a nuclear strike from Russia. The author traces this line of reasoning from its inception, setting the stage for an exploration of geopolitical tensions and catastrophic warfare. This book is not a lullaby, as I found out last night awake at 2am. Despite a compelling narrative, the book sometimes feels more like a speculative fiction than a plausible scenario. ...

2024.04.12 · 2 min · Annie Jacobsen

Nettle & Bone

Somewhere between a fairy tale and a clothing brand.

2024.03.04 · 1 min · T. Kingfisher

神秘的魔法石 (哈利波特, #1)

** 4th Read, 4 Languages ** This is my fourth time reading this book, each time I gain something different. The book has become my Rosetta Stone, as I use it to expand my vocabulary. The first time I read it was in fifth grade when I had already read many science fiction novels, so this book didn’t leave a deep impression on me, unlike “Redwall,” “Ender’s Game,” or “Dune.” ...

2024.01.25 · 1 min · J.K. Rowling

Empires of the Steppes: A History of the Nomadic Tribes Who Shaped Civilization

** Empires Come and Go ** So much of history relies on a modern nation remaining to tell its story, so while most know of the Mongols, fewer know the stories of the Scythians, Xiongnu, or even Tamerlane. For my own reference, heres the roughly chronological list of empires from the steppe: Indo-Aryans: Responsible for the Indo-European language family. Scythians The Huns, Attila: If Attila had not died, Attila and Menoria could have presided over a Western Roman Empire not too different from that of the contemporary Northern Wei emperors. Xiongnu: To fight them, China tried to use 200,000 soldiers and found 5000 horses, but the fodder in horses in China lacked the selenium necessary to build strong bones and muscles, so this effort failed. Mongols, Genghis Khan: 129,000 horsemen out of a population of 715,000. Tamerlane Turks The author makes some dubious claims, such as: ‘Without the unification of the Mongols, China would have remained under warring powers and would not be the world power that it is today. ‘ Not a deep read but an appreciated overview that is not told from the perspective of the romans.

2024.01.22 · 1 min · Kenneth W. Harl

The Decameron

**I’ll be here all week millennium! ** One of me wishes this would be required reading for sex-ed. At least that way students would learn something while attending the class! Second I wish I had read this during the pandemic, when it would have been a great shared experience to read whilst sheltering in place . I appreciate that like Durant , Decameron really humanizes the late Middle Ages. In the same way that late night comics rip monks and nuns today, Boccaccio pokes fun at the holier than thou traditions of the day. Many of the plots are overtly ridiculous, but done so in a way that is humorous and not overbearing. ...

2024.01.13 · 1 min · Giovanni Boccaccio

The Will of the Many (Hierarchy, #1)

**Will ** you read of the Many Tropes? Will of the Many fills its checklist of sci-fi and fantasy tropes, better than even a fan-fic. Orphaned✓ teenage✓ boy✓ finds himself unexpectedly whisked away from his mundane job✓ to an elite academy✓. There, he ascends through the ranks✓, unveils heretofore unknown skills✓, and aims to dismantle the corrupt system responsible for his parents’ demise from within.✓✓ The academy’s culmination is a battle royale✓ graduation✓, where treachery is guaranteed✓ and even the teachers flout the rules.✓ Let’s not forget the forbidden ruins ominously linked to the world’s end.✓✓ ...

2024.01.12 · 2 min · James Islington

The Empress of Salt and Fortune (The Singing Hills Cycle, #1)

With a few graceful red lights flickering into the waves, Vo sucks the reader into a world that is familiar to readers of Asian history (or fantasy ), but tinged with a velvet sheen of magic that only Vo brings. Far too short for my liking, but that’s just another way of saying that I’ll definitely read through the novella series.

2024.01.09 · 1 min · Nghi Vo

Victorious in Defeat: The Life and Times of Chiang Kai-shek, China, 1887-1975

** Another Dictator ** If I die as a dictator, I will go down in history like all dictators… Thus Mr. Chiang documented in his journal, and so history recalls him. We perceive China as a dominant power today, yet this was far from the truth in the early 20th century. Chiang, in his attempt to protect a fragmented and weakening China against Japan, was engaged in power politics without any real power. After experiencing betrayals by nearly every international ally and numerous trusted lieutenants, by the 1930s, he had grown distrustful of everyone. ...

2024.01.09 · 2 min · Alexander V. Pantsov