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I've just started reading "The Skill of Our Hands" by Steven Brust and Skyler White. I greatly enjoyed "The Incrementalists", so have high hopes for this sequel.
Continuing my walk through the alley of classics:
East of Eden by John Steinbeck

Just starting and quite impressed with funny style:
Lexikon des Unwissens by Kathrin Passig & Aleks Scholz

Supposed to be nice reading with kids, but it was a bit too complicated for my young daughters (but graphically perfect!):
Timeline by Peter Goes

Relatively interesting reading about Norway's far north. This book shows life of Sami people (also Sámi or Saami, traditionally known in English as Lapps or Laplanders), changes of last decades and conflicts with Oslo:
* Hen. Na północy Norwegii by Ilona Wiśniewska
I just started reading Babylon's Ashes by James S. A. Corey, which is the 6th book in the series called The Expanse. I'm excited!
The Confessions of Aleister Crowley. Quite interesting.

Other than that, got some books in the mail today and don't know where to begin: "The Haunted Vagina," "The Ultra Fuckers," and "Razor Wire Pubic Hair" by Carlton Mellick III; and "Skullcrack City" by Jeremy Robert Johnson. I just want to devour all of them at once.
German translation of the book "Alive and Well - One Doctor's Experience with Nutrition in the Treatment of Cancer Patients" by Philip E. Binzel, Jr., M.D.
online version
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DieRuhe: The Confessions of Aleister Crowley. Quite interesting.
I can recommend The Great Beast by Symonds if you're interested in the topic.
Book of the Worlds -by Albert Pike
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee
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DieRuhe: The Confessions of Aleister Crowley. Quite interesting.
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toxicTom: I can recommend The Great Beast by Symonds if you're interested in the topic.
Thanks!
GUNS - Non-Fiction Essay by Stephen King,,

its a good short story about whats happing in our time and i feel his way of explaining his view
very deep and amazing, a side of the great writer i have never seen in his books before ..


they have it as a free read on some kindle sites ect ,,,, check it out :)
Among some of the books I am currently reading...

Barbarians: How Baby Boomers, Immigrants, and Islam Screwed My Generation by Lauren Southern. It is about how the troubles with the millenials and their virtue signaling and "change for the sake of change" attitude was a long time coming because of the decadence and hedonism of previous generations like the baby boomers and the Frankfurt school of thought of cultural Marxism. It deals with how to fight back and Southern's personal experiences with such "regressions" from the so called "tolerant left wing."

Reflections on European Mythology and Polytheism by Varg Vikernes. It is about clarifying the symbolism and deeper meanings behind Germanic paganism/heathenism and how Christian writers tried to rewrite it by making Loki sound like the Devil or Ragnorak sound like a permanent death of certain deities when, according to Varg, Ragnorak was suppose to be a temporary death and was more of an allegory for winter or an ice age. Also, he talks about connections between the Norse religion and the Indo-European and proto-Indo-European (PIE) concepts. He even explains about how this can be shown by examining the old Indo-European and proto-Indo-European languages and artifacts. Basically, the eddas are heavily Christianized since the writers were Christian and lived during times of extreme censorship but looking past the Christian tie-ins and looking at connections to the Indo-European spiritual concepts can dismantle much of the Christianization.

Also, Call of Cthulu by Lovecraft. I also bought the Kindle version and noticed differences in certain words like "grand-uncle" in the physical version as oppose to "great uncle" in the Kindle version.
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Madshaker: GUNS - Non-Fiction Essay by Stephen King,,

its a good short story about whats happing in our time and i feel his way of explaining his view
very deep and amazing, a side of the great writer i have never seen in his books before ..

they have it as a free read on some kindle sites ect ,,,, check it out :)
Fuck no. Burn and delete his propaganda and have him go back to writing crappy horror fiction since his work hasn't been decent in decades.
Post edited February 13, 2017 by infinite9
"God of the Big Bang: How Modern Science Affirms the Creator" by Leslie Wickman, Ph.D. I'm also re-reading one of my all-time favorite books, "To Live" by Yu Hua.
"Secondhand Souls" by Christopher Moore. His ridiculous takes on, well, anything he writes about, are a nice diversion from whatever troubles one may be dealing with. This goes back to continue the story started in "A Dirty Job"
Got home today to find a package waiting for me. "What is this? I thought I got all my books already." Opened it up. "Oh yeah, Alan Moore's 'Jerusalem.' Awesome!" Looking forward to starting it.

Today I finished "Every Time We Meet at the Dairy Queen, Your Whole Fucking Face Explodes" by Carlton Mellick III. Short but awesome. Probably my favorite Bizarro writer. This one is unique because it's actually quite touching, despite the face-exploding.
Torch of Freedom by David Weber.

Second book in Crown of Slaves trilogy, Honorverse series.
It's science fiction with some covert ops and political powerplays for good measure.

Good stuff.