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submitted 3 years ago* (last edited 3 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Recently there was kind of a discussion, with one user being a bit mean towards the other regarding the latter posting a link to Amazon.

While I do not agree with how they brought the discussion, I think it would be great to read everyone's opinion about what should be link, and if linking to specific websites should be forbidden.

For example, we have Open Library, BookWyrm, Inventaire, etc, if you only want to link to a book's information, and while it is harder to find a replacement to a web site where you can buy books, users can always search for it if they want.

What are your thoughts?

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As a huge BTTF fan, I'm really excited to read this! I just added it to The StoryGraph, and you can shelve it for your TBR here: https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/c02ec440-d907-4c9d-b13c-6bc967207a0e

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Hello!

May I please have recommendations for neuroscience books? I am interested in the biological process of the nervous system.

Thank you in advance!

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Hello!

May I please have some book recommendations on Communist China? I am interested in learning about the origins of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). I would like to understand the events leading up to the formation of the PRC, the rise of the CCP, and the development of Communist China. I am particularly interested in learning about key figures such as Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai, Chen Duxiu, Li Dazhao, Liu Shaoqi, Deng Xiaoping, and Xi Jinping, as well as other prominent leaders.

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Hello!

May I please have some book recommendations on the Russian Monarchy from the causation and the formation of the Russia Monarchy to the rise of the Bolshevik Revolution.

Thank you in advance!

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This is a classic now, so I expected it to be the prototype of all time-traveling stories that are so much more common to us now. What I didn't expect was how serious Wells was about writing the book. The year 80K AD is a unique living breathing world which is built on the gradual conditioning of the two divisions of society: lower class and upper class. This makes the novel much more grounded and a commentary to the present times as all classic science-fiction does and indeed what is basically H.G. Wells' flavour.

Another surprising thing was the fact that this is also a very imaginative and creative novel. It seems like H.G. Wells is giving voice to the way time-lapse videos work when his protagonist gets on the machine for the first time and he experiences this:

The laboratory got hazy and went dark. Mrs. Watchett came in and walked, apparently without seeing me, towards the garden door. I suppose it took her a minute or so to traverse the place, but to me she seemed to shoot across the room like a rocket. I pressed the lever over to its extreme position. The night came like the turning out of a lamp, and in another moment came tomorrow. The laboratory grew faint and hazy, then fainter and ever fainter. Tomorrow night came black, then day again, night again, day again, faster and faster still.

I mean, this is before television, cameras, montages and yet HG Wells' proves himself as the classic visionary writer. The novel is always beautiful and imaginative with it's setting and the visual language gives the more serious commentary an adventurous thrill and excitement that makes you intrigued in the story.

To me the novel has less merit as a commentary though because it is much more speculative even in it's own narrative, the chains that keep the two classes in constant struggles are visible clearly at first to the time traveler but he soon realizes that even that simple explanation though it may explain how the beings of 80K AD got it, what is happening to them now is different. The novel also talks about evolution and time and all of that has a more compelling story-telling intrigue than anything that is real.

I have watched the movie "Things to Come" which was based on one of his stories and it felt like the writing and message was very heavy-handed and dry in it and that gave me the impression of Wells' as a very "old" writer so it was a pleasant surprise to find thrills, danger, beauty and genuine questions of humanity's future and about the Earth.

8/10 Wonderful read, surprisingly good

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I am looking for recommendations for some good historical fiction books. I am mostly interested in books about mediaeval times or even earlier, as I find it fascinating to understand the struggles of the people back then, but I am also open to any suggestions if worthy.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

The authors who manage to clear the low bar of incorporating characters/communities from diverse cultures into their fiction without cultural appropriation/stereotyping/racism... who are they and how do they do it?

I know many writers sidestep the difficulty altogether, either by creating a fictional universe with cultural proxies (fantasy stories/video games with Chinese, Japanese, and Russian analogues, I'm looking at you) or by writing in the distant future where the cultures have blended into new ones with flavors of the past (sci-fi does this a lot).

I've seen so very few authors do it well, but I do believe it's both possible and worth doing.

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So, I am trying to find quality elastic ribbon bookmarks that won't damage my books. I want this kind of bookmark because I use these types of elastics for my tablet cases and there is one on a notebook I have and it's really satisfying to close out my experience by reapplying the elastic band. Does anyone have any suggestions for a quality set of these bookmarks? Thanks in advance!

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Don't throw away your Kindle, Jailbreak it and take back ownership. Make your Kindle even better with KoReader and other apps. If you wanna see whats possible i recomment this Yt video. If you wanna get started here are all instructions: https://kindlemodding.org/ Don't let it scare you it seems complicated but its just a lot of (easy) steps. So definitely possible in <2h.

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Realm of the Elderlings is my favorite series of all time and its written by a woman, but every other book series ive read that ive liked has been written by a man. Not sure how to describe how most books I tried written by woman in the past felt other than the audience not feeling like me. Realm of the elderlings I never had this issue, I enjoyed following the female protoganists and the fool even if I dont identify with how they feel, so I think its not necessarily the main character being a male for half the series being why I like it.

I just typically dont like men written by woman like woman rightfully dont like woman written by most male authors, since it tends to be done poorlly. Looking for series/authors that do a good job of representing both genders and writing for them, not misrepresenting either or acting like its the only thing that defines them and all their actions.

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Like when they dream they are somehow tapping into another reality and seeing lives play out, the they are reframing and writing it as stories to sell.

Some examples of series that made me feel this way are the Realm of the Elderlings, gentleman bastards, red rising and the Kingkiller Chronicles (tho this one is framed that way on purpose kind of with the unreliable narrator and book within a book vibe)

Sometimes series will give me this vibe for the first book or two but then lose it, as if they no longer dream of that reality and are now just making stuff up without real context. Lightbringer and the warded man series felt like that.

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For me, it's King's "Fairy Tale". I think it would make a great movie. Here is to hoping that Hollywood hears my prayers. Lol

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#booksuggestions I've been meaning to get into manga, comic books, or visual novels. If I were to say I am a huge Sci-fi/Fantasy fan, especially of The Red Rising series by Pierce Brown, what suggestions would y'all have?

I tried looking up suggestions myself, but it's a little daunting with so many series to choose from. 😅 Especially with many series spanning 10+ issues!

@[email protected] @[email protected] @bookstodon #Books

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I am writing a book about a species that has to die to reproduce. The book is about overpopulation and what these creatures would do about it. Is that a good beginning plot line?

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Preferably:

Available on Libby

Nonfiction

Not a biography/autobiography

Not a self help book or pop phychology

The narrator isn't annoying/breathy

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cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/35593507

This post has been written with the intention of starting a conversation surrounding the discourse about dark romance, because I am tired of seeing opinions that are pure black and white from both sides. Feel free to disagree or agree with this post, I am only here to share my personal opinion.

What is Dark romance? I think that at this point most of us know what it is --a piece of fiction that is created from writing and/or drawing with the intention of exploring darker and more taboo fantasies. This can range from anything mild like bondage to something more extreme like sexual assault.

First I would like to say this: Our fantasies do not always align with our desires. You may fantasize about having someone put a loaded gun to your head because for some reason it entices you, but that does not mean that you wish it would happen in real life.

“But why would somebody fantasize about being assaulted?” Some might ask. I find the answer to be not 100% clear. For instance, somebody who has been assaulted before, at any point in their life, might find comfort in such media for the reason that at any point they could put a stop to it (I.e. closing the book and not engaging with it anymore). But what about those who haven’t been assaulted? The brain is complicated and we can not always understand why we like or dislike certain things, and that includes the media we engage with. So, while for somebody who has gone through such an experience we could see why they may gravitate towards that type of content, in the former case it is harder to explain where it could possible come from. But I might have an idea as to why people who have never been in that situation might still gravitate to these types of books. It might just be the idea of danger that you could be in but not actually being in it that makes you chase such media. It is for the same reason that some people have the horror genre as their favorite when it comes to movies. It is about false danger that you could remove yourself from at any moment if it is too much to handle.

Are there lines in Dark romance that just should not be crossed? I believe so, and the perfect example is what happened to author Tori Woods who wrote a book about a man who had been attracted and fantasized about the female main character since she was 3 years old, waiting for said main character to turn 18 so he could inflict said fantasies onto her when the dude had constantly been around her since she was a child. That, along with what she said at the dedication page, has led to her arrest in Australia.

In other words: The line that shouldn’t be crossed is children.

What I would personally like to see more from the Dark romance authors:

My biggest gripe with dark romance is the fact that female main characters tend to be barely legal, or that some start as almost being legal (like 17) and once they become 18 it is okay to do whatever the male character has fantasized about doing to them (I’m looking at you Penelope Douglas). While “Haunting Adeline” by H.D. Cartlon is not that great in my opinion, one of the things that I had liked about it was that both characters were over the age of 25.

Now, most Dark romance authors provide trigger warnings, but there are instances where there are some that are either missing, being misused or not having any trigger warnings at all (which is the worst one). I would like for these authors to have sensitivity readers and to research so they could provide the proper trigger warnings that the readers need before engaging with their book. I have to used H.D.Cartlon once again because it is the first one that comes to mind. In “Where’s Molly?” one of the trigger warnings was that there is blood play and though I thought that I could handle it, when I got to the first scene I couldn’t stomach it and closed the book. The author had warned me about this and I could have chosen not to engage with it. I did engage, did not like the scene and simply separated myself from the book.

THAT is the point of a trigger warning. To give you the option of engaging or not engaging with the content the producer provides. And say that you didn’t know if you could handle it, the content warning had been provided beforehand so you wouldn’t be too put off by it.

Should people shame the genre? Whenever I think about the discussions surrounding dark romance I tend to wonder what people who practice bdsm, especially on the more extreme side, think about it. For the point that I would like to bring I would genuinely like to hear the opinion of somebody who is in the bdsm community because I feel like their point of view would add more to the discussion. (So if you are there, please do say if you think I’m wrong. As I said, the point of the post is to spark a discussion)

The reason as to why I am bringing up bdsm is for the reason that the community also has extreme sides. Some people practice rape play. Should we say then that by acting out a scenario of assault they are romanticizing and normalizing it? The people who are partaking in the act are real and why would you want to play out something that millions have suffered because of such an experience? In the case of bdsm, there is consent, it was talked about before-hand with a safe word for the two or more people taking part in the play to use and there likely had been constant check ins to be sure that everyone is alright. But, it’s also enacting a fantasy. And dark romance can also provide this but in another way. Both environments provide a safe way to explore said fantasy with the option to disengage at any point, for bdsm by using the safe word and for dark romance by simply stopping to read.

Is there a problem with the consumption of dark romance? Unfortunately, this is where this post might be seen as being shameful. My take on this is that, it is not the authors themselves that are producing this type of content that are the problem (except with the instance in which they seem to be romanticizing grooming and pedophilia), but rather the way in which said content is being consumed.

There is nothing wrong in engaging with sexual content. Like with all things, even if it is badly made there can be fun in it. But arriving at the point of refusing to read something if it doesn’t have smut, no matter how little, the point is that there needs to be smut in it, sounds concerning.

And unfortunately I do think that a double standard is taking place in this community.

Say that you had recommended a video game to man, a game with a story so powerful and heartwarming that it moved you to tears, with artwork so amazing it pulled you and locked you into the world that the dev(s) promised you in the game description. Now, say that said man hits you with “Is there a sex scene in it? I won’t play if there isn’t any.” You’d think that man has a problem.

So, if that man has a problem for not playing a game if it doesn’t provide sexual content, why do readers who also only consume content alike think there is nothing wrong with it? Is it because it is fiction? Video games are also fiction. Is it because books aren’t hurting any real people because said people do not exist? Video games also have people that do not exist so they also technically aren’t hurting anybody.

The thing with sexual content is that it provides dopamine and while I can definitely see that it would be easier to develop an addiction by playing or watching because they require passive actions, why do we think that written smut, while possibly harder to develop an addiction to, could not have the same effect? We know that exposure to sexual content can have damaging effects on the consumer as well and that is especially the case when it is the only thing that somebody partakes in. But why is this not also applied to books? Sexual content is the only thing that some are asking for, to a point of refusing to read anything that doesn’t have any “spice”.

But what do you think? Is it really that black and white or is there nuance when it comes to Dark romance?

TLDR: Dark romance is a gray discussion about morality and fantasies that has a right to exist without being shamed but also to be criticized where it is needed, and while the consumption of it is not a problem, the over consumption might be.

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What are the best books and book series originally released in languages other than English (but which have an English translation) in the genre of high Fantasy?

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Bonus points for any other civil war books that don't focus on the actual military activities

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I just read Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel , and it's living rent free in my brain.

It was such a powerful book in so many ways. I loved the way the different storylines and characters were tied together, some intricately and some just loosely, as well as the multiple perspectives, timelines, and storylines.

I believe it was originally suggested to me as a book similar to the TV show LOST(2004-2010) and it did satisfy that quite well.

Other books that I have read and enjoyed in a similar vein include:

  • The Silo trilogy by High Howey ( Wool, Shift, and Dust)
  • Wayward Pines series by Blake Crouch (Pines, Wayward, and The Last Town)
  • Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh
  • MaddAddam Trilogy by Margaret Atwood (Oryx & Crake, the Year of the Flood, and MaddAddam)

Does anyone have any book suggestions for something similar I should look for?

Thanks!

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