Books

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founded 2 years ago
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Spreading the federation out is a good thing, both the communities on literature.cafe are accessible from lemmy.world as on the other end of things lemmy.world is accessible from literature.cafe

Feel free to check it out if you want to.

If you'd rather be on a remote instance than sign up feel free to check out the community directory @ [email protected]

Below is a previous post with much more details on the instance operations, etc etc.


cross post from https://literature.cafe/post/349464

more instance info

I don’t think this was posted here already, but this instance has been up and running for a bit. Apologies if this isn’t the best place for it, feel free to remove if need be! The instance has been running for a few weeks now and has a few users already, but if there’s people invested in that specific niche interest that wants to spread the load across instances it exists. It has some extra lemmy front end UIs available, and I am building up the local communities as I have time to. Some policy stuff as to how it operates, for sake of transparency.

Although I am currently the “only admin” I do have a “break glass” admin account and will be giving it to a trusted point person just in case (life happens sometimes…) as well as scaling up the team as need be.

If the instance ever has to go down, at the very least a 30 day notice will be given in advance as well as an outlined explanation as to why and a good faith effort will be made to keep it up as well.

The de-federation policy might be slightly controversial, and I completely understand. It is currently temporarily defederated from lemmys pornographic instances, mainly because of just how much it spams c/all. I will refederate in time when there more granular federation options, but I just can’t reasonably moderate that right now. I also do defederate from the “worst of the worst” fediverse instances (ie, known CP hosts, far right, nazis, etc) as a precaution despite how janky cross federation is for lemmy right now, hence why the instance blocklist is long.

The instance currently uses object storage, and I post monthly financial statements as to what the cost of the resources for it are.

I also use a community seeder bot that runs every 12 hours to diversify content in all. The local communities focus are mainly book related, but it federates with most other instances.

I also am currently taking manual secure database backups at least weekly and storing them remotely, but I will be automating that process as soon as I can. I value security greatly.

The link is https://literature.cafe

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Check out c/breadtube for more left video content and discussion.

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

August 31 – September 4 – Dragon Con! Visit their website for tickets and programming info.

September 16 – 17th – Jim will be in Denmark for Fantasyfestival. Visit their website for more information.

Also, there are two Goodreads Cinder Spires giveaways running through August 30th. Enter for The Aeronaut’s Windlass or for The Olympian Affair.

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I avoided web novels for ages because I knew this would happen to me, but then a friend recommended Shadow Slave to me last weekend and god damn it my life is over.

You read a chapter, around a thousand words. It ends on a light cliffhanger. You swipe to the next chapter. Repeat ad infinitum. Sometimes it takes me a long time to get through a longer book – I've been reading Don Juan for, like, a month now – but this? 300 chapters in a week. Around 300k words. Like nothing.

I have over 700 chapters to go before I catch up, but then what? I can hardly imagine a world where I stop at just one series, even though it has a new chapter every goddamn day. Maybe I check out the sources for other manwha and light novels I've read. Maybe I dive into that one where Florida Man is selling bath salts in another world. There are too many options. How many years of my life will disappear into reading mediocre but addicting progression fantasy a few hundred words at a time?

TL;DR I have a problem but at least I'm not on Reddit.

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That's all. I just felt like telling people. He's 11 and I'm just so excited he gave something new and difficult for him a shot.

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Just finished reading The Bullet that Missed by Richard Osman. I really enjoy this series and can't wait for the fourth book to come out.

#books @[email protected] @[email protected]

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

This was a nice week for book reading. Don't usually get this much time generally.

Finished The Last White Man by Mohsin Hamid. I didn't like the writing style initially but got used to as I read along. It's a small book, just a little more than 100 pages. An umm... interesting read.

Got my copy of The Frugal Wizard's Handbook for Surviving Medieval England by Brandon Sanderson. Really liked the book. It was a fun, light book. There was much less action than I was expecting, after reading the announcement of the book, but that didn't make book any less enjoyable. Finished the book in two days, which I rarely get to do now.

Grave Peril by Jim Butcher. Book 3 of Dresden Files. I have just started it, but it's the same Dresden Files. Nothing to say about that.

What have you been reading?

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Archived version: https://archive.ph/eK1Rx

The two-up, two-down terraced house on a cobbled Hebden Bridge street does not look like the headquarters of a multi award-winning publishing house.

There is no gleaming edifice, no sign and certainly no reception desk. The green front door leads straight into Kevin Duffy’s living room, the nerve centre of Bluemoose books, his independent literary hit factory.

It is at a cluttered table in the corner that Duffy has built a business with a success rate that billion-pound publishers regard with envy.

Each year, Bluemoose puts out no more than 10 titles, but a remarkable number end up in contention for major literary prizes.

Each author is handpicked by Duffy, 62, a self-confessed “control freak” from Stockport, Greater Manchester, who spent years as a salesperson for big publishers before remortgaging his house to start Bluemoose in 2006.

“We don’t publish a lot, but what we publish will stay with you for the rest of your life,” he promised.

It was Duffy who published Benjamin Myers’ The Gallows Pole, which has been made into a BBC series that was given five stars by the Guardian’s Lucy Mangan.

In March, Bluemoose won best northern publisher at the Small Press of the Year awards. In April, a Bluemoose title – I Am Not Your Eve, the debut novel by Devika Ponnambalam, which tells the story of Paul Gauguin’s child bride and muse, Teha’amana – was shortlisted for the £25,000 Walter Scott prize for historical fiction, which Myers won in 2018.

Bluemoose’s current bestselling author is Rónán Hession, a former musician who balances his writing career with being the assistant general secretary of the department of social protection in the Irish government.

Hession’s 2019 debut Leonard and Hungry Paul, a funny and tender story about kindness, has sold more than 125,000 copies worldwide. A bestseller in Germany, it has also attracted fans in Hollywood – Duffy recalls receiving an email from someone claiming to be Julia Roberts’s agent while having dinner in the Old Gate, a Hebden Bridge pub.

“I deleted it, I thought someone was taking the piss. Then her PR person got in touch saying she wanted to get in touch with Rónán because she loved the book. I was spitting potatoes across the room. How wonderful is that? She just wanted to say thank you,” he said. Hession will not be drawn on whether Roberts is buying the film rights.

Another Bluemoose success story with a day job is Stuart Hennigan, a librarian from Leeds. Ghost Signs, an eyewitness account of the impact of the early days of the pandemic on those living in poverty, made the shortlist of the Parliamentary Book awards.

Duffy shares an anarchic streak with Hennigan, finding it hilarious when he turned up to the Tory-packed ceremony in a T-shirt that said: “Still hate Thatcher”.

Major publishers have too many shareholders and overheads to take gambles, said Duffy.

“They’re not going to take risks on working-class and diverse writers because they need to get their money back … when you’ve got a 40m-high steel and glass edifice on the Embankment, there are costs to be taken care of.”

Take Penguin Random House, he said, part of Bertelsmann, the world’s biggest publisher. “It’s a €30bn organisation. Every year, their CEO says that they’ve got to grow by 10%. That’s €3bn, every year.”

In contrast, Duffy remains Bluemoose’s only employee, drawing a “tiny” salary, working with five freelance editors, including his lawyer wife, Hetha.

He is happy that way. “I don’t want to be the next Penguin. I don’t want to be a huge business. I just want to publish eight to 10 books a year, make a bit of a profit and invest it all back into the business to find new writers,” Duffy said.

Running Bluemoose is a seven-day-a-week vocation. On an average day, Duffy receives 10-20 unsolicited pitches, usually the first three chapters of a new book, all of which, he insists, he reads. Perhaps four in a month will grab his attention enough for him to ask for the full manuscript.

Duffy insists that there remains a “class ceiling” in the publishing of literary fiction. LGBTQ+ writers are being given deals, as well as people of colour, he says, but working-class writers are not being heard.

“It’s been a problem in publishing for 40 years and it’s getting worse,” he said.

“The people making those publishing decisions, because of their educational background and their life background, are not reading books about people in the rest of the country.

“You know, 93% of the people in this country don’t go to private school. There’s a reading public out there that wants books about themselves and the areas they live in.”

Myers, he notes, originally signed with Picador, which would not publish Pig Iron, his third novel about a Travelling community in the north-east.

“Because, they said, ‘who would be interested in a working-class character from a small northern town?’ That small northern town was Durham, theological capital of Europe for 2,500 years.

“Pig Iron went on to win the inaugural Gordon Burn prize. Ben’s next book, Beastings, won the £10,000 Portico prize. Then The Gallows Pole won the world’s leading prize for historical fiction. Then all the agents were interested,” he said.

Myers then signed to Bloomsbury, but Duffy insists that there are no sour grapes, not least because Myers insisted that Bloomsbury keep the Bluemoose titles in print as part of his deal. “We still go out for a brew and a slice of cake,” said Duffy. “We wish him well.”

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On a new livestream Thursday, Witcher author Andrzej Sapkowski said that he’s working on another book in the series, which would be the first one in a decade.

The livestream was an interview with Sapkowski and Ukrainian fans organized by Fantastic Talk(s). Sapkowski’s comments on the stream, as translated by Witcher fan site Redanian Intelligence, reveal that he’s been hard at work on the new story for some time now.

“Yes, I’m working on a new Witcher book and quite diligently,” Sapkowski said.

The good news is, the book doesn’t seem far away. Sapkowski seemed optimistic about the timing, saying that “it may take a year, but no longer.”

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I finished Fool Moon by Jim Butcher, and started The Last White Man by Mohsin Hamid. It’s a thin book, and I am almost at the end.

The book is interesting, though I didn’t like the writing style much, but I guess it suits the story, the way it’s told.

What about you? What have you been reading?

Edit: So, I made this post 2 days ago, but turned out there was some issue between lemmy.world and discuss.online so my posts and comments weren’t showing up here. It seems the issue is resolved now. So, that's why the date is 2 days old, and thread is posted late.

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I am only partially through the first book but can't help but elaborate on a theory that I have. I believe the author strongly hints at it and it may be a simple misdirection, but I think it will be amusing to see how right or wrong it is in the end. Note: I'm listening to the audiobook, so please forgive any spelling mistakes.

Spoilers after this point.

I am at the point of the book where the Apollo proctor is trying to scare off Darrow and Co.'s gang as they approach, so please no spoilers beyond that point. I believe the author strongly hints at the bellow starting with Darrow's interview with Titus before his death.

My Theory

  • the Sons of Ares, and other such groups, are simply another means of control.
    • The purpose is to identify individuals with great potential and acquire them for the Golds.
  • the school is mostly made up of Reds, or maybe other colors, and only a smattering of true Golds.
  • the school exists to replenish the blood of the high Aureate, regardless of where they come from
  • the upper crust (Peerless Unsacarred) rule over even the other Golds and represent the pinnacle of one view of humanity
  • most Golds slowly fade down the ranks, being replaced over time by the best of the lower orders

Evidence

  • The broadcast of Io's (sp?) death to the whole planet and beyond seems more calculated to call out recruits than to subdue anything
  • Darrow's transformation leaves the door open to others having gone through the same procedure
  • Darrow suspected that Titus was a Red due to the language he used and utter disdain for Golds, and what they did to his mother (?)
  • Darrow mentioned multiple times that other people felt more Red than Gold (Sevro off the top of my head)
  • Mustang humming the revolutionary song and (I suspect) pretended to not know the lyrics as a test of whether Darrow knew them -- did she suspect likewise?
  • Only a handful of characters I've seen so far, such as Priam and Cassius, have the authentic swagger and education that I suspect true Golds would have
  • Why do all these privileged Golds have such a massive chip on their shoulder?

Analysis

If this is true, it elevates the Aureate from cartoon villains to something interesting. It's one thing to enslave and lord over others for your own benefit, but to apply the same standard to your own people is quite the thing. Evil as they seem, I must respect that these true believers walk the walk. Maybe you really do need the hardest of the hard to bind together a solar system-spanning humanity.

The weakest link in this theory is why would these Reds willingly become part of the system? Does the game teach them of the necessity? Do they get brainwashed somehow? Does power corrupt? That's yet to be seen.

Thanks for reading!

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I've been in a horrible reading slump for years. I was fine with audiobooks and podcasts but just couldn't concentrate on reading.

Finally I've found that Agatha Christie novels hold my attention - they are fast paced, not overly complicated, and got me interacting with the story as I played detective while taking notes on the clues in the story.

Now that my reading muscle memory is coming back, I'm able to branch out to more complex books.

What type of books break your reading slump?

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submitted 1 year ago by i_do_not_agree to c/books
 
 

So, I had this chat with a friend about verious topics. It made me realize how much I love engaging in discussions, but I also noticed that I struggle to articulate my thoughts logically and effectively frame my arguments. I want to improve my reasoning and argument skills so that I can confidently present my ideas in such conversations. So I'm seeking a book recommendation that can help me develop my logical thinking and persuasive abilities. I'm looking for a book that explains things in a straightforward way, with fun examples to practice with, covering diverse topics to make logical thinking enjoyable. If you have any suggestions, I'd be super grateful

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I’m reading Demon Copperhead and I’ve only just realised that it’s based on David Copperfield by Charles Dickens. Somehow, I feel cheated. I hated Dickens in school - melodramatic claptrap - but it does explain the ‘serial’ feel of the book. It’s a clever book, the characters are credible, going beyond characterisation (another of my pet Dickens’ peeves.) And the writing is beautiful, wonderful imagery etc.

I know there’s nothing new under the sun and all tales are variations on a theme. This book, though, barely even changes the characters’ names.

I’m so disappointed. I don’t know what to think. And I’ve lost interest in finishing the book. Have you read it? What are your thoughts?

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Poetry books (reddthat.com)
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/books
 
 

Wanted to hear what your favorite poetry books are?

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"Christopher Robin, Christopher Robin!" cried Piglet. "Tell Kanga who I am! She keeps saying I'm Roo. I'm not Roo... am I?"

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Hello Everyone!

What are you all reading?

I am currently going through a re-read of Dresden Files by Jim Butcher. Currently on 2nd book, Fool Moon.

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  • Need suggestion novel(s)/series on medieval setting with good world-building.

  • Prefer peaceful story with less warfares/politics. I have enough of war and politics stuff. I want peace.

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Horror (reddthat.com)
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/books
 
 

Anyone here into horror? If so gimme your favorite picks.

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I am looking for some old school horror and (murder) mystery books and stories like the ones by Lovecraft, Sherlock Holmes, Scarhaven Keep, The Beetle, The House on the Borderland, Dracula.

Anyone have some recommendations?

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submitted 2 years ago by DuskLoaf to c/books
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1355300

I have a pretty bad memory when it comes to remembering the appearances of characters in books, usually because it’s mentioned once or twice and then mostly just briefly throughout the book again.

I was wondering if anyone knew a site that had like just the descriptions of characters from books, lifted from the text even without spoilers.

I’d like to start making notes going forward for myself when reading but I’m so far into The Way of Kings now that it’s quite difficult to backtrack for character descriptions.

Any help is much appreciated, don’t even know if what I’m looking for exists but it sounds super handy, to me anyway.

Cheers. ^^

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by Odusei to c/books
 
 

TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, is starting its own publishing company. What will that mean for BookTok?

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Just finished "Becoming Superman" by J. Michael Straczynski as read by Peter Jurasik. Poignant, funny, occasionally uncomfortable, but fascinating. JMS being a nerd makes it all the more relatable. Some good insights into the workings of TV, Hollywood, and comics. Jurasik's narration adds something special to it. It evokes Will Eisner's New York stories.

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