Skip Navigation
Jump
Have you read Babel by R.F. Kuang? Did you like it?
  • I didn’t loathe it, but I didn’t much care for it. It’s basically a polemic about the history and effects (racism, poverty, income inequity, classism) of colonialism and capitalism. Not that that would make a bad novel per se, but I was expecting something more fantastical. The promise of linguistic magic was a big draw for me, but I felt this book could have been written, and maybe should have been written, as straight-up historical fiction, instead of promising fantasy that it pretty much failed to deliver.

    3
  • Jump
    I don't drink, but I'd pop in for a visit
  • Third one from the end looks a little stretched.

    1
  • Jump
    I don't drink, but I'd pop in for a visit
  • The cats or the boxes?

    1
  • Jump
    It's her favorite book
  • To Kill a Mockingbird, of course.

    5
  • Jump
    If I'm stuck in the same area as someone who is clearly sick (runny nose, coughing etc) is there some combo of short/long breaths or nose/mouth breathing that's a better defense against catching it?
  • Here’s a very technical paper that studied nose vs mouth vs combined nose-and-mouth breathing:

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7455204/

    I confess it was over my head and I just skimmed it. But the conclusion says, “The high filtration efficiency of the nasal cavity together with its efficient clearance mechanisms lead to the recommendation to prefer the nose breathing over combined or mouth breathing.”

    The conclusion also says, “There is general scientific agreement that lower airways are more vulnerable to severe infections” and “From this point of view, the nasal inhalation is preferential because it significantly reduces the number of particles penetrating to lower airways.” I’d guess that means that shallow breaths are probably preferable, but you’d need to read the article to confirm that.

    17
  • Jump
    That explains it.
  • Heterosexual men want to look at boobs. If she thinks this is “weird,” I feel she needs something explained to her.

    74
  • Jump
    What book(s) are you currently reading or listening? August 20
  • I’m reading The Garden of Departed Cats by Bilge Karasu. It’s a collection of very strange and seemingly unrelated short stories, interspersed with chapters about a traveler in a Mediterranean city who ends up taking part in a human chess game. The publisher’s description says, “With many strata to mine, The Garden of the Departed Cats is a work of peculiar beauty and strangeness, the whole layered and shiny like a piece of mica.” If you like Kafka, or Italo Calvino, this might be up your alley. Me, I’m not too sure yet.

    I’m also listening to the audiobook of The Sentence by Louise Erdrich. It’s told from the point of view of Tookie, an ex con who works at a bookstore in Minnesota owned by an author named Louise. Tookie is now married to the tribal cop who arrested her, she has a fraught relationship with her step daughter and with the ghost of a former bookstore customer who died while reading a book that is now in Tookie’s possession that she thinks may be cursed. It takes place in 2020, and COVID-19 has just struck. I love Louise Erdrich, and this is much more engaging than the Karasu.

    5
  • Jump
    Recommend a Book: What's Your Favorite and Why?
  • One of my many favorites is The Cave by José Saramago. It’s an indictment of capitalism, bureaucracy, and commercial development couched as a sort of realist fable. Saramago is compassionate and tender toward his protagonists and wryly sardonic in his social criticism.

    2
  • Jump
    Looking for two book recommendations (first SciFi and "48 rules of Power" with ethics)
  • For SF, I recommend anything by Becky Chambers. The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet is the first of her Wayfarers series.

    4
  • Jump
    Something interesting on the ceiling
  • Greebles. They’re often on the ceiling at our house.

    11
  • Jump
    Modern beauty standards
  • “She had six strong legs and it frightened me. She had insect eyes but I could still see that the look she gave him you give to me.”

    12
  • Jump
    How do you push through a book you aren't enjoying?
  • Enjoy what you enjoy—life’s too short and there are too many other books out there to waste time on what you don’t enjoy! I have no qualms about not finishing a book, no matter how far along I’ve gotten. I’ve been known to skip to the last chapter or last few pages just to see how it ends, then move on.

    On the other hand, for books that you have to read (for school, e.g.) set a goal of X pages per day, and reward yourself when you make the goal. I also find it helps to read more interactively: take notes, argue with the author, think about what you read and whether it’s total b.s. or whether there was anything, however small, of value in it.

    5
  • Jump
    Doily I finished this morning by Zoya Matyushenko.
  • I love doilies, and this one is amazing!

    3
  • Jump
    What book that everyone seems to love do you dislike?
  • The Secret History by Donna Tartt, The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt (no, I’m not reading anymore Donna Tartt), Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn

    3
  • www.theguardian.com Cape Verde becomes fourth African country to eliminate malaria

    With no recorded cases since 2017, the archipelago has had a long journey to become free of the disease, which killed 608,000 people globally in 2022

    1
    Jump
    What was your favorite read of 2023?
  • I love Becky Chambers. Psalm for the Wild Built was one of my favorites from 2022.

    2
  • Jump
    What was your favorite read of 2023?
  • Dutch House was one of my favorite reads from 2022.

    1
  • Jump
    What was your favorite read of 2023?
  • I actually split between reading and listening to the audiobook. It was long either way! I didn’t care for it as much as I thought I would. The first part took me a while to get into, I loved the second part, but after

    spoiler

    Maidenhair dies

    it was all downhill.

    2
  • Jump
    What was your favorite read of 2023?
  • In very roughly descending order:

    Auē by Becky Manawatu

    Lighthousekeeping by Jeanette Winterson

    Open Throat by Henry Hoke‬‬

    Autumn by ‪Ali Smith‬

    A Tale for the Time Being by ‪Ruth Ozeki‬

    Home by ‪Toni Morrison‬

    Gnomon by ‪Nick Harkaway

    Space Opera by ‪Catherynne M. Valente‬

    The Book of M by ‪Peng Shepherd‬

    The Book of Strange New Things by ‪Michel Faber

    The Overstory by ‪Richard Powers

    The Door by ‪Magda Szabó‬

    Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by ‪Gabrielle Zevin‬

    5
  • Jump
    Went to the vet yesterday since my boy was acting weird. Turns out he was showing very mild signs of paralysis.
  • I had a cat that was maybe 6 or 7 years old when she suddenly started having seizures. After a seizure, she’d be wobbly for a few days, then eventually back to normal… until it happened again. Vet couldn’t figure out what was going on. We decided to try to track when she had the seizures—was it when she ate something out of the ordinary, got exposed to something unusual, on a recurring schedule? That sort of thing. We quickly found out that within a day or two of giving her a dose of Frontline flea treatment (the kind you drip on the back of their neck) she’d have a seizure. We stopped giving her Frontline and she never had another seizure.

    37
  • Jump
    Blocking my first blanket: update!
  • It turned out beautifully!

    2
  • apnews.com Cash bail disproportionately impacts communities of color. Illinois is the first state to abolish it

    Critics of cash bail as a condition of pretrial release say it is especially unfair to Black people and other people of color.

    A law abolishing cash bail will take effect in Illinois on Sept. 18. The change makes Illinois the first state to eliminate the practice and a nationally watched testing ground for whether such a change can work.

    0
    www.theguardian.com ‘Knowledge is power’: new app helps US teens read books banned in school

    Digital Public Public Library fights back against rightwing censorship with resource that works through geo-targeting

    “The Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) is trying to fight back. It recently launched the Banned Book Program, granting free nationwide access to books restricted in schools or libraries.

    “It functions through GPS-based geo-targeting; by typing in your zip code, you are shown the complete list of titles prohibited in your area. Once you download the Palace e-reader app, these books are available to download.”

    2

    What are you working on?

    First of all, I want to say I’m happy to see this crochet community on Lemmy, and to get the ball rolling, here’s one of my many WIPs. It uses the Draco Shawl pattern on Ravelry. It’s one of my older WIPs since the beading takes forever.

    !

    3