The Reading Thread
Re: The Reading Thread
Illy what’s your favorite Harry Potter book?
Cuz the best is clearly the prisoner of Azkaban
Cuz the best is clearly the prisoner of Azkaban
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Re: The Reading Thread
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: The Reading Thread
Dangit bro I thought you were a millennial.
Cuz the correct answer is the Prisoner of Azkaban.
Cuz the correct answer is the Prisoner of Azkaban.
Re: The Reading Thread
the harry potter franchise is the best of all the franchise's.
Re: The Reading Thread
This movement that continues to censor books ( both sides actually DO do it! ) by removing certain books from libraries or removing certain words and phrases from books and republishing sucks it.
Re: The Reading Thread
yes its absolutely fucking dumb. and it helps no one.
It's very Fahrenheit 451
is that one banned yet?
It's very Fahrenheit 451
is that one banned yet?
Just Ledoux it
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Re: The Reading Thread
probably
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
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Re: The Reading Thread
the banning of Toni Morrison did it for me
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: The Reading Thread
I know what books line the caged bird's cage
Re: The Reading Thread
Editing Robert Dahl and Ian Flemming is also disappointing.
Re: The Reading Thread
editing and/or banning any of them is fucking stupid.
If you dont like them, don't read them. Its all so ridiculous.
If you dont like them, don't read them. Its all so ridiculous.
Just Ledoux it
Re: The Reading Thread
We are always only one degree of separation from Salem. The adherents of superstition and fear never die out without passing down their worldview.
Re: The Reading Thread
I'm surprised Mark Twain hasn't been edited. Maybe he's next.
Defense. Rebounds.
Re: The Reading Thread
Is there a line somewhere where certain books shouldn't be in, say, elementary schools?
I ask this because of my latest Parent Teacher conference for my third-grader, who goes to a K-4 elementary school. Her teacher said she's very mature for her age, and that she reads at at least a fourth grade level.
Her concern though was that she was starting to read books that she isn't ready for yet. I then found out she was getting these books from the school library.
I really didn't like that. If she's mature enough to be the maximum grade for her school... Why would the school provide books and then tell the parents the student shouldn't read them?
I ask this because of my latest Parent Teacher conference for my third-grader, who goes to a K-4 elementary school. Her teacher said she's very mature for her age, and that she reads at at least a fourth grade level.
Her concern though was that she was starting to read books that she isn't ready for yet. I then found out she was getting these books from the school library.
I really didn't like that. If she's mature enough to be the maximum grade for her school... Why would the school provide books and then tell the parents the student shouldn't read them?
Re: The Reading Thread
Yea, that’s tough.
There are definitely some books that shouldn’t be in elementary libraries.
There are definitely some books that shouldn’t be in elementary libraries.
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Re: The Reading Thread
might have to find a copy of Civilized to Death
“When documentary filmmaker Jonnie Hughes was living with the "Insect Tribe" in a remote part of Papua New Guinea, a few of the tribesmen who had been hosting him asked Jonnie if they could visit him back in the United Kingdom. A few months later, when Jonnie pitched the idea of flying a few foragers to Lon-don, his bosses saw the documentary value and agreed to fund their trip. But Hughes was worried the visit might "pollute their culture with modern ideas, or perhaps make them terminally envious of a world beyond their reach.? After all, these were people who were living in very primitive conditions, with no refrigeration, modern medicine, television, or other marvels of modernity. By the end of the visit, however, Hughes saw things very differently:
‘With every whispered observation, they left us powerless to explain the madness of our own social norms, and when they boarded the plane back to PNG, we were the ones racked with envy-envious of their joyously interdependent community, their clear understanding of what mattered in life, their rock-solid roles, simple pleasures and ample leisure time, their lack of mortgages and debts, their indisputable "goodness." Our work appeared an obscene and dysfunctional manifestation of human existence in comparison.’
If Hughes sounds a bit like one of those silly romantics we're always being warned about, just do the numbers. Hughes says the tribesmen “were fascinated about our work/life balance, because over there, in a week, they'll spend maybe twenty hours in total collecting food, going hunting, ete.-just doing the things they need to do. The rest of their time they spend with their family, social lives . .. leisure time."
No wonder they were confused that Mark, the father in the family they were staying with, left early every morning and didn't return until evening. "Why are you doing this?" Hughes recalls them asking. "Why are you going out every day, not seeing the people that you really care about? It doesn't make any sense at all!" Mark explained that he had to work to pay for the house they were living in. "How long will you be doing this, to pay for your house?" they asked. When Mark told them about his twenty-five year mortgage, they looked at him in astonished pity, explaining that when one of them needed a house, they got together with the other men of the village and built a house in a couple of weeks.
At the end of their visit, the Insect People took just one innovation back to Papa New Guinea: the notion of putting feathers on arrows to stabilize their flight. Apparently, that was the only thing that impressed them very much about the modern world.”
“When documentary filmmaker Jonnie Hughes was living with the "Insect Tribe" in a remote part of Papua New Guinea, a few of the tribesmen who had been hosting him asked Jonnie if they could visit him back in the United Kingdom. A few months later, when Jonnie pitched the idea of flying a few foragers to Lon-don, his bosses saw the documentary value and agreed to fund their trip. But Hughes was worried the visit might "pollute their culture with modern ideas, or perhaps make them terminally envious of a world beyond their reach.? After all, these were people who were living in very primitive conditions, with no refrigeration, modern medicine, television, or other marvels of modernity. By the end of the visit, however, Hughes saw things very differently:
‘With every whispered observation, they left us powerless to explain the madness of our own social norms, and when they boarded the plane back to PNG, we were the ones racked with envy-envious of their joyously interdependent community, their clear understanding of what mattered in life, their rock-solid roles, simple pleasures and ample leisure time, their lack of mortgages and debts, their indisputable "goodness." Our work appeared an obscene and dysfunctional manifestation of human existence in comparison.’
If Hughes sounds a bit like one of those silly romantics we're always being warned about, just do the numbers. Hughes says the tribesmen “were fascinated about our work/life balance, because over there, in a week, they'll spend maybe twenty hours in total collecting food, going hunting, ete.-just doing the things they need to do. The rest of their time they spend with their family, social lives . .. leisure time."
No wonder they were confused that Mark, the father in the family they were staying with, left early every morning and didn't return until evening. "Why are you doing this?" Hughes recalls them asking. "Why are you going out every day, not seeing the people that you really care about? It doesn't make any sense at all!" Mark explained that he had to work to pay for the house they were living in. "How long will you be doing this, to pay for your house?" they asked. When Mark told them about his twenty-five year mortgage, they looked at him in astonished pity, explaining that when one of them needed a house, they got together with the other men of the village and built a house in a couple of weeks.
At the end of their visit, the Insect People took just one innovation back to Papa New Guinea: the notion of putting feathers on arrows to stabilize their flight. Apparently, that was the only thing that impressed them very much about the modern world.”
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: The Reading Thread
Yea but can they read kcrim?