Books - what are you reading? (Official Book Thread)

IronFist

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The Sufis, a modern classic that has been translated into over two dozen languages, has attracted the praise of such famous authors as Robert Graves, Ted Hughes, J.D. Salinger, and Doris Lessing.

Idries Shah’s The Sufis is the most authoritative book about Sufism ever produced for a modern audience. This definitive work explores an immemorial wisdom tradition best-known for its connections with Islam, but which both predates and goes beyond it.

Sufis espouse a mystical teaching and way of life that have had an immeasurable, though little-known, impact on East and West for thousands of years. Core to this “practical philosophy” is the cultivation of intuition and experience as a guide to life—rather than overreliance upon logic and the intellect. Its members believe that theirs is the secret tradition behind all religious and philosophical systems.

Shah’s remarkable book includes accounts of the lives and work of the best-known Sufi masters, encompassing many of the world's greatest thinkers, including the Eastern luminaries: Jalaluddin Rumi, Omar Khayyam, Ibn Arabi, Al-Ghazzali, Saadi Shirazi, and Farid Al-Din Attar.

Many of the greatest traditions, ideas and discoveries of the West are connected to the teachings and writings of Sufi savants working centuries ago. The astonishing impact of Sufism on the development of Western civilization, especially from the seventh century onwards, is traced through the work of Roger Bacon, St. John of the Cross, Raymond Lully, The Templars, Rosicrucians, Chaucer, Sir Richard Francis Burton, and others.

But more than a history, The Sufis is a dynamic book of instruction for modern times, reflecting the idea that living Sufism is never a static artefact of the past, but adapts to the current time, place and people.

Buy: Amazon

 

IronFist

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Jalal al-Din Rumi (1207-73), founder of the Mevlevi Sufi order of “Whirling Dervishes,” is the best-selling poet in America today. The wide-ranging appeal of his work is such that UNESCO declared 2007 to be “International Rumi Year.” However, his writings represent much more than love poetry. Rumi was one of the preeminent thinkers of Sufism, the esoteric form of Islam. In this groundbreaking collection of 13 essays on Rumi, many of the world's leading authorities in the field of Islamic Studies and Persian Literature discuss the major religious themes in his poetry and teachings. In addition to discussing the ideas of love, ecstasy, and music in Rumi's Sufi poetry, the essays offer new historical and theological perspectives on his work. The immortality of the soul, freewill, the nature of punishment and reward, and the relationship of Islam to Christianity are all covered, in order to bring Rumi's poetry properly into the context of the Sufi tradition to which he belonged.

Buy: Amazon.com

 

Pool_Shark

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Just finished Jurassic Park. Highly recommend. Man what a book. The smell playing such a major role is something I dont remember from the movie and really pulled me into the story. The time just flew by, first book I've read by Michael Crichton looking forward to checking out his other books.

What hit me the hardest was how much what the character Malcolm was saying can be applied to AI today. And Hammond reminded me of these tech billionaires, visionaries blind to the dangers theyre unleashing.


Next up: Eat That Frog by Brian Tracy
 
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Just finished Jurassic Park. Highly recommend. Man what a book. The smell playing such a major role is something I dont remember from the movie and really pulled me into the story. The time just flew by, first book I've read by Michael Crichton looking forward to checking out his other books.

What hit me the hardest was how much what the character Malcolm was saying can be applied to AI today. And Hammond reminded me of these tech billionaires, visionaries blind to the dangers theyre unleashing.


Next up: Eat That Frog by Brian Tracy
I've only read Sphere and Jurassic Park from Crichton but both were fun quick reads. I plan on reading Timeline sometime really soon
 

Pool_Shark

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I've only read Sphere and Jurassic Park from Crichton but both were fun quick reads. I plan on reading Timeline sometime really soon
Yup Sphere is on my radar. Saw its a movie too so that'll be cool
 

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Finished reading Witches Aboard by Terry Pratchett. 12th book in the Discworld series. After this book and the previous (Reaper Man), I think this is where Terry reaches his stride in the series with the puns, the jokes, social commentary, references, and story structure. I'm seeing why these books were reaching number one over there in the UK back in the day.
 

HoopLife

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I read this book

Undercurrents: A Life Beneath the Surface by Martha Mary.​


At first I was reliving my mothers spiral into depression and this book helped me a lot. I was able compartmentalize my feelings and learn to not breakdown through the process again. Learning to let go and find effective coping systems of accepting old age. Redefining the slow down in my mom's efficacy as an early retirement for raising us all those years.


Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro​


I'm still reading this book and it's incredible so far. Piecing together the vividness in the description of the fictional world building brings back memories of Harry Potter.

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I finished The Ballad of Tom Black by Victor LaValle last night and I just finished The Pearl by John Steinbeck.

With The Pearl (like what I mentioned about Cannery Row) you can see how much John Steinbeck influenced Stephen King's writing style with how he writes dialogue and characters that feel real(people that don't give King his literary credit are wrong, imo). I knew the direction the story was headed but I didn't expect what happened was going to happen.

The Ballad of Tom Black started a bit slow for me and I wasn't really into the story but that was more probably due to outside forces distracting me while I was trying to read. But the last half was exactly what I was hoping for when I read that this was a Lovecraftian story. I'll be sure to see what else this author put out
 

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The Red Pony by John Steinbeck was featured along with The Pearl, and I just finished reading that. A episodic novella that is a slice of life, coming of age story about a boy living in the early twentieth century California on a ranch dealing with death disappointment and maturing into manhood.
More proof that King was heavily influenced by Steinbeck was that the boy is said to be wearing a blue chambray shirt :mjlol:
 

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Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. I thought I might've read it in school because I knew about ending and what led up to it but all the other stuff was unfamiliar to me. Anyway, I liked the story.
 
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