Hacker news books
Thinking, Fast and Slow. Snow Crash. The Selfish Gene. Atlas Shrugged.
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Hacker news books
The year is coming to an end. Time to look back and reflect. What are the books you've read in ? Which books made you change your mind or you simply enjoyed? And which books would you recommend to others for ? Fiction: "Yumi and the Nightmare Painter" and "Tress of the Emerald Sea" - Two of Brandon Sanderson's "secret projects" that he released this year and easily my favorites of the bunch. Tress is just such a fun adventure and Yumi left me an emotional wreck by the end. This, alongside "Agents of Dreamland", is rather short and great for getting through in a couple sittings. It's all about taking on an entity that you actively can't remember the existence of. Non-Fiction: "Letters to a Young Poet" - This is a collection of ten letters sent from the poet Rainer Maria Rilke to a younger aspiring poet in the early s. As a creative that sometimes struggles with the whole "what am I doing this for?
I read that after reading Gladstone's scifi book[1].
Hi, welcome to the brand new website, HN Reads. I enjoy reading Hacker News and I love buying books and reading , and I also love data, so what better than doing some processing of data about books to find some interesting results?! It also gives me the opportunity to write about books that I find interesting. I also shared some details about this process at my blog. See footnote for info on affiliate links. Originally I wanted to publish a top 50, but there are too many ties.
Hi all, creator here : I launched Shepherd. Then I crunched that data and broke it by genre, age range, and when it was published. Thanks, Ben P. Semaphor 3 months ago next [—]. The idea is cool, but I have some suggestions. I just ran out of time to do that this year this is the first year I've done this. I will also rethink what data I show for as I want to better show which authors picked which books visually. Get a better source for the book data: I wish there were a better source; book data is a nightmare.
Hacker news books
The year is coming to an end. Time to look back and reflect. What are the books you've read in ? Which books made you change your mind or you simply enjoyed? And which books would you recommend to others for ? Fiction: "Yumi and the Nightmare Painter" and "Tress of the Emerald Sea" - Two of Brandon Sanderson's "secret projects" that he released this year and easily my favorites of the bunch. Tress is just such a fun adventure and Yumi left me an emotional wreck by the end. This, alongside "Agents of Dreamland", is rather short and great for getting through in a couple sittings. It's all about taking on an entity that you actively can't remember the existence of. Non-Fiction: "Letters to a Young Poet" - This is a collection of ten letters sent from the poet Rainer Maria Rilke to a younger aspiring poet in the early s.
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Great story. Author of Exploding The Phone here, thanks for the mention and glad you enjoyed it! I just read Outlive by Peter Attia and Bill Gifford [0] and liked it for how it made me think about fitness as part of life into old age and not just a specific thing to do in order to accomplish something run a race, climb a mountain, etc. VoodooJuJu 6 months ago root parent prev next [—] I think you've successfully protected yourself against very dangerous information. It has a clear framework that presents actionble tips and exercises you can apply in situations. I would try the original book on people pleasing: "No more Mr. This book was a blogpost extended x too long. Or brokenness. Cadillac Desert by Marc Reisner - still in progress but clearly a great book so far. When I tried to grasp at the scifi aspect, it felt like I was grasping at air. We do this in situations where actually the slow thinking mode might be better. If you want to get the book, I bough it at goldenageproject. In the book ' Thinking, Fast and Slow ' studies are presented, that the number of right answers increases if the question is harder to read. Its a highly addictive hobby! I hope to read his follow up book in
To vote on existing books from the list, beside each book there is a link vote for this book clicking it will add that book to your votes. To vote on books not in the list or books you couldn't find in the list, you can click on the tab add books to this list and then choose from your books, or simply search. Discover new books on Goodreads.
Great read about an early 19th C. Second, start building those muscles with the few people who are both challenging and accessible. The Design of Everyday Things. And to me, that's part of the awesomeness. Like any one in their right mind wants to have 10 wives to deal with. In DDIA, you will learn about highly technical details like database internals, the intricacies of system clocks, and data replication. Read 28 comments. UniverseHacker 6 months ago root parent next [—] I think we're actually in agreement, but these issues are hard to discuss clearly because the words and ideas surrounding them are pretty muddled together. Having a slice of nature in my home that's genuinely self-sufficient by all practical means has been wildly educational, rewarding, and fascinating. Read 32 comments. Undermajordomo Minor -- Patrick deWitt This was a very entertaining novel, if you like them dark, funny and smart. To avoid a positive prejudice whilst also describing the higher frequency of violence in history and in toddlers. You can read all the lesswrong you want. Legends and Lattes is probably my favorite book i've read this year Set in the DnD universe a adventure retires and sets up a coffee shop in a large city. I tend to agree with this sentiment especially considering I have read and tried to apply quite a few in my own life.
I congratulate, what necessary words..., a brilliant idea
Excuse, I have removed this idea :)
I with you agree. In it something is. Now all became clear, I thank for the help in this question.