
Everything for Everyone: An Oral History of the New York Commune, 2052–2072 by M. E. O'brien, Eman Abdelhadi
By the middle of the twenty-first century, war, famine, economic collapse, and climate catastrophe had toppled the world's governments. In …
Printer, anarchist, illustrator, & enthusiast of the printed word.
FediBanter: @Thundering@kolektiva.social
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ I want everyone to read it and think of it often ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great book, fun, and uncomplicated ⭐⭐⭐ Good, feel complicated about if I wasted my time ⭐⭐+⬇️ I hate read this
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80% complete! Leaving_Marx has read 24 of 30 books.

By the middle of the twenty-first century, war, famine, economic collapse, and climate catastrophe had toppled the world's governments. In …
Interesting text for historians by historians. Felt like an outsider seeing some of the conversations that go into assembling texts and trouillot did an excellent job of discussing the ways historians aren't unbiased and everything from sources to the present influence how history is told.
Definitely a great text for anyone interested in how power intersects with history. The subjects he chooses to explore the themes in the books and the prose he includes at the beginning of each chapter provide a fascinating glimpse into the colonization and history of Haiti and the Antilles.
Interesting text for historians by historians. Felt like an outsider seeing some of the conversations that go into assembling texts and trouillot did an excellent job of discussing the ways historians aren't unbiased and everything from sources to the present influence how history is told.
Definitely a great text for anyone interested in how power intersects with history. The subjects he chooses to explore the themes in the books and the prose he includes at the beginning of each chapter provide a fascinating glimpse into the colonization and history of Haiti and the Antilles.
Interesting text for historians by historians. Felt like an outsider seeing some of the conversations that go into assembling texts and trouillot did an excellent job of discussing the ways historians aren't unbiased and everything from sources to the present influence how history is told.
Definitely a great text for anyone interested in how power intersects with history. The subjects he chooses to explore the themes in the books and the prose he includes at the beginning of each chapter provide a fascinating glimpse into the colonization and history of Haiti and the Antilles.
Interesting text for historians by historians. Felt like an outsider seeing some of the conversations that go into assembling texts and trouillot did an excellent job of discussing the ways historians aren't unbiased and everything from sources to the present influence how history is told.
Definitely a great text for anyone interested in how power intersects with history. The subjects he chooses to explore the themes in the books and the prose he includes at the beginning of each chapter provide a fascinating glimpse into the colonization and history of Haiti and the Antilles.

Nanni Balestrini is the most significant writer of Italy's revolutionary period in the sixties and seventies, comparable only to Pier …

The Sympathizer is the 2015 debut novel by Vietnamese-American professor Viet Thanh Nguyen. It is a best-selling novel and recipient …
Left any possible spoiler content to the past paragraph. so you can stop before then.
Tokarczuk novel starts off with a loud knock on the door, a visitor, and in a hurried shuffle the discovery of a neighbours body in his home: a local hermit, poacher, and dog abuser whom our protagonist has a distinct dislike of. From there a interesting murder mystery unfolds exploring the relationships between a small community bordering the Czech Republic in Poland and the human and animal relations.
Our protagonist from the begin presents as an unreliable narrator, an elderly vegetarian woman with poor social skills, a strange naming convention for people in her life, an almost fanatical devotion to Astrology, and a passion for William Blakes Poetry which the novel derives its title from. I found myself both sympathetic to her and at odds with her stories, as we see the world through her …
Left any possible spoiler content to the past paragraph. so you can stop before then.
Tokarczuk novel starts off with a loud knock on the door, a visitor, and in a hurried shuffle the discovery of a neighbours body in his home: a local hermit, poacher, and dog abuser whom our protagonist has a distinct dislike of. From there a interesting murder mystery unfolds exploring the relationships between a small community bordering the Czech Republic in Poland and the human and animal relations.
Our protagonist from the begin presents as an unreliable narrator, an elderly vegetarian woman with poor social skills, a strange naming convention for people in her life, an almost fanatical devotion to Astrology, and a passion for William Blakes Poetry which the novel derives its title from. I found myself both sympathetic to her and at odds with her stories, as we see the world through her eyes, with her perceptions and biases disjointing our perception of what is happening in this little community.
Presented as a subtle backdrop to the narrative is that our protagonist has lived through Polish communism and the influence of the Soviet Union which through shreds of details such as workers hostiles and land management practices you witness snippets of a world and context which has known more than one form of authoritarian governance.
In contrast to the ruminants of soviet economic and social planning, the small towns Catholicism plays as an element that grates against our protagonist and her friends as they explore and inquire into the murders that the novel centers around. the push/pull of religious conservatism and rural madwoman left me siding with our protagonist but also left confused by how she has skewed my perception of all of the events of the book.
All in all, I found the book a short, good read (200 pgs.) which kept me engrossed from it's disjointed world building through this womans lens, murder, inquiry, and a central theme of the ethics of human relations with animals. Definitely pick it up if you're looking for something to reboot your desire to read a book and you aren't sure where to start again.
SPOILER*******
Truly this was a really engaging read, which by it's conclusion reminded me vividly but with the loosest ties of the John Wick films due to the nature of seeking out to revenge for the death of dogs companions. I would recommend it, short and smart.

Attachment theory has entered the mainstream, but most discussions focus on how we can cultivate secure monogamous relationships. What if, …
Interesting collection of short stories, focusing on Hong Kong before and during the Chinese revolution. My favourite parts of the book was seeing snippets of conservative family values and patriarchy presented from the perspective of upper class, and occasionally working class perspectives. Generally love stories or settling for less stories, some featuring incel like protagonists, others romance.
My favourite story was called sealed off which tells snippets of stories from a bunch of bus riders in the city during rush hour and a romance inspired by a traffic jam.
Definitely I imagine her writings have more depth and meaning to people who live in Hong Kong or the Diaspora, but as an outsider I found it an interesting read.