NickEast , to reading group
@NickEast@geekdom.social avatar

jPod
I would recommend this book to anyone who has ever worked in IT. Especially, executives and managers.
Also, to anyone who has parents that are incompetent mosters (Incompemonsters TM) and need YOU to fix THEIR problems 😂

@reading @bookstodon @bookreviews




https://ramblingreaders.org/book/266333/s/jpod

Uair ,
@Uair@autistics.life avatar

@NickEast @reading @bookstodon @bookreviews

One of my favorites. Coupeland's best, IMO.

kimlockhartga , to bookstodon group
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I need to reorganize my fiction bookshelves. What system has worked best for you? I'm leaning towards going by author, though that leaves the question of how to treat anthologies. Maybe anthologies could be first, or shelved by the editor's name. Alphabetical by title (preceded by numbers) might work just as well as by author.

I had been doing them by height size, except for the graphic novels, which tend not to match any standard size.

These particular bookshelves are all fiction (except for graphic nonfiction) so organizing by subject seems unwieldy.

@bookstodon

acatwholovesyou ,
@acatwholovesyou@mastodon.social avatar

@whitneymcn @smashedratonpress @kimlockhartga @bookstodon eeeeeyy, somebody else who likes Anathem 👊

hoare_spitall ,
@hoare_spitall@mastodon.world avatar

@whitneymcn @smashedratonpress @kimlockhartga @bookstodon
It look familiar.

dbsalk , to bookstodon group
@dbsalk@mastodon.social avatar

Something a little different this week: after finishing Tales of the City by Armistead Maupin, I'm pivoting hard to The Book Eaters by Sunyi Dean. I didn't love Tales of the City, and I think a large part of that had to do with Maupin's narration: for me, his North Carolina accent didn't translate well to a character driven story set in 1970s San Francisco. Hoping the next book will taste better (pun intended). 😂

@bookstodon

Cover for The Book Eaters by Sunyi Dean. Cover shows a silhouette of a woman and boy cut from the pages of an open book, looking up at a tall apartment building also rising up from the pages of the same open book. A light is on in one of the windows of the apartment building. "Innovative, unique, and poignant... I devoured it in one sitting. - James Rollins

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  • EllenInEdmonton ,
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    @dbsalk @bookstodon The Book Eaters is extremely good but a pretty disturbing concept!

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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    Today in Labor History June 7, 1929: Striking textile workers battled police in Gastonia, North Carolina, during the Loray Mill Strike. Police Chief O.F. Aderholt was accidentally killed by one of his own officers during a protest march by striking workers. Nevertheless, the authorities arrested six strike leaders. They were all convicted of “conspiracy to murder.”

    The strike lasted from April 1 to September 14. It started in response to the “stretch-out” system, where bosses doubled the spinners’ and weavers’ work, while simultaneously lowering their wages. When the women went on strike, the bosses evicted them from their company homes. Masked vigilantes destroyed the union’s headquarters. The NTWU set up a tent city for the workers, with armed guards to protect them from the vigilantes.

    One of the main organizers was a poor white woman named Ella May Wiggans. She was a single mother, with nine kids. Rather than living in the tent city, she chose to live in the African American hamlet known as Stumptown. She was instrumental in creating solidarity between black and white workers and rallying them with her music. Some of her songs from the strike were “Mill Mother’s Lament,” and “Big Fat Boss and the Workers.” Her music was later covered by Pete Seeger and Woodie Guthrie, who called her the “pioneer of the protest ballad.” During the strike, vigilantes shot her in the chest. She survived, but later died of whooping cough due to poverty and inadequate medical care.

    For really wonderful fictionalized accounts of this strike, read “The Last Ballad,” by Wiley Cash (2017) and “Strike!” by Mary Heaton Vorse (1930).

    https://youtu.be/Ud-xt7SVTQw?t=31

    @bookstadon

    peterjriley2024 ,
    @peterjriley2024@mastodon.social avatar
    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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    Today in Labor History June 1 is the day that U.S. labor law officially allows children under the age of 16 to work up to 8 hours per day between the hours of 7:00 am and 9:00 pm. Time is ticking away, Bosses. Have you signed up sufficient numbers of low-wage tykes to maintain production rates with your downsized adult staffs?

    The reality is that child labor laws have always been violated regularly by employers and these violations have been on the rise recently. Additionally, many lawmakers are seeking to weaken existing, poorly enforced laws to make it even easier to exploit children. Over the past year, the number of children employed in violation of labor laws rose by 37%, while lawmakers in at least 10 states passed, or introduced, new laws to roll back the existing rules. Violations include hiring kids to work overnight shifts in meatpacking factories, cleaning razor-sharp blades and using dangerous chemical cleaners on the kills floors for companies like Tyson and Cargill. Particularly vulnerable are migrant youth who have crossed the southern U.S. border from Central America, unaccompanied by parents. https://www.epi.org/publication/child-labor-laws-under-attack/

    Of course, what is happening in the U.S. is small potatoes compared with many other countries, where exploitation of child labor is routine, and often legal. At least 20% of all children in low-income countries are engaged in labor, mostly in agriculture. In sub-Saharan Africa it is 25%. Kids are almost always paid far less than adults, increasing the bosses’ profits. They are often more compliant than adults and less likely to form unions and resist workplace abuses and safety violations. Bosses can get them to do dangerous tasks that adults can’t, or won’t, do, like unclogging the gears and belts of machinery. This was also the norm in the U.S., well into the 20th century. In my soon novel, “Anywhere But Schuylkill,” the protagonist, Mike Doyle, works as a coal cleaner in the breaker (coal crushing facility) of a coal mine at the age or 13. Many kids began work in the collieries before they were 10. They often were missing limbs and died young from lung disease. However, when the breaker bosses abused them, they would sometimes collectively chuck rocks and coal at them, or walk out, en masse, in wildcat strikes. And when their fathers, who worked in the pits, as laborers and miners, went on strike, they would almost always walk out with them, in solidarity.

    @bookstadon

    mustseek ,
    @mustseek@stranger.social avatar

    @MikeDunnAuthor @bookstadon CONFORM OBEY BE SILENT DIE

    MikeDunnAuthor OP ,
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    @mustseek @bookstadon

    And make me rich in the process

    dbsalk , to bookstodon group
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  • cetan ,
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    @dbsalk @bookstodon it is so wonderful. my oldest read the whole series during lockdown and loved it.

    dbsalk , to bookstodon group
    @dbsalk@mastodon.social avatar

    The Stand didn't even crack Forbes' Top 10 list of Stephen King books, and I'm curious as to how this miscarriage of justice came about.
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/entertainment/article/stephen-king-books/?sh=5b67e62062b8

    @bookstodon

    alistair ,

    @charles222a249 @dbsalk @bookstodon They probably asked chatgpt to make the list.

    farbel ,
    @farbel@mas.to avatar

    @dbsalk @bookstodon What a silly clickbait exercise, trying to pick the ten "best" and rank them.

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Writing History May 22, 1927: Author Peter Matthiessen was born. Matthiessen was an environmental activist and a CIA officer who wrote short stories, novels and nonfiction. He’s the only writer to have won the National Book award in both nonfiction, for The Snow Leopard (1979), and in fiction, for Shadow Country (2008). His story Travelin’ Man was made into the film The Young One (1960) by Luis Bunuel. Perhaps his most famous book was, In the Spirit of Crazy Horse (1983), which tells the story of Leonard Peltier and the FBI’s war on the American Indian Movement. Peltier is still in prison (over 43 years so far) for a crime he most likely did not commit. The former governor of South Dakota, Bill Janklow, and David Price, an FBI agent who was at the Wounded Knee assault, both sued Viking Press for libel because of statements in the book. Both lawsuits threatened to undermine free speech and further stifle indigenous rights activism. Fortunately, both lawsuits were dismissed.

    @bookstadon

    Vinzenz ,
    @Vinzenz@freiburg.social avatar

    @MikeDunnAuthor @bookstadon and he wrote a wonderful book about Zen.

    fictionable , to bookstodon group
    @fictionable@lor.sh avatar

    Huge congratulaions: Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck, translated by Michael Hofmann, has won the International Booker prize.

    @bookstodon

    fictionable OP ,
    @fictionable@lor.sh avatar
    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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    Today in Labor History May 18, 1781: Tupac Amaru II was drawn and quartered in Plaza Mayor del Cuzco, Peru. Tupac II had led a large indigenous uprising against the Spanish conquistadors. As a result of his heroic efforts, he became an inspiration to others in the fight for indigenous rights and against colonialism. The uprising began because of “reforms” by the colonial administration that increased taxes and labor demands on both indigenous and creole populations. However, there was also an ongoing desire to overthrow European rule and restore the pre-conquest Incan empire. And though this would merely replace one feudal power with another, there were also Jacobin and proto-communist elements to the rebellion. Most of the Tupamarista soldiers were poor peasants, artisans and women who saw the uprising as an opportunity to create an egalitarian society, without the cast and class divisions of either the Spanish or Incan feudal systems.

    The uprising began with the execution of Spanish colonial Governor Antonio de Arriaga by his own slave, Antonio Oblitas. Tupac Amaru II then made a proclamation claiming to be fighting against the abuses of Spain and for the peace and well-being of Indians, mestizos, mambos, native-born whites and blacks. They then proceeded to march toward Cuzco, killing Spaniards and looting their properties. Everywhere they went, they overthrew the Spanish authority. Tupac’s wife, Michaela Bastidas commanded a battalion of insurgents. Many claimed she was more daring and a superior strategist than her husband.

    However, despite their strength and courage, the rebels failed to take Cuzco. The Spaniards brought in reinforcements from Lima. Many creoles abandoned the Inca army and joined the Spanish, fearing for their own safety after seeing the wanton slaughter of Spanish civilians. In the end, Tupac was betrayed by two of his officers and handed over to the Spanish. However, before they killed him, the Spanish forced him to watch them execute his wife, eldest son, uncle, brother-in-law, and several of his captains. They cut out both his wife’s and son’s tongue before hanging them.

    As a result of Tupac’s leadership and success against the Spanish, he became a mythical figure in the Peruvian struggle for independence and in the indigenous rights movement. The Tupamaros revolutionary movement in Uruguay (1960s-1970s) took their name from him. As did the Túpac Amaru Revolutionary guerrilla group, in Peru, and the Venezuelan Marxist political party Tupamaro. American rapper, Tupac Amaru Shakur, was also named after him. Chilean poet, Pablo Neruda, wrote a poem called “Tupac Amaru (1781).” And Clive Cussler’s book, “Inca Gold,” has a villain who claims to be descended from the revolutionary leader.

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor OP ,
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    @crashglasshouses @bookstadon
    Yes, I mentioned that in my post

    crashglasshouses ,
    @crashglasshouses@kolektiva.social avatar

    @MikeDunnAuthor @bookstadon oh, i missed that part.

    fictionable , to bookstodon group
    @fictionable@lor.sh avatar

    Jenny Erpenbeck opens 2024 with Sloughing Off One Skin, a haunting that explores truth and identity, translated by Michael Hofmann.

    https://www.fictionable.world/stories/sloughing-off-one-skin-jenny-erpenbeck-translated-by-michael-hofmann

    @bookstodon

    fictionable OP ,
    @fictionable@lor.sh avatar

    @bookstodon Subscribe for £20 and get all this and a year's more exclusive and from all over the world, as well as access to an ever-expanding archive of stories from writers including Joyce Carol Oates, Ali Smith, Sarah Hall, Alain Mabanckou, Etgar Keret, Diana Evans, Lizzy Stewart and more…

    https://www.fictionable.world/subscribe.html

    richardlea ,
    @richardlea@mastodon.online avatar

    @fictionable @bookstodon And four of the five in this issue came via open submissions:

    https://www.fictionable.world/submit.html

    We're on the lookout for perspectives that are currently under-represented on bookshelves in the UK and in the US, and material first written in languages other than English.

    fictionable , to bookstodon group
    @fictionable@lor.sh avatar

    So here's a little taste of the marvellous from Jenny Erpenbeck, Jakub Żulczyk, Grahame Williams, Lauren Caroline Smith and Rose Rahtz for 2024.

    @bookstodon

    Portraits of Jenny Erpenbeck, Jakub Żulczyk, Grahame Williams, Lauren Caroline Smith and Rose Rahtz accompany brief readings from their short stories

    fictionable OP ,
    @fictionable@lor.sh avatar

    @bookstodon With thanks to John Markoff for reading from Żulczyk's story, Many Years of Hardships.

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Writing History May 9, 1981: Nelson Algren, American novelist and short story writer died. His most famous book was “The Man With The Golden Arm,” which was made into a film in 1955. He was called the “bard of the down-and-outer” based on his numerous stories about the poor, beaten down and addicted. Algren was also called a “gut radical.” His heroes included Big Bill Haywood, Eugene Debs and Clarence Darrow. He claims he never joined the Communist Party, but he participated in the John Reed Club and was an honorary co-chair of the “Save Ethel and Julius Rosenberg Committee.” The FBI surveilled him and had a 500-page dossier on him.

    @bookstadon

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  • Fredhead ,
    @Fredhead@dads.cool avatar

    @MikeDunnAuthor @bookstadon
    My favorite writer!

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Writing History May 8, 1937: Thomas Pynchon, American novelist was born.

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor OP ,
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    @klutzagon @bookstadon
    One of the best!
    Have you read Against The Day? Might be even better. Lots of anarchist, magonistas, coal mining unions

    klutzagon ,
    @klutzagon@catcatnya.com avatar

    @MikeDunnAuthor @bookstadon i haven't heard of it but i just got a copy, so i will soon(tm)

    KitMuse , to bookstodon group
    @KitMuse@eponaauthor.social avatar

    With the most likely imminent loss of my day job, I'm thinking of changing my patreon back to my writing.

    Would it be too confusing if I had people able to subscribe either by my website, Patreon, or Ream? (Either same benefits each place OR same benefits with bonus short stories on my website.)

    I've got a serial idea in the works and I hope to dive into it no later than June.

    @bookstodon

    mileposter ,
    @mileposter@indieauthors.social avatar

    @KitMuse @bookstodon

    Decidedly NOT confusing, however I would specify or provide a REASON for the things to be available. "To appeal to a wider base" is a given, but doesn't really seem to be enough to generate interest.

    If it's just simpler to have only one, then having more than one can create more questions that it offers solutions in the eyes of your potentials. But if having the alternative solves some sort of issue or scenario, EVERYONE can get on board and tend to support it.

    herhandsmyhands ,
    @herhandsmyhands@romancelandia.club avatar

    @KitMuse

    Reader here; as someone with a very limited budget who needs to pick and choose who and where and how to support creators, the suggestion of "same benefits everywhere (for the same $$), with a bit extra offered at the place YOU get the most back" makes the most sense and feels the most fair..

    It allows people to make the choice to support you either on the platform they already have or where it does you the most good, being assured they aren't missing out elsewhere.

    @bookstodon

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