Something I'd wish I'd said when you asked if I micro-specialized: with science fiction, I'm really interested in the New Wave and people I see as inheritors of that movement. I don't even really have a taste for the older classic science fiction authors, though I'll read a bit.
My favourite RUclipsrs in the same room, a great deal of thoughtful fun. I love being taken outside my comfort zone. I read history, philosophy, anything written in Greek or Latin, fantasy, classical English lit, SF , biographies, letters, essays, and anything that you two recommend. I'm reading an Eleic book by Michael Moorcock at the moment, I read and have read a lot of Sword and Sorcery, but also his experimental fiction too. I suppose it's because compared to you lads, I'm ancient.
I was taught to read at 3, so there is hope Jared. My grandfather read whatever he fancied to me, including Chandler, but also "The Wind in the Willow" etc. He had an auctioner brother, who would buy in boxes of books and I was allowed to read anything. Hence at 6 or so I discovered Dickens, and yes I didn't understand everything, but it formed a base to reread from later.
@@kerrytusc it sure was, we weren't rich, but my mother, father, grandfather were all readers. The only two that weren't we're my brother, later diagnosed as dyslexic and my gran, who did read, but was also addicted to crosswords.
My dad only reads WW2 books as well. It used to stun me as a kid that how can he read about one thing over and over. But now I have come to realise that there are many folks who read similarly, it’s almost like a comfort food or nostalgia trip for them I guess.
Guys you talked about the Chinese thought book , but no details. One of you please post what it was, as I'm desperate to read it. Iloved the discussion about sifferent styles of BookTubing. It made this a classic video, superb chaps.
Hi there Mr Donoghue, I was wondering what are your favorite animal-themed books (examples: White Fang, The Peregrine, etc). Could also be a good idea for a video.
In order to review "The Power Broker" in 2023, I would have to a) grow a beard, b) slurp semi-constantly from an ostentatious mug, and c) remove all books by women from my shelves ...
I think I have identified the book as " The Rise of Chinese Thought" by Whang Hui. Unfortunately it is £56 as an ebook and the physical copy is even more expensive. I'll wait until I can find it secondhand. My enthusiasm is somewhat flattened. I suppose it is because it's 1000 pages and a minority interest, unfortunately.
@@Johanna_reads I yearn to be admitted to the reclusive elven kingdom of Fantasy BookTubers! I'll do whatever it takes! Should I make more videos about the fantasy I read? Should I change my name to Steveduil?
@@saintdonoghue consider yourself admitted! If I'm lucky, maybe I can recruit you and another GarbAugust promoter for a "Why Read?" discussion sometime!
Steve's idea that philosophy is an attempt at making the universe subservient to man's thought is funny, because I'm not sure you can make that claim without also making it about science and mathematics - which I assume he wouldn't do.
The brief section in this discussion you two had here about people lying about reading, very specifically just reminded me of the complete opposite attitude; the "200 pages a day" Booktube trend, where you're thinly-veiled-admitting that you cram read (or reading at all) simply to impress others. A booktuber I used to watch did this, as well as other channels I've seen do it. It sounds nauseating to try if you don't read that fast, which I don't think many people do.
I don't think there's anything wrong with that, that just sounds like someone challenging themselves. sure, it's also about impressing people, but making content in general is about that to some extent.
Can understand why your wife was perplexed, one doesn't teach at the top uni there without being party-message aligned, especially if one were involved with Tiananman. Not that you shouldn't read it, but it's somewhat akin to trying to understand contemporary American thought by reading a Trump biography. 'Red dust' helped me understand a lot when I lived there, as did the poetry of Li Bai, the works of Lu Xun, Journey to the West, and an understanding that talking about the weather is rarely talking about the weather, even though it's likely take a lifetime to puzzle out what message was actually being conveyed
Well, a good Trump biography would be an excellent way to understand contemporary American thought, but even so, I'm not as comfortable as you are with casually dismissing the thought & writing of a hundred serious thinkers because of the Chinese Communist Party.
When Steve goes a day without posting a video we all assume some were recorded but the rants were deemed too extreme. Nice discussion guys. I find alternating between an important book (fiction or non) and a lighter contemporary read works well.
I have to disagree about Ayn Rand. I've read Atlas Shrugged, The Fountainhead and several other minor works in college but while I think she came up with interesting plots her writing was not very good. In fact it's some of the worst writing I've ever read
Hello Steve. I read a lot of romance books. You don’t hear male you tubers talk about reading romance books. There’s only a small amount of people on RUclips who talk about romance books.
Something I'd wish I'd said when you asked if I micro-specialized: with science fiction, I'm really interested in the New Wave and people I see as inheritors of that movement. I don't even really have a taste for the older classic science fiction authors, though I'll read a bit.
Because I've just gotten to the Ursula K. Le Guin bit, fyi she did a translation of the Tao de Qing
My favourite RUclipsrs in the same room, a great deal of thoughtful fun. I love being taken outside my comfort zone. I read history, philosophy, anything written in Greek or Latin, fantasy, classical English lit, SF , biographies, letters, essays, and anything that you two recommend. I'm reading an Eleic book by Michael Moorcock at the moment, I read and have read a lot of Sword and Sorcery, but also his experimental fiction too. I suppose it's because compared to you lads, I'm ancient.
Not all of us SFF readers are insolent 😅 would love to chat with you sometime Steve. This was a nice discussion to listen to
Gasp! Being on your regular show would be a DREAM COME TRUE!
@@saintdonoghue you’ll run circles around me but I’ll try to keep up haha
Please god I need this crossover
@@davidslone2937 happening this Friday lol
@@thefantasynuttwork Dick discussion with Saddler and CWN with Steve. Hate to say it but your channel is only going downhill after this jimmy
I was taught to read at 3, so there is hope Jared. My grandfather read whatever he fancied to me, including Chandler, but also "The Wind in the Willow" etc. He had an auctioner brother, who would buy in boxes of books and I was allowed to read anything. Hence at 6 or so I discovered Dickens, and yes I didn't understand everything, but it formed a base to reread from later.
@@kerrytusc it sure was, we weren't rich, but my mother, father, grandfather were all readers. The only two that weren't we're my brother, later diagnosed as dyslexic and my gran, who did read, but was also addicted to crosswords.
My dad only reads WW2 books as well. It used to stun me as a kid that how can he read about one thing over and over. But now I have come to realise that there are many folks who read similarly, it’s almost like a comfort food or nostalgia trip for them I guess.
Guys you talked about the Chinese thought book , but no details. One of you please post what it was, as I'm desperate to read it. Iloved the discussion about sifferent styles of BookTubing. It made this a classic video, superb chaps.
Hi there Mr Donoghue, I was wondering what are your favorite animal-themed books (examples: White Fang, The Peregrine, etc). Could also be a good idea for a video.
Steve needs to get us a video review of The Power Broker, or a joint review of the same book!
In order to review "The Power Broker" in 2023, I would have to a) grow a beard, b) slurp semi-constantly from an ostentatious mug, and c) remove all books by women from my shelves ...
I was wondering what streaming service you used this time? It didn’t cut you off 40 minutes in like the free version of Zoom.
At Jared's suggestion, we used StreamYard -
I think I have identified the book as " The Rise of Chinese Thought" by Whang Hui. Unfortunately it is £56 as an ebook and the physical copy is even more expensive. I'll wait until I can find it secondhand. My enthusiasm is somewhat flattened. I suppose it is because it's 1000 pages and a minority interest, unfortunately.
it's on zlibrary
SFF BookTuber here to extend the olive branch, Steve!
Hah! I wasn't saying your were all WARLIKE! Just a touch xenophobic, in an adorably nerdy way!
@@saintdonoghue haha! Well, in fantasy we do love war. 😅 I've been an admirer of yours for a while and just had to chime in!
@@Johanna_reads I yearn to be admitted to the reclusive elven kingdom of Fantasy BookTubers! I'll do whatever it takes! Should I make more videos about the fantasy I read? Should I change my name to Steveduil?
@@saintdonoghue consider yourself admitted! If I'm lucky, maybe I can recruit you and another GarbAugust promoter for a "Why Read?" discussion sometime!
i used to watch the Tripod tv show. i'd like to try the books.
Steve's idea that philosophy is an attempt at making the universe subservient to man's thought is funny, because I'm not sure you can make that claim without also making it about science and mathematics - which I assume he wouldn't do.
I don’t understand how a reader can be timid, to me reading is exploration.
The brief section in this discussion you two had here about people lying about reading, very specifically just reminded me of the complete opposite attitude; the "200 pages a day" Booktube trend, where you're thinly-veiled-admitting that you cram read (or reading at all) simply to impress others. A booktuber I used to watch did this, as well as other channels I've seen do it. It sounds nauseating to try if you don't read that fast, which I don't think many people do.
I don't think there's anything wrong with that, that just sounds like someone challenging themselves. sure, it's also about impressing people, but making content in general is about that to some extent.
@@random_reader11 thank you for the reply! i think that's a wonderful point and it gave me more to think about!
Can understand why your wife was perplexed, one doesn't teach at the top uni there without being party-message aligned, especially if one were involved with Tiananman. Not that you shouldn't read it, but it's somewhat akin to trying to understand contemporary American thought by reading a Trump biography. 'Red dust' helped me understand a lot when I lived there, as did the poetry of Li Bai, the works of Lu Xun, Journey to the West, and an understanding that talking about the weather is rarely talking about the weather, even though it's likely take a lifetime to puzzle out what message was actually being conveyed
Well, a good Trump biography would be an excellent way to understand contemporary American thought, but even so, I'm not as comfortable as you are with casually dismissing the thought & writing of a hundred serious thinkers because of the Chinese Communist Party.
When Steve goes a day without posting a video we all assume some were recorded but the rants were deemed too extreme. Nice discussion guys.
I find alternating between an important book (fiction or non) and a lighter contemporary read works well.
I have to disagree about Ayn Rand. I've read Atlas Shrugged, The Fountainhead and several other minor works in college but while I think she came up with interesting plots her writing was not very good. In fact it's some of the worst writing I've ever read
Jared didn't praise Rand's writing. He said something complimentary about a Rand biography written by Jennifer Burns.
@grimbroom83 yes I know but he also commented on her writing as well
No praise for Rand's writing in this video, fear not!
Hello Steve. I read a lot of romance books. You don’t hear male you tubers talk about reading romance books. There’s only a small amount of people on RUclips who talk about romance books.
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