• AmadeusD
    2.7k
    Ah piss... And I used to read French (literally 25 years ago). Perhaps I can find a translation somewhere.. Thank you for the tip!
  • Tom Storm
    9.4k
    I’m a-readin’ The Adventures of Huckleberry Finnpraxis

    Nice. I must have read it a dozen times over the years. I discovered this book at 10 and never looked back. Each time I re-read it (like The Great Gatsby) I find it sadder and more nuanced than the last. It's curious that for all the inadequate children's adaptations in movies and TV, no great director has ever tried to film this complex story from a more adult perspective.
  • praxis
    6.6k


    One thing’s fer certain, ain’t no adaptation gonna have that n-word in it, no matter how grown-up it tries to be.
  • Tom Storm
    9.4k
    I wonder what an adaptation might look like made by a black director/auteur.
  • Pierre-Normand
    2.5k
    Ah piss... And I used to read French (literally 25 years ago). Perhaps I can find a translation somewhere.. Thank you for the tip!AmadeusD

    I doubt anyone will translate to English (or any other language) a French translation from the Greek. Unfortunately, the book also only appears to be issued as a print edition. If a digital edition was available, then you could use a chatbot to translate Bodeüs' enlightening notes in English.
  • praxis
    6.6k
    Why not?AmadeusD

    Well, reckon folks steer clear o’ usin’ that word in “Huck Finn” nowadays ‘cause it’s mighty hurtful. Back in Twain’s time, it was common talk, but now it stings somethin’ fierce, remindin’ folks of bad times and ugly ways. Some swap it out or leave it be altogether, figurin’ it ain’t worth keepin’ if it’s gonna hurt folks. Others use it for learnin’, talkin’ ‘bout how things used to be so folks don’t go forgettin’. Either way, it’s a tricky business tryin’ to honor the past without hurtin’ folks in the here and now.
  • AmadeusD
    2.7k
    LOL extremely enjoy this written southern patois.

    Yes, fair. I agree - probably why it hasn't been done. I think if one were to adapt, and remove that word, one is not fit to adapt it.
  • praxis
    6.6k
    I think if one were to adapt, and remove that word, one is not fit to adapt it.AmadeusD

    Ain’t nothin’ but a pile o’ words, not no holy book or such. I reckon ol’ Twain wouldn’t bat an eye ‘bout swappin’ one word for ‘nother.
  • AmadeusD
    2.7k
    fo' * surely.

    I would humbly disagree. But neither of us are timebandits, i'd think :P :P
  • Pierre-Normand
    2.5k
    Thibault Prévost, Les Prophètes de l'IA - Pourquoi la Silicon Valley nous vend l’apocalypse.
    Published in French only.
    (The Prophets of AI - Why Silicon Valley sells us the Apocalypse)

    This was recommended by a friend who supplied the first chapter. It was enlightening enough to motivate me to buy the book. The author may have some misconceptions regarding the nature of the technology (and its present capabilities) but has dug deeply into the historical, sociological, ideological and economic aspects and incentives that motivate(d) the main promoters and developers of AI.
  • Pantagruel
    3.5k
    The Overcoat and Other Tales of Good and Evil
    by Nikolai Gogol
  • javi2541997
    6k
    I am enjoying my first-time reading of Gogol. Dead Souls is both funny and clever in many different ways. Nozdryov (in my edition, it appears written as "Nozdrev") is outstanding. I understand now why Dostoevsky referred to him in some of his tales and works. Sadly, I only have Dead Souls. However, I'm excited to purchase more Gogol's tales in 2025. :smile:
  • Pantagruel
    3.5k
    Lately my tastes in fiction have had a leaning to the fantastical, and Gogol definitely leans in that direction, melding the commonplace and the supernatural.
  • javi2541997
    6k
    Boyhood Island. My Struggle 3, by Karl Ove Knausgård.

    I started to read Knausgård's series two months ago; I remember and me sharing a common thought on the deep narrative of his novels. These are not easy to read because they are laden with much pain and drama, but I started to get engaged with this Norwegian author for a lot of reasons.

    Since Knausgård himself said that we are free in order to read his series, I decided to skip the second part (it is about divorce and love failures and I am not ready to jump on it yet), and then start reading the third part. It is about when the author was just eight years old in his mother's family home, in a random small Norwegian fjord.
    Memories, nostalgia, unanswered questions, childhood friends, etc.

    I remember missing more presence by the mother in the first part, and I guess this third part will lead to what I was looking for a few months ago.
  • Pantagruel
    3.5k
    Critical Theory of Legal Revolutions: Evolutionary Perspectives
    by Hauke Brunkhorst

    C. Wright Mills' The Power Elite is deservedly a classic. All of the characteristics Mills describes of the worst types of abuses by the worst types of men can be seen in even starker relief against the backdrop of the tableau of modern politics.
  • Pantagruel
    3.5k
    Irrational Man: A Study in Existential Philosophy
    by William Barrett
  • Maw
    2.7k
    Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
  • T Clark
    14.2k
    Heart of Darkness by Joseph ConradMaw

    My favorite book. I've read it three times and listened to it once.
  • Maw
    2.7k
    quite good

    A History of Judaism by Martin Goodman
  • kazan
    312
    Question.
    Was it Jeremy Bentham who wrote one paragraph,one sentence, one page long style English?
    Used to love that. A good primer for short term memory loss sufferers.

    smile
  • Pierre-Normand
    2.5k
    Was it Jeremy Bentham who wrote one paragraph,one sentence, one page long style English?kazan

    No, it was actually me.

    (Just kidding, Bentham was doing this also.)
  • kazan
    312
    @Pierre-Normand,

    Hope your's was as grammatically correct as Bentham's generally was also.

    wink & a smile.
  • DifferentiatingEgg
    153
    Currently ruminating through:

    Quine's Pursuit of Truth

    Wittgenstein's Tractatus and Philosophical Discussions

    Bernays' Propaganda

    Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals and Birth of Tragedy

    Foucault's Madness and Civilization

    And an MITx Philosophy course on "Paradoxes and Infinities."

    Might pick up some Godel.

    I know that's weird, but I go through sections, stop move to another person and allow my thoughts to ruminate upon what I've read. After I get enough handling and understanding of the sections I'm on, I then revisit where I left off.

    It's kinda like grade school, but with philosophy subjects as each topic.
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