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Go read a book anon! Comics|Tabletop Gamin|Stories|Video Games|Weapons|Furry|Random|Retro Vidya|Library|PDFs|FanFiction

The Screwtape Letters By C.S. Lewis Scribe 09/01/2021 (Wed) 18:25:53 No. 327 [Reply]
I have not read this book yet, but after reading this excerpt that defines /pol/ and political misanthropy in general, I just might. >This is an epistolary novel, written in the form of a series of letters. The letters are from Screwtape, a senior devil to Wormwood, who’s trying to tempt his human soul.
>>327 This looks pretty good OP. Let you know more later
>>328 >2021 Legends say he is reading The Screwtape Letters to this day.

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Scribe 04/17/2025 (Thu) 18:40:56 No. 751 [Reply]
Which is the better translation of the Polish book Ogniem i mieczem? Samuel A Binion's version or W. S. Kuniczak's? Jeremiah Curtin's version is not that good but he didn't forget to include the Epilogue.
>>751 Kurwa
>>751 I've heard that the translations aren't that good, one of them was made by a man who didn't know Polish well and just used a dictionary and the other made a lot of shit up. >Segel cites a series of mistranslations perpetrated by Curtin due to his carelessness, uncritical reliance on dictionaries, and ignorance of Polish idiom, culture, history and language. Among the more striking is the rendering, in The Deluge, of "Czołem" ("Greetings!"—a greeting still used by Poles) "literally" as "With the forehead!"[15] Funny.

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Nine Princes in Amber - Roger Zelazny - Amber 1 Scribe 07/17/2021 (Sat) 03:21:23 No. 130 [Reply]
The first in the venerable Amber chronicles, and more importantly the first in the five book Corwin Cycle. We meet an Amnesiac. Bed ridden in some manner of hospital, and where this any other book it probably wouldn't go much further. But here our protagonist proves paranoia isn't necessarily wrong. Just insane. So he rips off his casts and sets a trap for the hospital staff. Soon we have moved from assault to blackmail at gunpoint. Then pockets flush, stolen .38 in hand, and no fucking idea who he is or how he got to upstate New York. Anons I love this series. Absolute favorite. It's fucking good. Highly recommend.
>>130 My older brother loved this series when he was a teen, and I'm 10 years past that age, but he keeps recommending it to me. It breaks my heart that I'd never fully appreciate this series even if I read through it.

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Scribe 11/20/2024 (Wed) 02:08:15 No. 681 [Reply]
Screw this pretentious crap. Give me some unapologetically unintellectual hard sci fi with explosions and pussy. Like Frankowski if he had been free to write how he really felt.
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BAEN books are fucking great.
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>>681 here you go, king

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What are you currently reading? Scribe 08/01/2021 (Sun) 02:26:58 No. 276 [Reply] [Last]
Or what have you recently read? Talk about it ITT.
62 posts and 32 images omitted.
>>276 The Meaning of Love by Vladimir Solovyov. Russian cosmists authors are kinda cool.
Currently reading Vineland. Think I'll read something shorter next and then delve into Against the Day for the first time.
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The King in Yellow. Its a nice short read before bed

R 04/18/2025 (Fri) 07:58:24 No. 772 [Reply]
Been reading this lately. I like it What are your thoughts on it? https://mises.org/library/book/how-think-about-economy-primer
>>772 Seen it on my wishlist but never picked it up

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120 days of Sodom Scribe 04/18/2025 (Fri) 06:35:34 No. 769 [Reply]
I started reading this several months ago but stopped because of the slow pace of the first 30 days. Sade was clearly bored of the weak first fetishes and dropped the 2nd and 3rd months and went straight to the last month, the most extreme. This helped me finish the book in a few days. It's definitely not for normal people, I don't really like gore but I'm open to reading about it. Near the end you feel a bit desensitized because of the overused torture methods and a bit of detachment tl the characters due to the book being incomplete. For someone who read visual novels like Starless and Euphoria when young I feel at home in a sense. It was nice finally being able to meet the father of Sadism. I would rate it a 7/10 book

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Stack/Shelf Thread Scribe 07/13/2021 (Tue) 22:06:06 No. 100 [Reply]
Feel free to share your book shelves and or stacks!
5 posts and 2 images omitted.
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Just getting back in to reading and picked up a few books i heard were good
>>684 Someday I'll actually finish Moby Dick. I made it about 2/3rds though and just couldn't go on.
my shelf above my computer

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An exploration of metaphysical concepts in fiction: consensus reality Scribe 07/28/2021 (Wed) 11:12:19 No. 245 [Reply]
The idea of the nature of all aspects, laws, entities, and phenomena of reality (aka. absolutely everything and everyone in existence) re-writing itself to match with the majority agreement of all the minds of the universe as to what it should be (consciously or unconsciously). This premise is similar to "mage: the ascension" except that it really explores what this premise of the aggregate psychic influence of mental activity over reality itself would mean, it would not just mean changing of phenomena in the present, but in the past or future as well (like if enough minds believe the holohoax happened, then the evidence in the present would change to indicate a past where it did happen, and a time-traveler to this past would end up in an alternative universe where it had occurred as claimed, unless most minds in the present also believed most minds in this past believed that the holohaox wasn't happening, which would cause the time-traveler to show up in a past where it didn't happen, but from a present where the past was changed from the present to make the present as if it had occurred back then, because the past consensus would warp reality to make it so that the holohoax wasn't happening the moment the time-traveler arrived), it would be able to affect itself, like altering what realities people's mental power goes towards, or straight up creating or deleting people with minds that could contribute to determining what the aggregate consensus on reality is, and the strange idea of making an exception for one species, normal humans, as the sole contributors to the "vote" on what their reality is going to be like is rather arbitrary, what if all minds, including those of animals and even aliens, were to have a "vote"? last deviation is the idea of belief being the sole form of mental activity that contributes to the nature of reality, it might be the strongest kind of mental activity, but the mind has all sorts of mental phenomena going on, for example, imagination and fantasy or thought and emotion, if belief has an influence, surely these should as well? The setting is one where the existence of magic means that all minds can warp reality, any kind of mental activity exerts some level of influence upon the nature of existence. The degree of psychic ability that any mental activity has to alter the world depends on various factors, like how complex the mind is, how close the mind is to what it's affecting, the nature of the mental activity itself, the level of consciousness of the mental activity, the strength of that mental activity, and the duration the mental activity occurs over. The strongest kind of influence would be the most complex kind of mind believing with the greatest level of certainty and with the greatest force of will, at the most forefront of it's own consciousness, for the longest period of time, about some phenomena occupying the exact same space as itself, something usually describing the a priori knowledge of a mind about it's own existence. Since the mental activity of every mind exerts some degree of influence over the way things are, multiple minds can be in disagreement with one another, and even one mind can pull existence in multiple conflicting directions at once just by disagreeing with itself, reality can be pulled in multiple directions by the contradictions between the different potential realities that the actual reality is being pulled towards, in this case, the potential reality with the greatest amount of psychic power behind it is the one which becomes the actual reality. In the rare cases of ties, the nature of some phenomena may be equally disputed as being multiple possibilities that are equally backed by psychic power, and in addition to being supported by perfectly equal amounts of psychic energy, these possibilities are backed by more psychic energy than any other, in such cases, the ties are settled by going through the closest minds to the phenomena and whichever possibility being tied for gets the first bit of psychic power that breaks the tie in favor of one of the tied possibilities determines the nature of the contested phenomena, locality matters (also, most of these exceedingly rare events are resolved immediately without ever being noticed). Any aspect of reality can be affected by the influence of mental activity, including the minds of others and the mental activity produced by them, in such cases, the affected minds would influence reality in accordance with their new states, thus the consensus could theoretically affect itself. Since the consensus could create the existence of new minds, or remove existing minds from existence (such as the consensus causing the creation or erasure of people), and the presence or absence of those minds would include the presence or absence of their mental activity, those new minds that are created by the consensus would create a new contributution to it, and those existing minds which are deleted by the consensus would take their contribution with them, in both cases, this would only affect their contributions towards the consensus in the present and going forward, should there be changes made to their past existence by the consensus, their contributions to it in the altered past would only be observable to one who enters this past from the present after the consensus of the past had been retroactively altered, not just by the creation or erasure of minds that existed in the past, but also by the alteration of what way the minds that existed in the past had contributed to the consensus of their time (see below). The consensus can not only affect the present and future state of reality, but also it's past and future states, should the consensus influence the past to have been a certain way, all of reality would warp itself to be consistent with having come from that version of the past, should the consensus influence the future to be a certain way, the future would warp itself to fulfill this prediction. This makes time-travel more like stepping into another world entirely, as going back to a past that the consensus of the present had altered is not going back to the "true" past that existed pre-alteration. Furthermore, if the consensus on the present had altered the consensus of the past, that past consensus would not have any influence on the time-travelers reality before they went back in time, since their minds wouldn't be present to exert any influence on reality, but after doing so, the time-traveler is now in a world where the consensus is different, and therefore reality will warp itself to match with that new consensus, since the time-traveler's influence is going to be easily overpowered by the influence of the minds of everyone else in that version of the past, and if this consensus of the past was created by a consensus of the present, it's possibly a consensus that never created a reality before, thus the time-traveler is trapped in a brand new version of reality without precedent (whether they are aware of this or not). This is because only minds that are active in the present can contribute to determining the nature of reality at any point in time, a mind that has ceased to generate any activity or which has yet to begin doing so does not have it's contributions factored in to the state of reality at the time. A time-traveler going to the future would have the same experience, as the existing consensus of the future, which may or may not have been influenced by the consensus of the present, would overpower the time-traveler and leave them trapped in a reality that is produced by that future consensus, just as with the case of travel to the past, time-travel in this setting is potentially like stepping into an alternate reality, however, normally the time-traveler wouldn't notice since the differences between produced realities would not likely be readily noticeable. Still, history is no longer an exact science in such a setting.
8 posts omitted.
>>279 Holy fuck two auto success and two extra rerolls. 1d10 = 5 1d10 = 5
>>277 It's been a while since I read the mage core book but that sounds about right. Only as a PC you have a way to cheat a little. To bend temporarily that which is commonly believed into that which only you believe. The greater the disbelief such a thing would generate, or how hard it deviates from the norm of the collective unconsciousness, determines it's difficulty but also the danger. Any time a mage cheats reality in this fashion theres a possibility of failure, and reality snapping back to it's more or less true form. Often in very exciting ways. It is an interesting philosophical concept, but ultimately probably fruitless as it applies to the real world. I would encourage moderation if reading too much into it. And if you wanna play mage then I'm down.
I asked a question on the old /lit/ regarding a sci fi book that features living replicating universes and so far I've gotten stuff that kind of fits the bill but not 100 percent.

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/writ/ Scribe 07/17/2021 (Sat) 21:24:07 No. 132 [Reply] [Last]
Are you writing? Do you want to? Dreams of writing for anything in particular? Share, chat, and critique. Let's suffer together.
114 posts and 9 images omitted.
Refugee who barely hung around /lit/ transmitting into the blind here. I mostly liked writing threads because ironically I wasn't much of a reader myself. I'm willing to read other's works and give criticism but my stuff was pretty ignored. Figure I'll throw out a pair of chapters I worked on ages ago and see how you guys would like it. Yes its .MD cause I'm a faggot who likes using obsidian. Please be harsh. I want it to hurt.
Ben writing. Very slowly. I'm stuck between writing the first draft and writing the skeleton draft outline. I want to write a separate microfiction in the same universe but just so little time.
Half way through my second volume, working on another series at the same time. Unfortunately, I get distracted much too easily. Maybe I should get into a more isolated space where tv and videogames aren't as accessible.

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Kurt Vonnegut Scribe 08/10/2021 (Tue) 23:28:29 No. 294 [Reply]
I just finished Slaughterhouse-Five, this was my introduction to Vonnegut and it couldn't have left a better impression on me if it tried. I went into this completely blind and with little to no expectations but left pleasantly surprised. I would love to know what the fact that ending was supposed to convey exactly beyond "war bad". What should I read next?
>>294 He was anti-war for sure. Of the post world war 1 "oh the inhumanity of man" sort. He's good but that is the overarching theme hes getting at. I'd say offset it with something prowar. Like starship troopers. Not like the movie. Have you read zodiac by Neal Stephenson? He wasn't a cuck when he was starting out so the earlier stuff is good. If you want more vonnegut cat's cradle is popular. For more in the anti-war vein catch-22 is excellent.
>>294 I personally don't recommend The Sirens of Titan, it was the last one of his I read and it was just too nialistic for me. Cat's cradle was interesting

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Writefag thread Anonymous 01/05/2023 (Thu) 04:27:36 No. 567 [Reply]
Write your stupid stories here so anons can call you a homosexual.
15 posts and 3 images omitted.
The fourth time round I had even remembered my name. The pain hadn't gotten any better though. I was afraid to touch my head again lest I find a hole there and touch my own brain, sure as hell felt like it anyway. Sgt. Kirkegaard. No relation. I had a job... A mission. I'm supposed to be doing something, but the darkness has a comfort all it's own, and soon I find myself coming to for the fifth time.
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WHITE POWER
Tanna Banks, just 19 years old, stood at the entrance of an office building. Her newly earned associates degree and education certificates glimmered in her hand, evidence of her successful journey through the public school system. Her hair fell down her back reaching just below her waist, forming loose curls around her face. Her eyes shone emerald green, framed by long lashes. She wore minimal makeup – only a touch of mascara to accentuate her eyes and a hint of blush on her cheeks. She wore more than what was expected from women: A knee length skirt, not an inch shorter. The blouse clung softly to the bra underneath, sheer fabric revealing it as black and lacey. Full coverage! She insisted within herself. Less than a bikini would show. The skirt was made of flowing material that danced around her legs as she moved. She knew what was expected from her but refused to give in to the lechery. Tanna would show them that a woman is made of more than legs. She stepped into the security office at the lady's entrance with a sigh. "Hi there little girl"! Tom the Guardsman said with a greasy leer. "You know I have to make sure you're not carrying anything." Tom was overweight, middle aged, and a boor. He also had the final say over whether Tanna would get to start her second day on the job. "Your purse" he said, holding out a plastic tray. She reluctantly placed it inside. Instead of just looking inside Tom dumped everything onto a table. Lipstick, tissues, wallet, keys, phone, and some tampons spilled out. He took his time picking up each item. He looked up at her with a smirk, "Well aren't we prepared for anything?" Tanna blushed as she felt the heat rise in her cheeks but kept quiet. "Is this your size?" He picked up the tampon. "That's pretty tight" Her blush deepened into a crimson red. Tom laughed. She could feel his gaze on her, and it made her skin crawl. "Now just step onto the platform here so we can run a scan." he commanded. Tanna hesitated, feeling as if she was about to walk into an ambush. But this was work! This was part of being a woman. An adult. She stepped onto the platform, standing still while it started its scan. Tom hit a button before it got up to her knees. "oops!" he said "Looks like the machine broke! This is going to be a manual inspection" Tanna's heart raced as she looked around desperately for someone else but as her eyes landed on the other guard her heart sank. He looked no older than her and he was practically drooling. She swallowed hard, and steeled herself. Tom approached her, "Just gonna pat you down here to make sure nothing is hidden under your clothes" He put his hand on the inside of her knee and slowly moved it up. Tanna closed her eyes tight, trying not to imagine what she knew was happening. Tom's fingers brushed against her inner thigh, lingering a little too long and then cupped her crotch. "Panties?" he said. "Hey Bob, check this out, I think she's hiding something in here!" He motioned to the other guard who eagerly came over. Bob hesitated only a moment before reaching up her skirt. Tanna bit back a whimper as his hand felt under the gusset and wiggled against her sex. "Let me make sure" Bob said, trying to sound as confident as Tom did. He pulled down her panties to her ankles exposing everything. She couldn't hold it in any longer - tears welled up in her eyes. The two guards snickered at her, but continued their search. After an eternity and Tom's hand under her bra they finished and stepped back. "Well you're all clear" said Tom. "You know, this would go faster if we didn't have all those clothes to look through". Tanna stepped down and fixed her clothes, furiously wiping away the tears. She wouldn't let them see how much it hurt. "I'll remember that next time" she replied in a masked voice. And stepped through the door, 15 minutes late her second day on the job.

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Tolkien's Legendarium Scribe 05/26/2022 (Thu) 23:59:06 No. 525 [Reply]
I just finished reading The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion. I know there are tons of other books related to this series, but I'm having a hard time figuring out which ones are actually worth reading as narratives, and which are mostly made for their value of their analysis. I understand how some people might care about analyzing the development of the texts, but I really just want to read stories. But it's hard to figure out which publications are actually made for the sake of telling stories. For example, The History of Middle Earth seems mostly to exist for its analytical value, but its first two volumes are called The Book of Lost Tales, and seem to feature some narratives not told elsewhere, among others that are just earlier versions of narratives in The Silmarillion. Is The Book of Lost Tales (or any other book of The History of Middle Earth) actually worth reading for its narrative value, or only for seeing the literary development of The Silmarillion? Related to the same question, there is Unfinished Tales. As these are unfinished, I'm less interested in them, but would anyone say they are actually worth reading for their narrative value, either on their own or as they add to the greater narrative of the world? Or are they more just interesting for seeing the ideas Tolkien toyed with in the development of his work? What about the "Great Tales?" The Children of Hurin, Beren and Luthien, and The Fall of Gondolin. They were published as standalone books in the last 15 years, and they seemed like interesting stories in The Silmarillion, so I'd be interested in reading more fleshed out versions. Is that what these publications are? From what I've gleaned from the internet, Children of Hurin and Fall of Gondolin sound like they're novels, but Beren and Luthien is apparently a publication of two versions of the same story, to show the development of it. I'd be less interested in that than I would in just a full book of a much more fleshed out story, especially since that chapter of The Silmarillion interested me much more than the other two Great Tales. Of course, I'd also be interested in your thoughts and questions about the main three books. Now that I've finally read them, I finally understand them. I tried to read The Silmarillion when I was like 12, after Jackson's Fellowship of the Ring movie came out, and I read The Hobbit, so I figured reading the thing that takes place first would be fine, I wouldn't need to know the end of Lord of the Rings since it takes place later. I was sorely mistaken. I finished it, but retained almost nothing. Now, 20 years later, I finally understand it. Except for one thing. Who is Tom Bombadil? I'm pretty sure he's the embodiment of the forest. I mean his wife is very blatantly the spirit of the river, and that would match the forest well enough. But I'd be interested in hearing/arguing about other ideas.
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>>660 Thanks for the info! I'm now late in replying to your reply, but this is good info. So to be clear, The Fall of Gondolin, as well as Beren and Luthien, are there to show the development of the stories, but Children of Hurin is more like an actual novel? What I'm wondering is if, in terms of narrative value, I'd get more from reading the standalone books than I did from reading The Silmarillion. Are the final versions of the stories pretty much just the ones that are in The Silmarillion? And is Children of Hurin an exception in that it has a more fleshed out version of the version that's in The Silmarillion? I'll be honest about not having much interest in earlier versions of the stories. It's kind of cool, but I have a lot of stuff to read and only so much time to read it. But a more fleshed out version of a story that I've only read an abridged version of would be cool.
>>563 >like those stuck up elves DnD memes infesting Tolkien discussion yet again.
>>677 The fact that hobbits are much more down-to-earth than elves, and everyone else, is central to their premise. Elves are definitely stuck up compared to them.

Mein Kampf -Adolf Hitler Anonymous 04/12/2022 (Tue) 03:40:34 No. 407 [Reply]
Part autobiography, historical treatise, dissertation on goverment and its role in the life of men. And then there's the man's solution to the various issues of the world. His solution is political. This is party platform as much as it is anything. And it is many things. Taken orally while hitler languished in prison, there is a strong stream of consciousness to the chapters. A very good read and highly recommended.
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This is a National Socialist board. Jews not allowed. If your jewish then you will be banned. Go to hell demons. It has open borders, and you love immigration.
>>553 If he was banned for rascism you would have a point. But he was banned for his race. Because I am a racist. And I think all jews need to perish.
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join a youth group they said

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Beginners guide on books about the Jewish Question? Scribe 10/15/2022 (Sat) 06:54:15 No. 561 [Reply]
Someone posted on 4chan lit, a PNG about Beginners Redpilling Guide on the Jewish Question Books but a week ago the thread got deleted. Can anyone here share the png guide here or list of books on the Jewish Question? All I remember from the PNG is the Elders of Zion, the invention of the jewish people and The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine by Ilan Pappe.
1 post omitted.
>>562 its somewhere anon. Everything is somewhere
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funerals >kek

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I recommend you reading this book. Scribe 05/18/2024 (Sat) 16:29:56 No. 666 [Reply]
A novel called '29 Locks' by Nicola Garrard is a very interesting novel. The book is basically about a fifteen-year-old Donald Leroy Samson is the son of an absentee St. Lucian father and a drug-addicted English mother. Growing up in dire poverty in Hackney, East London, his life is shaped by casual violence, gang initiation, drug-dealing, and knife crime. When Donny's bored, rich, white girlfriend Zoe is offered a dubious modeling audition, the couple "borrow" a barge and navigate the 29 locks on the canal system from Hertfordshire down into Kings Cross. When they start out on their journey, the future for both of them looks unpromising, like the fake audition, but as each lock is navigated and conquered, as the waters fall then rise again, their adventure takes on a new dimension. Life will never be the same again. A gritty, urban tale of redemption. It's pretty excellent, and I found it from my school library. Definitely something that you should check out.

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