booktweeting, to books
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

ADRIFT IN A NEARLY DESERTED VENICE in the early months of the 2020 pandemic, a writer contemplates his native Nigeria, his life in Detroit, his love of travel, but most of all his complicated family. Beautifully crafted prose, distinctive story. B PLUS

https://www.arcadiapublishing.com/collections/new-coming-soon/products/9781953368669

@bookstodon

CordeliaBeattie, to earlymodern
@CordeliaBeattie@historians.social avatar

Charles II had his coronation
23 April 1661 at Westminster Abbey. How was this event remembered by Alice Thornton, a gentlewoman living in north . See our blog post. https://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/posts/blog/2023-04-23-coronation-charles-II/
@earlymodern @histodons @histodon @litodons

booktweeting, to books
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

AN EXPERT ON CARCERAL VIOLENCE and the system’s cruel injustices to poor and minority youth tells the story of a tragedy that happened in his own extended family—the loss of a bright, caring teen to imprisonment and then a gang-related murder. A MINUS

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/sito-laurence-ralph/1143598833?ean=9781538740323

@bookstodon

HannibalElector, to Introvert
@HannibalElector@beige.party avatar

Allow me to reintroduce myself

by day, couch potato by night.

I have a ton of new stuff on my watchlist, but I'm just going to rewatch the same 5 over and over again.

I read a lot of and nonfiction about psychology, disease, physics, chemistry, poisons, crimes, and cults.

is the nerdiest sport, and therefore the best.

thevglibrary, to poetry
@thevglibrary@mstdn.social avatar

What an awesome and eclectic series of books recommended to today! ♥️

From and to and - there's a little bit for everyone!

Thanks so much to @XenosNS and the Discord community for these!

Hannibal_elector, to tvshows
@Hannibal_elector@techtoots.com avatar


Engineer by day, couch potato by night.

I have a ton of new stuff on my watchlist, but I'm just going to rewatch the same 5 over and over again.

I read a lot of and nonfiction about psychology, disease, physics, chemistry, poisons, crimes, and cults.

is the nerdiest sport, and therefore the best.

One of my toxic habits is server hopping when my feed gets too quiet.

booktweeting, to books
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

A BLACK PHYSICIAN’S UNSPARING examination of the profound impact racism has on healthcare and health outcomes intertwines with stories of her own, her sister’s, and her mother’s lives as doctors. Thoughtful, deep, engaging. A MINUS

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/legacy-uch-blackstock-md/1142804246?ean=9780593491287

@bookstodon

#book #Books #bookreview #bookreviews #nonfiction #medicine #healthcare #BlackStudies #blackwriters #BlackHistory #memoir #memoirs

booktweeting, to books
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

A MEMOIR OF DIVORCE AND MOTHERHOOD shines brightest when talking about the raw physicalities of birth and parenting and love and longing. Candid and impressively unafraid to show the writer’s flaws. B PLUS

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/splinters-leslie-jamison/1143707716?ean=9780316374880

@bookstodon

appassionato, to books
@appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

Chronicles, Volume One by Bob Dylan

This is the first spellbinding volume of the three-volume memoir of one of the greatest musical legends of all time. In CHRONICLES Volume I, Bob Dylan takes us back to the early 1960s when he arrived in New York to launch his phenomenal career. This is Dylan's story in his own words - a personal view of his motivations, frustrations and remarkable creativity.

@bookstodon



booktweeting, to books
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

BRILLIANT, MOTIVATED, AND FIERCELY fabulous, activist Eddie Ndopu tells the story of his journeys: South Africa to Canada to Oxford to his role on the world’s most glittering stages speaking out for the rights of people with disabilities. B PLUS

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/sipping-dom-p-rignon-through-a-straw-eddie-ndopu/1142837554?ean=9780306829062

@bookstodon

lurkjay, to books
@lurkjay@mastodon.social avatar

The Way the Future Was by Frederik Pohl (1978)

Text instead of screenshots: https://cohost.org/lurkjay/post/4492014-the-way-the-future-w

We milled around in the anteroom, under the original oil paintings of covers from his gadget and radio magazines, but we never got past the reception desk. After about two visits the girl made it clear to us that we never would, and so for submissions to Wonder I scraped up stamp money. I never got past the reception desk at Amazing, either, but T. O’Conor Sloane, Ph.D., did something for me no other editor had done. He made me a pro. Sloane was quite an old man, white-bearded and infirm of gait. He was a marvel to me just on account of age—my own grandfather, who died around that time, was only in his sixties, and Sloane was at least a decade or two past that. But he was amiable and cordial enough; he would totter out to meet me, chat for a moment, and retire with that week’s offering in his hand. His talent as a science-fiction editor was not, I am sorry to say, marked. His scientific attitudes had been fixed somewhere around the rosy twilight of his career, say 1910, and anything since then he dismissed as fantasy. He put himself firmly on record as denying that any human being would ever leave the surface of the Earth in a spaceship, and to us Skylark addicts that was diagnostically treason. What he published was a queer mix of flamboyant space adventure and barely imaginative stories of exploration, all heavily weighted with his interminably balanced blurbs, editorials, and comments on letters. I cannot resist describing one set of the space adventures for you.
They began with a story called “The Jameson Satellite,” written by Neil R. Jones. “The Jameson Satellite” was about a very rich university professor who had nothing much to do with his money and nobody to leave it to. He decided to use it to make himself the dandiest tomb a fellow could have, and so he built in his backyard a rocket ship, big and powerful enough to take his body into orbit, where it would circle Earth, preserved by the absolute zero of space, until the end of time. After a while, it all came about as he planned. He died. His executor had his unembalmed corpse loaded into the rocket, they lit the fuse, and zap, there went all that was mortal of Professor Jameson right into orbit. But there was more. The Earth rolled along. Time passed. The human race became extinct, the sun itself grew cold—and yet Jameson was still there in the deepfreeze. And then, in the fullness of time, strangers came poking around. They were machine-men called Zoromes. They had once had fleshly bodies, more or less like you and me (except that they had tentacles and a few other peculiarities of anatomy), and when they discovered the Jameson satellite with its cargo of still-fresh meat, it was no trouble for them to do with the human corpse what they had done with their own bodies long and long ago: They built him a machine body, took out his brain, thawed it, and stuck it into the machine.
And so thereafter, for endless adventures, Professor Jameson lived once again as the Zorome called 21MM392. The Zorome stories were among the most popular series of the 1930s, and not just with me. There was another reader, a youngster named Bob Ettinger, who liked them as much as I did. A few decades later, when Ettinger was grown up and a scientist on the faculty of a Midwest university, he remembered old Professor Jameson’s deepfreeze and wondered just how much science was in that science fiction. So he dug into the biochemistry and the physics, checked out what was known about the effects of liquid gas temperatures on animal tissue, even costed the current quotations for liquid helium and triply insulated containers big enough to hold you and me… and evolved the proposal described in his book, The Prospects of Immortality, for freezing everyone who dies until such time as medical science figures out how to thaw him out and repair him. Right now there are a couple of dozen corpsicles in the United States (Walt Disney is supposed to be one of them) waiting for that great thawing-out day. It is not yet clear whether they will make it or not; as Bob Ettinger says, they’re halfway there; they’ve frozen quite a few but haven’t thawed any out yet. But if they do make it, they will owe quite a bit to Neil R. Jones and 21MM392.

CordeliaBeattie, to histodon
@CordeliaBeattie@historians.social avatar

30 Jan. 1649 Charles I was executed. For Alice Thornton, looking back on this c.1669, Charles I was a 'martyr' who was 'cruelly murdered by the hands of blasphemous rebels, his own subjects, at Whitehall, London' (Book 1). https://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/posts/blog/2023-01-27-last-days-charlesI/
@histodons @histodon @litodons

BonnettsBooks, to random
@BonnettsBooks@mastodonbooks.net avatar

1/25/24 — Open 6-9p. Mask recommended. No open drinks, please.

I often overlook our biographies & memoirs. Not today! These are nearly all celebrity books–because that's where I was when the idea hit. There are bios in many categories... sports, science, humor, politics, true crime, etc. This is just a sampler! You'll have to visit to find more...

A composite image of six book photos, as follows: 1. "Big Man - Real Life & Tall Tales" by Clarence Clemmons & Don Reo, with a foreword by Bruce Springsteen. 2. "Stand By Your Man - An Autobigraphy" by Tammy Wynette with Joan Dew. 3. "A Life In Stolen Moments - Bob Dylan - Day By Day: 1941-1995" by Clinton Heylin, the author of Bootleg; Bob Dylan: Behind the Shades; and Bob Dylan: The Complete Recording Sessions. 4. "And A Voice to Sing With - A Memoir" by Joan Baez. 5. "Soul Survivors: The Official Autobiography of Destiny's Child" by Beyoncé Knowles, Kelly Rowland, and Michelle Williams, with James Patrick Herman. 6. "I, Tina - My Life Story" by Tina Turner with Kurt Loder.
A composite image of six book photos, as follows: 1. "Lucky Man - A Memoir" by Michael J. Fox. 2. "Donahue - My Own Story" by Phil Donahue & Company. 3. A New York Times Bestseller, "Marlene Dietrich - The Life" by her daughter, Maria Riva. 4. The New York Times Bestseller "If Chins Could Kill - Confessions of a B-Movie Actor" by Bruce Campbell - Includes all-new material on the Chins Across America Tour. 5. "Steve Jobs" by Walter Isaacson - the book that inspired the movie. 6. "Greenlights" by Matthew McConaughey.

booktweeting, to books
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

AN EXTRAVAGANTLY THEATRICAL LIFE, onstage and off—the playwright and incomparable diva Charles Busch’s memoir is witty and full of love for his family, friends, mentors, and muses, but most of all for the glamour of acting. B PLUS

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/leading-lady-charles-busch/1142959951?ean=9781637744147

@bookstodon

CindyWeinstein, to Medicine
@CindyWeinstein@zirk.us avatar

Ibrahim Imam reads lots of books about , esp. the , and reviews them on 'sBookshelf. He wrote a wonderful review of my , & named it one "the most incredibly moving patient memoirs about the brain." Turns out the review was one of the most read of 2023. Below are links to the original review, to the list of , & to 2023's most-read reviews.

https://thedoctorsbookshelf.com/2023/02/26/finding-the-right-words/

https://thedoctorsbookshelf.com/2023/02/11/the-most-incredibly-moving-patient-memoirs-about-the-brain/

https://thedoctorsbookshelf.com/

CordeliaBeattie, to histodon
@CordeliaBeattie@historians.social avatar

We have a new most read post for 2023! Thank you for counting down to 2024 with Alice Thornton's Books, and we wish you a very Happy New Year. Our most read blog post is my 'A House Divided', about the Restoration of Charles II and a domestic quarrel. https://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/posts/blog/2022-09-12-a-house-divided/ @litodons @histodons @histodon

CordeliaBeattie, to history
@CordeliaBeattie@historians.social avatar

We're down to our top two most read blog posts as we count down to 2024! Last year, my piece about finding two missing Alice Thornton manuscripts was in the very top spot. This year it's at number 2. Find out where the Alice Thornton's Books project all began. https://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/posts/blog/2022-06-23-two-missing-thornton-manuscripts/
@bookhistodons @histodons @histodon @litstudies

CordeliaBeattie, to histodon
@CordeliaBeattie@historians.social avatar

As we look over our top 5 blog posts, what better time to dip into the world of Alice Thornton (1626-1707). We'll keep you reading about the till the Eve of 2024. At no. 4, project postdoc Jo Edge brought us 'Alice Thornton, Memory and Middleham Castle'. https://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/posts/blog/2022-07-25-alice-thornton-middleham-castle/
@histodons @histodon @litodons

booktweeting, to books
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

A VISIONARY, KALEIDOSCOPIC MEMOIR combines tales from the writer’s life with legends from her Japanese, Okinawan, and Taiwanese heritage. Touching and insightful; beautifully illustrated by the author’s sister. A MINUS

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-night-parade-jami-nakamura-lin/1142972630?ean=9780063213234

@bookstodon

RED-HEADED STEPCHILD (www.amazon.com)

In the harrowing memoir "Red-Headed Stepchild," Dr. Powell invites readers into the dark corridors of his childhood, a journey fraught with danger, abuse, and an unrelenting will to survive. Raised in a home plagued by violence and fear, he endured unimaginable torment at the hands of his stepfather, facing physical,...

booktweeting, to books
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

THE OPPRESSION OF THE UYGHUR PEOPLE explored in heartbreaking detail through an exiled poet and filmmaker’s memoir. Beautiful writing about a horrifying topic brings stories of the imprisoned and murdered into the light. A MINUS

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/waiting-to-be-arrested-at-night-tahir-hamut-izgil/1142610549?ean=9780593491799

@bookstodon

CordeliaBeattie, to AdobePhotoshop
@CordeliaBeattie@historians.social avatar

Check out version v1.3.0 of our edition of Alice Thornton's Books. We have a new search function for people and places. Links that go to our partial release are live (others show up but are currently disabled). We also have some sample bios up for the 14 people named in the first 22 pages of her 'Book of Remembrances'. https://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/entities/

@histodons @histodon
@litstudies

CordeliaBeattie,
@CordeliaBeattie@historians.social avatar

We have also added more detail on the site about Alice Thornton's four manuscript books, especially her 'Book of Remembrances' which is where the 103pp of the partial release are from
https://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/books/
@histodons @histodon @litstudies

CordeliaBeattie, to history
@CordeliaBeattie@historians.social avatar

While four autobiograpical accounts of Alice Thornton's (1626-1707) life exist, each one is different from the others as she changed the structure and rewrote events.

@histodons @histodon @archivistodon @antiquidons @bookhistodons

CordeliaBeattie,
@CordeliaBeattie@historians.social avatar

If you are interested in learning more about the four Thornton manuscripts, see our page here:
https://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/books/


@histodons @histodon @archivistodon @antiquidons @bookhistodons

booktweeting, to books
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

A FAMILY’S DEEPEST SECRETS are brought to light in this ambitious, poetic memoir. In a mix of recollection and recreation, the author uses her uncle’s conviction for art forgery as the lens through which to examine a family in flight from truth. B PLUS

https://bellepointpress.com/products/letting-in-air-and-light

@bookstodon

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