addictionary
Well-Known Member
Armageddon by Peyami Safa
I post, therefore I am.
I post, therefore I am.
Sounds interesting. Added to my list.Finished reading Sapiens by Yuval Harari. I liked it a lot, specially its discussion of the evolution of religion from its animist origins, to the modern natural law religions, like humanism, capitalism, and socialism. Highly recommended.
![]()
I enjoyed Origin, I do the same thing as i'm reading it I'll stop and google the locations around Spain he's talking about, makes you want to visit them. I liked Inferno, but I think this is a better book. It had some twists that i didn't see coming. I was wondering if I was going to be let down in the end because the driving force is these two big questions where are we from and where are we going but the ending was satisfying for me."Origin" by Dan Brown
While this series isn't everyone's cup of tea, I love it because of all the things I learn from it. This book is set mostly in Spain and other nearby countries, and I burned up my phone looking at photos of all the locations mentioned. The underlying mystery is rather interesting as well.
Anyone doing Udoh's book club?
He send the book to people who sign up for free and does the discussions on Twitter. Then sometimes he does them in person like he did last month.
I liked Borne a lot even if it's really out there(flying bears and stuff like that) Vandermeer does a really fine job of building these worlds. I really liked his book Annihilation, and I can't wait to see the movie.
He has done a few, I think that is his 3rd one since Joining the Jazz and he is doing them more regularly now.I just saw something about it on Twitter today. Looks like he did "Underground Railroad" by Colson Whitehead as the last book. I read that last year, and while I appreciated the ideas in it, I didn't like how it played with the truth of what the underground railroad really was.