I am beginning to feel very negatively about John Lennon.

The absolute state of contemporary science fiction. A Goodreads book through and through.

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Grossly simplifies and cites outdated studies like the Milgram experiment. Full of truisms that serve only to appeal to the intended liberal reader's sense of superiority and intelligence. I didn't find it worth finishing despite its brevity.

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It all came together as I finished it in a way I cannot describe more than saying it occurred super-textually, like a wave that cascaded backwards, justifying every word Joyce wrote.

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It will forever puzzle me that Cassius and Brutus are put in the innermost circle alongside Judas, seemingly elevating Caesar above the Christ.

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The connection of Alan Dulles to Jack Kennedy's assassination is thinner than mere attribution to the CIA, but the outline of the less speculative events in the man's life is adequate.

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Yet another pop science book where economists try to convince you that they came up with a basic concept. This time: statistical variation.

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Everyone authors an autobiography with a spin in mind, and rewriting the history of a legal battle nobody but the author cares about is such a dull spin.

3.5/10.

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Undoubtedly the best of his writings: well-paced and entreating all sorts of speculations. Its only categorical flaw is his overuse of ‘decadence' to hammer in his theme of civilisational decline.

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Provides a lukewarm opposition to the popular view of Putin as a domestically unrestricted autocrat. I do not think the book successfully proves its thesis that Putin is far weaker than imagined, though it does temper the majority account.

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An even-handed history of the Occupation of Japan, though scant on analysis. Wish it engaged with long-term political and cultural effects of the occupation, both on Japan and globally.

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Remarkably defensive of the state of the economy considering the book's title and subject matter. The Profit Paradox summarises entry-level economics for the majority of the book, only introducing novel ideas in its scant and underdeveloped final chapter.

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One of those mystifying books I'll read over and over again for the hope of understanding just one more sentence.

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A decent investigation into the history and business practices of one of the world's most successful corporations. Most interesting is the portion covering Coca-Cola's bottled water ventures and consequent attempts to exploit weak municipal water distribution.

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Phenomenal chapter on Scientology's embodiment of neoliberal economics, but the collection as a whole is undermined by the apologetic chapter by a self-admitted NRM adherent, out of place in an academic textbook.

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