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Edina Kishonthy's avatar

That is an awesome list. I am especially intrigued by the Erich Fromm book. It addresses a question I have had on my mind. It is something that makes me very sad - what is going on in Hungary. How is it, that after 50 years of oppression by foreign and domestic powers, Hungarians have willingly elected, and those who didn't vote for him tolerated, an autocrat. There was so much joy and anticipation in 1989, and now we are worse off than before as a country, and as a nation, in all the domains (economy, standard of living, morals, etc). Other East European countries didn't fall into this trap. There's something about Hungarians. Maybe it is the anxiety / depression that is genetically built into us, unfortunately (as I often say, Procaz should be baked into the bread in Hungary). Yes, as a side note, one of the triggers of anxiety for people with Generalized Anxiety Disorder is unstructured time (a.k.a. freedom). When they have "nothing to do," on weekends and school breaks for kids, the anxiety peaks.

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Jeremiah Lewis's avatar

I'm looking forward to reading a very short list of books that are carryovers from last year. Like you, I don't make reading lists. But once I add a book to my queue, it's just a matter of time.

The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver. Going in blind on this one, don't even know what it's about. Haven't read the jacket or anything.

A Fire on the Deep by Vernor Vinge. Sci-fi, that's all I know about it.

A Perfect Spy by John le Carré.

None of these are "research" for anything else. They're just for reading and enjoying.

I may try to attack the 4th Churchill WW2 Ring book again after giving up on it halfway in 2020. Any other books I do end up reading will be fortuitous, unexpected encounters.

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