Category: nonfiction
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Book Review: The Extinction of Experience, by Christine Rosen
Dive into the unique aspects of Australian literature and its significance in the global literary scene.
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Book Review: Nuclear War, by Annie Jacobsen
Annie Jacobsen’s Nuclear War describes the collapse of civilization in unforgettable detail.
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Book Review: Money, by David McWilliams
As books on money go, few are as fun as this.
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Book Review: What We Owe the Future, by William MacAskill
William MacAskill’s deep dive into our ethical responsibilities toward future generations is the best book I’ve read all year.
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Book Review: Cobalt Red, by Siddharth Kara
Cobalt Red is Siddharth Kara’s devastating exposé of a country ravaged by Western hunger for digital technologies.
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Book Review: Slow Productivity, by Cal Newport
‘Slow Productivity’ is familiar territory for Cal Newport, but a good reminder for those of us caught in the world of busy for busy’s sake.
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Book Review: Chip War, by Chris Miller
Chris Miller’s ‘Chip War’ exposes the fragility of one of the world’s most critical supply chains.
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Book Review: How The World Ran Out of Everything, by Peter S. Goodman
Peter S. Goodman’s lively but far-reaching book examines how modern supply chains became extremely complex, extremely cheap, and extremely fragile.
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Book Review: Bitch, by Lucy Cooke
Lucy Cooke’s ‘Bitch’ concludes that there is no single definition of what it means to be ‘female’ in nature.
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Book Review: Poor Charlie’s Almanack, by Charlie Munger
Charlie Munger’s classic compendium reminds us that he truly is the Godfather of interdisciplinary mental models.