GOD FUCKING DAMMIT. This forum ate my post, which I spent a FUCKING HOUR ON.
...I'll try again.
I've spent a lot of time in lockdown and unemployment, and it wasted on the internet. Only finally decided a couple weeks ago to dedicate time to reading at least 50 pages a day, and I managed to get that up to a couple hundred pages average a day once I got back into the swing of things.
Books completed:
1) Rites of Peace: The Fall of Napoleon and the Congress of Vienna, by Adam Zamoyski: nonfiction, covers the diplomatic charades that closed out the Napoleonic wars. About 2/5ths of the book covers the final maneuvers of the war from Napoleon's retreat from Russia to his surrender, but the military side is only covered enough to keep track of the war; the focus is on the diplomats following the frontline, making alliances and hasty deals for the split of the continent post-war. The author posits that many of these deals were ill-considered and rushed due to the pressures of the time, headed by personalities with their own beliefs and foibles which sabotaged the ideals of rebuilding a peaceful Europe. The big focus on the book is how these hasty agreements played out at the congress called in Vienna after the war, and how these poorly thought-through deals became the cornerstone of a politically reorganized Europe. The congress was also infamous for the lavish balls and sexual debauchery which distracted and tired the diplomats even as they were creating the modern Europe. Great read.
2) Star Wars: X-Wing Series Books 5-7: Wraith Squadron, Iron Fist, and Solo Command, all by Aaron Allston: The old Star Wars EU was a really strange mix of all sorts of things from great to awful, but these books have remained some of my all time favorites. I reread them to help get back into the reading groove. They have little connection with the earlier books in the X-Wing series, so you can think of them as their own trilogy. They focus on the formation and operations of a starfighter squadron which doubles as a commando unit, so you read through both classic Star Wars space action and inventive special operations. The pilots are all hardcases who've almost flunked out of starfighter training and have been given a last chance, which the author uses as an excuse to explore mental health
and have some really strange cast choices for a Star Wars book (headlined by a Gamorrean, one of those green fat pig guys from Jabba's palace in Episode 6, only this one was modified to be a mathematical genius). Best of all, they're
funny. Allston has a good balance of drama and humor, with most everybody in the cast getting a chance to snark and pull pranks in between cast deaths and mourning. I don't recommend Books 1-4 or 8 of this same series, which I last enjoyed as a teenager but which I've found have not aged alongside me (they feature a different cast of characters, are a different story arc, and were written by a different author). Book 9 was written by Allston, but serves as something of an epilogue to the arc of Books 1-4 & 8, and although I suppose you can read it alone, you won't get the intended emotional impact of a certain character arc across the earlier series concluding that the book was entirely written around.
3) Merchant Soldier Sage, by David Priestland: Made myself finish the final 60-70 pages after dropping it for a couple of months. Quick copy+paste from the first time I mentioned it in this thread: "an examination of history through a lens of caste struggle, as opposed to class struggle (with caste in this context meaning broad groups matching jobs, such as aristocracy or priesthood), in an effort to identify merchant caste values and how their unfettered proliferation in the past few decades led to the 2008 recession." It's unfortunate that the 2 month break dulled my memory so I didn't get the most out of the book as I could have, but I'm trying to move forward with getting through my library and didn't want to waste time restarting it. Overall, I thought it was an interesting way to view history and power. It fits my personal experience that people tend to lean in the direction of certain values which are conducive to excelling in their fields, which essentially is the thesis of the work, and makes sense to me in a way I've always felt that Marxism lacked.
From now on, I am endeavoring to maintain a reading list of 3-4 books at a time: 1 nonfiction, 1 high-literature/poetry, and 1 low-literature (I don't want an argument on the division and respect accorded to high and low art, there's an obvious distinction between Ulysses and a Warhammer 40k novel which anybody with a brain can recognize), and 1 open spot if I feel like I need to switch off from those other things.
1) Nonfiction: Atlas Obscura: An Explorer's Guide to the World's Hidden Wonders, by Joshua Foer, Dylan Thuras, Ella Morton: My degree is Geographic Information Science. There was less geography in it than a usual GIS program; our's substituted geography classes with surveying. So I have a few books on geography and the history of cartography to round out my own education. Atlas Obscura is the first one which I'm reading. It catalogs many notable and odd landmarks and sights throughout the world, both manmade and natural. I'm keeping a notebook handy as I go along to jot down any that I wish to use in the D&D game I'm writing. My current favorite is the
Eye of Africa, which contrary to appearances is not an impact crater but a naturally eroded dome of massive size.