Short rundown of what I've been reading since end of Aug during my vacation:
1) Re-read of "The Steel Remains" - I remembered next to nothing about this, except Ringil and a bit about Eg. On a re-read, it's still not as good as Morgan's Covacs stuff, but it's ok, and some interesting world-building aspects.
2) since I was back home, I finally read a book I got from one of my cousins about a year ago- "Політ золотої мушки", or "The flight of a golden fly" by Bohdan Voloshyn. It's a collection of satirical short stories exposing a bunch of Western Ukrainian quirks through a fictional small town and its inhabitants. The hook of the book is supposed to be it's heavy use of extreme Galician dialectisms (my cousin and her husband had a very hard time reading it). However, due to me spending a lot of time around 2nd and 3rd gen Uki Canadians who use the archaic Galician as their primary Ukrainian, that factor wasn't a barrier for me. As for the content, I've read the earlier stories before, somewhere (I suspect I may have gotten the book from the Uki section of my library in Canada). The later stories lost the satirical tone, getting somewhat darker, and the tone change didn't really work for me. Still, an ok distraction overall.
3) Also read Arnold Joseph Toynbee's "Civilization on Trial" and "The West and the World"- 2 collections of essays written by a history prof writing in the 1950s about the philosophy of history. If you take into account that this is written way before the Internet and at the onset of the Cold War, there were some scarily interesting and accurate insights in there about the course of world's history looking at it in a "clash of civilizations"-type of analysis, but philosophy instead of political science. Worth a look, despite how clearly dated it is.
4) Because I didn't want to cart the whole volume back with me, I speed-read Saltykov-Schedrin's "Tale of One City". Satire exposing Russian absolutism and popular acquiescence to authority is all kinds of depressing.
5) While in Europe, I resumed "The Cold Commands". I'm still interested where Morgan is going with this, and gonna try to pick up "The Dark Defiles" tomorrow so I can finish the trilo while it's still fresh, but i';m not loving it. It's ok, but not great.
6) I also read Ian McDonald's "Brasyl" which was pretty fun, though I liked the "River of Gods" approach with many more PoVs better than just having 3 storylines to follow. Still, a really cool premise, and strong theme of local colour made it an engrossing read overall.
I also started Francis Fukuyama's
The origins of Political order: From Prehuman times to the French Revolution which so far is an oddly accessible (after "End of History") attempt at applying evolutionary principles to human societies to trace the evolution of the main components of liberal democracies throughout human history. It feels like it'd be a pretty monumental work, so I think i'll try the Malaz re-read approach to this of squeezing in a chapter a day before bedtime to make sure I don't abandon this, because it's pretty interesting and development theroy and comparative studies have always been my favourite aspects of my Poli Sci almost-minor in undergrad.
This post has been edited by Mentalist: 24 December 2017 - 09:38 PM