What subjects do you plan on reading this year?For me:Roman history Labor history Media theory & cultural studies, anthropologyphilology/linguistics New philosophy stuff (object oriented ontology, poetics/hermeneutics, utilitarianism, philosophy of religion, more political philosophy)Biographies and autobiographiesSome novels, particularly Italian and French works (in translation because I'm a pseud). Maybe something like Name Of The Rose (medieval and ancient conspiracy stories - help me out here!)What about you?
Marketing books I wanna sell more products
Autistically long autobiographies and memoirs
>>24985991I'm going to read more capeshit
>>24985999Samuel Pepys?
>History of /tg/ in my cunt>Christian apologia>A history of ashkenazi jews throughout the 20th century and how they won it by any metric>1450-1560 in Europe>Hemingway's book on bullfightingAnd of course my regular diet of fiction.
>>24986247Yes it's one of them
>>24985991>>24986272>>24986008>>24985999Ur gay nerds I plan of reading 4plebs on crimemaxxing, and implementing it without delay
>>24985991I want to read Canadian history books. I saw some ragebait tweet the other day that stuck with me, it said something like “Canada has the third highest gold production in the world, number 2 in uranium, number 1 in potash and number 1 in freshwater, but we’re still crumbling”; I want a book to answer what exactly went so wrong.
>>24986356Canada ain't shit.
I got these books as gifts for myself for Christmas, so these.The one on top is a book about the conquest of Mexico."The Last of the Mohicans" seems to be a historical novel about the expansion of European-Americans settlements into the lands of the Mohicans and the latter's gradual recess.No idea what the Jansson and Balzac books are about, but they looked nice when I went into a bookstore and found those.The one titled "Der Papalagi" seems to be about Pacific Islanders and their interactions with early Christian missionaries in their land (I got it at a used book store for no other reason than wanting to have something to practice reading in German - my fourth language).The second-to-last one is a series of short stories by New Orleans-native William Faulkner titled "New Orleans Sketches", which I got as a bit of a gimmicky souvenir of sorts when I visited a bookstore while on a trip to New Orleans last year.The last one seems to be a poetry book by Rilke (never read anything by him, but my sister gave it to me as a gift).