Reading Project

readingproject.au

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We reached 100K views last night. Thanks to all who have taken an interest. I've made an entry in our blog on our about page about it which has some stats:
6 likes
dotcomboom's avatar dotcomboom 7 years ago

Congratulations! Like what you're doing.

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readingproject's avatar readingproject 7 years ago

* 282 pages that comprise the website * 179 reviews of 174 different books * 178,960 words across the 179 reviews * 33 Federalist Papers read for that project, totalling 21,082 for that alone * 9 Man Booker Prize winners now reviewed for that project * 3 main reviewers with reviews by a total of 6 different people * 9 Man Booker Prize winners now reviewed for that project

4 likes
elementz's avatar elementz 7 years ago

Wow! That is some amazing stats. Congrats!

2 likes
readingproject's avatar readingproject 7 years ago

Thanks. I know what we're doing doesn't fit a lot of what people on neocities are interested in, but we're just following our own interests. It's nice to see that there's some interest in it out there, too.

3 likes
I know little about web design, so I thought I would let you know I used your Penny's Pages and realised I could personalise a 404 page. Thanks. At the moment, it reads: "if you have not removed the page, you can access, and edit it". Maybe you could edit the text to say that if you have deleted the file you can still create a new file called not_found.html to create that page. I realised I could do this.
New Review: The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton
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New Review: G. by John Berger
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Say, are you guys planning on ever adding a "Philosophy" category? Because that would be rad.
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readingproject's avatar readingproject 7 years ago

I never formally studied philosophy although I have read some, particularly existentialism while doing my honours thesis. I lost all my philosophy books years ago in a strange theft. Always happy to include reviews by others, although I think that kind of review would also fit your own site. If any of us (or someone else) feel a desire to read philsophy again, I'll add it. Thanks

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nbodyproblem's avatar nbodyproblem 7 years ago

(Somehow I am very interested in whoever your burglar was.) I didn't formally study philosophy either, I'm just very interested in the field and would've liked to read about some titles from your perspective. If I ever feel an urge to opinionate about the body without organs again, I'll gladly submit some of that in text form to you, though.

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readingproject's avatar readingproject 7 years ago

That would be great. The ‘burglary’ was really my fault. I put out a cache (see About page re geocaching) based on “A Room of One’s Own” by Virginia Woolf, which I consider philosophical. I included my philosophy books for others to swap in the cache, thinking I might get something new. Instead, a non-cacher found the cache and just stole it.

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readingproject's avatar readingproject 7 years ago

This is a link to that cache listing, if you’re interested (ignore the how to join panel and scroll below it): https://www.geocaching.com/geocache/GC25BBX_a-room-of-ones-own?guid=08178ab8-06db-400d-83f6-1de506f9f3a0

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readingproject's avatar readingproject 7 years ago

Of course, you're probably very familiar John Berger's Ways of Seeing which I reviewed on our site. My review of that is very basic. You could have probably done a better job. I'm currently finishing his novel, G.

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nbodyproblem's avatar nbodyproblem 7 years ago

Oh my. What a sweet cache idea. I'm sure the thief was a struggling young Ph.D. candidate whose uni library burned down and he ran out of text to quote.

1 like
nbodyproblem's avatar nbodyproblem 7 years ago

Then, desperate and asking himself whether life made any sense or driving to the next town to use their library was worth it, he stumbled over your cache and felt that his prayers - though he would never admit that he did actually pray, for he was an academic - had been answered.

1 like
nbodyproblem's avatar nbodyproblem 7 years ago

I think your reading of John Berger was perfectly fine, for it was intended as a basic text. That's why it was influential - a mainstream audience was able to grasp what he wanted to say, which is very rare and therefore all the more delightful.

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nbodyproblem's avatar nbodyproblem 7 years ago

I only remember fragments of the text, and that was still enough to write my rant about the negligence of art historians to accept they're praising porn.

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