TomSweeney wrote: » SPQR a history of Ancient Rome by Mary Beard Fantastic!!! I can't put it down!!
Thargor wrote: » Yep, best history book Ive ever read.
Fakediamond wrote: » When breath becomes air - Paul Kalanithi. Autobiographical memoir of a talented young neurosurgeon, who died at age 37 years in 2015. It definitely makes you appreciate your life, however imperfect it might be.
Belle E. Flops wrote: Rereading 'Wise Man's Fear' by Patrick Rothfuss. Waiting very impatiently for any sign of the third book coming out.
Dial Hard wrote: » I loved 'The Name of the Wind'. Thought 'The Wise Man's Fear' was considerably weaker. Have consigned the third volume to the "Never going to happen" scrapheap alongside the rest of A Song of Ice and Fire.
In 2011, Adolf Hitler wakes up in a vacant lot in Berlin which appears to be the location of the garden outside the bunker where he was burned, with no knowledge of anything that happened following his death in 1945. Homeless and destitute, he interprets everything he sees and experiences in 2011 from a Nazi perspective — for instance, he assumes that Turks in Germany are an indicator of Karl Dönitz having persuaded Turkey to join the Axis, and thinks that Wikipedia is named for Wikinger (“Vikings”). Although everyone recognizes him, nobody believes that he is Hitler; instead, they think he is either a comedian or a method actor. He appears on a variety television show called Whoa, dude!, going off-script to broadcast his views. Videos of his angry rants become hugely successful on YouTube, and he achieves modern celebrity status as a performer. The newspaper Bild tries to take him down, but is sued into praising him. He is beaten up by far-right extremists who think he is mocking the memory of Hitler, unaware that he is the genuine article. In the end, he uses his popularity to re-enter politics.
Noel Some Cornbread wrote: » Er Ist Weider Da' ~ Timur Vermes. Hilarious. I haven't laughed so much since I read James Harriots series of 'All Creatures great and Small'. Highly recommended. I start it this morning, ironically enough the date of Hitlers birthday lol
pitifulgod wrote: » It's great but unfortunately more relevant than ever now. There's a film too.