#Emma Thaler
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RESERVED for opening
limit ten (10) per member
for Artemis -
Curran Walters
Jack Quaid
Kat McNamara
Natasha Liu Bordizzo
Richard Harmon
Hailee Steinfeld
Owen Teague
Grant Gustin
for Ashley -
Chloe Bennet
Ana de Armas
Greta Onieogou
Sean Teale
Cody Christian
Kennedy McMann
Cemre Baysel
for Biggles -
Adam Page
Nick Bateman
Adam Cole
Swerve Strickland
for CC -
Danielle Rose Russell
Brenton Thwaites
Dylan O’Brien
Phoebe Tonkin
for Emma -
Aaron Tveit
Penn Badgley
Oscar Isaac
for Katie -
Chloe Grace Moretz
Diana Silvers
Davika Hoorne
Hirai Momo
Brianne Howey
Elle Fanning
beabadoobee
Alexa Demie
Alyssa Milano (young)
Sab Zada
for Kit -
Cailee Spaeny
Megan Fox
Sebastian Stan
Samara Weaving
Sophie Wilde
Mikey Madison
Bruna Maquezine
Glen Powell
Tini Stoessel
Ester Expósito
for Love -
Daisy Edgar-Jones
Anna Sawai
Chris Evans
Kaya Scodelario
Ursula Corbero
Cristin Milioti
Adam Brody
Savannah Lee Smith
for Max -
Bex Taylor-Klaus
Tom Holland x2
Bill Skarsgard
John Krasinski
Emma Myers
Pedro Pascal
Jordan Fisher
Paris Berelc
Tanner Buchanan
for Pixie -
Anya Taylor Joy
Tom Hiddleston
Derek Thaler
Jamie Campbell Bower
Sutton Foster
for Rachael -
Florence Pugh
Sofia Carson
Madelaine Petsch
Sabrina Carpenter
Olivia Rodrigo
Madelyn Cline
Meg Donnelly
Camila Mendes
Isabela Merced
Sophie Thatcher
for Ring -
Spencer Charnas
Noah Sebastian
Andy Biersack
Kat Dennings
for Admin Rory (subject to change) -
Anthony Turpel
Mark McKenna
Toby Wallace
Joshua Colley
Lukas Gage
Briana Cuoco
Xolo Maridueña
Dara Reneé
Ludovico Tersigni
Fionn Whitehead
Kiara Pichardo
Asa Germann
Lukita Maxwell
Jasmin Savoy Brown
Jackson Kelly
Jack Wolfe
Michael Evans Behling
Justin Min
Jonathan Daviss
for Admin Ryan -
Katie Douglas
Joe Locke
Mint Ranchrawee
Ashley Moore
Ciara Bravo
Ashby Gentry
Kento Yamazaki
Federico Russo
Barry Keoghan
Ruby Stokes
Melissa Collazo
Kyle Gallner
Tyler Lawrence Gray
Mia Isaac
Olivia Holt
Jenna Ortega
Antonia Gentry
Jung Hoyeon
Maris Racal
Maia Reficco
for Sierra -
Adam Scott
Norman Reedus
for Sierra -
Sarah Gadon
George MacKay
Logan Lerman
for Tasha -
Kathryn Winnick
Vanessa Morgan
Kristen Kreuk
Kathryn Newton
Nathalie Kelley
Ella Purnell
Madison Pettis
Liz Gillies
Bridget Reagan
for Tom -
Paul Mescal
Theo James
Manny Jacinto
Rahul Kohli
Ryan Gosling
Aron Piper
Suraj Sharma
for V -
Tyla
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Rose Morgan, who still lives with her mother, is a professor of Romantic Literature who desperately longs for passion in her life. Gregory Larkin, a mathematics professor, has been burned by passionate relationships and longs for a sexless union based on friendship and respect. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: Rose Morgan: Barbra Streisand Gregory Larkin: Jeff Bridges Hannah Morgan: Lauren Bacall Henry Fine: George Segal Claire: Mimi Rogers Alex: Pierce Brosnan Doris: Brenda Vaccaro Barry: Austin Pendleton Candy: Elle Macpherson First Girl Student: Ali Marsh Sara Myers: Leslie Stefanson Female Professor: Taina Elg Felicia: Lucy Avery Brooks Felicia (Video): Amber Smith Claire’s Masseur: David Kinzie Rabbi: Howard S. Herman Reverend: Thomas Hartman Trevor: Trevor Ristow Mike (Student): Brian Schwary Randy (Student): Randy Pearlstein Stacie (Student): Stacie Sumter Taxi Stealer: Cindy Guyer Taxi Driver: Thomas Saccio Waiter: Andrew Parks Jimmy the Waiter: Jimmy Baio Henry’s First Date: Emma Fann Henry’s Second Date: Laura Bailey Justice of the Peace: Mike Hodge Gloria: Anne O’Sullivan Female Student: Sandi Schroeder Female Student: Kiyoko M. Hairston Male Student: Ben Weber Male Student: Christopher Keyes Female Aerobic Instructor: Lisa Wheeler Male Aerobic Instructor: Kirk Moore Make-Up Artist: Regina Viotto Hair Colorist: Paul LaBreque Waiter: Rudy Ruggiero Mr. Jenkins: William Cain Doorman: Adam LeFevre Irate Woman: JoAn Mollison Opera Man: Carlo Scibelli Male Student: Eli Roth Girl in Commercial (uncredited): Milla Jovovich Film Crew: Theme Song Performance: Barbra Streisand Screenplay: Richard LaGravenese Casting: Todd M. Thaler Production Design: Tom H. John Executive Producer: Cis Corman Casting: Bonnie Finnegan Editor: Jeff Werner Original Music Composer: Marvin Hamlisch Director of Photography: Dante Spinotti Costume Design: Theoni V. Aldredge Original Story: Gérard Oury Co-Executive Producer: Ronald L. Schwary Location Manager: Declan Baldwin First Assistant Director: Amy Sayres Director of Photography: Andrzej Bartkowiak Producer: Arnon Milchan Production Accountant: Tamara Bally Original Story: André Cayatte Hairstylist: Susan Germaine Makeup Artist: Randy Houston Mercer Chief Lighting Technician: William Ward Rigging Gaffer: James Malone Production Coordinator: Lori Johnson Camera Operator: Dick Mingalone Casting Assistant: Gayle Keller Sound Editor: Mark Larry Sound Editor: Steven Ticknor Sound Editor: John M. Colwell Assistant Costume Designer: Kevin Brainerd Actor’s Assistant: Renata Buser Sound Editor: Chuck Neely Unit Production Manager: Tony Mark Steadicam Operator: Gregory Lundsgaard Makeup Artist: Edouard F. Henriques Production Supervisor: Ray Quinlan Camera Operator: Patrick Capone Theme Song Performance: Bryan Adams Set Decoration: Alan Hicks Supervising Sound Editor: Charles L. Campbell Assistant Sound Editor: Jerry Edemann Assistant Editor: Marilyn Madderom Stunt Coordinator: Vince Deadrick Jr. Art Direction: Teresa Carriker-Thayer Script Supervisor: Karen Kelsall Production Sound Mixer: Tom Nelson Craft Service: Roger Poirier Supervising ADR Editor: Gail Clark Burch Assistant Property Master: Travis Wright Second Unit Director of Photography: Richard Quinlan Orchestrator: Jack Hayes Unit Publicist: Stanley Brossette Property Master: Thomas Saccio Transportation Co-Captain: Dennis Radesky Assistant Sound Editor: Keith Edemann Additional Editing: Alan Heim Foley: Alicia Stevenson Supervising Music Editor: Charles Martin Inouye Orchestrator: Torrie Zito Boom Operator: Daniel Rosenblum ADR Editor: Laura Graham Chief Lighting Technician: Jay Fortune Rigging Grip: Matthew Miller Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Kevin O’Connell Sound Editor: Ronald Eng Sound Editor: Harry Cheney Sound Editor: Richard C. Franklin Hairstylist: John Quaglia Sound Editor: Leonard T. Geschke Scenic Artist: Leslie Salter Camera Operator: Gary Jay First Assistant Camera: Steve Adcock Sound Editor: John H. Arrufat Foley: Marko Costanzo Still Photographer: David James Music Supervisor: Jay Landers Assistant Sound E...
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Così, tanto per fare il punto ed evitare qualsiasi fraintendimento
Disegni di legge
Atto Senato n. 3240 XVI Legislatura
Ratifica ed esecuzione del Trattato che istituisce il Meccanismo europeo di stabilità (MES), con Allegati, fatto a Bruxelles il 2 febbraio 2012
Titolo breve: Ratifica Trattato Meccanismo europeo di stabilità
Seduta n. 764 del 12 luglio 2012 - Votazione elettronica
Oggetto: Votazione finale
L'Assemblea del Senato «vota normalmente per alzata di mano». È quanto detta l'articolo 113 (secondo comma) del Regolamento del Senato. Come specificato nel titolo, le votazioni elencate in questa pagina sono quelle avvenute mediante il dispositivo elettronico. Per tutte le informazioni sui sistemi di voto in vigore in Senato, vedi gli articoli del Regolamento dal 107 al 120 (Capo XIII)
<< Torna all'elenco delle votazioni
Presidente: Emma BONINO
Presenti: 229
In congedo o in missione: 13
Numero legale: 154
Maggioranza: 114
Votanti: 227
Favorevoli: 191
Contrari: 21
Astenuti: 15
Esito: Approvato
Hanno votato a favore:
(elenco)
ADAMO Marilena, PD
AGOSTINI Mauro, PD
ALBERTI CASELLATI Maria Elisabetta, PdL
ALICATA Bruno, PdL
AMATI Silvana, PD
AMORUSO Francesco Maria, PdL
ANDRIA Alfonso, PD
ANTEZZA Maria, PD
ARMATO Teresa, PD
ASTORE Giuseppe, Misto
AUGELLO Andrea, PdL
AZZOLLINI Antonio, PdL
BAIO Emanuela, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
BALBONI Alberto, PdL
BALDINI Massimo, PdL
BARBOLINI Giuliano, PD
BARELLI Paolo, PdL
BASSOLI Fiorenza, PD
BASTICO Mariangela, PD
BENEDETTI VALENTINI Domenico, PdL
BERTUZZI Maria Teresa, PD
BETTAMIO Giampaolo, PdL
BIANCO Enzo, PD
BIANCONI Laura, PdL
BIONDELLI Franca, PD
BLAZINA Tamara, PD
BODEGA Lorenzo, Misto
BONFRISCO Anna Cinzia, PdL
BOSCETTO Gabriele, PdL
BOSONE Daniele, PD
BRUNO Franco, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
BUBBICO Filippo, PD
BURGARETTA APARO Sebastiano, PdL
BUTTI Alessio, PdL
CABRAS Antonello, PD
CALIENDO Giacomo, PdL
CALIGIURI Battista, PdL
CARDIELLO Franco, PdL
CARLONI Anna Maria, PD
CARRARA Valerio, CN:GS-SI-PID-IB-FI
CASOLI Francesco, PdL
CASSON Felice, PD
CASTRO Maurizio, PdL
CECCANTI Stefano, PD
CERUTI Mauro, PD
CHIURAZZI Carlo, PD
COLOMBO Emilio, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
COMPAGNA Luigi, PdL
CONTI Riccardo, PdL
CONTINI Barbara, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
COSENTINO Lionello, PD
D'ALI' Antonio, PdL
D'ALIA Gianpiero, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
D'AMBROSIO LETTIERI Luigi, PdL
DE ANGELIS Candido, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
DE ECCHER Cristano, PdL
DE FEO Diana, PdL
DE LILLO Stefano, PdL
DE LUCA Cristina, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
DE LUCA Vincenzo, PD
DE SENA Luigi, PD
DEL VECCHIO Mauro, PD
DELLA SETA Roberto, PD
DI GIACOMO Ulisse, PdL
DI GIOVAN PAOLO Roberto, PD
DI STEFANO Fabrizio, PdL
DIGILIO Egidio, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
DINI Lamberto, PdL
DONAGGIO Cecilia, PD
D'UBALDO Lucio Alessio, PD
ESPOSITO Giuseppe, PdL
FASANO Enzo, PdL
FAZZONE Claudio, PdL
FERRANTE Francesco, PD
FERRARA Mario, CN:GS-SI-PID-IB-FI
FINOCCHIARO Anna, PD
FLERES Salvo, CN:GS-SI-PID-IB-FI
FOLLINI Marco, PD
FONTANA Cinzia Maria, PD
FOSSON Antonio, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
FRANCO Vittoria, PD
GALIOTO Vincenzo, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
GALPERTI Guido, PD
GARAVAGLIA Mariapia, PD
GARRAFFA Costantino, PD
GASPARRI Maurizio, PdL
GENTILE Antonio, PdL
GERMONTANI Maria Ida, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
GHEDINI Rita, PD
GIAI Mirella, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
GIARETTA Paolo, PD
GIORDANO Basilio, PdL
GRAMAZIO Domenico, PdL
GUSTAVINO Claudio, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
ICHINO Pietro, PD
INCOSTANTE Maria Fortuna, PD
IZZO Cosimo, PdL
LADU Silvestro, PdL
LATORRE Nicola, PD
LATRONICO Cosimo, PdL
LAURO Raffaele, PdL
LEDDI Maria, PD
LEGNINI Giovanni, PD
LENNA Vanni, PdL
LICASTRO SCARDINO Simonetta, PdL
LIVI BACCI Massimo, PD
LUMIA Giuseppe, PD
MAGISTRELLI Marina, PD
MARCENARO Pietro, PD
MARCUCCI Andrea, PD
MARINARO Francesca Maria, PD
MARINO Mauro Maria, PD
MAZZARACCHIO Salvatore, PdL
MAZZUCONI Daniela, PD
MENARDI Giuseppe, CN:GS-SI-PID-IB-FI
MERCATALI Vidmer, PD
MICHELONI Claudio, PD
MILANA Riccardo, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
MILONE Giuseppe, PdL
MOLINARI Claudio, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
MONACO Francesco, PD
MONGIELLO Colomba, PD
MORANDO Enrico, PD
MORRI Fabrizio, PD
MUSI Adriano, PD
MUSSO Enrico, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
NEGRI Magda, PD
NEROZZI Paolo, PD
NESPOLI Vincenzo, PdL
NESSA Pasquale, PdL
ORSI Franco, PdL
PALMA Nitto Francesco, PdL
PALMIZIO Elio Massimo, CN:GS-SI-PID-IB-FI
PARAVIA Antonio, PdL
PASSONI Achille, PD
PASTORE Andrea, PdL
PEGORER Carlo, PD
PERDUCA Marco, PD
PERTOLDI Flavio, PD
PETERLINI Oskar, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
PICCIONI Lorenzo, PdL
PICHETTO FRATIN Gilberto, PdL
PIGNEDOLI Leana, PD
PISCITELLI Salvatore, CN:GS-SI-PID-IB-FI
PONTONE Francesco, PdL
PORETTI Donatella, PD
POSSA Guido, PdL
PROCACCI Giovanni, PD
RANDAZZO Nino, PD
RIZZOTTI Maria, PdL
ROILO Giorgio, PD
ROSSI Paolo, PD
RUSCONI Antonio, PD
RUSSO Giacinto, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
RUTELLI Francesco, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
SACCOMANNO Michele, PdL
SACCONI Maurizio, PdL
SAIA Maurizio, CN:GS-SI-PID-IB-FI
SALTAMARTINI Filippo, PdL
SANCIU Fedele, PdL
SANNA Francesco, PD
SANTINI Giacomo, PdL
SARO Giuseppe, PdL
SARRO Carlo, PdL
SCANU Gian Piero, PD
SCARPA BONAZZA BUORA Paolo, PdL
SERAFINI Anna Maria, PD
SERAFINI Giancarlo, PdL
SERRA Achille, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
SIBILIA Cosimo, PdL
SIRCANA Silvio Emilio, PD
SOLIANI Albertina, PD
SPADONI URBANI Ada, PdL
SPEZIALI Vincenzo, PdL
STRADIOTTO Marco, PD
TANCREDI Paolo, PdL
TEDESCO Alberto, Misto
TOFANI Oreste, PdL
TOMASELLI Salvatore, PD
TONINI Giorgio, PD
TOTARO Achille, PdL
VALDITARA Giuseppe, Per il Terzo Polo:ApI-FLI
VALENTINO Giuseppe, PdL
VICECONTE Guido, PdL
VIESPOLI Pasquale, CN:GS-SI-PID-IB-FI
VILLARI Riccardo, CN:GS-SI-PID-IB-FI
VIMERCATI Luigi, PD
VITALI Walter, PD
VIZZINI Carlo, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
ZANDA Luigi, PD
ZANOLETTI Tomaso, PdL
Hanno votato contro:
(elenco)
ADERENTI Irene, LNP
BRICOLO Federico, LNP
CALDEROLI Roberto, LNP
CARUSO Antonino, PdL
CASTELLI Roberto, LNP
DAVICO Michelino, LNP
DIVINA Sergio, LNP
FRANCO Paolo, LNP
GARAVAGLIA Massimo, LNP
LANNUTTI Elio, IdV
LEONI Giuseppe, LNP
MARAVENTANO Angela, LNP
MAZZATORTA Sandro, LNP
MONTANI Enrico, LNP
MURA Roberto, LNP
PITTONI Mario, LNP
RIZZI Fabio, LNP
TORRI Giovanni, LNP
VACCARI Gianvittore, LNP
VALLARDI Gianpaolo, LNP
VALLI Armando, LNP
Si sono astenuti:
(elenco)
ALLEGRINI Laura, PdL
ASCIUTTI Franco, PdL
BORNACIN Giorgio, PdL
CAFORIO Giuseppe, IdV
CAMBER Giulio, PdL
CARLINO Giuliana, IdV
DE TONI Gianpiero, IdV
LI GOTTI Luigi, IdV
MALAN Lucio, PdL
MASCITELLI Alfonso, IdV
MESSINA Alfredo, PdL
PEDICA Stefano, IdV
PINZGER Manfred, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
PISTORIO Giovanni, Misto
THALER AUSSERHOFER Helga, UDC-SVP-AUT:UV-MAIE-VN-MRE-PLI-PSI
In congedo o in missione:
(elenco)
BERSELLI Filippo, PdL
CHITI Vannino, PD
CIAMPI Carlo Azeglio, Misto
CIARRAPICO Giuseppe, PdL
DELL'UTRI Marcello, PdL
GAMBA Pierfrancesco Emilio Romano, PdL
MONTI Mario, Misto
MORRA Carmelo, PdL
MUGNAI Franco, PdL
OLIVA Vincenzo, Misto
PERA Marcello, PdL
SANGALLI Gian Carlo, PD
SCIASCIA Salvatore, PdL
#italia#mes#mes meccanismo europeo di stabilità#meccanismo europeo di stabilità#unione europea#parlamento italiano
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268 Directors and the end of the blog
This post marks the end of the Ask a Director experiment. I’m so grateful to all who have contributed, supported and engaged with it over the past six and a half years.
This blog was started at a time when I felt incredibly alone in the directing field. I had always been taught that a director operates solo, that it was a lonely career and above all, it was based on scarcity. This was a style of working and living that didn't fit for me. I wanted to talk to other directors about their practice and thoughts about the field, both national and international. This blog was started as a way to connect, to uplift other directors and to create a conversation about the changing field and practices.
It's surpassed all of these goals and brought me more joy than I can name.
I'm now at a moment where my practice and advocacy are taking different and exciting paths and it's time for me to put this site to bed. I remain committed to uplifting other directors, to talking about the practice, to flattening hierarchies, to opening doors for new ways of working, and leading rehearsal rooms, companies, and classrooms away from silos and vacuums. Featuring these 268 different directors was just the beginning.
I encourage you all to hire them (and others), advocate for them (and others) and choose to work in a system that values connection and generosity.
Abhishek Majumdar
Adam Fitzgerald
Alice Stanley
Aliza Shane
Amanda McRaven
Amy Corcoran
Amy Jephta
Anisa George
Ana Margineau
Andrew Scoville
Anna Stromberg
Anne Cecelia Haney
Ariel Francoeur
Arpita Mukherjee
Ashley Hollingshead
Ashley Marinaccio
Andrew Neisler
Beng Oh
Ben Randle
Ben Stockman
Benjamin Kamine
Beth Lopes
Bo Powell
Bogdan Georgescu
Bonnie Gabel
Brandon Ivie
Brandon Woolf
Brian Hashimoto
Cait Robinson
Caitlin Ryan O’Connell
Caitlin Sullivan
Catie Davis
Cara Phipps
Carol Ann Tan
Carsen Joenk
Chari Arespacochaga
Cheryl Faraone
Chloe Treat
Christin Eve Cato
Christine Zagrobelny
Christopher Diercksen
Colette Robert
Colleen Hughes
Cyndy Marion
Dado Gyure
Dan Rothenberg
Daniel Irizarry
Danielle Ozymandias
Danny Sharon
Dara Malina
David Charles
Dennis Yueh-Yeh Li
Derek Spencer
Donald Brenner
Doug Oliphant
Eamon Boylan
Elena Araoz
Emily Lyons
Emma Miller
Eric Kildow
Eric Wallach
Eric Powell Holm
Estefania Fadul
Evelina Stampa
Evren Odcikin
Evi Stamatiou
Francesca Montanile Lyons
Gabriel Vega Weissman
Gian Marco Riccardo Lo Forte
Graham Schmidt
Gregg Wiggans
Hannah Ryan
Hannah Wolf
Heather Bagnall
Horia Suru
Ilana Becker
Ilana Ransom Toeplitz
Illana Stein
Ioanna Katsarou
Ioli Andreadi
Irina Abraham Chigiryov
Iris Sowlat
Isaac Klein
J Paul Nicholas
Jack Tamburri
Jaclyn Biskup
Jacob Basri
Jake Beckhard
Jaki Bradley
Jamie Watkins
Javier Molina
Jay Stern
Jay Stull
Jenna Rossman
Jenna Worsham
Jennifer Chambers
Jenny Bennett
Jenny Reed
Jeremy Bloom
Jeremy Pickard
Jerrell Henderson
Jess Hutchinson
Jess Shoemaker
Jesse Jou
Jessi D Hill
Jessica Burr
Jessica Holt
Jillian Carucci
Joanne Zipay
Jo Cattell
John Michael Diresta
John Kurzynowski
Joe Hedel
Jonathan Munoz-Proulx
Jose Zayas
Josh Kelley
Josh Sobel
Joshua Kahan Brody
Joshua William Gelb
Julia Sears
Justin Schlabach
Kareem Fahmy
Karen Christina Jones
Kate Bergstrom
Kate Hopkins
Kate Jopson
Kate Moore Heaney
Katherine M. Carter
Katherine Wilkinson
Kathy Gail MacGowan
Katie Chidester
Kendall Cornell
Kendra Augustin
Kholoud Sawaf
Kimberly Faith Hickmann
Kim Weild
KJ Sanchez
Knud Adams
Kristin Marting
Kristin McCarthy Parker
Kristin Skye Hoffman
Kristy Chambrelli
Kristy Dodson
KT Shorb
Kyle Metzger
Kylie M. Brown
Larissa Fasthorse
Larissa Lury
Laura Brandel
Laura Steinroeder
Lauren Hlubny
Lauren Keating
Lavina Jadhwani
Jenn Haltman
Leta Tremblay
Lila Rachel Becker
Lillian Meredith
Lily Riopelle
Lindsey Hope Pearlman
Lisa Rothe
Lisa Sanaye Dring
Liz Thaler
Lori Wolter Hudson
Lucie Tiberghien
Luke Comer
Luke Tudball
Lyndsay Burch
Lynn Lammers
Mallory Catlett
Manon Manavit
Margarett Perry
Maridee Slater
Marina Bergenstock
Marti Lyons
Martin Jago
Matt Cosper
Matt Ritchey
Max Hunter
Megan Sandberg-Zakian
Megan Weaver
Meghan Finn
Melissa Crespo
Melody Erfani
Michael Alvarez
Michael T. Williams
Michaela Escarcega
Michelle Tattenbaum
Mimi Barcomi
Miranda Haymon
Molly Beach Murphy
Molly Clifford
Molly Noble
Morgan Gould
Morgan Green
Murielle Borst-Tarrant
Nana Dakin
Natalie Novacek
Neal Kowalsky
Nell Bang-Jensen
Nick Benacerraf
Noa Egozi
Norah Elges
Normandy Sherwood
Olivia Lilley
Orly Noa Rabinyan
Oscar Mendoza
Pablo Paz
Padraic Lillis
Patrick Walsh
Pete Danelski
Pirronne Yousefzadeh
Portia Krieger
Rachel Karp
Rachel Wohlander
Randolph Curtis Rand
Raz Golden
Rebecca Cunningham
Rebecca Martinez
Rebecca Wear
Renee Phillippi
Renee Yeong
Rich Brown
Rick St. Peter
Robert Schneider
Ryan Anthony Nicotra
Sammi Cannold
Sammy Zeisel
Sanaz Ghajar
Sara Holdren
Sara Lyons
Sara Rademacher
Sarah Elizabeth Wansley
Sarah Hughes
Sarah M. Chichester
Sarah Rose Leonard
Sash Bischoff
Scarlett Kim
Seonjae Kim
Seth Pyatt
Sharifa Elkady
Shaun Patrick Tubbs
Sherri Eden Barber
Simon Hanukai
Sophia Watt
Suchan Vodoor
Stephen Cedars
Steven Kopp
Steven Wilson
Talya Klein
Tana Siros
Tara Ahmadinejad
Tara Cioletti
Tara Elliott
Tatiana Pandiani
Taylor Reynolds
TerryandtheCuz
Tommy Schoffler
Tracy Bersley
Trevor Biship
Tyler Mercer
Wednesday Sue Derrico
Will Dagger
Will Davis
Will Detlefsen
Will Steinberger
Yojiro Ichikawa
Yoni Oppenheim
Zi Alikhan
Zoya Kachardurian
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Lauren’s updated ‘send help, too many books’ to be read list
Making a list seemed to help last time (or at least it did until i did the inevitable and... bought more books... and since we’re almost at the end of the year and into a new one here is my new and updated to-be-read list. I’ve removed all the books i’ve read since i made the first one and i’ve added the new ones. My goal is to have halved this list by the end of next year haha, thats 65 books (ignoring the fact that i’ll probably get a couple for christmas/buy more when audible have a good daily deal haha)
AUDIBLE: (30)
Prisoners of Geography by Tim Marshall
Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies by Nick Bostrom
Misbehaving: The Making of Behaviour Economics by Richard H. Thaler
We Are Legion (We Are Bob) by Ray Porter
Lost At Sea by Jon Ronson
Them by Jon Ronson
Welcome to the Universe by J. Richard Gott and Neil Degrasse Tyson
The Establishment by Owen Jones
What a Wonderful World by Marcus Chown
The Idiot Brain by Dean Burnett
Elizabeth is Missing by Emma Healey
Born to Run by Christopher McDougall
The Watchmaker of Filigree Street by Natasha Pulley
The Silk Roads by Peter Frankopan
The History of the Ancient World by Susan Wise Bauer
Doctor Who Tales by ensemble
The Origins of Political Order by Francis Fukuyama
The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
The Lie Tree by Francis Hardinge
Command and Control by Eric Schlosser
Pale Blue Dot by Carl Sagan
Cosmos by Carl Sagan
Medical School for Everyone by The Great Courses
The Origin and Evolution of Earth by The Great Courses
The Summer of Impossible Things by Rowan Coleman
The Hundred-Year Old Man by Jonas Jonasson
This Changes Everything by Naomi Klein
Lost Connections by Johann Hari
Circe by Madeline Miller
Life on Earth by David Attinborough
KINDLE: (20)
The Last Romeo by Justin Myers
Call me by your Name by Andre Aciman
History Is All You Left Me by Adam Silvera
Mirror, Mirror by Cara Delevingne
Moxie by Jennifer Mathieu
All The Rage by Courtney Summers
We Have No Idea by Jorge Cham
Ask the Passengers by A.S. King
Happy by Derren Brown
Stillhouse Lake by Rachel Caine
The Winter Over by Matthew Iden
Lift and Separate by Marylin Simon Rothstein
The Realm of Possibility by David Levithan
No Place Left to Run by Zara Detand
Gives Light by Rose Christo
The Kangeroo Chronicles by Marc-Uwe Kling
Into That Silent Sea: Trailblazers of the Space Era by Francis French
The Dark Wife by Sarah Diemer
Burro Hills by Julia Lynn Rubin
Cheerleaders From Planet X by Lissa Chiavari
PHYSICAL COPIES: (27)
Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari
Forces of Nature by Brian Cox
Why Does E=MC2? by Brian Cox
Mort by Terry Pratchett
The Posterchildren: Origins by Kitty Burroughs
Wonder Woman: Warbringer by Leigh Barduco
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel
A Streetcat Named Bob by James Bowen
Fire by Elfgren and Strandberg
Question Everything by NewScientist
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
The Greatest Show on Earth by Richard Dawkins
The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins
Bang! by Brian May
Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future by A.S. King
Percy Jackson 1-5 by Rick Riordan (0/5 read)
Brisingr by Christopher Paolini
Living Dolls by Natasha Walter
The Equality Illusion by Kat Banyard
Yes Means Yes! by Jaclyn Friedman, Jessica Valenti
Privilege by Kimmel and Ferber
Ice Crypt by Tiana Warner
Ice Kingdom by Tiana Warner
(TOTAL: 77)
#personal#to read list#i love talking about books!!#edited to take down from 115 to 106 heck yes thats progress#edited down again from 106 to 77 but i havent added all the new books ive bought and in realist the list is actually at 102 whoops
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Luping Wang and Carolina Thaler in Alexis Mabille Spring 2018 / BG image artist Lani Mitchell edited by Emma Regolini (iPhone wallpaper)
(original images sourced from @freaki)
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‘A poor reflection of the country’: Strong local opinions on Trump
By Analaura Amezquita (Whittier, CA) and Abby Dotterer (Casper, WY)
On Friday night, August 4, people on the streets of Princeton, New Jersey had strong opinions about President Donald Trump’s Twitter account. Thirty-two-year-old Emma Nelson, originally from England, said that her least favorite part about the Commander-in-Chief is his “use of social media to bully people.”
Student Vicki Leech said that she does not think that a president should communicate with the country through Twitter. An annoyed David Figurelli agreed with Leech and thought it was ridiculous that he announced something as significant as the transgender military ban on Twitter.
Jim Smith, a 55-year-old Independent from North Brunswick, also voiced strong opposition to the President’s use of Twitter, saying “it is a poor reflection of the country.”
Lisa Chansky, 46, said that if she were to discuss Trump’s faults, “it would just be a string of profanities.”
While there were multiple negative responses, not all hope is lost for Trump in Princeton. “He’s giving Saturday Night Live more material,” said Nelson.
Ohio native Russ Thaler said that his favorite thing the President has done was appearing on The Apprentice.
“One positive thing since the campaign, I am glued to CNN. He has made me a more aware consumer of news,” said Chansky.
Michael Paul, 39, said “he encouraged us all to not take democracy for granted.”
Paul’s nine-year-old son had a similar opinion, stating that if he had the chance, he would not vote for Trump “because he is mean and cuts people off.”
Even though Trump already won the presidency, to many Princeton residents, he does not act like the president of the land of the free. Smith would like the president to “go back to doing what [he] did before being elected, and leave politics to people who are capable.”
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1871 GERMANY German PRUSSIA King WILHELM I Thaler Silver Coin vs FRANCE i73799
1871 GERMANY German PRUSSIA King WILHELM I Thaler Silver Coin vs FRANCE i73799
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10 Things to Know About the Psychology of Cults
Both terrifying and utterly fascinating, cults have a tendency to capture the attention of just about everyone. Questions abound: Where do these people come from? What are they really doing inside those secluded compounds? Most interesting, perhaps, are the psychological components of cult life, questions such as: Who in the world would fall for that? In an effort to answer these questions and more, we’ve listed 10 things to know about the psychology of cults.
Cults are attractive because they promote an illusion of comfort.
Humans desire comfort, and in a fearful and uncertain world many turn to cults because they tend to promote exactly that. Jon-Patrik Pedersen, a psychologist at CalTech, has pointed out that cult leaders often make promises that are totally unattainable, but also offered by no other group in society. Such things might include financial security, total health, constant peace of mind, and eternal life — the things every human desires at the deepest level.
Cults satisfy the human desire for absolute answers.
Today’s world is a tough one, with more abstract issues than there are issues that are black and white. As Dr. Adrian Furnham describes in Psychology Today, humans crave clarity. Many people join cults because they believe they’re being offered solid, absolute answers for questions such as good vs. evil, religion, the meaning of life, politics, etc. Many cult leaders promote messages that are simple and seem to make sense, the exact opposite of what we’re often provided with in typical, everyday life.
Those with low self-esteem are more likely to be persuaded by a cult environment.
People are often surprised to learn that those who join cults are, for the most part, average people. They come from all backgrounds, all zip codes, and all tax brackets. But research done in the past two decades has found an interesting pattern: many people successfully recruited by cults are said to have low self-esteem. Cults generally do not look to recruit those with certain handicaps or clinical depression. However, people with low self-esteem are easier to break down, then build back up in an effort to teach them that the cult is the supportive environment they’re looking for.
New recruits are “love bombed.”
Once people have been recruited by a cult, they are often “love bombed.” This odd phrase is commonly used to describe the ways in which someone with low self-esteem is consistently flattered, complimented, and seduced in order to train their brain to associate the cult with love and acceptance.
Women are more likely than men to join a cult.
According to various research, women make up a whopping 70% of cult members around the globe. Psychologists have different ideas about why more women than men join cults. Dr. David Bromley of Virginia Commonwealth University points out that women simply attend more social gatherings, either religious or otherwise. This makes women statistically more likely to join groups that will ultimately victimize them. Others suggest it has to do with the fact that women have been oppressed for much of human history. Therefore they’re more comfortable being under an authority figure. Still others write this off as total crock. Emma Cline, the author of the bestselling cult-themed novel The Girls theorizes that young women are often taught to seek the attention of men and to wait for “rescue.” Joining a cult, says Cline, is a way for many young women to feel as if they are “seizing their destiny.”
Many cult members have rejected religion.
Dr. Stanley H. Cath, a psychoanalyst and psychology professor at Tufts University, has treated more than 60 former cult members over the course of his career. From this unique firsthand experience, Cath has noticed an interesting trend: many people who join cults have experienced religion at some point in their lives, and rejected it. Perhaps this is surprising, considering many cults tend to be religious — or at least claim to be. But Dr. Cath asserts that this trend is a sign of something deeper. Many of those who join cults are intelligent young people from sheltered environments. Growing up in such an environment, says Dr. Cath, often means that “many have a history of failing to achieve intimacy, of blaming others for their failures, and of constantly striving for perfectionistic goals.” These characteristics make them prime targets for cult recruitment.
Cults maintain their power by promoting an “us vs. them” mentality.
Cults prove powerful because they are able to successfully isolate members from their former, non-cult lives. One of the ways cult leaders achieve this is to convince their followers that they are superior to those not in the cult. This “us vs. them” mentality ultimately leads to cult members isolating themselves socially from friends and family. They replace those relationships with new ones inside the cult.
Cult leaders are masters at mind control.
Cult leaders convince their victims to separate themselves from society, give up personal possessions and sometimes huge sums of money. They convince people buy into whatever they are promoting. To do all this a cult leader must be a master at mind control. Ways in which leaders gain control over cult members vary, but some popular methods include: Public Humiliation: New cult members may be “love bombed” shortly after their arrival, but once they are established members, cult leaders often maintain emotional control through various exercises meant to publicly humiliate a member. One such method involves someone sitting in a chair surrounded by other members, at which time they are required to admit their recent failures, base thoughts, shortcomings, etc. Self Incrimination: A favorite tactic of the infamous cult leader Jim Jones, self incrimination requires cult members to provide their leader with written statements detailing their individual fears and mistakes. The cult leader can then use these statements to shame individual members publicly. Brainwashing:: Cult leaders are known to repeat various lies and distortions until members find it difficult to distinguish between reality and cult life. Paranoia: To maintain a false sense of comfort, cults often rely on paranoia tactics. Cult leaders convince their victims that a group, their families, and/or the government is out to get them, but that the cult can provide safety. Once a cult member comes to the conclusion that their families and country cannot keep them safe, they begin to worship and put all of their faith in their cult leader. Jim Jones was especially skilled at this mind-control trick. He would encourage members to spy on each other, and consistently spoke through loudspeakers at all hours of the day so that cult members would hear his voice whether awake or asleep.
Cult members often have no idea they’re in a cult.
Although it can be obvious to those around them, people in cults often don’t realize what they have become a part of. Psychologist Dr. Margaret Thaler Singer spent most of her career studying the psychology of cults and brainwashing. She found that most people enter a cult willingly, without realizing the power it is bound to have over them. Singer theorizes that this is partly because some people are more willing to see the perceived benefits than they are the potential dangers. She also mentions that many people assume cults are only religious, though in truth, cults can also be political groups, lifestyle groups, or business groups.
Cult life can have a dangerous and lasting effect.
Cult victims often spend years overcoming the emotional damage incurred during their time spent in a cult. Psychologists who treat former cult members routinely describe the long-term effects being in a cult environment can have on the human body. Dr. John G. Clark, Jr., is a Harvard psychiatry professor and the co-founder of a non-profit group which treats former members and their families. He specifically mentions that the “symptoms of temporal lobe epilepsy are similar to those seen or reported as resulted from cult conversions: increased irritability, loss of libido or altered sexual interest, ritualism, compulsive attention to detail, mystical states, humorlessness and sobriety, heightened paranoia.”
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Chicago Booth Center for Decision Research is seeking an Executive Director
The Center for Decision Research at The University of Chicago Booth School of Business has initiated a search for its next Director, to support Faculty Director Nicholas Epley and the center’s distinguished slate of faculty affiliates. Start date is expected to be approximately June 15, 2018. The central priorities for this position are management and implementation of all administrative services for the center. This responsibility includes the design, production, and assessment of initiatives aimed at: cultivating excellence in the center’s research facilities and activities; facilitating external partnerships to broaden the center’s impact and access to resources, and organizing outreach efforts to engage and inform key constituencies. You can view the full job posting at https://uchicago.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/External/job/Hyde-Park-Campus/Director--Center-for-Decision-Research_JR00581-1
Review of applications will begin on April 1.
Interested applicants should submit a CV, with a cover letter describing how their experience (in research administration, behavioral science, or any other relevant area of training) aligns with the interests of the CDR. In addition, applicants are strongly encouraged to have two letters of recommendation emailed to the search committee (c/o Vicki Drozd, [email protected]) in support of their applications. Selection will be based largely on the applicant's ability to ensure that center researchers are continuously supported with state-of-the-art research infrastructure. This will involve oversight of CDR Labs (the center’s suite of empirical research facilities), support for field research partnerships, event planning, outreach to students and alumni, and fundraising. In order to receive full consideration, please submit your application materials electronically in the following way: * Review the job posting, and click on the relevant “Apply” button * Arrange for two letters of recommendation to be emailed to the CDR Admin Office, c/o Vicki Drozd ([email protected]) For questions about this position, please email the current Executive Director, Heather Caruso ([email protected]). The Center for Decision Research at University of Chicago includes a group of researchers interested in the study of judgment and decision making, social psychology, marketing, and behavioral and experimental economics (Daniel Bartels, Marianne Bertrand, Chris Bryan, Berkeley Dietvorst, Nicholas Epley, Ayelet Fishbach, Reid Hastie, Christopher Hsee, Emma Levine, Ariel Kalil, Emir Kamenica,Boaz Keysar, Susan Mayer, Ann McGill, Ed O’Brien, Devin Pope, Jane Risen, Anuj Shah, Alex Shaw, Abigail Sussman, Thomas Talhelm, Richard Thaler, Oleg Urminsky, Bernd Wittenbrink, and George Wu). The group runs weekly workshop and brownbag seminars. More information on the group and our activities is available at: www.chicagocdr.org
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BONUS EPISODE: #SEABookstoreDay Year 3
Epigraph
For the third year in a row, the Drunk Booksellers drove all over Seattle (and the surrounding regions) for Indie Bookstore Day. We asked booksellers at each of the 21(!!!) stores we visited to tell us what they're recommending in the current political climate. We also collected recommendations from past guests and #SEABookstoreDay Champions! (For an epic TBT, check out our episodes from Seattle Bookstore Day Year One and Year Two.)
Chapter 1
In Which Your Fearless Hosts Wake Up Far Too Early, Take a Ferry, Drink an Obscene Amount of Caffeine, and Get Our First Round of Bookseller Recommendations
Emma, Eagle Harbor Book Co.
American War by Omar El Akkad
Madison Duckworth, Liberty Bay Books
Illuminae by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff
Ron Woods, Edmonds Bookshop
The Nix by Nathan Hill
Robert Sindelar, Third Place Books
Exit West by Mohsin Hamid
Annie Carl, The Neverending Bookshop
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
Ruth Dickey, Seattle Arts & Lectures
The Fire This Time by Jesmyn Ward
Chris Jarmick, BookTree
Dark Money by Jane Mayer
Red Notice by Bill Browder
Laurie & Marni, Island Books
Why We March: Signs of Protest and Hope
It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis
What We Do Now: Standing Up for Your Values in Trump's America ed. Dennis Johnson
The Book of Joy by Dalai Lama and Desmond Tutu
Hallelujah Anyway by Anne Lamott
Larry Reid, Fantagraphics Bookstore & Gallery
American Presidents by David Levine
Amber, Seattle Mystery Bookshop
Golden Age mysteries by authors like Agatha Christie and Elizabeth Daly
Chapter 2
In Which Kim and Emma Make it Back to Seattle-Proper and Still Have... a Lot of Bookstores to Visit
Tegan Tigani, Queen Anne Book Company
Your Heart Is a Muscle the Size of a Fist by Sunil Yapa
Georgiana Blomberg, Magnolia's Bookstore
Bobcat & Other Stories by Rebecca Lee
Lara Hamilton, Book Larder
Soup for Syria by Barbara Abdeni Massaad
Madison, Secret Garden Books
Exit West by Mohsin Hamid (2nd mention!)
I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith
Tom Nissley, Phinney Books
Ghettoside by Jill Leovy
Billie Swift, Open Books: A Poem Emporium
Whereas by Layli Long Soldier
In the Language of My Captor by Shane McCrae
Trophic Cascade by Camille T. Dungy
The Boston Review's Poems for Political Disaster
If You Can Hear This: Poems in Protest of an American Inauguration by Bryan Borland
Resist Much / Obey Little: Inaugural Poems to the Resistance
Water & Salt by Lena Khalaf Tuffaha
Into Each Room We Enter Without Knowing by Charif Shanahan
Sea and Fog by Etel Adnan
Pam Cady, University Bookstore
Make Trouble by John Waters
Christina, Third Place Books Ravenna
Against Equality: Queer Revolution, Not Mere Inclusion ed Ryan Conrad
Garrett, Ada's Technical Books
No Place to Hide by Glenn Greenwald
Chapter 3
In Which Guests from Episodes Past Return to Give Their Recommendations
Pete Mulvihill, Green Apple Books (episode 8)
Dear Ijeawele, or a Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Make Trouble by John Waters (2nd mention)
Stranger in the Woods by Michael Finkel
White Tears by Hari Kunzru
The Dark Dark by Samantha Hunt
Leah Koch, The Ripped Bodice (episode 13)
Prime Minister by Ainsley Booth & Sadie Haller
A Promise of Fire by Amanda Bouchet
Paul Constant, The Seattle Review of Books (episode 14)
Give Us the Ballot: The Modern Struggle for Voting Rights in America by Ari Berman
Chapter 4
In Which the Seattle Bookstore Day Champions Tell Us What They're Reading
Katie
The Origins of Totalitarianism by Hannah Arendt
The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin
The Queen of the Night by Alexander Chee
Ed
The Death and Life of Great American Cities by Jane Jacobs (which totes has a white cover)
(also mentioned: The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America by Richard Rothstein)
Courtney, Three-Year Seattle Bookstore Day Champion(!!!)
Borderlands by Gloria Anzaldua
The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood (for the Book Club for Courtneys)
Kristianne, Shelf Awareness
The Book of Joan by Lidia Yuknavitch
Kendra
American Gods by Neil Gaiman
Tony Hillerman
Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
The Undoing Project by Michael Lewis
(check out Michael Lewis's episode on the Freakonomics podcast)
Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioral Economics by Richard H. Thaler
Nudge: Improving Decisions about Health, Wealth, and Happiness by Richard H. Thaler and Cass R. Sunstein
Epilogue
What are you reading in the current political climate? Let us know at @drunkbookseller.
Non-book political media that Emma recommends:
The New York Times (support journalism, y'all)
What the Fuck Just Happened Today?
Wall of Us
Flippable
Indivisible Guide - A Practical Guide for Resisting the Trump Agenda
Kim's listening to:
Pod Save America
Pod Save the World
With Friends Like These
Another Round
You can find us on:
Twitter at @drunkbookseller
Litsy at @drunkbooksellers
Facebook
Instagram
Email
Newsletter
Website
Emma tweets @thebibliot and writes bookish things for Book Riot.
Kim tweets occasionally from @finaleofseem, but don’t expect too much.
Subscribe and rate us on iTunes!
Kim went on a v weird youtube rabbit hole while procrastinating from editing, but had enough self control not to add this track to the end of the episode. You're welcome.
youtube
Check out this episode!
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LAUREN’S ‘DEAR GOD WHAT HAVE I DONE’ BOOKLIST
I wanted to make a list of all the books currently in my house/on my phone waiting to be read as a ‘fun’ project to motivate myself to read them but all it made me want to do is curl up into a ball and cry lmao. Anyhow i’m posting it here a) in case anyone is curious about this list i keep talking about, and b) because i can then cross them off one by one as i go through.
Quick note: this list is not complete. I know for a fact that i’ve accidentally missed off several books, but these are the ones i’ll be focusing on for this year.... or you know, decade. Also these are all books i own (some from years ago), the list of books i don’t own but want to read is... well, probably longer. Under a read more to save us all the scrolling lmao.
AUDIBLE: (33)
Pompeii - The Life of a Roman Town by Mary Beard
Prisoners of Geography by Tim Marshall
Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies by Nick Bostrom
Misbehaving: The Making of Behaviour Economics by Richard H. Thaler
The Bedlam Stacks by Natasha Pulley
Sovereign by April Daniels
Into the Drowning Deep by Mira Grant
We Are Legion (We Are Bob) by Ray Porter
The Dark Tourist by Dom Joly
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
Lost At Sea by Jon Ronson
Them by Jon Ronson
The Men Who Stare At Goats by Jon Ronson
Welcome to the Universe by J. Richard Gott and Neil Degrasse Tyson
The Establishment by Owen Jones
What a Wonderful World by Marcus Chown
The Idiot Brain by Dean Burnett
The Brain by David Eagleman
Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton
Elizabeth is Missing by Emma Healey
Born to Run by Christopher McDougall
The Power by Naomi Alderman
The Watchmaker of Filigree Street by Natasha Pulley
The Silk Roads by Peter Frankopan
A Quiet Life in the Country by T E Kinsey
Do Not Say We Have Nothing by Madeleine Thien
Dim Sum Asylum by Rhys Ford
The Apocalypse of Elena Mendoza by Shaun David Hutchinson
The Marshmallow Test by Walter Mischel
Sal by Mick Kitson
The History of the Ancient World by Susan Wise Bauer
Doctor Who Tales by ensemble
The Origins of Political Order by Francis Fukuyama
Ask an Astronaut by Tim Peake
Everybody Lies by Seth Stephens-Davidowitz
People Like Us by Dana Mele
Juliet Takes a Breath by Juliet Rivera
The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
Around the World in 80 Days by Micheal Palin
The Lie Tree by Francis Hardinge
A Skinful of Shadows by Francis Hardinge
Command and Control by Eric Schlosser
Dreams of My Father by Barack Obama
Cosmos by Carl Sagan
Medical School for Everyone by The Great Courses
The Origin and Evolution of Earth by The Great Courses
KINDLE: (26)
The Last Romeo by Justin Myers
Call me by your Name by Andre Aciman
Girlhood by Cat Clarke
History Is All You Left Me by Adam Silvera
Mirror, Mirror by Cara Delevingne
Moxie by Jennifer Mathieu
All The Rage by Courtney Summers
We Have No Idea by Jorge Cham
Ask the Passengers by A.S. King
Happy by Derren Brown
Stillhouse Lake by Rachel Caine
The Winter Over by Matthew Iden
To Stand in the Light by Kayla Bashe
My Lady King by Kayla Bashe
Midair by Kodi Scheer
Lift and Separate by Marylin Simon Rothstein
The Realm of Possibility by David Levithan
No Place Left to Run by Zara Detand
Gives Light by Rose Christo
The Kangeroo Chronicles by Marc-Uwe Kling
Into That Silent Sea: Trailblazers of the Space Era by Francis French
The Dark Wife by Sarah Diemer
Hunter’s Moon by M.J. O’Shea
Cold Moon by M.J. O’Shea
Burro Hills by Julia Lynn Rubin
Cheerleaders From Planet X by Lissa Chiavari
PHYSICAL COPIES: (63)
Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari
Forces of Nature by Brian Cox
Human Universe by Brian Cox
Wonders of the Solar System by Brian Cox
Why Does E=MC2? by Brian Cox
The Rest of Us Just Live Here by Patrick Ness
You Know Me Well by David Levithan
Peter Darling by Austin Chant
Mort by Terry Pratchett
The Posterchildren: Origins by Kitty Burroughs
Lies my Girlfriend Told Me by Julie Anne Peters
Marks: Rise of Heroes by Hayden Thorne
The Thousand Dollar Tan Line by Rob Thomas
Wonder Woman: Warbringer by Leigh Barduco
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel
A Streetcat Named Bob by James Bowen
Fire by Elfgren and Strandberg
Inheritence by Malindo Lo
Question Everything by NewScientist
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
What If? by Randall Munroe
The Greatest Show on Earth by Richard Dawkins
The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins
The Magic of Reality by Richard Dawkins
Bang! by Brian May
Vampire Chronicles Collection by Anne Rice
Not Your Sidekick by C.B Lee
The Abyss Surrounds us by Emily Skrutskie
Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future by A.S. King
Percy Jackson 1-5 by Rick Riordan (0/5 read)
Brisingr by Christopher Paolini
Vanish by Sophie Jorden
Bi Notes for a Bisexual Revolution by Shiri Eisner
Living Dolls by Natasha Walter
The Equality Illusion by Kat Banyard
Yes Means Yes! by Jaclyn Friedman, Jessica Valenti
Horrible Histories 20 book collection (1/20 read)
Privilege by Kimmel and Ferber
Mythology for Dummies
Ice Crypt by Tiana Warner
Ice Kingdom by Tiana Warner
The Nowhere Girls by Amy Reed
The Edge of the Abyss by Emily Strutskie
Neither Here Nor There by Bill Bryson
(TOTAL: 122)
#personal#to read list#i feel distinctly overwhelmed lmao#ive been curating this to read list for about four years now probably
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1849 GERMANY German States Hannover King ERNST AUGUST Silver THALER Coin i68563
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1780-1960 Maria Theresa Austria Germany Queen Silver Thaler Large Coin i71985
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