Last year I read 63 books and started posting notes online, which helps me consolidate my thinking: https://www.briansnotes.io
At any given time, I have about 3 books going - one technical, one fun, and one management/leadership.
Range is a great book that extols the virtues of playing around and dabbling with multiple skills. Immensely readable.
Siddhartha, is a fascinating take on advaita vedanta, Sramana, and Buddhism. As someone familiar with these 3 philosophies, I liked Hesse's take on them. The story is really simple and can be finished in 2-3 sittings.
Letters from a stoic is full to the brim of wisdom and I've never filled a book with so many bookmarks and notes before. Seneca writes like a straight arrow and doesn't mince words. No wonder the book is still around, one of the best examples of Lindy effect.
I'm not just "reading" it like a novel though. I "just read" up to a certain point (basically the end of the section on inference using FOL) and now I'm going back to a certain point (the beginning of the section on logic based agents) and going back through and doing exercises, implementing the algorithms myself, etc. Once I've satisfied myself that I have done all I need to do with this area, I'll pick back up with the section that starts talking about Uncertainty and repeat the process.
And I'll keep picking through a couple of these other 49 books in random moments of idle time here and there. I'll probably finish Behind The Cloud by Marc Benioff soon.
Reading frequency? Not sure what you mean. I read everyday with few exceptions, but since books vary in length and density, I can't say "I read two books a week" or anything like that. But FWIW, I log my reading with Goodreads, and over the last 10 years or so of my life, I've averaged finishing somewhere between 35-50 or so books per year.
I used to read a lot, but over the past few years I've read less and less. 2020 was definitely not a good year for deep reading.
I also want to read Godel, Escher Bach, it's been recommended to me a lot.
Definitely some interesting picks on this thread.
What about my reading frequency, nowadays I read more of whitepapers and less of books, because whitepapers are way harder to read than books. Every day I read at least half of A4 page of whitepapers or at least 10 of A4 page of books or blogposts. It is just a hobby for me, not kind of job.
I've also read a lot of his other work as well as the Wheel of Time. If anyone has recommendations for other fantasy novels/epics, I'm all ears!
During iso I've set aside Wednesday nights as reading nights. The schedule gives me something to look forward too, but it doesn't preclude reading during the weekends if I'm feeling into it.
[0] https://www.google.com/books/edition/Programming_for_Mathema...
Fantasy isn't my go to genre but I've been wanting to read something in the fantasy realm because I am just tired of the lawyer/whodunnit stuff.
I am hoping my 12 year old daughter reads it as the heroine is a 14 y/o girl who has to overcome many obstacles and meets them head on.
→→ Idries Shah - Learning how to learn - psychology and spirituality in the Sufi way
→→→ Marc Lewis - The Biology of Desire - Why Addiction Is Not a Disease
And always fiction mixed with non-fiction, recently Tess Gerritsen, currently Zygmunt Miłoszewski (his books are in Polish only, I believe).
Regarding frequency, it depends, only 26 in 2020, 40 in 2019.
My usual reading list consists of tech books, but I figured I'd change it up a little to have a bit of an escape.
Another, The Almanack of Naval Ravikant. Probably the podcast or the free PDF versions.
>> The Expanse (novel series) - I was introduced to it several years ago and have been meaning to get to it for awhile. I heard it now has a TV series and the next book in the series is supposed to come out this.
This book looked extremely think and daunting when it arrived.
Too little for my taste. I seem to have lost my ability to dive in and just read it without looking at the phone or HN, like it was with Harry Potter and all those books of my youth.
Next: A Mind at Play: How Claude Shannon Invented the Information Age by Jimmy Soni & Rob Goodman
I kinda stopped reading as much as I used to since I got my first smartphone two years ago, but I am trying to change that
Do Andriods Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick
Providence: God's Loving Care for Men and the Need for Confidence in Almighty God by Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange
Python 3 Object-Oriented Programming by Dusty Phillips
Currently reading:
Stalingrad by Vasily Grossman
The Bitcoin Standard: The Decentralized Alternative to Central Banking by Saifedean Ammous
Financial Shenanigans by Howard M. Schilit
Up next:
Life and Fate by Vasily Grossman
These Truths by Jill Lepore
Understanding Machine Learning: From Theory to Algorithms by Shalev Shwartz and Ben David