Marc A. Godin rated The Hundred Years' War on Palestine: 5 stars

The Hundred Years' War on Palestine by Rashid Khalidi
A landmark history of one hundred years of war waged against the Palestinians from the foremost US historian of the …
Gay/queer writer of strange and tender fiction, in Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada; reader of speculative fiction, horror, and non-fiction; this is my author page.
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A landmark history of one hundred years of war waged against the Palestinians from the foremost US historian of the …
From Chuck Tingle, author of the USA Today bestselling Camp Damascus, comes a new heart-pounding story about what it takes …
A profound and meaningful book about the responsibilities we take on when we become writers. Coates describes his travels to through the perspective of why he is a writer, the spirits he's carried with him, the reach his words have had, and the times he failed to meet his own high standards while at the same time highlighting injustices and reminding us how to fight against them. Deeply personal and deeply readable.
Ta-Nehisi Coates originally set off to write a book about writing, in the tradition of Orwell’s classic Politics and the …
Two time-traveling agents from warring futures, working their way through the past, begin to exchange letters—and fall in love in …
This book is a great spring-board for thinking about and planning for abolition through a series of well-chosen metaphors drawn from nature. Especially as I've learned more about abolition, I've encountered the "but how do we get there?" question from folks curious about what a world without policing can look like and the concrete steps to take to arrive there.
The answer this book presents isn't a set of concrete steps, but a nimble and robust framework for thinking about abolition as a process, one that is fractal, iterative, cooperative, autonomous, and creative. The answer to what we do about the prison industrial complex is different for everybody, and this book presents a way to think about that.
If you are already convinced we need to abolish police and prisons but aren't sure how to carve a path forward, this might be the text for you in this moment.
Finished my re-read of this last week, I'll return again to it. I love Dostoevsky's characters and the way he piles on layer after layer of small town gossip into a tragic story of murder, suicide, and revolutionary ideals betrayed.
Couldn't really put this down, just a sweet and tender and vulnerable book giving us a glimpse into the intimate pandemic correspondence between Ivan Coyote, a nonbinary storyteller, and people who were touched by their words. Sometimes, as a queer person, I can feel a little existentially lonely, and I suspect the next time I do I might pick this up and read a little bit of it for some connection.
The Artist's Way is the seminal book on the subject of creativity. An international bestseller, millions of readers have found …
While I'm not a receptive audience for a certain kind of spirituality talk, I was willing to set aside some skepticism to read this book as a workshop, progressing through the text, tasks, and morning pages week to week. Overall, I found a lot of the tasks useful and engaging, and I did have some personal and creative breakthroughs, enough to keep me overcoming my skepticism and general curmudgeonliness until completing the course. If you like pop-spiritual approaches to art this book might hit all the bases, and even if it isn't quite for you, some of the tasks and tools presented might be worth it anyway.