Books: high-brow, low-brow, and in between

Second lady friend in my life who mentioned about this author Eckhart Tolle. One of them bought a book of his for me once which upon initial skimming seemed like a mixture of Dale Carnegie and L Ron Hubbard rubbish. Why do people keep getting suckered into this?

It's surprisingly popular. The current version of Tolle's program is called "Landmark" and it's got quite a following worldwide. A former friend of mind really got into it and was convinced it was helping him but we ended growing apart because every time I caught up with him, he'd try to persuade me to come along to a Landmark session. Of course, if you go along, you get pressured to sign up for a big group session that goes over a weekend and that costs hundreds of dollars.

It does really seem to help some people but it seems that it can also be really traumatic and actually cause problems for other people.
 
It's surprisingly popular. The current version of Tolle's program is called "Landmark" and it's got quite a following worldwide. A former friend of mind really got into it and was convinced it was helping him but we ended growing apart because every time I caught up with him, he'd try to persuade me to come along to a Landmark session. Of course, if you go along, you get pressured to sign up for a big group session that goes over a weekend and that costs hundreds of dollars.

It does really seem to help some people but it seems that it can also be really traumatic and actually cause problems for other people.
Landmark is an unscrupulous scam/cult/ etc
 
The Eye of Osiris by R. Austin Freeman featuring Dr. Thorndyke as detective. I suppose the Thorndyke series is a homage to Sherlock Holmes given the London setting, sidekick narrative, and that the series started 20 years after Holmes first appeared in print.

Anyway, this is one of the first novels featuring Thorndyke and I found it a fun read. The Thorndyke novels appear to be solvable mysteries for the reader (unlike the Holmes ones) and this one in particular I found the writing fun to read. Yes it's English from 1911 but it's a pretty easy read and there is that subtle English humor to it.
 
It's surprisingly popular. The current version of Tolle's program is called "Landmark" and it's got quite a following worldwide. A former friend of mind really got into it and was convinced it was helping him but we ended growing apart because every time I caught up with him, he'd try to persuade me to come along to a Landmark session. Of course, if you go along, you get pressured to sign up for a big group session that goes over a weekend and that costs hundreds of dollars.

It does really seem to help some people but it seems that it can also be really traumatic and actually cause problems for other people.

Landmark is an unscrupulous scam/cult/ etc

I had no idea he was related to Landmark which I came across when I worked in the States. Ultimately I fired the one bloke who was trying to get co-workers and even myself to a session. But that was to reduce costs not because he was shilling Landmark.

I'm too obstinate to ask or receive advice so these trickeries don't work on me but all these women and my former staff in the US were broken in some way (divorce, illness, etc) so I can see how it preys on them.
 
I had no idea he was related to Landmark which I came across when I worked in the States.

Yes, Tolle had some sort of training course in self-realisation that he then sold to some former employees/presenters, who re-branded it as Landmark.

It's a bit like Amway or a pyramid marketing scheme - the participants all try to sign up people they know for training sessions so it can get pretty tiring as they're often banging on about it.

I find the idea deeply unappealing, but some people seem to love it and will even travel long distances to participate in sessions (well, prior to COVID, at least).
 
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I’ve had a few roadtrips for work and listened to 80% of Tokyo Vice. If you like the series, you will enjoy the book … because it is so different. A lot more vice, hardly any yakuza or hostess clubs. A lot more press procedural and Lost In Translation moments.
 
He’s celebrating Presidents’ Day before heading to Lubbock to deal with a measles outbreak

Oh. Diseases that can be solved by vaccines. You might want to get ahead of that before RFK Jr notices.
 
Reading one of my all-time favourites ina. Fresh translation. Truly a masterpiece on so many levels

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Currently reading The Expanse series, after a few good horror novels. I want try something noir next. I’m thinking full-on trench coat, fedora, smoking gat and pesky dames. Suggestions welcome as I dip my toe into the genre. Raymond Chandler?
 
Currently reading The Expanse series, after a few good horror novels. I want try something noir next. I’m thinking full-on trench coat, fedora, smoking gat and pesky dames. Suggestions welcome as I dip my toe into the genre. Raymond Chandler?
Get into Oz Noir

This is possibly the great Australian Novel as well.
The Broken Shore by Peter Temple

Just for you Sandgropers

Dave is funny as used to be Dave Warner From the Suburbs band.
City of Light by Dave Warner
The main character of City of Light is Snowy Lane, a young police constable working in suburban Perth in the late-1970s, who gets swept into investigating a string of murders of young women by a serial killer dubbed Mr Gruesome. This not only changes his life, it ultimately entangles him in the corruption and excess that marked 80s Perth. The book is split into three sections.

For Old school OZ Noir - Any Cliff Hardy books by Peter Corris

I used to work with Gary Disher before he was famous.

I recommend these

The Challis and Destry novels, aka the Peninsula Crimes series​

The Paul "Hirsch" Hirschhausen novels

 
The rain fell without conviction, washing the city in shades of charcoal and regret.

Somewhere in the electronic badlands, beyond the reach of common sense and healthy self-esteem, sat DressedWell.

It wasn't a forum.

It was a holding cell.

A place where men sentenced themselves to life without parole for the crime of caring too much.

The regulars drifted through its corridors like ghosts in bespoke tailoring. Their usernames hung over them like aliases on old police files. They had spent years memorising the sacred texts: shoulder expression, lapel proportion, waist suppression, hand-sewn buttonholes. They could identify a jacket's country of origin from a grainy photograph. They could estimate the year of manufacture from the shape of a collar.

None of it had made them happy.

Then there was DropBear.

Nobody knew his real name. Rumour said he was an Australian expat somewhere in Trump's America, a man who'd crossed the Pacific decades ago and never entirely arrived. He posted at impossible hours, as if sleep was something that happened to other people. His avatar never changed. His opinions never softened.

He claimed to own three navy blazers and seventeen firearms. Nobody could tell which number was the exaggeration.

When discussions turned ugly—and they always did eventually—DropBear would emerge from the shadows of the thread like a drifter stepping out of desert heat shimmer. He'd deliver a paragraph of deadpan Australian sarcasm, insult everyone involved, condemn modern tailoring, American politics, and Italian loafers in a single sentence, then disappear again before anyone could decide whether he'd won the argument or merely poisoned it.

The others feared him a little.

Not because he was right.

Because sometimes he was.

A newcomer would arrive carrying a photograph and a little hope.

The hope never lasted.

The photograph would be pinned beneath the fluorescent lights of a thread. Then the examination began.

The trousers were too slim.

The jacket too short.

The shoes too square.

The tie too wide.

The watch too large.

The man himself too eager.

Every flaw was documented. Every aspiration processed through a machine built from equal parts expertise, disappointment, and boredom.

The forum's true currency wasn't knowledge.

It was judgment.

Judgment flowed through every thread like sewage through old pipes. Men who had spent twenty years searching for the perfect navy blazer dissected strangers with surgical precision. They delivered verdicts with the detached professionalism of coroners. Sometimes they were right. That almost made it worse.

The clothes were never really the subject.

The clothes were camouflage.

Beneath them lurked older hungers: status, envy, insecurity, nostalgia. The desperate hope that if a jacket fit perfectly, something else might too.

Outside, the world accelerated.

Stores closed.

Tailors retired.

Factories vanished.

Presidents came and went.

Markets boomed and collapsed.

Empires argued with themselves on television.

Somewhere in suburban America, DropBear sat in the blue glow of a monitor, pouring another drink and composing a reply that would derail an otherwise civil discussion about button stance.

Inside DressedWell, nothing moved.

The same arguments circled endlessly like vultures over a desert carcass. Men grew older beneath the glow of their monitors. Hairlines retreated. Waistlines advanced. Careers ended. Marriages began and dissolved. Entire decades disappeared.

Yet the debates remained.

Half an inch on a lapel.

A quarter break on a trouser.

The eternal question of whether anyone should still wear a double-breasted jacket.

The forum persisted with the stubbornness of a forgotten graveyard.

A museum of vanished standards.

A support group for incurable obsessives.

A monastery where the monks had replaced God with fabric.

Late at night, when the threads slowed and the city outside disappeared into darkness, the place felt less like a community than a warning.

A warning that obsession doesn't need to be rational.

Only persistent.

And somewhere, in a fresh thread posted three minutes ago, a man was asking whether his jacket sleeves were too long.

The answers were already coming.

DropBear had viewed the thread.

God help him.
 

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