HackerNews Readings
40,000 HackerNews book recommendations identified using NLP and deep learning

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All In: An Autobiography

Billie Jean King

? on Amazon

5 HN comments

Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle: Transform Your Body Forever Using the Secrets of the Leanest People in the World

Tom Venuto

4.7 on Amazon

4 HN comments

My Family and Other Animals

Nigel Davenport, Gerald Durrell, et al.

4.5 on Amazon

4 HN comments

What Doesn't Kill Us: How Freezing Water, Extreme Altitude and Environmental Conditioning Will Renew Our Lost Evolutionary Strength

Scott Carney and Foxtopus Ink

4.7 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream

H.G. Bissinger

4.7 on Amazon

4 HN comments

The Secret Life of Plants: A Fascinating Account of the Physical, Emotional, and Spiritual Relations Between Plants and Man

Peter Tompkins and Christopher Bird

4.7 on Amazon

4 HN comments

The Dangerous Book for Boys

Conn Iggulden and Hal Iggulden

4.7 on Amazon

4 HN comments

Bigger Leaner Stronger: The Simple Science of Building the Ultimate Male Body

Michael Matthews

4.6 on Amazon

3 HN comments

Eleven Rings: The Soul of Success

Phil Jackson and Hugh Delehanty

4.7 on Amazon

3 HN comments

Where Men Win Glory: The Odyssey of Pat Tillman

Jon Krakauer

4.5 on Amazon

3 HN comments

The Barbell Prescription: Strength Training for Life After 40

Jonathon M Sullivan , Andy Baker, et al.

4.7 on Amazon

3 HN comments

24: Life Stories and Lessons from the Say Hey Kid

Willie Mays , John Shea, et al.

4.8 on Amazon

3 HN comments

The Art of Peace: Teachings of the Founder of Aikido

Morihei Ueshiba and John Stevens

4.6 on Amazon

3 HN comments

The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon

David Grann

4.4 on Amazon

3 HN comments

H Is for Hawk

Helen Macdonald

4.1 on Amazon

3 HN comments

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neadenonNov 7, 2017

If you like Watership Down I don't think I can recommend enough H is for Hawk by Helen Macdonald. While the books are very different, one is a novel the other is a memoir they both touch on nature, death, life in beautifully similar ways.

EdwardCoffinonMar 18, 2018

I read something about this in a quite unexpected place: H is for Hawk by Helen Macdonald:

> A few years ago I met a retired U2 pilot ... as I talked with this man what impressed me the most weren't his deadpan tales of high adventure, the 'incidents' with Russian MiGs and so on, but his battle against boredom. The nine-hour solo missions. The twelve-hour solo missions. 'Wasn't that horrendous?', I asked. 'It could get a little lonely up there,' he replied. But there was something about how he said it that made it sound a state still longed-for. And then he said something else. 'I used to read,' he said, unexpectedly, and with that his face changed, and his voice too: his deadpan Yeager drawl slipped, was replaced with a shy, childlike enthusiasm. 'The Once and Future King. By T.H.White,' he said. 'Have you heard of him? He's an English writer. It's a great book. I used to take that up, read it on the way out and on the way back.' [pp31-2]

OopsCriticalityonNov 9, 2015

I'm cheating a little on the date, but The Three Body Problem by Liu Cixin stands out. It was translated into english late last year, and received the Hugo this year for best story. It's wonderful sci-fi written on a grand scale, and made all the more interesting and refreshing to me by coming from outside the Western perspective. It's one of a trilogy: The Dark Forest english translation is out, and Death's End is coming beginning of next year.

Also enjoyed Seveneves by Stephenson, and H is for Hawk by Helen Macdonald. The former is likely known to the HN crowd; the latter draws comparisons to T.H. White's classic The Goshawk.

Among non-fiction books, I enjoyed The Little Prover by Friedman and Eastlund. It was exactly what I expected, a gentle introduction into inductive proofs in the idiom established by The Little Schemer.

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