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The Great Peace
A highly personal '#metoo' memoir of 'American Beauty' Hollywood Actress, Mena Suvari, whose teenage sex abuse led to life-long relationship struggles.
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10th April 2023 03:46 AM
by Vixen
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The Surrogate
Corny - but somehow works
Chick-lit-cum-psychological thriller-meets- Coming of Age
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10th April 2023 03:41 AM
by Vixen
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10th April 2023 03:38 AM
by Vixen
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Down Girl -- The Logic of Misogyny (2018)
Your reviewer has read several books categorised as feminism, which may be something to do with being born into an 80% female household. This one reads like a feature length academic paper whereas many are more polemical. Kate Manne is a moral philosopher at Ivy League Cornell University... 
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Going Solo
The extraordinary rise and surprising appeal of living alone
Human beings are social animals, according to Aristotle and Roman Emperor Aurelius. Yet, in contrast to a couple of hundred millennia of collective living, the last generation or two has uniquely been accompanied by a big rise in living alone. All adult age cohorts have involved themselves... 
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Is That A Fact?: Frauds, Quacks, And The Real Science Of Everyday Life
Dr. Joseph Schwarcz is a sessional instructor of Chemistry at McGill University. He is the director of McGill’s Office for Science and Society (OSS), an organization dedicated to debunking pseudoscientific myths as well as improving scientific literacy.
This book is divided into... 
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The Power of Others
To many introverted types the refrain "Humans are social animals" sometimes jars. But the context of Michael Bond's volume is not about hosting dinner parties or joining a bridge club; it's a powerful documentation of the extent to which we are not running our own show even if we think... 
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22nd April 2021 03:13 PM
by Magrat
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Inferior: How Science Got Women Wrong
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All The Single Ladies
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Storm in a Teacup
Your reviewer took Physics A-level in 1992 and hasn't really touched it since. Helen Czerski has written the kind of book that she wishes had been a textbook, but couldn't really be, but which helps traverse the yawning chasm between what one studies and what happens in real life around... 
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Influence
The Psychology of Pursuation.
Written in a narrative style combined with scholarly research, Cialdini combines evidence from experimental work with the techniques and strategies he gathered while working as a salesperson, fundraiser, advertiser, and in other positions inside organizations that commonly use compliance tactics to
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19th March 2018 08:47 AM
by Senex
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The World Beyond Your Head
How to flourish in an age of distraction
On page 13 of this book, Matthew Crawford, writer and motorcycle engineer calls for a "right to not be addressed". This struck your reviewer as such an astonishingly good idea (she cherishes her share of not being addressed), that it will probably never catch on. Crawford is,... 
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15th October 2017 11:10 PM
by stevea
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Mirror, Shoulder, Signal
Shortlisted for the Man Booker International Prize 2017
Published Feb 2017.
Dorthe Nors (born 20 May 1970 in Herning) is a Danish author and writer. She is the first Danish author to be published in the American magazine The New Yorker.[
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8th August 2017 01:16 AM
by Vixen
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Taste in an age of endless choice
Tom Vanderbilt attempts rather well to demonstrate that, contrary to some received wisdom, there is accounting for taste. His book is an account for it. Moreover plenty of it is logical, or at least predictable, given a modest background in behavioural quirks that seem entertainingly daft,... 
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The Village Effect
Why face-to-face contact matters
It is sometimes assumed that in today's modern age it is far easier than before to spend a day not meeting anyone in person, or even speaking to anyone, without feeling lonely and without cutting oneself off, thanks to online connectivity. Indeed a case often made is that modern media have... 
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