During the MOOC lull, I picked up to read an old book "The Assassins" by Elia Kazan. I have lost all interest in watching TV, many days I haven't watched a single minute of TV (today, for instance). I have mixed feelings about this book. All the same, it is thousand times better than watching meaningless TV shows.
"...stimulating their brain with exposure to real science, rather than watching yet another vapid, IQ-lowering reality show, and continuing the psychological descent into the twitching mass of consumerist jelly that is the product of the modern media enterprise..." I absolutely agree with the statement.
Back to the book...
Don't expect lots of murders, violence as the title might suggest. Elia Kazan was a very famous movie maker (directed famous movies Street Car Named Desire, and On The Waterfront) and actor and probably not as famous as a writer, but he did write a few novels. In the book, a US Air Force sergeant Cesario Flores commits a cold-blooded murder which he readily admits. The book is about the system, the trial that takes place. At the end Flores is acquitted. I don't recommend this book, but I have to say this book does what a really good book is expected to do. It will make you think for days and weeks. I am kind of consumed by this thinking right now.
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