someguy3,

Try Dragonfruit.

ooli,

May be a little too wild, start with litchi or something

solidgrue, (edited )
@solidgrue@lemmy.world avatar

Do you mean Lychee fruit, or are you saying to track down an actual lich and run it through a chipper shredder? I’m in either way

misophist,

Is it? My local grocery store in small town America has whole dragonfruit in the produce aisle and includes it in their overpriced mixed fruit tubs.

greenfish,
@greenfish@lemmy.world avatar

I’ll add it to the list! Kiddo is 4 so we’re probably just going to go to the Korean market and see what catches their interest

BlackPenguins,

Oh you are going to be disappointed.

Okokimup,
@Okokimup@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve started painting 10-15 minutes every day and I want to keep that up. I fell off reading nonfiction so I’m planning to start that again.

rockSlayer,

I’m taking a 1 month tolerance break, because getting high isn’t really interesting anymore

Nemo,

Oops, thought you meant “a break from being tolerant” and I was like, yeah, stop putting up with bullshit!

bionicjoey,

Finally we’ve found a solution to the paradox of tolerance!

ShadyGrove,

That first hit when you get back will feel great I imagine. Enjoy the crazy dreams for the first couple weeks!

favrion,
@favrion@lemmy.world avatar

I want to read at least ten books, and learn ASL.

aeronmelon,

I used to read all the time, now I almost never read anything.

So this year I’m resolving to read one book, any book, then I’ll move foward from there.

QuarterSwede,
@QuarterSwede@lemmy.world avatar

I recommend finding a movie you love that was a book first and reading it. I’m an extremely picky reader and I did this with Dune and LOVED it. Hasn’t gotten me much further but this may help kickstart your love of reading again.

criticon,

I recommend The Martian as a book that fits your criteria

QuarterSwede,
@QuarterSwede@lemmy.world avatar

Definitely read that one before the movie came out. Excellent read. Great suggestion anyway!

aeronmelon,

That’s what happened with The Hunt for Red October. Got me into Tom Clancy.

QuarterSwede,
@QuarterSwede@lemmy.world avatar

Ohhh, I haven’t tackled that one yet. My father loves Clancy (too bad Clancy was a douchebag).

dumples,
@dumples@kbin.social avatar

I recommend starting with young adult novels. There are a lot of great ones and they are easy to get into. Large fonts makes fast reading. They generally have an interesting theme and simple plot. Great way to get started. Trying to go from nothing to something complex like Infinite Jest is a recipe to fail.

They aren't all love triangles anymore

runjun,

After Reddit shut off 3rd party apps, I came here and resolved to read more. In the previous decade I had read maybe 2 books. I think your resolution is achievable but i would make it ridiculously achievable of reading like 1 min a day.

The habit of reading is what you want and the books will come after that and chances are you will read much longer. Don’t read anything you “should” be reading. Get a “popcorn flick” equivalent that you interests you and isn’t challenging.

Here is what I have read since June.

Waking Gods by Sylvain Neuvel

Only Human by Sylvain Neuvel

Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes

Shogun by James Clavell

Circe by Madeline Miller

The Secret History by Donna Tartt

The Player of Games by Iain M. Banks

I, Robot by Isaac Asimov

The Color of Magic by Terry Pratchett

The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami

Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer

Wool by Hugh Howey

Shift by Hugh Howey

Dust by Hugh Howey

Luna: New Moon by Ian McDonald

A Deepness in the Sky by Vernor Vinge

(Reading) A Fire Upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge

clay_pidgin,

If you aren’t already in it, it sounds like you belong in the sci-fi community on Lemmy.world, some of those were books of the month recently.

Valmond,

A link for the lazy?

clay_pidgin,

lemmy.world/c/sciencefiction

Let’s see if this works: c/sciencefiction@lemmy.world

Valmond,

Thanks!

clay_pidgin,

You betcha, friend.

runjun,

I am and that’s why I read the books. I do need to get better about going into particular communities to help drive their growth.

pearsaltchocolatebar,

I’d recommend getting into Asimov’s Foundation series. I, Robot is kind of a meh book from him, Imo (I’ve read all his fiction work)

Also take a look at Michael Crichton (Jurassic Park) and Arthur C. Clarke (2001: A Space Odyssey).

I’d also recommend Heinlein, but his books do get pretty “pervy misogynistic old man harem fantasies” in his later years.

runjun,

Great recommendations. I want to read the foundation series, I’m enjoying the show, but the wait time on Libby is really long. Michael Crichton is one of my favorite authors. I do need to read some of Clarke’s books but it almost suffers from “classical” must read avoidance I have lol

I_Fart_Glitter,

If Asimov’s Robots series has a shorter/no wait I think they’re worth reading. Maybe not as exciting as the Empire and Foundation series, but it’s interesting background- the evolution of robots, positronic brains, robot/human relations, jump ships, space colonization, human clones. Caves of Steel, The Naked Sun and Robots of Dawn are murder mystery detective stories that advance the robot plot.

Asimov recommended reading his books in this order:

The Complete Robot (1982) and/or I, Robot (1950)

Caves of Steel (1954)

The Naked Sun (1957)

The Robots of Dawn (1983)

Robots and Empire (1985)

The Currents of Space (1952)

The Stars, Like Dust (1951)

Pebble in the Sky (1950)

Prelude to Foundation (1988)

Note: Forward the Foundation (1993) was then unpublished, but would have followed Prelude.

Foundation (1951)

Foundation and Empire (1952)

Second Foundation (1953)

Foundation’s Edge (1982)

Foundation and Earth (1986)

more.bibliocommons.com/list/share/…/1735833849

runjun,

I appreciate the recommendation and listing them out! That is actually helpful as I don’t like searching up which book is next.

randint,
@randint@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz avatar

The Wool trio by Hugh Howey is a banger! I actually just finished Shift yesterday, and I’m gonna borrow Dust from a library tomorrow.

DarkPhysix,

I did this in 2021. This year I consumed 13 books (7 audio, 6 paper). Wishing you and your love for reading the best!

KestrelAlex,

If you are in Canada or the US I can’t recommend the Libby app highly enough - books, audiobooks and magazines borrowed to your devices from your local Library. Looking at the last 5 years of borrowing it has saved me (pirating probably) thousands of dollars of audiobooks, and having an endless supply of audiobooks with zero cost really encourages reading.

Dozzi92,
@Dozzi92@lemmy.world avatar

I suggest the Wheel of Time Omnibus edition. Available on Kindle for $148, 14k+ pages, great one book solution to your re-solution.

intensely_human,

I don’t know if you’ve ever read Stephen King but he’s pretty good

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