Here are 2 books that Goodbye, Eastern Europe fans have personally recommended if you like
Goodbye, Eastern Europe.
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A minor miracle, this book makes death and decay funny. I mean, very funny. The term "hilarious" is severely abused today -- usually means something that cracks a smile, at best -- but this book is deeply, unexpectedly funny, and chock full of rarely arcane, fully relatable science.
Not to be read at night, though. Laughing out loud at midnight at death and decay isn't something that endears you to your partner.
For two thousand years, cadavers - some willingly, some unwittingly - have been involved in science's boldest strides and weirdest undertakings. They've tested France's first guillotines, ridden the NASA Space Shuttle, been crucified in a Parisian laboratory to test the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin, and helped solve the mystery of TWA Flight 800. For every new surgical procedure, from heart transplants to gender confirmation surgery, cadavers have helped make history in their quiet way. "Delightful-though never disrespectful" (Les Simpson, Time Out New York), Stiff investigates the strange lives of our bodies postmortem and answers the question: What should…
It is April 1st, 2038. Day 60 of China's blockade of the rebel island of Taiwan.
The US government has agreed to provide Taiwan with a weapons system so advanced that it can disrupt the balance of power in the region. But what pilot would be crazy enough to run…
How do we define genius? When do setting, season, motives become more or less irrelevant in a (very short) novel? Tolstoy packs in as much about life, death, marriage, caste and all the ramifications in one story than most writers do at 10 times the length. The subtle, brutal insights about human nature are astonishing; no wonder he was revered as a near-god. I’m not sure that any writer today can write with this degree of insight, subtlety and wit, too concerned about being politically correct, about being trendy, about being startling.
Wrote British poet Matthew Arnold (Dover Beach), "A novel by Tolstoy is not a work of art but a piece of life."