23 books
—
11 voters
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read (228)
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currently-reading (3)
read (228)
2021-wishlist (43)
classic (42)
non-fiction (42)
historical (36)
favorites (34)
2018-wishlist (30)
philosophy (27)
read-some-parts-again (26)
2020-wishlist (22)
disturbing
(22)
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india (10)
dystopia (9)
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economics (22)
life-altering (21)
psycho-thriller (21)
psychology (19)
2022-wishlist (15)
humour (13)
political-science (12)
2019-wishlist (10)
india (10)
dystopia (9)
sci-fi (9)
Siddharth
is currently reading
progress:
(99%)
"Very good! Solid non-fiction, and seems to be backed by a lot of research." — Apr 26, 2025 06:25PM
"Very good! Solid non-fiction, and seems to be backed by a lot of research." — Apr 26, 2025 06:25PM
Siddharth
is currently reading
progress:
(99%)
"Very nice! This book really got me out of my slumber, into doing the research required to find the lowest cost, traditional index fund." — Mar 31, 2025 04:09AM
"Very nice! This book really got me out of my slumber, into doing the research required to find the lowest cost, traditional index fund." — Mar 31, 2025 04:09AM
Siddharth
is currently reading
progress:
(99%)
"So good! The ending was apt. (Also, this was my first audiobook completion. It works; I wonder how much I will retain over the long term though.)" — Mar 15, 2025 07:44AM
"So good! The ending was apt. (Also, this was my first audiobook completion. It works; I wonder how much I will retain over the long term though.)" — Mar 15, 2025 07:44AM


“She went back to the computer, typed in $50, and then sat back, feeling relieved. It was a bit of insurance. So as long her maximum was the highest, she would still win. 3:59. Less than a minute left. She began to count down, and then, with only twenty seconds to go, the bid jumped to $32.45. And then it jumped again, and again! Not one, but two snipers were bidding on her Hansel and Gretel! She held her breath and crossed her fingers and counted—five, four, three, two . . . The Congratulations, You’ve Won! message popped on to her screen, along with her winning bid. $49.45. She sat back in her chair, triumphant. It felt so good to win.”
― The Book of Form and Emptiness
― The Book of Form and Emptiness

“Consumerism provides no psychological satisfaction, because there is no limit to our desires for things that we never needed in the first place.”
― The Greatest Empire: A Life of Seneca
― The Greatest Empire: A Life of Seneca

“The only path McAuliffe saw to hard-money parity ran through cycles of prospecting new donors, in the mail and online. To accomplish that on the scale he believed crucial, Democrats needed the list of 100 million new names, sortable by party registration or voting behavior, that would fill a national voter file. McAuliffe proposed a deal to the state chairs, that the DNC would effectively borrow their files, help clean them up, add new data like donor information and commercially available phone numbers, and then return them for the state party’s use. At the same time, McAuliffe went to Vinod Gupta, a major Democratic fund-raiser and Clinton friend who was the founder and CEO of InfoUSA, one of the country’s large commercial data vendors. Like many of his rivals, Gupta had been trying for years to find customers in the political world, and offered McAuliffe a good deal for his product. McAuliffe agreed, and as the state files came in, the DNC would send them out to InfoUSA’s Omaha servers, where hundreds of pieces of new information were added to each voter’s profile. A new interface was built to navigate it all. It was called Demzilla.”
― The Victory Lab: The Secret Science of Winning Campaigns
― The Victory Lab: The Secret Science of Winning Campaigns

“I waited patiently - years - for the pendulum to swing the other way, for men to start reading Jane Austen, learn how to knit, pretend to love cosmos, organize scrapbook parties, and make out with each other while we leer. And then we'd say, Yeah, he's a Cool Guy.”
― Gone Girl
― Gone Girl
Siddharth’s 2024 Year in Books
Take a look at Siddharth’s Year in Books, including some fun facts about their reading.
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