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Rise and Kill First by Ronen Bergman

It may bill itself as a history of Israeli assassinations, but this incredibly well-researched history functions surprisingly well as a fact-focused and unbiased cross-sectional history of Israel from before its founding to much more recently, and I have finished it with a much deeper understanding of the regional geopolitics. 
Recent posts

being there (1979)

Even though this classic old drama only really has one point / joke to make, it makes it every well, and is worth a watch - the only other funny thing about it is that it feels like it was shot a decade earlier, not sure why.

Pilot X by Tom Merritt

Time travel in novels works best as poetry (nothing explained, vibes only) or as hard sci-fi (intensely careful plotting, solid internally consistent rules) - whereas this loose handwavy mix of jargon and clutter made no sense, and was totally unsatisfying. 

dog day afternoon (1975)

I love 70s movies because they’re gritty and showy at the same time, and they look great, and they don’t try too hard, they know they’re movies, but al pacino tries too hard here and for some reason it works great, this is a classic, but also it’s boring if you’re looking for action; it’s really a character study, and also it has funny ideas about sexuality that are ahead or maybe behind the times i’m not sure, and also travolta’s character mentions this movie in Swordfish and that’s all I have to say about that. 

The Spider’s War by Daniel Abraham

Abundantly readable and exactly as satisfying an ending of a five book fantasy series as you could ask, but also totally boring - it seems like Abraham took the least-risk option every step of the way here, and so ends up with a conclusion that feels like the solution to a mathematical equation.