What are you reading in 2026?

Finished It Was All A Lie, a 2019 book by Stuart Stevens, a GOP political consultant and filmmaker for most of his adult life (he started in 1978 and worked on the Bush and Romney campaigns).

Stevens’ honesty about his past and the current state of the party under its current leader is refreshing and he’s extremely insightful. His main thesis is that the GOP lost the moral argument decades ago (with civil rights in the 60s) and has basically sunk further and further into a sport team model, where voters support the team and only care about winning and white grievance. All the various apparently long-held principles - fiscal responsibility, rule of law, small government, even gun ownership - are like players; you support them when they’re on the team and you stop caring about them when they aren’t.

Stevens of course doesn’t think the Democrats are much better - he’s very annoyed about Obama refusing federal funding to run for President - but he admits that they’re generally more likely to have genuine principles at both the politician and voter level, and they don’t have to rely completely on team loyalty as a result.

It’s an excellent book and I do feel sorry for him, I’m glad he wrote it. It seems prescient now about how things have developed since 2019.
 

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Seeing latest humble bundle book bundle with good Forgotten Realms novels, I see myself rereading Cyrse of the Azure Bonds and the Counselors and Kings trilogy and trying Brimstone Angels for the first time this year.
Even though I have not yet cracked open any of the TSR books from the last three D&D novel bundles I got, I am getting this one too. I have read about a dozen FR novels back in the 80s and 90s but none by Greenwood himself and I am interested to see how Elminster comes across in a full novel as compared to the Dragon articles and setting books.
 

Even though I have not yet cracked open any of the TSR books from the last three D&D novel bundles I got, I am getting this one too. I have read about a dozen FR novels back in the 80s and 90s but none by Greenwood himself and I am interested to see how Elminster comes across in a full novel as compared to the Dragon articles and setting books.
For me, I love Greenwood's ideas, but not so much his full-length prose writing.
 

It’s not at all bad (the whole trilogy is good) though my favourite is the sequel, The Wyvern’s Spur, which is just really good at the P G Wodehouse references.
I haven't gotten to that one yet in my idle re-read of the old D&D fiction line. I guarantee that the first time I read it as a young teen, I wouldn't have gotten any P.G. Wodehouse references.
 

I haven't gotten to that one yet in my idle re-read of the old D&D fiction line. I guarantee that the first time I read it as a young teen, I wouldn't have gotten any P.G. Wodehouse references.
Same here, but I read a lot of Wodehouse as a kid (I strongly suspect that doing so was formative to my ideas about masculinity).
 

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