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Michael Hit: Go to the cinema.
Lauren Jude: Just go to the cinema.
Katie Dramond: I love it.
Michael Hit: This is the worst time per year to go to the cinema.
Lauren Jude: No, it’s the best time in the year to air conditioning and comfortable seats.
Michael Hit: Yes, but it-
Katie Dramond: I am with Lauren, this is a great advice.
Lauren Jude: No, you were three times this year and every time, at the last minute. A friend invited me at the last minute to go to watch the fortieth anniversary of Goonies, who was playing in the city center. We went, was great. I was hanging with friends one night and said, “Let’s go to see sinners.” He was playing directly across the street, wonderful. The theater was practically empty, and it was glorious. The movie itself, in fact, checks our friends, and critics in the New Yorker pod. They had some ideas about the materials, so I would throw it to them, but it was great. I was like, I need to go to the cinema more.
Michael Hit: Oh, definitely.
Lauren Jude: What is your recommendation, Mike?
Michael Hit: I will recommend a book, and this is a book I read during the weekend of July 4. It is called, I refuse to cheer the fiber. I think this is the fourth fourth novel. It is selling, you may have heard of his name before. This is his new book, it’s a Dystopian imagination. It depicts a world a few decades after now, as society has collapsed in a very recognized and familiar way, somewhat similar to a more dangerous and unconfirmed version of the day. The entire economy is controlled by a handful of the high -end elite. The education system, and most Americans are proudly collapsed. We have proudly head of the illiterate in this book. Satellite communications have been identified, which are not completely reliable, and the GPS (GPS) is no longer operating anymore. It is just like a eroded version of the world in which we live, and it was starkly presented. We go down to this world and follow the main character in the research. The entire book is held on the Superior Lake in northern Minnesota and West Ontario. The main character gets a boat, goes and sails on the Superior Lake and we follow it. I will not spoil it by saying anything more than that, but it holds and is not fully predictable, beautifully written at the sentence level. It is like hair for pages. It is amazing, emotional and deep. It will get angry because it is a book for this moment. It is great.
Lauren Jude: I don’t know what to say that, but it really looks deep.
Katie Dramond: You are more sophisticated than both. Sorry, Lauren.
Michael Hit: Well, I mean, not really.
Lauren Jude: I accept this.
Michael Hit: No, I mean, I know that I recommended the NERDY book, but you must really read it just because it gives you a sharp future and sort what it is if you leave the richest people in the world running the economy and running all the basic services that we depend on, to the point in which they only collapse because the most important people do not need this anymore, and they run us who suffer from that. It is like, it is a kind of dark, it seems that this is the way the world moves, which is why the book echoes with me a lot when I read it. Yes.
Lauren Jude: I will add this to good readings. Thank you very much.
Michael Hit: naturally.
Lauren Jude: Yes. I recommended writing a book by a philosopher, but I will keep it and keep it down at the present time. Once Katie leaves, we can only hit the student who taught a lot, Mike.
Michael Hit: I don’t know. I will go to see the granules. I don’t know.
Lauren Jude: Welcome to Wire’s Lit Nerd Podcast.
Michael Hit: Well, well, thank you for listening to this episode of Wadi Gharib. If you like what you heard today, make sure to follow us in our offer and evaluate it on your favorite PodCast app. If you want to contact us with any questions, comments or suggestions, write to us on Uncannvalley@wise.com. Today’s offer was produced by Adriana Tabia. Amar Lal from Macrosound Mixed this episode, Bran Bandy was a studio engineer in New York. Mark Lida was our San Francisco Studio engineer. Kate Osborn is our executive product. Katie Drummond is WIRED Editor -in -Chief, and Chris Bannon is the president of Global Audio.