ChaDefinitelyFeel
ChaDefinitelyFeel OP t1_j24z6mq wrote
Reply to comment by StepfordMisfit in Of the books you've shelved on Goodreads, which has the highest & lowest average rating? by ChaDefinitelyFeel
Theres a weird psychological thing where people don't want to give a book a 1 or 2 star rating, even for things that are really bad. Instead of 1-5 it might as well be a scale of 3-5. Even Mein Kampf has a 3.18, to put things in perspective.
ChaDefinitelyFeel OP t1_j24t5d9 wrote
Reply to comment by MarieReading in Of the books you've shelved on Goodreads, which has the highest & lowest average rating? by ChaDefinitelyFeel
Was Otrano really that bad? Isn't it considered to be a classic?
ChaDefinitelyFeel t1_j1mimac wrote
Reply to comment by timtamsforbreakfast in I fell in love and my interests in books changed drastically. by kingkontroverseP0si
The Road by Cormac McCarthy is a book you need to read
ChaDefinitelyFeel t1_je0jvbm wrote
Reply to Hidden gems by Spookykinkyboi
The Prodigy: A Biography of William James Sidis, America's Greatest Child Prodigy
206 total ratings on goodreads
William James Sidis is quite possibly the most intelligent man who ever lived, and virtually no one has heard of him. The son of Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire, his IQ is estimated to have been upwards of 200. He was the youngest person to ever attend Harvard University, enrolling at the age of 11, and began giving lectures at the age 12 to mathematics post-doctorates on the subject of four dimensional bodies. By the age eight he had taught himself eight languages and by the end of his life was conversant in 25. Sidis was scrutinized and harassed by the press throughout his childhood because of his prodigal abilities and lived most of his adult life in seclusion, constantly using pseudonyms to avoid the attention of the media.