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Here Are The Books Bill Gates Thinks You Should Read This Summer

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You’re going to need a bigger beach bag.

Yuri Gripas / Reuters

Gates' picks last year included book like the Pulitzer Prize winning The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History by Elizabeth Kolbert and Reinventing American Health Care: How the Affordable Care Act Will Improve Our Terribly Complex, Blatantly Unjust, Outrageously Expensive, Grossly Inefficient, Error Prone System by Ezekiel J. Emanuel.

Hyperbole and a Half by Allie Brosh

Hyperbole and a Half by Allie Brosh

"The adventures she recounts are mostly inside her head, where we hear and see the kind of inner thoughts most of us are too timid to let out in public. You will rip through it in three hours, tops. But you’ll wish it went on longer, because it’s funny and smart as hell."

Touchstone Books


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U.S. Releases Contents Of Bin Laden's English-Language "Bookshelf"

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This Nov. 18, 2011, file photo shows the guesthouse inside Osama bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

Shaukat Qadir / AP

WASHINGTON — The U.S. government this week is releasing the list of English-language texts that were recovered from Osama bin Laden's Pakistan compound after the U.S. raid that killed the al-Qaeda leader in 2011.

The list is the first public accounting by the government of the English-language section of the trove of materials found in the compound. The release of the list along with another tranche of materials from the compound that are being declassified marks the fourth time since the 2011 raid that killed the 9/11 mastermind that the government has made public some of the documents found after the raid. The list, embargoed until Wednesday morning and provided in advance to BuzzFeed News, includes volumes by Massachusetts Institute of Technology linguist Noam Chomsky, former intelligence official and antiwar activist Michael Scheuer, conspiracy texts about 9/11 and the Illuminati, and a book by Bob Woodward. Bin Laden had these materials in digital files. The list also includes numerous materials about France, including information on France's economy and defense, as well as materials that analysts think were probably used by other residents of the compound — including a suicide prevention manual.

"This release contains a list of primarily English-language materials that the U.S. Intelligence Community assesses informed Usama bin Ladin’s understanding of the West, and thus informed his strategy to impact the West’s decision making — a collection of documents we nicknamed 'Bin Ladin’s Bookshelf,'" Office of the Director of National Intelligence spokesperson Jeffrey Anchukaitis said. "U.S. Intelligence Community analysts believe Usama bin Ladin’s English-language proficiency was more than sufficient to read and comprehend these documents, and other open sources suggest the same."

"The files in 'Bin Laden’s Bookshelf' represent only the English-language reading material found among Adobe Acrobat PDF files recovered from the Abbottabad compound" after Navy SEALS raided the compound and killed bin Laden, a senior intelligence official who has analyzed the list and who is not authorized to speak on the record said in an email. "The vast majority of the PDFs were months-to-years’ worth of digitized or scanned issues – a page at a time – of (Arabic-language) al-Hayat and al-Quds al-Arabi newspapers. The 'Bookshelf' are all of the English-language PDF files we found except duplicate files and about a dozen weapons and bombmaking manuals that we will not release due to the nature of their contents."

"In terms of the materials that are there, some of the things that we’ve found to be of note were that bin Laden was probably an avid conspiracy theorist," the senior intelligence official said in a phone call. "Of the 38 full-length English-language books he had in his possession, about half of them were conspiracy theory books" about the Illuminati, Freemasons, and other conspiracy topics. Texts listed on the "bookshelf" include Bloodlines of the Illuminati by the American conspiracy theorist Fritz Springmeier; The New Pearl Harbor: Disturbing Questions About the Bush Administration and 9/11 by the 9/11 conspiracy theorist David Ray Griffin; and The Secrets of the Federal Reserve, a book by the Holocaust denier and anti-Semite Eustace Mullins.

The list also includes materials from congressional hearings about Project MKUltra, the so-called "mind control" program conducted by the CIA in the 1950s and 1960s. Also on the list: maps of Iranian nuclear sites.

Intriguingly, the list includes "Is It the Heart You Are Asking?" by Dr. Islam Sobhi al-Mazeny, which is a suicide prevention guide. According to the senior intelligence official, analysts do not believe that this belonged to bin Laden himself, but instead that it was intended "for use with one of his own family members who also lived on the compound."

The process of declassifying the documents from the bin Laden raid has been a subject of controversy in the four years since the raid. Congress and the media have pressured the administration to declassify the material, which it has been slow to do. The Intelligence Authorization Act of 2014 required that the director of national intelligence conduct a declassification review of documents from the compound and publicly release those that had been declassified.

The intelligence community is now releasing two tranches of material recovered from the compound; the "bookshelf" this week, and a second tranche of material that is being declassified.

The second part is "not publicly available information" and "follows an
interagency review. With DNI approval, the CIA spearheaded a rigorous interagency review of the classified documents under the auspices of the National Security Council staff. That effort began last October and continues as we speak," Anchukaitis said. "We’re only releasing a part of the overall review on Wednesday."

According to a press release being put out by ODNI on Wednesday, "All documents whose publication will not hurt ongoing operations against al-Qa‘ida or their affiliates will be released."

The release of these documents comes a week after investigative journalist Seymour Hersh's controversial article published last week in the London Review of Books that alleged that the U.S. government colluded with Pakistan to stage the raid on the Abbottabad compound, and that in fact Pakistan had known bin Laden's whereabouts for years. In the story, Hersh alleged that the documents the government said it had recovered from the compound had been fakes. Anchukaitis said that the timing of the release this week has "nothing to do" with Hersh's story, but that "We do though know that this process was taking a long time. Once a document is declassified it can’t become reclassified and the IC needs to insure that all the documents declassified will not hinder efforts to keep the nation safe."

Documents from the raid have become public only a few times before this: 17 letters dated between 2006 and 2011 that were given to the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point in 2012, 150 pages of documents that became public as part of a terrorism case in New York in 2013, and one document was used by German prosecutors at the terrorism trial of Abdeladim el-Kebir. The documents that were entered into evidence in the trial of Abid Naseer in New York consisted mostly of communications between bin Laden and his inner circle and suggested that bin Laden still took an involved role in the operations of al-Qaeda in his last years despite being in hiding.



How The Media Would Report The Events Of "Game Of Thrones"

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News reports are coming.

Robert Baratheon's death.

Robert Baratheon's death.

BBC / HBO / BuzzFeed

The execution of Eddard Stark.

The execution of Eddard Stark.

Time Inc. / HBO / BuzzFeed

Rumours of Cersei and Jaime's relationship.

Rumours of Cersei and Jaime's relationship.

News Corp / HBO / BuzzFeed

The outbreak of The War of the Five Kings.

The outbreak of The War of the Five Kings.

CNN / HBO / BuzzFeed


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16 "Mr Men" And "Little Miss" Characters That Sum Up London

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Sorry in advance for any childhoods we may ruin.

Robin Edds / BuzzFeed / Via penguin.com.au

Robin Edds / BuzzFeed / Via penguin.com.au

Robin Edds / BuzzFeed / Via penguin.com.au

Robin Edds / BuzzFeed / Via penguin.com.au


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"The Fault In Our Stars" Author John Green: We Have A Responsibility To Tackle Cancer

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Author John Green signs copies of his book during a "The Fault In Our Stars" red carpet and fan event in Nashville, Tennessee.

Rick Diamond / Getty Images

The first thing John Green asks me when we're introduced is what football team I support. On hearing my answer – Manchester United – the American author and Liverpool fanatic replies: “That’s terrible,” before adding: "I appreciate your honest. And anyway, it makes sense, because you live in London, right?”

His knowledge of the Premier League is almost as disarming as how polite and chirpy he is, given we’re speaking at 9am (his time) on a Monday morning.

The reason we're chatting is that the 37-year-old is hoping to encourage the young British fans of his best-selling novel, The Fault In Our Stars (a story of teenage love and cancer), to raise money for Teenage Cancer Trust next month.

On 26 June, fans of the hugely popular book and subsequent film, are being asked to stage sleepovers with their friends to try and encourage donations and raise awareness for the charity.

TFIOS stars Nat Wolff, Shailene Woodley, and Ansel Elgort with John Green.

Rick Diamond / Getty Images

Green’s own charity work is well known; his The Project For Awesome event on YouTube saw his fans (known as “nerdfighters”) raise over $1 million in just one week last year.

He says he and his brother Hank, who run the extremely popular VlogBrothers YouTube channel, grew up being reminded by their parents of the importance of volunteering. His success has only intensified that belief.

“I think for me it quickly begins to feel meaningless to have an audience if you don’t get to do anything together," he says. "And the most interesting and important things that you can do together as a community are about... addressing problems that are bigger than just personal problems.

“Also I’ve always felt pushed in that direction by my readers and our video viewers as well. A lot of people think teenagers are disengaged or uninterested or self-involved or whatever and that’s just not true, that’s not been my experience.”

After the film version of The Fault In Our Stars was released, a lot of young people approached Green on social media to ask how they could help fight cancer and support those with the disease.

He admits he feels a responsibility, given the success of the book and film, to try to emphasize that teenage cancer is not a fictional problem and is instead “completely unacceptable”. He says he wishes America had an organisation similar to Teenage Cancer Trust, a place where young people suffering with cancer can build a community.

“I believe that we have a responsibility as a community to address the problem of cancer, especially among young people because it is such a horrific, capricious…" He tails off.

Fans of "The Fault In Our Stars" Nashville in Nashville, Tennessee.

Rick Diamond / Getty Images

When I ask why young people respond to him and his brother online, he suggests that it's because they take their problems seriously, no matter what they are.

John and Hank's educational videos range from silly to the inspired. “We tried very hard not to talk down to them and instead create a community that celebrated intellectualism and celebrated learning and curiosity – that wasn’t inaccessible," he says. "Hopefully when we’re not too pretentious, hopefully we don’t live in an ivory tower."

Green says that when he was at school it never crossed his mind to give money to charity or volunteer. He even admits that he thought the way his parents (a community organiser and non-profit worker) focused on the world’s problems was totally useless.

“And now kids don’t seem to feel that way," he says. "I wish I understood that change, I think there’s a cultural thing

“Teenagers may not have as much financial or political power but they are tremendous passionate and intellectually curious and desperate to see the world change for the better."

One element to emerge from the social media era is the idea that teenagers deserved to be listened to, Green remarks. “I think a lot of times, people didn’t… it was easier to dismiss teenagers and their culture, they couldn’t have a unified culture because they couldn’t transcend geography at the rate they can now.”

Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images

Green's travels to promote the upcoming Paper Towns, a film starring Cara Delevingne and Nat Wolff and based on his 2008 novel, will see him visit his British fans in the summer. He hopes that the planned adaption of his book Looking for Alaska will also work out. “That’s been a long time coming and I don’t want to get prematurely excited but I hope so," he says.

But when I ask about his dream cast, he's totally stumped.

“Oh God, no, I’m so old man that when I think about what teenage actors should play people in Looking for Alaska, I think about, like, Drew Barrymore. I think about people who are now 40 years old, I am totally unqualified to cast movies, because I would cast a bunch of 40-year-olds.”

I tell him my sister, who’s a fan, told me to say “French the llama!” – a made-up exclamation of amazement Green has been trying to make happen for years.

“I almost said it as the MTV movie awards,” he admits. “But I was talked out of it by my wife at the last second.

“She literally leaned over to me during the commercial break and said ‘You can’t say "French the llama" if you go up there to accept the award’.”

But he hasn't given up hope – he wants BuzzFeed to help him officially make it a thing. It's Green in a nutshell: Persistent, enthusiastic, and determined to use his fanbase, and whatever other opportunities he has, to help change the world.

You can find out more about Teenage Cancer Trust’s event, Night of Infinities, on the charity's website.


What Are Your Favourite Books From Australian Authors?

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Time to get lost in a fictional world.

Reading is a fantastic way to relax and enter a whole new, magical world.

Reading is a fantastic way to relax and enter a whole new, magical world.

TriStar Pictures

There's many fantastic Australian authors. Whether it's Melina Marchetta's coming of age tale Looking for Alibrandi...

There's many fantastic Australian authors. Whether it's Melina Marchetta's coming of age tale Looking for Alibrandi...

Penguin Australia

Or Markus Zusack's brilliant international best-seller The Book Thief.

Or Markus Zusack's brilliant international best-seller The Book Thief.

Picador

Perhaps an old book from childhood still holds a special place in your heart.

Perhaps an old book from childhood still holds a special place in your heart.

Omnibus Books


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Here's The One Thing That Should Be Changed In Harry Potter Movies

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We all have plenty of book-to-movie quibbles, but we’re missing the big picture here. We need Fat Amy like we need air.

BUT HERE IS THE FAT LADY WE DESERVE. HERE IS THE FAT LADY WE NEED.


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