(Part 3) Top products from r/barstoolsports

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We found 25 product mentions on r/barstoolsports. We ranked the 344 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/barstoolsports:

u/jim_tpc · 1 pointr/barstoolsports

If you're into Middle Eastern food, Zahav is incredible. I'm biased because I'm in Philly but the restaurant has won James Beard awards for Outstanding Chef and Outstanding Restaurant, and the book has recipes for everything they serve and a lot more.

For a more general book, The Food Lab by J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is pretty great. Most of the recipes are on the Serious Eats website but it's nice to have the physical book.

u/bwhitcf · 7 pointsr/barstoolsports

Give the book "Young Money" by Kevin Roose a read. It's a quick read, incredibly entertaining, but also pretty enlightening as to the culture of IB. As with anything, take it with a grain of salt, but it can give you an idea of what life may be like if you end up going IB. Personally, I left the book feeling incredibly relieved I took a Corporate Finance track. Consulting is the goal, though.

u/eirtep · 2 pointsr/barstoolsports

non-fiction:

I liked Eddie' Huang's Fresh Off The Boat. Don't let the shitty TV show (which the dude doesn't like) scare you off. It's an interesting book that covers a wide range of shit. Not just cooking or being Asian.

If you know who Eddie Huang is and you aren't a fan/don't want to give it a shot, maybe alternatively try one of Anthony Bourdain's books. I personally haven't ready them though.

The Heart of the Sea: Tragedy of the Whale ship Essex again, ignore the shitty movie. Well, I haven't seen it but I assume so. Very interesting true story about a whaling ship in 1800 something that's destroyed by a sperm whale and the shipwrecked crew tries to survive. Basically a real life Moby Dick - Herman Melville based his story on the Essex.
Fiction:

Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy is an easy entertaining easy read. I'm now realizing all of recommendations all seem to have movies but that's coincidence. I was also gonna say American Psycho.

Books are cool. I don't read enough anymore.

u/Mean_Gene3 · 3 pointsr/barstoolsports

Finished American Kingpin recently fantastic book Highly recommended.

Next one I am looking to tackle is Beautiful Boy by Nick Sheff. New movie with Steve Carell and Timothée Chalamet coming out soon should be a good read.

u/YourFavoriteYankee · 97 pointsr/barstoolsports

the Bagel boss guy ALLEGEDLY has a YouTube channel and gave his side of the story....apparently they kept trying to push MINI BAGELS


Edit love how he said ‘the bagel was very good, I’m happy it was because I was about to drive my car through the window and kill everyone’


Edit 2 bagel boss tshirt

u/TheTank123 · 1 pointr/barstoolsports

Just as I thought. You don’t actually have any idea if it’s a good investment or not, you just assume it is because it’s gone up.

You’re welcome:

https://www.amazon.com/Manias-Panics-Crashes-Financial-Investment/dp/0471467146/ref=nodl_

u/nwPatriot · 1 pointr/barstoolsports

Thinking about buying a used keyboard myself and trying to learn. Are these the books you're talking about? https://www.amazon.com/Suzuki-Piano-School-International-Vol/dp/0739054473/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1539302636&sr=8-1&keywords=suzuki+piano+book+1&dpID=51jf8cG3Q4L&preST=_SY344_BO1,204,203,200_QL70_&dpSrc=srch

​

Also, do you recommend getting the CD that comes with it or just the book?

u/Donttakethisname_35 · 2 pointsr/barstoolsports

Bret Easton Ellis:Rules of Attraction and Glamorama. I’d go with RoA first though https://www.amazon.com/Rules-Attraction-Bret-Easton-Ellis/dp/067162234X

u/hereforporn696969 · 11 pointsr/barstoolsports

Gonna go ahead and plug a book, The Defining Decade by Meg Jay. It's filled with case studies of people in their mid-twenties figuring out their careers, romantic lives, and mental well-being. I'm 25 and often panic about career direction and purpose. I feel this book gives a very informed look on how the sky isn't truly falling. It's a quick 200 pages and I walked away feeling a whole lot more confident about my position.

u/ATLAirport30MinWalk · 0 pointsr/barstoolsports

even if you're not a traditional cube life place this gave me so much perspective on how we arrived where we are in terms of corporate cultures, good read

https://www.amazon.com/Cubed-History-Workplace-Nikil-Saval/dp/0345802802/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1522766560&sr=8-1&keywords=cubed

u/ryanmoskal · 8 pointsr/barstoolsports

After sitting on my dresser for nearly 3 years I finally decided to read Jensen Karp’s book about his rap/battle rap career today. Rone is listed on the acknowledgments page. Hopefully he shows up in the story itself.

u/AlexMoranQB1 · -3 pointsr/barstoolsports

Finished reading the book about the Duke lacrosse case and the parallels between what happened then and the Kavanaugh thing are unbelievable.

edit: To everyone downvoting, if you don't believe me read the book yourselves https://www.amazon.com/Until-Proven-Innocent-Correctness-Injustices/dp/0312384866

u/rama1423 · 2 pointsr/barstoolsports

https://twitter.com/ryenarussillobc

Some dude posts all the recommendations he's made on his podcast. I assume the Washington book you're referencing is Washington: A Life by Ron Chernow

https://www.amazon.com/Washington-Life-Ron-Chernow/dp/0143119966

Or maybe In the Hurricanes Eye by Nathaniel Philbrick

https://www.amazon.com/Hurricanes-Eye-Washington-Victory-Yorktown/dp/0525426760