(Part 4) 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 61-80. 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/Catamount90 · 6 pointsr/barstoolsports

Sapiens is an excellent book about the history of humans and it is a super easy, thought-provoking read. Puts into perspective how short modern humans have been around in the scheme of all humankind

u/SicilianSal · 2 pointsr/barstoolsports

Thanks. You still might want to read it just because Diamond's thesis is pretty unique so it's enjoyable to read.

It's quite a controversial book but if you want the opposite perspective of Diamond, Wade's "A Troublesome Inheritance" is among the best: https://www.amazon.com/Troublesome-Inheritance-Genes-Human-History/dp/1594204462. The other obvious contender is Charles Murray's The Bell Curve, though there's basically only chapter that's relevant to this discussion, and unsurprisingly it's the chapter that has gotten him the most praise and the most criticism: https://www.amazon.com/Bell-Curve-Intelligence-Structure-Paperbacks/dp/0684824299

For criticism of Diamond from someone opposed to Wade/Murray, try Wertheim's review in the Nation (it's short): http://www.columbia.edu/~saw2156/HunterBlatherer.pdf in which he argues that even Diamond is too deterministic.

u/rama1423 · 5 pointsr/barstoolsports

If you listen to Russillos podcast he recommends books about history that he's been reading. The most recent one he mentioned was called Normandy 44, if you are interested in history, particularly military history, it sounds like it would be very interesting.

https://www.amazon.com/Normandy-44-77-Day-Battle-France/dp/0802129420

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/young_nino11 · 1 pointr/barstoolsports

really great book about when they played Long Beach poly .both teams had a few guys who ended up having careers in the nfl

u/_DanSmith_BYU · 12 pointsr/barstoolsports

Best guess is he was being liberal with the page count and talking about D-Day by Stephen Ambrose (guy who wrote Band of Brothers), https://www.amazon.com/Day-June-Climactic-Battle-World/dp/068480137X

u/bangbangthreehunna · 1 pointr/barstoolsports

Read "The Last Men Out" by Tom Downey on a special rescue company in the FDNY who lost a few guys on 9/11. Really touching how they go into detail of the bond they had link

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

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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/ghostfacekyle · 2 pointsr/barstoolsports

fuck it i'll bite, downloading now I'll give a listen on my commute home. Also I read Breaking Bad and Philosophy sooo yeah you could say I'm smart.

u/Charles_E_Cheddar · 3 pointsr/barstoolsports

I know there is an entire book suggestion thread on this sub, but I can't recommend Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss enough. Just started to re-read it hoping to time up with the release of the third book in the series and FUCK is Rothfuss' writing incredible. It is fantasy but in my opinion, way more digestible than GRRM. There is also a show in development that might have potential but... It's on Showtime so who knows.