

week
This
CevirWomen chose Crime and Punisment, written by Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky, as a Book of the Week for you.
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Crime and Punishment has lots of topics to discuss or get the meaning of the human nature. The author is extremely insightful on human nature. Even German philosopher Nietzsche said: “Dostoevsky,the only psychologist from whom I've anything to learn.”
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The book can help you to find truly yourself or help you to understand of yourself, and human.

“To go wrong in one's own way is better than to go right in someone else's.”
Movie of the Week is Fight Club which is a 1999 American film directed by David Fincher, and staring Brad Pitt, Edward Norton and Helena Bonham Carter.
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The movie adopted from the book, Fight Club, written by Chuck Palahniuk in 1996.
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The movie and also the book maybe wants to teach us that "you never really (can) know much about yourself until you've been in a fight."

“It's only after we've lost everything that we're free to do anything.”
Mr. Robot is an American drama, television series created by Sam Esmail. It stars Rami Malek as Elliot Alderson, a cybersecurity engineer and hacker with social anxiety disorder and clinical depression. Elliot is recruited by an insurrectionary anarchist known as "Mr. Robot", played by Christian Slater, to join a group of hacktivists called "fsociety." The group aims to destroy all debt records by encrypting the financial data of E Corp, the largest conglomerate in the world.

"A bug is never just a mistake. It represents something bigger. An error of thinking that makes you who you are."
Gökotta is an untranslatable Swedish word, which essentially means “to rise at dawn in order to go out and listen to the birds sing”.