Critiques et Commentaires

David Bremner Compte verrouillé

bremner@book.dansmonorage.blue

A rejoint ce serveur il y a 3 années, 6 mois

computer scientist, mathematician, photographer, human. Debian Developer, Notmuch Maintainer, scuba diver

Much of my "reading" these days is actually audiobooks while walking.

FediMain: bremner@mathstodon.xyz

bremner@bookwyrm.social is also me. Trying a smaller instance to see if the delays are less maddening.

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a publié une critique de The Hidden Palace par Helene Wecker (The Golem and the Jinni, #2)

Helene Wecker: The Hidden Palace (Hardcover, 2021, Harper)

Chava is a golem, a woman made of clay, able to hear the thoughts and …

sometimes stately paced, but worth it

Less tidbits of New York Jewish and New York Syrian culture than the previous, but more character development. Certainly Sophia is a more interesting person in this episode. The door is left open for a sequel, but the main conflicts are more or less resolved.

Morgan G. Ames: The Charisma Machine (2019, MIT Press)

A fascinating examination of technological utopianism and its complicated consequences.

In The Charisma Machine, Morgan …

Must read for CS people

Two prominent subcultures within computer science academe and practice are "Free and Open Source Software" and "Startup Culture". This book made me think (uncomfortably) about the connections and commonalities of the two. Some of the most cringe-worthy moments from tech people come from someone thinking that a certain amount of skill at e.g. computer programming makes them an expert in a completely unrelated topic. This is a kind of anti-intellectualism; maybe it is sometimes needed, but it seems more often harmful than helpful.

a publié une critique de Reaper Man par Terry Pratchett (Discworld)

Terry Pratchett: Reaper Man (Paperback, 1992, Corgi Books)

Reaper Man is a fantasy novel by British writer Terry Pratchett. Published in 1991, it …

I don't think pterry was knighted for this one

I don't know if it says more about me or the book, but I found myself skim reading parts of this.

I thought I would go back and re-read the discworld Death books, but now I'm not so sure. Death has some snappy one liners, but there is not enough there to really engage with the character.

The other part of the book is the wizards, and although I have fond memories of the parody-of-academe in the Unseen University, it didn't quite do it for me either in this book.

a publié une critique de Ninja Betrayed par Tori Eldridge (Lily Wong, #3)

Tori Eldridge: Ninja Betrayed (AudiobookFormat)

Lily’s mother has been summoned by her grandfather, Gung-Gung, to attend an emergency board meeting, …

A fun variation on the crime thriller

I suspect this book won't change anyone's life, but it may distract you for a few hours. The plucky heroine is a "modern Ninja", which seems to be a hypothetical martial-arts discipline with strong aspects of mindfulness and meditation. Her family is a rich Hong Kong business family while she is born and raised in the USA. The writing about Hong Kong culture and politics feels fairly authentic to me, but I'm an outsider. There is some romance, and the heroine deals with some issues of intimacy and trust. I liked the fact that Lily is a skilled fighter, but also realistic about her chances when outnumbered by larger attackers. Probably the most intellectually interesting part for me was when Lilly talks about the ethics of extracting information from someone who is clearly romantically interested in her.

Lois McMaster Bujold: The Assassins of Thasalon

An unholy attack upon his brother-in-law General Arisaydia pitches sorcerer Learned Penric and his Temple …

world building and characters more than suspense

The world of the Five Gods, with it's interplay of magic an religion and "alternate Mediterranean" feel is an interesting one. One advantage of the novel format is that the author has the space to develop several interesting characters. On the other hand the protagonist is almost too powerful and lucky (luck here has a religious aspect). The outcome was never very much in doubt.

There have been several intervening novellas that I haven't read yet, but there was only one reference that I didn't get.

Morgan G. Ames: The Charisma Machine (2019, MIT Press)

A fascinating examination of technological utopianism and its complicated consequences.

In The Charisma Machine, Morgan …

A bit painful to read about hardware and software problems disrupting classrooms. And not in the techno-utopian sense of disrupt. I've been there where technical problems derail a lesson, and it is no fun.

a publié une critique de The Water Dancer par Ta-Nehisi Coates

Ta-Nehisi Coates: The Water Dancer (2019, One World)

well written, entertaining, educational

This is at least 3 books. It is a rousing adventure story with well developed characters, it is a polemic about the evils of slavery, and it is a fantasy novel. Coates is a skilled writer and I spent the first third of the book admiring his use of language. At some point I became immersed in it, and stopped remarking on the cleverness. I was listening to the audiobook, and there are definitely places where call-response spoken word and snatches of song enriched that immersion. The fantasy element is relatively small, if important as a plot device / metaphor. Probably nobody reading this needs to be convinced of the general notion that slavery was (and is) evil, but at least for me, reading this helped me internalize some of the specifics. The hero is "owned" by his white father, the same father who sold his mother into even more …

a commenté The Charisma Machine par Morgan G. Ames

Morgan G. Ames: The Charisma Machine (2019, MIT Press)

A fascinating examination of technological utopianism and its complicated consequences.

In The Charisma Machine, Morgan …

Nostalgia is a big theme. I think it's a valid critique of the OLPC qua educational project, although nostalgia / retrocomputing / techno-minimalism also seems like a valid response to the more dystopian aspects of modern big tech.

Philip Pullman: The Book of Dust (2017, Knopf Books for Young Readers)

Set before the events in His Dark Materials, La Belle Sauvage tells the tale of …

Begin as you mean to go on

A solid beginning to a prequel series. It kept my interest the whole way, even though ultimately I knew what the outcome had to be, since it's a prequel.

The central characters were believable to me as children and teens. Of course that was some time ago for me, so make of that what you will. There were some YA / coming-of-age topics, but I would not say they were central to the story. There is some violence, but it is not too gory / repetitive. I respected the way the author conveys the effects of violence on the characters, both as doers and receivers.

Some of the "side-quests" in the last third of the book could be taken either as homage to traditional fairy stories, or as cliché, depending on how cranky the reader is feeling.

My overall impression was that although the Christian(?) Church was the overarching villain, …