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Barbarius Locked account

Barbarius@outside.ofa.dog

Joined 5 months ago

Mostly reading sci-fi, fantasy, and comics/graphic novels, but occasionally some other stuff too. Only posting books I've read/reading since joining in 2023 (maybe one day I'll go through my bookshelf and change this).

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Spy Who Came In From The Cold (Paperback) 4 stars

le Carré's writing is great

4 stars

I don't have enough experience of spy novels to know if this is, in fact, "one of the greatest spy novels of all time". It's good, and an enjoyable read. Full of plots and counter-plots.

The good thing about these novels is that they're not especially long. This one clocks in at around 240 pages, which makes it easily digestible and nothing drags on. le Carré's writing is good; he seems (to me) to reserve the right amount of space to talk about anything, knowing when to elaborate and build metaphors, and when to throw something else into sudden and sharp focus.

Anyway... Looking Glass War next!

The Caves of Steel (Paperback, 2018, HarperVoyager) 4 stars

"A Del Rey book."

It was bad enough when Lije Baley, a simple plainclothes cop, …

Different to what I thought it would be

4 stars

I should have anticipated this really, given that this was a novel set in Asimov's Robot universe; it's more of a murder mystery (with robots) rather than a Robot story. That being said, it still plays with themes of ballooning populations, limited resources, fear of superior technology that could replace you, and interplanetary civilisation; which are all very Asimovian themes, and definitely make me keen to see where he takes this series in the next book. So I guess I'll need to get that next book now.

Dune : the Battle of Corrin (2019, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 2 stars

Just a giant list of everything's origins, and almost none of them satisfying.

2 stars

This is more about the entire trilogy, rather than this one book.

I wanted to read this series because I wanted a story about how the thinking machine rose up and took over, and how the human race dealt with that and the subsequent aftermath. Instead the series begins centuries after the thinking machines have conquered everything, and little exposition is given to explain how it all occured. What this series actually is is nothing more than a fan service crawl through the origin of everything and anything that the authors could think of from the original book. The real icing on the cake though is how dull and, honestly, rubbish most of the origin stories are, and they get worse the further through the series you get. (seriously, by the end it would have been just as convincing to say "a wizard did it")

If you want a story …

Bored and Brilliant (2018, Pan Macmillan) 4 stars

vii, 192 pages ; 25 cm

Good, but a bit long. The neuroscience was quite interesting!

4 stars

I appreciate the irony of stating that a sub-200-page book is long, but what I mean by that is that it felt a bit like there was a page number that was required to be reached; there is a lot of unnecessary repetition, or drawing out of a point that could have been achieved with half as many paragraphs.

That being said, I did enjoy reading the book. I remember listening about the original challenge in the author's podcast, and thinking it was interesting then. What was good about the book, however, is the interviews she made with academics and researchers about what technology is doing to us on a social and (more interestingly) neurological level. It was far more interesting to me to read about the quantifiable evidence gathered from research and experimentation, rather than the anecdotal stories.

Ultimately, the book gets you to think about your relationship with …

Common sense for the 21st century : only nonviolent rebellion can now stop climate breakdown and social collapse 4 stars

True

4 stars

Basically, business as usual is sending us off a cliff to extinction, and the neoliberal capitalist elites are telling us everything is fine. The solution? Overthrow the government.

This very short book is heavy on its suggestions and implications, but nothing said in it is wrong... at all.