User Profile

reading crustacean Locked account

unsuspicious@wyrms.de

Joined 1 year, 2 months ago

reading account of @unsuspicious@anarchism.space

This link opens in a pop-up window

reading crustacean's books

View all books

User Activity

Parable of the Sower (Paperback, 2000, Warner Books) 4 stars

In 2025, with the world descending into madness and anarchy, one woman begins a fateful …

am I not getting this?

3 stars

maybe I was expecting too much because I'd heard about it in adrienne maree brown and Autumn Brown's podcast and thought this was going to be extremely mind-blowing. I kept expecting the story to go somewhere, to develop in some direction but it just kept being a bleak, lost earth and people trying to just survive on it. seemed to me like the plot just fizzled out.

Being Seen (AudiobookFormat, 2022, Tiller Press) 4 stars

A Deafblind writer and professor explores how the misrepresentation of disability in books, movies, and …

mostly a media analysis

4 stars

ok so when I started this book it was very reluctantly. i am abled and have not confronted my own ableism a lot, so i was expecting it to make me feel guilt, shame, the whole fragility shebang when confronted with one's own bigotry. but actually, i did not because a) this is a very funny book as elsa sjunneson writes in a very snarky way b) it is mostly about ableism in the media, so it didn't really teach me to change something about my behavior, specifically, but still got me to question some assumptions and thought patterns

The Seventh Bride (2015, 47North) 4 stars

Young Rhea is a miller's daughter of low birth, so she is understandably surprised when …

light reading

4 stars

I liked this a lot - maybe a little less than "Nettle and Bone" by the same author because it's not quite as snarky. It's super wholesome and put me in a light mood. The characters are very likable and down to earth, plus it has a lot of fresh ideas and plays on common fantasy tropes, which I liked.

Imago (1997, Aspect) 4 stars

Child of two species, but part of neither, a new being must find his way. …

satisfying

4 stars

it is really interesting how I ended up being sympathetic with jodahs, my perspective towards the ooloi has changed a lot over the course of the story. some very interesting thoughts on biopolitics and human nature (the "human conflict" especially) and an entertaining read. as it has already been pointed out by other readers the gender essentialism is hard to endure sometimes. i think ooloi is a pretty cool gender though ^^

We Are ‘Nature’ Defending Itself (Paperback, 2021, Pluto Press) 4 stars

In 2008, as the storms of the financial crash blew, Isabelle Fremeaux and Jay Jordan …

inspiring

4 stars

the foreword was, to me, just a collection of buzzwords and had no real meaning, but the main body of the book was really nice. it gave me ideas of why the zad was able to win, not only in the physical space but maybe also on the way of developing other imaginaries that can help us leave capitalism, patriarchy and white supremacy behind. I loved the focus on ceremony. especially worthwhile for people trying to defend forest and village occupations e.g. #LütziBleibt