Tag: book reviews
-
Review: Martin’s A Storm of Swords
Ed note: This was written for a new defunct live journal circa 2007 before GOT became the pop culture juggernaut it is now. A Storm of Swords (A Song of Ice and Fire, Book 3) George R.R. Martin Basically a soap opera, but my kind of soap opera, with the occasional swordfight/dragon and or touch…
-
Review: Pessl’s Night Film
Night Film: A Novel Marisha Pessl New Rule: If a book is worth reading, it is worth the effort of writing a review of at least 250 words. All reviews will end with one of three sentence fragments: (1) “recommended” meaning I can recommend the book to most readers without caveat (2) recommended for the…
-
Review: Taleb’s Fooled By Randomness
Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets (Incerto) Nicolas Nasim Taleb If you’re interested in poplar economics, you’ve very familiar with Taleb by now. This, and its sequel Black Swan are required reading for the economically literate. Fooled by Randomness is both a very interesting book, and…
-
Review: Delany’s 1984
1984: Selected Letters Samuel Delany I have a Samuel Delany fetish. I have a google alert on the man’s name for Christ’s sake. I have read a bunch of his work, and hope to one day read it all, so I think I can say with some confidence that if you’re interested in Delany and…
-
Review: Adams and Frantz’s Full Service Bank: How BCCI Stole Billions Around the World
Full Service Bank (How Bcci Stole Billions Around the World) James Ring Adams, Douglas Frantz If you know me, you know I have a deep and abiding love for books on business scandals. This shit fascinates me – the complexity of some of the fraud, the stupidity and greed of many of the people involved.…
-
Review: Kropotkin’s Mutual Aid
Mutual Aid: A Factor in Evolution Peter Kropotkin When I used to work at Bound Together, an anarchist bookshop in San Francisco, they teased me because I had never read this book by Kropotkin (aka the anarchist formerly known as prince). The concept just seemed so basic that it didn’t seem necessary to read the…
-
Review: Raymond’s Cairo
Cairo Andre Raymond Its amazing to me that a city with a history so rich, that spans such important events in history of the world can be turned into such a boring book. I think Raymond is aping Braudel in this book with his focus on the economics and geographical changes that happened in…
-
Review: Cherryh’s Downbelow Station
Downbelow Station (20th Anniversary) (Daw Book Collectors) C.J. Cherryh If you’re going to say you know something about the science fiction genre (and for my own odd reasons I want to be able to say that*), you have to read C.J. Cherryh. She is one of the genre’s most respected writers both for the…
-
Review: Rubenstein’s Aristotle’s Children
Aristotle’s Children: How Christians, Muslims, and Jews Rediscovered Ancient Wisdom and Illuminated the Middle Ages Richard Rubenstein I have for some time been interested in the interplay between classical Greek philosophy, rabbinic Judaism, and early Christian thought. Neo-platonic thought and early Christian doctrine share a lot in common, and Aristotle had a clear influence on…
-
Review: Rubenstein’s When Jesus Became God
When Jesus Became God: The Struggle to Define Christianity during the Last Days of Rome Richard E. Rubenstein From the perspective of a modern westerner, it is hard to understand how amorphous the early Christian movements were. In the first few hundred years after the death of Christ, much of what we now take for…