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Joined 2 years, 8 months ago

Literary gadfly. Profile photo from Ruri Miyahara, “The Kawai Complex Guide to Manors and Hostel Behavior”, volume 5: an ink drawing of a person spacing out with one hand on their cheek, under dappled shade.

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reviewed All Systems Red by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #1)

Martha Wells: All Systems Red (EBook, 2017, Tor.com)

"As a heartless killing machine, I was a complete failure."

In a corporate-dominated spacefaring future, …

Review of 'All Systems Red' on 'Goodreads'

I read, what, all six Murderbot novels in as many days. Because of that hilarious photo on Martha Wells' website of her reading a Murderbot novel aloud to… search and rescue robots at Texas A&M University. Because I have friends who are just like Murderbot and ART in terms of sarcasm and assholery (respectively). But mainly because Martha Wells is a pen-wielding goddess, whom I humbly beg for more.

Christina Thompson: Sea People (Hardcover, 2019, Harper)

Review of 'Sea People' on 'Goodreads'

John McWhorter praised this book in his August 19, 2019 podcast of “Lexicon Valley”, on the Austronesian language family, stating that the book read like a novel and was delightful like Pringles at a party.

I.

Hate.

Pringles.

But the endorsement was so complete that I, who have long admired the Polynesian human miracle of setting the Pacific, and loved Michener’s retelling of the first settlement party from Bora Bora to the eponymous “Hawai‘i”, and had read a good bit of Kon-Tiki (the Norwegian dudes who rafted from Peru to the Tuamotus), and even suffered through the film Moana, had to pick up the book.

It is an absolute delight. There are so many topics that I wish I had as superb a teacher as Christina Thompson. She tells you up front that the book is about the sea people, but also about the story of what we know about …

Naomi Novik, Naomi Novik: Spinning Silver (Paperback, 2018, Del Rey)

"A fresh and imaginative retelling of the Rumpelstiltskin fairytale from the bestselling author of Uprooted, …

Review of 'Spinning silver' on 'Goodreads'

Come for the AO3 connection, stay for the
- rich Jewish–Slavic speculative fiction (too rare!),
- superb Freakonomics-grade real-world economics and finance (that is, better than the garbage they teach you in micro and macroeconomics; that scene where she can offer a better price for better wool than the local carters who don’t differentiate enough, a lesson for thoughtful futures traders),
- frightening prediction of the future, where women are invisible, outsiders are downtrodden, and men make the rules, that many authoritarian nationalists seem to crave.

村田沙耶香: Convenience Store Woman (2018)

Keiko Furukura had always been considered a strange child, and her parents always worried how …

Review of 'Convenience store woman' on 'Goodreads'

An expert convenience store worker and Robert D. Hare-level psychopath and possible ace or aro (asexual or aromatic) adopts a pet rat—actually a men’s rights activist/incel type—to reduce people’s discomfort with her lifestyle, which apparently everyone around her in 2016 Japan condemns for failing to include either a full-time job or a family.

This is the setup used to criticize a common habit of society. If people can’t tell some linear combination of socially-common eigenstories about you, they often question the evidence their eyes present them with: even if you’re the perfect worker, the model worker in every way, but you don’t have a respectable life story, you might never be recognized as a valuable colleague or employee or person. Even if you, like the narrator, win over your new bosses and coworkers by being exceptionally skilled and dedicated to your craft, any hint of conventional respectability (full-time job or …

Bart D. Ehrman: Forged (2011, HarperOne)

"In FORGED New York Times bestselling author, Bart Ehrman, reveals another hidden scandal of the …

Review of 'Forged' on 'Goodreads'

(I feel bad for writing a review of this when I have left other books, ones I liked a lot more, unreviewed.)

I didn't come to this book with an axe to grind—everyone has had the experience of discovering that a fact long held is actually disproven or contentious. A couple of delicious examples. Several people have told me how the "ring around the rosies" children's song is about the bubonic plague and Black Death, taking delight in how a gruesome ghastly grim piece of history is hidden innocuously in a playground song, but as David Wilton in [b:Word Myths: Debunking Linguistic Urban Legends|410941|Word Myths Debunking Linguistic Urban Legends|David Wilton|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1347794587s/410941.jpg|400206] points out, the song is likely from much later than the last plague outbreaks in English-speaking areas, and he wonders what it says about people that they like to propagate this urban legend.

Similarly, we all have been told how …

Philip E. Tetlock, Dan Gardner: Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction (2015, Crown, Crown Publishers)

Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction is a book by Philip E. Tetlock and …

Review of 'Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction' on 'Goodreads'

You have to understand that this book is eminently and deeply rooted in the research program Tetlock pioneered and ran, the Good Judgement Project, and about the real people whom he found through the program to be great are forecasting geopolitical events in the three to six month range.

My own personal goal before reading the book was to learn rigorous prediction—not necessarily answering geopolitical questions that were handed from somewhere else, but more like how many editors will show up on global Wikipedia today, or possibly more profitably, how much the stock market will lose today. I was prepared for the book to be an overly-academic treatise on the minutiae of the research program, or for a number of ways it could be operationally useless.

But at each chapter, Tetlock had something very meaningful and useful to say to me about the business of prediction. At each stage he …

Aaron Brown: The poker face of Wall Street (2006, John Wiley)

Wall Street is where poker and modern finance?and the theory behind these "games"?clash head on. …

Review of 'The poker face of Wall Street' on 'Goodreads'

Look. He tells you up front what this book is about: “Finance can only be understood as a gambling game, and gambling games can only be understood as a form of finance.” A nice video tl;dr I can recommend is his guest lecture at MIT called “Poker Economics”. In about sixty minutes at 1.5x, you’ll have gotten a nice sparse projection into this book.

Look. It took me almost exactly nine years to finish this book—and I’ve had it this whole time, and thought about it this whole time. I started (by way of Nassim Taleb’s introduction, before Taleb became a fascist apologist) when I was a young whippersnapper who wouldn’t recognize the real world was if I bumped into it on the street—because the ideas presented here did bump into my over the years, in terms of risks, lifestyles, and choices, and it recognize them as such only …

John McWhorter: Language A to Z (AudiobookFormat, 2013, Teaching Company)

Review of 'Language A to Z' on 'Goodreads'

So unadulterated awesome! I died in the “like” lecture when he imitated a German speaker (in accented English) quoting someone who didn’t like pears.

When I find someone stiffnecked with a lack of imagination, I casually get them a copy of these lectures. The richness of this thing we call humanity! An awareness of which will bring us closer, I hope.

Ahmed’s rant time. Small ones this time!

At one point McWhorter concisely presents his pet theory about why water bottles have become popular in the last twenty years: like cigarettes, they give us something to hold, let us interrupt our conversations, and satisfy our oral fixation—he notes how people twenty years ago didn’t carry around water and weren’t getting dehydrated. Well, twenty years ago there was a lot less salt and preservatives in our food—which becomes immediately obvious when you home-cook for a few days and then visit a …