User Profile

Sky

Wolfin@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 months, 4 weeks ago

A technically-minded furry who enjoys books set in anthropomorphic world, science fiction, as well as real world technology and history tomes.

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Sky's books

To Read (View all 6)

Currently Reading

reviewed Artificial Condition by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #2)

Martha Wells: Artificial Condition (EBook, 2018, Tordotcom)

It has a dark past—one in which a number of humans were killed. A past …

Murderbot is back with a new supporting cast

Protecting humans turns out to be a hard habit to break. In the sequel to All Systems Red, Murderbot returns on his search for answers and to get answers to how he ended up free to chose his owns destiny. Another excellent short story that expands on the overall universe and the corporate world of the Murderbot series. So short and consumable it's easily read in an afternoon.

finished reading 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 …

All systems red is a short but deeply compelling read. Every bit of the story keeps you moving, wanting to learn more, and rooting for the self-titled murderbot. The world feels full and alive, even as we view it through the eyes of a flawed but relatable protagonist. It’s an easy read, and being a short first book in the series you have nothing to lose by giving it a try.

Steven Brill: The Death of Truth

How did we become a world where facts—shared truths—have lost their power to hold us …

The Death of Truth Stays Shallow

I jumped into Steven Brill’s The Death of Truth with excitement, but found myself largely underwhelmed and disappointed. As someone who has been following the issues of misinformation, media polarization, and political upheaval since 2020, the book offered little new insights or compelling analysis. Most of the content revisits well-trodden ground—vaccine misinformation, the events of January 6, and the increasing detachment of politics from objective truth. If you have been engaged online, the narratives and examples Brill gives will feel familiar.

By the time I reached the halfway mark, I hoped the book would pivot to introduce fresh perspectives or delve deeper into uncharted aspects. Unfortunately, that shift never happened. Instead, the author’s proposed solutions struck me as shallow and an afterthought. Suggestions like abolishing online anonymity and adopting ranked-choice voting seemed disconnected from the core problems of misinformation and lacked a convincing explanation of how they would fix …