User Profile

David Weir

davidjamesweir@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 1 month ago

I'm David, a queer Fennoscottish physicist who never has enough time to read.

Find me also at @davidjamesweir@mementomori.social.

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David Weir's books

To Read

Currently Reading

Dennis Baron: What's Your Pronoun? (2021, Liveright Publishing Corporation)

The missing word is...

I finished reading the main part of this book a while ago, but the detailed chronology of English-language gender-neutral and nonbinary pronouns took me some more time to digest (it takes up sixty pages, a quarter of the book).

In any case, I really enjoyed it. I loved the sardonic tone deployed when discussing the rants of anti-feminists, as well as historical skeptics of gender-neutral and nonbinary pronouns.

The author argues (and one of the chapters is titled) "the missing word is 'they'", and he provides a number of arguments to support this. Most interesting (and new to me) was the journey taken by 'you' from plural pronoun to also take on the role historically held by 'thou'. I also was not aware that 'they' is from Old Norse þeir.

Language is complicated, and ultimately, I believe it should generally be left alone and allowed to evolve (but this book …

Ben Orlin: Math Games with Bad Drawings (2022, Running Press)

Bestselling author and worst-drawing artist Ben Orlin expands his oeuvre with this interactive collection of …

Popular maths books have come a long way over the years, and that's a very good thing. I read this book as an antidote to other, weightier things – both fiction and nonfiction – that I have borrowed from the library. It is fun, humourous, and richly illustrated. I strongly recommend it, and urge you to give into temptation and try the games as you go along!

(I also got an idea for my teaching from it afterwards, but I read it for pure diversion and entertainment in the first place)

Andrew Pettegree, Arthur der Weduwen: Library (2022, Profile Books Limited)

Browsing is key to the success of the institutional library, and a key difference between this and personal collections. Since digital resources began to develop new models of selling, a great deal of ingenuity has been invested in trying to replicate the experience of browsing. The results are impressive, if a little creepy, in the recommendations by association in both the search results ('if you bought this, you may also like this') and the micro-targeted paid advertising. But what if we want something different, rather than more of the same? What if we do not know that we want something different, but a chance encounter sparks our interests?

Library by , (Page 413)

This quote sums up to me the importance of physical instutional libraries - academic or public. It's crucial that we are able to browse, to come upon the unexpected.

Samra Habib: We Have Always Been Here (Paperback, Viking)

A memoir of hope, faith and love, Samra Habib's story starts with growing up as …

Readable, moving memoir

I really enjoyed this book. The author recounts their experiences as an young Ahmadi in Lahore, fleeing Pakistan, escaping arranged marriage and discovering their queerness. I found it engaging, inspiring and deeply thought-provoking. There were several passages I read aloud to people around me because they seemed so important, or so well expressed. The book, particularly its final couple of chapters, also serves as an important reminder of the privilege that many of us white queers enjoy and take for granted.

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Maggie Nelson, Maggie Nelson: The Argonauts (2015, Graywolf Press)

Maggie Nelson’s The Argonauts is a genre-bending memoir, a work of “autotheory” offering fresh, fierce, …

Review of 'The Argonauts' on 'Goodreads'

The personal perspective makes this feel at first like a novel that affectionately mocks academic queer feminism but it actually is the stereotypical nonfiction work of academic queer feminism I thought it was mocking, only framed within a set of intimate personal anecdotes. And it is excellent. The Audiobook is read by the author with affecting understatement.

Maggie Nelson, Maggie Nelson: The Argonauts (Paperback, 2016, Melville House UK)

An intrepid voyage out to the frontiers of the latest thinking about love, language, and …

I finished reading The Argonauts in Oodi central library last night before returning it.

I really enjoyed this book. Not a particularly easy read for me personally, but there was a lot that resonated with me. I often find books that make reference to lots of other literature to be a bit wearing, but not this one. It's the sort of book I would like to have on my shelf to dip into from time to time, so perhaps I will buy a copy.