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foxrain

foxrain@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 month, 2 weeks ago

"Once you stop learning, you start dying." – Albert Einstein

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foxrain's books

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Roald Dahl: Danny, the champion of the world (1975, J. Cape)

A young English boy describes his relationship with his father and the special adventure they …

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What a surprisingly wonderful book. At first, the story seemed a little uninteresting, but then it turned out to be a typical Dahl story: witty, fun and a bit twisted. The good characters are sympathetic and fun, the villains loathsome and vile. I do like it that the main bad guy is also the only rich person in the story, and the ordinary folks of the village quite openly ridicule and affront him. I also like it that Danny and his father live an alternative lifestyle but they're not outcasts or anything.

The story is also very, very British with lords, pheasant hunting, poaching and foods like toad-in-the-hole.

Jeff Lindsay: Dexter An Omnibus (2008, Orion Publishing Co, Orion)

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I have watched the series and liked it okay, so I decided to try the books. For once, I think the series is better.

By far, the best part of the trilogy is the first book, Darkly Dreaming Dexter. The two others were okay but had many annoying features and quite few good ones. Some of the annoyances, even in the first book, were small things in the content: like Dexter being, "I was right about the space being a studio", but then he describes a darkroom. Also the plot is illogical at times. For example, in the second book, a police officer (Doakes) is held captive for days by a crazy murderer that the police are chasing, but no one in the police department seems to be aware of his plight – or even care that he suddenly just vanishes. That seems highly unlikely. In the third book, the …

reviewed Queen of the Damned (Anne Rice) by Anne Rice (Vampire Chronicles (3))

Anne Rice: Queen of the Damned (Anne Rice) (1988, Random House Audio)

The third book in The Vampire Chronicles, Queen of the Damned, follows three parallel storylines.

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Much of the time, this book was quite boring. There were a couple of hundred pages of some alright stuff, but I think I've had enough of The Vampire Chronicles now.

I wasn't the biggest fan of the frame story – again. Although it made sense logically, it felt forced and clunky, especially in the beginning. I also didn't like Stan Rice's poems AT ALL.

Maharet and Mekare's story is good, and Jesse's. The ending was good as well.

The other characters were quite meh. Akasha was very annoying. Her philosophy was something else; e.g. "A male is an aberration and a matter of function." (368) Akasha and Lestat's dialogue was long-winded and needlessly convoluted.

Meh.

A. A. Milne: Winnie-the-Pooh (1988)

Winnie-the-Pooh (1926) is a best-selling classic children’s book. It is the first volume of stories …

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This book wasn't especially interesting in any of the ways I thought it might be. It was originally published in the 1920s, but there weren't many interesting historical quirks in the book. The characters and the stories are quite vanilla. The illustrations are pretty, though.

Chuck Palahniuk, Chuck Palahniuk: Fight Club (Paperback, 2006, Vintage)

A man who struggles with insomnia meets a colorful extremist, and they create a secret …

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I have conflicting feelings about this book. I'm actually still not sure whether I liked this book or not, but since I had trouble stopping to read it at night, I guess I did.

On the one hand, the story is very good and the characters are completely insane in an interesting way. On the other hand, I've never liked Palahniuk's writing style, and I didn't like it here either. I just learned to tolerate it as the story got more interesting. The atmosphere in the book is skillfully constructed, but it's very dreary and suffocating. It's not a pleasant reading experience. I'm not sure I'm a fan of the ending either.

Still, as a whole, I guess I enjoyed this book in a morbid way. Like some people would enjoy getting the shit beaten out of them regularly.

reviewed The Vampire Lestat by Anne Rice (The Vampire Chronicles, #2)

Anne Rice: The Vampire Lestat (Paperback, 2004, Ballantine Books)

The Vampire Lestat, whom we first met in Interview With the Vampire , has his …

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This second part of the Vampire Chronicles was much better than the first one. The characters had more depth and the storytelling was more to my liking. I also liked the setting of 1700s France better than colonial Louisiana.

At first, I didn't like the framing story of Lestat the rock star, but the epilogue was actually quite good. I even liked Louis in this book, which I didn't do in the previous one.

There were small(ish) things that still bothered me, like Lestat's semi-romantic relationship with his own mother, and the fact that the rock band Lestat founded doesn't have a bass player.

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I started reading this book years ago but didn't get very far. Now I decided to fill this gap in my cultural knowledge. I can see that many books have taken strong influences from this one, especially Fevre Dream by George R. R. Martin and the Twilight series.

The writing style is captivating but the story and the characters are mediocre. I liked how the storytelling is an ode to living in the moment, appreciating life and the little things. The format of interview/monologue invites you to just keep on reading until you've read the whole thing.

Some parts, especially, the relationship between Louis and Claudia, weirded me out.

Naomi Klein: Tuhokapitalismin nousu (2008, WSOY)

Vangeille annetaan sähkösokkeja, jotta heidät saataisiin murtumaan ja tunnustamaan. Sama logiikka pätee suurempiin ihmisryhmiin: katastrofin …

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Jo johdannon perusteella tiesin, että pidän tästä kirjasta. Se olikin alusta loppuun erinomainen – vaikuttava, raivostuttava, herättävä, pöyristyttävä, turhauttava. Loppu oli onneksi todella inspiroiva ja voimaannuttava, joten lukemisesta ei jäänyt lannistunut fiilis.

Tämä kirja auttaa ymmärtämään lähihistoriaa ja nykypäivän poliittista ja taloudellista tilannetta aivan uudella tavalla. Mietin jatkuvasti, kuinka tutuilta uusliberalismin perusperiaatteet (yksityistäminen, talouden vapauttaminen ja sosiaalimenojen leikkaaminen) kuulostavatkaan vuoden 2025 Suomessa. Mahtaako Petteri Orpolla olla yöpöydän laatikossa raamatun sijaan Milton Friedmanin Capitalism and Freedom?

Suomessa valtion taloustilanne esitetään jatkuvana kriisinä, millä perustellaan kurjistavien toimien tarpeellisuutta. Nuo toimet köyhdyttävät köyhiä ja rikastuttavat rikkaita. Herää kysymys, kuinka tarpeellisia toimet loppujen lopuksi ovat, etenkin jos ne perustuvat IMF:n suosituksiin... Kuinka paljon meille valehdellaan ja mitä kaikkea meiltä salataan, jotta uusliberalistisia taloustoimia saadaan vedettyä läpi? Täytyy ehkä askarrella foliohattu... tai foliohaalari.

Kirja myös selittää esimerkiksi Afrikan valtioiden velkatilannetta kannalta, jota en ole ikinä kuullut nostettavan esille missään muualla.

Kirjassa selitettiin varsin seikkaperäisesti Pinochetin …

The Origins of Totalitarianism, published in 1951, was Hannah Arendt's first major work, wherein she …

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Totalitarismin synty on vaikuttava ja haastava teos, jonka syvällinen ymmärtäminen vaatisi minulta useita lukukertoja. Jos olisin tajunnut kirjasta enemmän, olisin saattanut antaa sille viisi tähteä.

Olen aiemmin lukenut Arendtilta Vita activa -teoksen. Totalitarismin synty oli huomattavasti helpommin lähestyttävää tekstiä kuin se. Tässä teoksessa asia on kuitenkin yksityiskohtaista ja abstraktia ja sitä on paljon, joten helppo kirja tämäkään ei todellakaan ollut. Kirjasta tekee haastavan myös Arendtin tyyli, johon kuuluvat pitkät virkkeet sekä latinan-, ranskan ja saksankieliset ilmaukset tekstin seassa. Kirjassa myös mainitaan paljon ihmisiä, joista en ole koskaan kuullutkaan, eikä Arendt yleensä vaivaudu selittämään kenestä puhuu – usein hän ei kerro edes henkilön etunimeä, vaan olettaa lukijan tietävän 1800-luvulla eläneet poliitikot ja filosofit pelkän sukunimen perusteella.

Keskeisistä käsitteistä minulle jäi hieman epäselväksi, mitä roskaväki tarkoittaa. Se määriteltiin "luokkien pohjasakaksi" mutta jäi silti epämääräiseksi. Tämä vaikeutti lukemista myöhemmin.

Minusta tuntui, että kolmas osa oli tosi paljon helppolukuisempi ja mukaansa tempaavampi kuin muut, …

reviewed Death note. by Tsugumi Ohba (Death Note #9)

Tsugumi Ohba: Death note. (Paperback, 2007, Viz Media)

Light has always been confident in his abilitiy to outthink everyone, but now L's protégés …

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I was close to giving up the series during this volume. I feel like it's dragging along unnecessarily slowly. Could we just get to the end, please? Then again, I only have a few volumes left, so I guess I'll try and finish the series.

Daniel Kahneman: Thinking, Fast and Slow (Hardcover, 2011, Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

Kahneman introduces two modes of thought - system 1, fast and intuitive, and system 2, …

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I was a bit skeptical about this book at first because the writer has won the Nobel prize for economics. However, my skepticism was assuaged when I started reading the book and learned that 1. Kahneman is not an economist and 2. his style of writing is very down to earth and disarming. (He must be quite the manipulator if he wants to be.)

I loaned this book from the library, and it has a several-months-long waiting list so I can't renew the loan. I wish I could spend more time memorising some of the stuff because this book gave me a lot to think about. Richard Thaler's recommendation, printed on the back cover, is quite accurate: "Buy it fast. Read it slowly. It will change the way you think!" This surely is a book best read slowly, and I may even buy a copy at some point.

That being …

reviewed Death note. by Tsugumi Ohba (Death Note #8)

Tsugumi Ohba: Death note. (Paperback, 2006, Viz Media)

Light, working as Kira and L in the NPA intelligence bureau, has nearly succeeded in …

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The story's getting more interesting again, mainly because Light has morphed into full evil mode in the course of the last few chapters.