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iddcutie@bookwyrm.social

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reviewed Azumanga Daioh by Kiyohiko Azuma

Kiyohiko Azuma: Azumanga Daioh

Azumanga Daioh (Japanese: あずまんが大王, Hepburn: Azumanga Daiō) is a Japanese yonkoma comedy manga series written …

Hilarious and Relatable

The closest a manga, for me, has come to emulating what high school was actually like. That's not to say the series doesn't romanticize it or have any faults, it does, but Azuma writes his misfit characters with such interiority, it is hard not to imagine these high school girls having a real life counterpart, and being super relatable to real people. Also, of course, its a hilarious series with tight, well-crafted gags, even if some get lost in translation. This series really helped pioneer a subgenre of slice of life comedy manga, and deserves all the praise and cult classic status it receives. A personal favorite. Highly recommend.

reviewed Yotsuba&! Vol 1 by Kiyohiko Azuma (Yotsuba -- 1)

Kiyohiko Azuma: Yotsuba&! Vol 1 (2005, ADV Manga, Diamond [distributor], .)

Yotsuba is a green-haired and wide-eyed girl who always has her befuddled neighbors' and friends' …

Yotsuba & Reviews!

Yotsuba&! is wholesome, hilarious, touching, and fantastic in every way, and the series - its storytelling, art style, and humor - get better and better with each and every succeeding volume. Cannot recommend this series enough. If you need to wind down and soak in some positive energy, need a laugh, anything, read Yotsuba&!

reviewed How to Do Nothing by Jenny Odell

Jenny Odell: How to Do Nothing (Paperback, 2020, Melville House)

Nothing is harder to do these days than nothing. But in a world where our …

Highly Recommend

Superb read. A book that happened to find me at the right time, at the beginning of me becoming more critical of our current technological landscape under late capitalism. What the book suggests for action, if I recall, was seldom, or not possible for me, but what use it did offer, and the greater thesis it provided, was essential for a baby Luddite like me.

John Carreyrou: Bad blood (2018)

The full inside story of the breathtaking rise and shocking collapse of Theranos, the multibillion-dollar …

Highly Recommend.

A very engaging and gripping read (or listen, for the audiobook, which I would recommend). Not much to say other than this is a really great, well-researched, and at times, suspenseful book, and well worth anyone's time.

Also pairs well with the Hulu series, The Dropout about Theranos and Holms, which takes a lot, if not all, from this book.

Nico Tanigawa: No Matter How I Look at it, it's You Guys' Fault I'm Not Popular

No Matter How I Look at It, I Don't Know if I'll Keep Reading This Series

The more I read the series (if I remember right, I stopped around volume 10) the more it fell into tired manga tropes, and while the main character I find endearing at times, and empathized with a lot, she got more unlikable as the story went on (though, from what I've read of other reviews, she starts to become more likable in later volumes)

I appreciate what it's trying to accomplish, and can also appreciate the idiosyncratic art style, but I don't know if I'll return to this series any time soon.

Despite all that, I do think this is worth a read, at least the first volume. It is a cult classic for a reason, and I still proudly own the first volume, sitting with the likes of Yotstuba&! and Girls Last Tour on my bookshelf.

Kyle Chayka: The Longing for Less (Hardcover, 2020, Bloomsbury Publishing)

Recommended

His thesis on what minimalism actually is and how to practice it is a bit muddy, but on the whole, he gives an interesting and concise history of the minimalist movement, in Eastern and Western thought, through music and architecture, etc., which I suppose was more of the point of the book. It was this book that encouraged me to think more about the movement, about minimalism as a whole, and to take a visit to the Judd Foundation and the NY Earth Room, as a NY resident.