User Profile

Jens Finkhäuser

jfinkhaeuser@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 10 months ago

Trying to build a better Internet. In the meantime, I enjoy reading.

I'm @jens@social.finkhaeuser.de elsewhere on the fediverse (I only follow other bookwyrm accounts here).

FYI, I'm shelving books in "Dad's Library" that my father owns, which I will eventually receive. We have a long-standing agreement that he will give me his SF&F, or I inherit them eventually.

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Jens Finkhäuser's books

Currently Reading

Devon Price: Unmasking Autism (Paperback, 2022, Octopus Publishing Group)

Have you, a friend or family member been living with undiagnosed autism?

For every visibly …

The book was almost entirely unsurprising to me, which is a compliment.

It captures a variety of topics of the autistic experience, often through the lens of some autistic person's life story. While these individual stories differ strongly from my own, the underlying patterns explored through them are deeply familiar.

The compliment here is that this approach works - it covers a wide area by it's use of more focused examples, wide enough to either find yourself (or not). And the examples also humanize the experiences in a way you wouldn't achieve without their specifics.

That said, by covering a lot of ground, it's also not the resource that you want when you'd like to dig deeper into one topic or another. The good news is, there are plenty of references in the last section to go for that.

Devon Price: Unmasking Autism (Paperback, 2022, Octopus Publishing Group)

Have you, a friend or family member been living with undiagnosed autism?

For every visibly …

Transphobic people often take the strong association between gender variance and Autism as a sign that we aren't "really" trans, we're "just" Autistic and confused. They presume Autistic people are un-self-aware and easily manipulated, and therefore shouldn't be allowed to make decisions about our identities or what we do with our bodies. When Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling published the piece "TERF (trans exclusionary radical feminist) Wars" on her blog in the summer of 2020, she specifically mentioned her fear that many transgender men are actually Autistic girls who weren't conventionally feminine, and have been influenced by transactivists on the internet into identifying out of womanhood. In presenting herself as defending disabled "girls", she argued for restricting young trans Autistic people's ability to self-identify, and access necessary services and health care.

Rowling's perspective (which she shares with many gender critical folks) is deeply dehumanizing to both the trans and Autistic communities. We're fully fledged, complex people, who are entitled to the same body autonomy and self-determination as anyone else. And it's meaningless to question whether a trans Autistic person would have "still" been trans had they not been born neurodiverse, because Autism is such a core part of who we are. Without our disability (or our gender identity), we'd be entirely different people. There is no separating these aspects of ourselves from our personhood or personality. They're both core parts.

Unmasking Autism by  (Page 59)

Two thoughts:

  1. It's good to be seen.
  2. Rowling and her ilk are embracing Nazi ideology by treating our experience as sub-human.

I was vaguely hoping she was just a little confused. But no. She's seems like a bona fide villain. Voldemort must be her true hero.

Richard Zane: Fantasmagoria (Paperback, Independent)

A scoundrel with a secret seeks the key to escaping the end of the world. …

A wild ride

Content warning Some spoilers and language

reviewed Feast of Shadows by Karen Conlin (Feast of Shadows, #1)

Karen Conlin, Rick Wayne, Rick Wayne: Feast of Shadows (Paperback, 2019, Independent)

One part mystery. One part savagery. Three parts magic.

Years ago, driven by greed, men …

Books that explode

The Minus Faction is what won me over to Rick's writing. Feast of Shadows is the same, but more of it.

Thematically, of course, it's very different. Where Minus Faction might be Rick's take on Comic book superheroes, this book is his take on ... what do they call it? Urban fantasy? With a dose of horror, cosmic and otherwise.

With the second part now out, it's easier to understand this as a whole work.

Each course is a relatively self contained story with an overarching connecting plot, and each is told from the perspective of a different character. Consequently, Rick has the freedom to play with different storytelling styles and matches them perfectly to the respective protagonist.

The actual main character, the focal point of the overarching plot, is not each course's protagonist. That makes the entire work a tad less accessible; you have to keep switching out of …

reviewed The Zero Signal by Rick Wayne (Science Crimes Division, #1)

Rick Wayne, Rick Wayne: The Zero Signal (Paperback, 2021, Independent)

In the decades after tomorrow, the intersection of emerging technologies like AI, gene editing, and …

Cyberpunk for this century

At the risk of being quotable: this is the post-cyberpunk book a post-cyberpunk world needs.

I'm not sure I should go into plot here. The blurb on the book page is enough of an introduction, and plot details might spoiler something.

What compels me to write is genre and subtext.

In terms of genre, the easiest comparison to make is Cyberpunk, and if anyone would ask me for a modern Cyberpunk recommendation, this book is easily at the top of my list. But various people have called it Biopunk, and Dave Higgins called it "hard weird" - as in weird fiction, but also hard sci-fi.

The thing is, all of these are apt descriptions. You do have your ubiquitous 'net and artificial limbs - but they're not shiny neon and chrome. You do have gene manipulation, which in some ways is actually a central theme to the book - but …

Michelle Obama, Michelle Obama: Becoming (Hardcover, 2018, Crown Publishing Group)

IN A LIFE filled with meaning and accomplishment, Michelle Obama has emerged as one of …

Review of 'Becoming' on 'Goodreads'

Well, it was interesting.

I find it very hard to write honest thoughts on autobiographies, which to some extend are always publicity efforts, and should therefore not be trusted verbatim.

But yes, it was an interesting read for a number of reasons, not least of which what the book did not contain.