User Profile

Martin Kopischke

kopischke@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years ago

Purveyor of finest boredom since 1969. Lost causes catered for. He / him (they / them is fine, too). English / deutsch / français. @kopischke@mastodon.social (@kopischke on BirdSite)

My ratings can look harsh, because they do not reflect how much I enjoyed a book; instead, I try to assess how exceptional a piece of literature I find it. I quite like a lot of books I “only” rate three stars, and I wouldn’t necessarily enjoy re-reading everything I rate above that, but the only service I use which helps me express that kind of nuance is Letterboxd.

For reference: ★★★★★ Flawless 
★★★★☆ Must read 
★★★☆☆ Above average 
★★☆☆☆ Oh, well
 ★☆☆☆☆ Blargh

Avatar by Picrew Shylomaton, courtesy of @Shyle@mastodon.social

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Martin Kopischke's books

To Read (View all 6)

Currently Reading

Adrian Tchaikovsky: Elder Race (EBook, 2021, Tom Doherty Associates) 4 stars

Lynesse is the lowly Fourth Daughter of the queen, and always getting in the way. …

Still labouring with my feelings about Tchaikovsky’s Final Architecture novels, and this one (which works well; hat tip to Soh Kam Yung’s review) makes me suspect the issue is emotional dissociation from the characters and how that works out for the novel in question. Anyway, good read.

Richard Overy: Blood and Ruins (EBook, 2021, Penguin Books) 5 stars

Richard Overy sets out in Blood and Ruins to recast the way in which we …

Forget what you thought you knew about the Second World War

5 stars

Overy’s monumental, erudite take on current revisionist historical WW II scholarship repositions a conflict traditionally seen as a mostly Western one (with a Pacific sideshow) as but a part of the long death throes of territorial empire post WW I. The breadth and depth of the book is frankly mind blowing, even if some parts suffer a bit from being visibly based on elder, narrower scholarship (like the chapter on popular resistance, which almost entirely glosses over the South and South East Asian anti-Japanese resistance movements that play such an important role in the book’s opening and closing chapters), and some social science methodical rigour would have helped the more psychological analyses, but these are minor niggles that cannot mar a colossal achievement.

Overy never loses track of the grand picture; his views on race, gender and power in the conflict are unflinchingly clear and modern; and his writing is …

John Scalzi: The Kaiju Preservation Society (EBook, 2022, Tom Doherty Associates) 4 stars

Jamie’s dream was to hit the big time at a New York tech start-up. Jamie’s …

Scalzi being Scalzi, in a good way

3 stars

KPS is not, and I say this with absolutely no slight intended, a brooding symphony of a novel. It’s a pop song. It’s meant to be light and catchy, with three minutes of hooks and choruses for you to sing along with, and then you’re done and you go on with your day, hopefully with a smile on your face.

Not much to add to that, really.

commented on Blood and Ruins by Richard Overy

Richard Overy: Blood and Ruins (EBook, 2021, Penguin Books) 5 stars

Richard Overy sets out in Blood and Ruins to recast the way in which we …

Small quantities of high explosive bombs were mixed in with the incendiary load to blow in windows and roofs, and to deter the civil defenders. To discourage them further, explosives were fitted to a number of the incendiaries (around 10 per cent of the load) with fuses timed at different intervals. In 1942 small anti-personnel bombs were added to the aircraft bomb loads. The intention was to kill or maim any civil defenders unfortunate enough to be near them.

This is not about Syria or Ukraine today, but about the British bombing campaign of WW II. Chilling.