User Profile

loppear

loppear@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 6 months ago

Reading for fun, threads over the years of scifi, history, social movements and justice, farming, philosophy. I actively work to balance out the white male default in what I read, but have a long way to go.

He/they for the praxis.

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loppear's books

Currently Reading (View all 5)

2024 Reading Goal

54% complete! loppear has read 49 of 90 books.

reviewed Determined by Robert M. Sapolsky

Robert M. Sapolsky: Determined (2023, Penguin Publishing Group) 4 stars

One of our great behavioral scientists, the bestselling author of Behave, plumbs the depths of …

two or three very good chapters

3 stars

Lighter and more liberally uplifting than I expected, though not all strong, the late chapters on the shifts in society as we ceased to treat schizophrenia, epilepsy, etc as personal moral failings stand out. From mostly neuroscience cases and psych experiments lens pushes at any gaps for spontaneous decision making separable from our histories of a second, an hour, a year, a millennium. Then moves into implications for society, primarily our societal morality and justice system's injustices built on individual responsibility.

Emily Habeck: Shark Heart (2023, Scribner) 4 stars

Newlyweds face the unimaginable in this epic tale about marriage, motherhood, and enduring love.

For …

choppy

3 stars

Mixed feelings: the premised analogies for losing people and people losing themselves are well othered, and there a few sub-stories, on theater and mothers, that are heartfelt. Irked me as far from a coherent book, however.

Deb Chachra: How Infrastructure Works (2023, Penguin Publishing Group) 5 stars

A new way of seeing the essential systems hidden inside our walls, under our streets, …

the collective agency of infrastructure

4 stars

Readable tour through infrastructure's reflections of our collective cultures, in its histories, dependence on social pasts and futures, and the agency it gives us individually and en masse to reduce labor and lessen daily focus on basic needs. Maintenance and the shifting baselines of climate bring our attention now to the need and opportunity to redesign infrastructure to address a larger collective future.

replied to Rainer's status

@rainer I would guess not, this book is limited to pre-parenting in one way or another, the uncertainties of new terrain, and leans to forgiveness over judgement. While I may have missed a traumatic trigger, the big obvious ones for parents don't feature here.

Elizabeth Rush: Quickening (2023, Milkweed Editions) 5 stars

An astonishing, vital book about Antarctica, climate change, and motherhood from the author of Rising, …

beautiful

5 stars

A writer joins a research ship to Antarctica and entangles the story of climate change and polar exploration with that of pregnancy and bringing life into our future, with glaciers collapsing, with the crew and scientists lives and hopes and wonder. Beautiful.

Sonali Deraniyagala: Wave (2013, Random House Audio) 5 stars

"On the morning of December 26, 2004, on the southern coast of Sri Lanka, Sonali …

Grief confronted

4 stars

Hard to recommend, hard to finish, hard to put down. Focused on the grief and guilt of surviving, with the background of the surviving and oblivious world left to imply healing and reconciliation and accommodation.