User Profile

loppear

loppear@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 years, 10 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 6)

2025 Reading Goal

82% complete! loppear has read 66 of 80 books.

Theodore Roszak: The cult of information (1994, University of California Press)

As we devote ever-increasing resources to providing, or prohibiting, access to information via computer, Theodore …

marvelous critique from 1986

At the dawn of the Information Age, a prescient rant against conflating information with knowledge, of things that promise everything and so mean nothing, of the political and empirical projects of pushing computers and rational procedural models of thinking into all aspects of education and consumption. Leads to an epistemic argument about the primacy of creative & moral ideas and the role of forgetting in human thinking, but stays grounded as a book of political philosophy opposed to industrial exploitation and social control. Hardly feels dated: though the outlined consumerist and surveillance logic has ground on to deliver us into our late-computer-filled society, so much of what was heralded just around the corner 40 years ago - flourishing of democracy, artificial intelligence, educational wonders - and called out here for the emperor's finery is still relevantly promised to us in exchange for treating trivia as if it were wisdom.

Leif Enger: I Cheerfully Refuse (Hardcover, 2024, Grove/Atlantic, Incorporated)

A storyteller “of great humanity and huge heart” (Minneapolis Star Tribune), Leif Enger debuted in …

Close to amazing

Ultimately I didn't love this, nearly gave it another star for Lake Superior and the slow-apocalypse vibe. Turns darker again and again and I couldn't recover the sense of stubborn hope I think was intended in this mostly endearing tale of getting along with what's right in a world of wrong.

reviewed Slapstick by Kurt Vonnegut (Delta book)

Kurt Vonnegut: Slapstick (1976, Dell)

The book explores one of Vonnegut's favorite recurring themes, which is his belief in our …

very Vonnegut

Grotesque and hilarious, on family and demise and care and the absurdity of humanity, in a decayed future or ever present. Not a favorite, but memorable lines and sets of course.

Laura Spinney: Proto (2025, Bloomsbury Publishing USA)

Daughter. Duhitár-. Dustr. Dukte. Listen to these English, Sanskrit, Armenian and Lithuanian words, all meaning …

well-told

Tracing language's past through archaeology, genetics, and linguistics, reconstructing the unlikely-seeming breadth of similarities and ecological-driven differences and additions over millennia. A well-crafted and word-loving history.

Arthur Sze: The redshifting web (1998, Copper Canyon Press)

earthy and untethered

Nature, accident, emptiness, vastness collide in shattered moments, finding a letter in the stars or watching war correspondence or dancing with a sunflower bending to the light. Real growth over this collection, unsteady in the '70s and engrossed by the '90s.

Astra Taylor: The Age of Insecurity (2023, House of Anansi Press)

Writer, filmmaker, and organizer Astra Taylor takes a curious, critical, and ultimately hopeful look at …

insecurity as the tie that binds

The thesis - that the modern state and capitalism has brought us to crisis by manufacturing and maintaining insecurity across classes - is articulately threaded with considerations of roots - in language, history, myth, and rights - of care, securitization, commons, insurance, obligation, and possibility.

Dan Charnas: Dilla Time (2023, Picador)

Equal parts biography, musicology, and cultural history, Dilla Time chronicles the life and legacy of …

superb musician's biography

A superb musician's biography, beautifully researched threads of musicology, Detroit, influences and connections. I wasn't aware of J Dilla prior to reading, appreciated the tour of 90s and 00s performers I do recognize and the technical transitions in electronic music capability and performance expressed through JD's explorations and legacy. Wonderfully extensive supporting youtube playlist.

Theodore Roszak: The cult of information (1994, University of California Press)

As we devote ever-increasing resources to providing, or prohibiting, access to information via computer, Theodore …

"brim with the sort of noncontroversial trendiness that easily catches on among business types and public officials in search of attractively packaged convenience food for thought"

The cult of information by  (Page 23)

On John Naisbitt and Alvin Toffler championing the new "information age" that conflates information with knowledge and coincides with global capital shipping high tech manufacturing offshore.