Reviews and Comments

matthewmincher

matthewmincher@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 4 months ago

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reviewed Shift by Hugh Howey (Silo, #2)

Hugh Howey: Shift (Paperback, 2016, John Joseph Adams/Mariner Books)

Hugh Howey goes back to show the first days of the Silo, and the beginning …

Disappointed

Not sure what it was about this book. Took me ages to get through and I was so glad when it was done.

I probably should have DNF'd it. I was consistently bored - I know loads of people love this book so I'm clearly wrong or missing something.

Don't think I'll be continuing for now. I found none of the characters particularly interesting or distinctive and much of the story blurred together.

The world building was interesting.

Hugh Howey: Wool (2014, Brilliance Publishing, Inc.)

In a ruined and toxic landscape, a community exists in a giant silo underground, hundreds …

Post Apocalyptic drama

I'd watched the show first which I really enjoyed.

Quite enjoyed the book too - found it grabbed me and kept me interested until the end. Probably wouldn't have enjoyed it without the context of the show, unfortunately.

reviewed The Devils by Joe Abercrombie (The Devils, #1)

Joe Abercrombie: The Devils

Brother Diaz has been summoned to the Sacred City, where he is certain a commendation …

More Abercrombie

A fun read. Very much more Abercrombie written in a lighter tone than some of his grittier works.

A band of antiheroes on a quest, similar to other reviews it definitely had a bit of a "DnD party on a quest" vibe - even down to their initial motivations via the pope.

Longer than it needed to be for the story, I think. It almost felt like two books in one.

I'd read another book with these characters now that I've grown to like them. I did love Vigga the scandinavian werewolf.

Susanna Clarke: Piranesi (Paperback, 2021, Bloomsbury Publishing)

From the New York Times bestselling author of Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, an …

Short & Different

This was a quick read. I didn't really know what to expect as I only have a mild familiarity with the author (I've tried Strange & Norrel but not finished it).

Ended up quite enjoying this, it's got a compelling combination of unease and fantasy that I loved. I don't really know what I took from it - I think you'd need to read it at the right time and mood otherwise this might be a bit of a miss.

I really enjoyed the point of view character having to piece themselves back together, and the melancholy sadness of people who don't quite fit being able to perceive something more.

I'd recommend it if you've read one too many tomes recently and want a palate cleansing escape.

Apparently there's going to be a movie adaptation which I'll be interested to see.

reviewed Source Code by Bill Gates

Bill Gates: Source Code (2025, Penguin Books, Limited)

Early Days

Enjoyed this. Doesn't go very far into Gates' life but it gave him more space to focus on his childhood and early days.

His obsession and drive coupled with serendipity and like minded friends combined to form one of the most recognisable companies of recent times.

Lots of people will say it's all luck. Gates probably wouldn't disagree. But if his story here is true, he would likely have succeeded at whatever he'd done.

An interesting read, but possibly not much to take away or talk about.

Agatha Christie: The secret of Chimneys (1984, Berkley)

Murder and conspiracy go up in smoke ...

"The champion deceiver of our time". -- …

A bit slow

I've not read any of the Superintendent Battle books before.

This was OK - feels like the first part of the book had very little going on. Definitely some dated views/dialogue in the story. The characters were interesting, but the story felt overly complex.

I'm going to go on to The Seven Dials Mystery soon and see how that goes.

Liu Cixin: Of Ants and Dinosaurs (2020, Head of Zeus)

A satirical fable, a political allegory and an ecological warning from the author of The …

On the nose

Written before some of the stories by Tchaikovsky with a similar premise, this was a short and fun read.

I don't think the writing of different species was anywhere near as mature or compelling as Tchaikovsky's stories, however the overarching plot - population control, nuclear war, and the environment was closer to home.

I liked that both species had flaws and specialities, but I wish a bit more time had been spent exploring their civilisations.

Bill Bryson: A Short History of Nearly Everything (Hardcover, 2003, Broadway Books)

Bill Bryson is one of the worlds most beloved and bestselling writers. In A Short …

Super interesting

I wasn't sure I was going to finish this, but it really picked up about 30% of the way in.

It's a relatively light overview of a load of stuff (no prizes for guessing that bit)

You're probably familiar with all of it, but there will be gems and additions to knowledge that are delightful.

A highlight for me was the discussion of time, the age of the universe and how our understanding of that has changed (and is still changing)

Carl Sagan, Ann Druyan: The Demon-Haunted World (Paperback, 1997, Ballantine Books)

How can we make intelligent decisions about our increasingly technology-driven lives if we don’t understand …

Same conspiracy theories, different time

Started off a bit weak but was well written and compelling by the end. Possibly a bit too much time spent on aliens.

Considering this book was published in 1997, it still applies today. I took away a note that conspiracy theories just evolve and fill a fundamental default need when we don't understand or are confronted with uncomfortable things.

Sagan emphasises a need for education, the scientific method, and critical thinking. I don't think he'd be happy how that has trended since writing this.

Something that interests me is how I see the supposed scientific method corrupted and used as a weapon by conspiracy theories and people pushing them. There's lots of calls for citizen science, making your own observations, and trusting yourself over experts.

It feels like that's not a bad thing, if only it could be channeled into something positive - not just people finding things that …

Sir Tony Robinson: No Cunning Plan (Hardcover, 2017, Pan Macmillan, imusti)

Open and interesting

This book is a refreshingly open look at lots of parts of his life. It goes into more personal detail than I expected.

Good to get a bit of a peek behind the curtain on the well known shows. The audiobook is narrated by Robinson himself which was obviously great.

I can't believe we almost didn't get him on time team or his version of Baldrick. I guess it's also an interesting lesson in serendipity and persistence.

Loved the bits on Mick Aston - it's good to hear he was as wholesome as he always seemed.

reviewed All Systems Red by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #1)

Martha Wells: All Systems Red (EBook, 2017, Tordotcom)

"As a heartless killing machine, I was a complete failure."

In a corporate-dominated spacefaring future, …

Short and fun

Thought I'd give this series a go before the Apple TV show. It's pretty fast and doesn't hold your hand.

Didn't realise how short it was going to be - fun read with some great characterisation. Will probably reread and then continue the series.

Robert Louis Stevenson: The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Paperback, 1993, Troll Communications Llc)

Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is a Gothic novella by Scottish author …

Just okay

I think this was possibly ruined by Jekyll and Hyde being such a defining work and now well known trope. No doubt it was amazing for the time.

If I could somehow read it without that context I imagine I would have enjoyed it a lot more. As it is, it’s a passable horror with plenty to read into the themes.

A bit disappointing overall, though.

Stephen Hawking: A Brief History of Time (Paperback, 1995, Bantam Books Ltd)

" Historia del tiempo " es un libro de divulgación sobre el espacio y el …

Accessible

Loved this. Wasn’t dry at all and written with a sense of humour and awareness of the target audience at all times.

For me it is less common to find a non-fiction book unputdownable but I devoured this and enjoyed all of it.

I enjoyed the variety of topics and the sense of scale. The mathematics was supported by analogy and practical examples. There were also interesting parts on general scientific progress. A stand out for me was the commentary that not so long ago learned people were able to hold the sum total of human science in their minds - something that is no longer possible.

I enjoyed the coverage of the anthropic principle however-much it may feel like a cop-out.

Black holes continue to fascinate and terrify me.