Just got my copy from the library!
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Elsewhere: @mycorrhiza@post.lurk.org gemini://degrowhter.smol.pub gemini://retrace.club/~mycorrhiza
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mycorrhiza's books
2025 Reading Goal
58% complete! mycorrhiza has read 7 of 12 books.
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mycorrhiza started reading Duly Noted by Jorge Arango
mycorrhiza started reading Ulysses. by Richard Ellmann (A Penguin modern classic -- 3000)
I don't like the emotional reactions I've been having to many of the posts in my Mastodon feed. I'm following the same great folks, so there must be a shift in my attitude to cause this, but I'm unsure how fix it. I just saw that Standard Ebooks has a version in their library, so I put that on my phone as an alternative to (what increasingly feels like) doomscrolling.
mycorrhiza commented on The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson
Here the book appears to be “lampshading” its commitment to liberalism by issuing the first (will it be the only?) critique of liberalism from a person in psychological distress. This is such a hacky trope that it’s become popular in superhero movies, for crying out loud! The villain clearly has the better political analysis than the heroes, but then indiscriminately murders innocent people, just so that the audience understands that only the bad guys question the status quo. Up untill now the book’s been fine — some good parts, some obnoxious but tolerable parts — but here I’ve lost respect for it and I would be surprised to regain it.
mycorrhiza replied to mycorrhiza's status
@kirk@social.coop @mycorrhiza@post.lurk.org (tl;dr: if nothing else, get everyone you know to read Chapter 3)
mycorrhiza replied to Kirk Smith, PhD's status
@kirk@social.coop @mycorrhiza@post.lurk.org well I wrote down the answer to your question and went ahead and turned it into a brief review: bookwyrm.social/user/mycorrhiza/review/4602255/s/a-deeply-researched-history-of-an-important-facet-of-the-anarchist-movement
mycorrhiza reviewed Means and Ends by Zoe Baker
A deeply researched history of an important facet of the anarchist movement
5 stars
I came to Means and Ends as a moderately well-read anarchist. I’ve read plenty of “theory”, and was already familiar with the writing of Bakunin, Kropotkin, Goldman, Malatesta, Cafiero, and others who were writing about anarchist communism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe and North America. Nevertheless, I enjoyed this book and got a lot out of it.
When I was only couple chapters into the book I had quipped that it was “dry and academic”, but I realize that this isn’t a fair description. Okay, maybe it is a bit dry in tone — which I feel is a bit unfair to the wild characters who comprised the anarchist movement — but Baker did a commendable job of transforming a PhD dissertation into something so easy to read. She was fairly even-handed in presenting the controversies that divided the movement, although I got the impression …
I came to Means and Ends as a moderately well-read anarchist. I’ve read plenty of “theory”, and was already familiar with the writing of Bakunin, Kropotkin, Goldman, Malatesta, Cafiero, and others who were writing about anarchist communism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe and North America. Nevertheless, I enjoyed this book and got a lot out of it.
When I was only couple chapters into the book I had quipped that it was “dry and academic”, but I realize that this isn’t a fair description. Okay, maybe it is a bit dry in tone — which I feel is a bit unfair to the wild characters who comprised the anarchist movement — but Baker did a commendable job of transforming a PhD dissertation into something so easy to read. She was fairly even-handed in presenting the controversies that divided the movement, although I got the impression that she favors “mass anarchism” over insurrectionist and anti-organizational approaches.
Since anarchists (at least a certain breed of us) love a reading group, I can imagine that some may read at least a few chapters from Means and Ends. Here’s one way that the chapters could be prioritized:
3: Values, Critique, and Vision 5: Anarchism and State Socialism 4: Anarchist Strategy 7: Mass Anarchism 6: Insurrectionist Anarchism 9: The Theory and Practice of Syndicalist Anarchism 10: Organizational Dualism 8: The History of Syndicalist Anarchism 2: Theoretical Framework 11: Conclusion 1: Defining Anarchism
I still recommend reading them in the order used by book; what I’m suggesting here is that if you want to read only two chapters, read 3 and 5 (skipping 4), but if you can read a third, read 3 through 5. This is aimed at folks who are fairly new to anarchist writings and history from this era; for theory-heads who might want to challenge themselves with different viewpoints, I suggest choosing from 6, 7, 9, and 10 as appropriate.
If I could get every liberal and socialist I know to read the third chapter, that would go a long way toward helping them understand where I’m coming from — I’m surprised at how closely my basic values align with people who were born a century before me. On the other hand, the anarchists were uncanny in predicting how liberal democracies and state communism would develop in the postwar era and we still have the same fight on our hands.
mycorrhiza rated Means and Ends: 5 stars

Means and Ends by Zoe Baker
Means and Ends is a new overview of the revolutionary strategy of anarchism in Europe and the United States between …
mycorrhiza started reading The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson
Buckle up, it’s time to read KSR’s fanfic about world governments actually doing something for the common good. I like Stan but I don’t expect to love this. Should have some compelling characters at least.
mycorrhiza finished reading Means and Ends by Zoe Baker

Means and Ends by Zoe Baker
Means and Ends is a new overview of the revolutionary strategy of anarchism in Europe and the United States between …
mycorrhiza wants to read You Can Write a Novel by James V. Smith
Grabbed this from the library after seeing this toot from @writerobscura@writing.exchange writing.exchange/@writerobscura/112439557405023423
Don’t know if I’ll ever actually write a book, but I’ve kinda wanted to forever.
mycorrhiza wants to read The Limits of Software by Robert N. Britcher
Sounds neat! (H/T @arclight@oldbytes.space) oldbytes.space/@arclight/112434493793005215
mycorrhiza wants to read Natural History of Empty Lots by Christopher Brown

Natural History of Empty Lots by Christopher Brown
During the real estate crash of the late 2000s, Christopher Brown purchased an empty lot in an industrial section of …