User Profile

Caoimhe

oakreef@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 month, 1 week ago

This link opens in a pop-up window

Caoimhe's books

No books found.

K.C. Davis, Dr Martin: How to Keep House While Drowning (AudiobookFormat, 2022, Blackstone Pub)

How to Keep House While Drowning will introduce you to six life-changing principles that will …

“Good enough is perfect.”

A lot of this was not novel to me (it’s not like I have not read advice for people with ADHD before) but it gives clear, concise and useful advice, some tips that I had not seen elsewhere before and was just overall quite motivating for me to make another round of adjustments to help get me through everything.

reviewed Sonic and the Blade of Courage, Vol. 1 by Yuki Imada (Sonic and the Blade of Courage, #1)

Yuki Imada: Sonic and the Blade of Courage, Vol. 1 (Paperback, 小学館)

The official manga adaptation featuring the world-famous character “Sonic” as the protagonist finally arrives as …

“It’s because we run at different speeds that we were able to look after everyone.”

Interesting to see Sonic in a story where he’s mostly interacting with humans again when the series has avoided it for so long outside of the live-action films. It’s been fun so far but has also felt like a fairly by-the-numbers adventure story and I don’t really love how Sonic looks in Imada’s style a lot of the time.

reviewed Mind Play by Mark Wiseman

Mark Wiseman: Mind Play (Paperback, 2017, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform)

“There is nothing more intimate than letting another person get into your subconscious.”

Interesting guide that I am looking forward to putting to more use (or being used on me). There’s a lot of fun ideas in here, though I think that the author is coming at it from an angle of having so much experience, and having had much of that with experienced participants, that he takes a lot for granted of how easily things will come. I am also a little doubtful of some of the psychological framework he uses for understanding things, the “hidden observer” and such. But it’s not a psychology book, it’s a guide to things that can be fun to try out, and it does give a lot of ideas and approaches. Though, while I am nitpicking, it could really have done with an editor and a once-over on the formatting.

Geoff Manaugh: A Burglar's Guide to the City (2016)

Encompassing nearly 2,000 years of heists and tunnel jobs, break-ins and escapes, A Burglar's Guide …

“Every city implies the crimes that will someday take place there.”

I was not expecting this to teach me how to rob a bank, but I was hoping it would have more in the way of discussions of how buildings and cities are constructed rather than just talking about very broad strokes concepts. Maybe a diagram or two, y’know? I believe I first heard about this from reading a game developer talk about how it changed how they thing of spaces and construction of locations and of game levels. I think it might have been Heather Flowers? It is not quite what I expected from that half-remembered description of it that I read a few years ago, but that’s hardly the fault of the book.

I do think the text is a bit myopic, focusing on architecture and dismissal of all else. That is, somewhat, the point of the book: To take an architectural view on criminality, but it leads …