A great read on the history of id software (and the huge game industry that it helped blossom), this will go on my list of favorite computing/video game history books. Most of the book is detailed and entertaining, although the ending felt a little abrupt. What I would give for a followup edition with updates on the founders!
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One Up On Wall Street: How to Use What You Already Know to Make Money in the Market by Peter Lynch
More than one million copies have been sold of this seminal book on investing in which legendary mutual-fund manager Peter …
tiegz reviewed Masters of Doom by David Kushner
tiegz reviewed The hero with a thousand faces by Joseph Campbell (Bollingen series -- 17.)
Review of 'The hero with a thousand faces' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
A lengthy, expansive overview of myths from around the world. Each one is meant to illustrate parts of the hero's journey. I was expecting more analysis of the hero's journey itself, but this focuses more on the myths themselves.
tiegz rated So You Want to Talk About Race: 4 stars
So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo
So You Want to Talk About Race is a 2018 non-fiction book by Ijeoma Oluo. Each chapter title is a …
tiegz reviewed The hero's journey by Joseph Campbell (The collected works of Joseph Campbell)
Survive! by Les Stroud
From the sun-scorched sands of the Kalahari to the snake-infested jungles of the Amazon, Les Stroud has made a life …
tiegz rated Lady Astronaute: 5 stars
Lady Astronaute by Mary Robinette Kowal
Elma York est une célébrité sur la planète rouge, suite au rôle déterminant qu’elle a joué lors des colonisations lunaires …
tiegz reviewed The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell
Review of 'The power of myth' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
The audio version of this book is well worth it. Campbell’s recollection and understanding of myths is impressive, and although I lost him a few times on the discussion of spirituality, overall this interview is inspiring.
tiegz rated America’s Forgotten Slaves: 4 stars
tiegz reviewed A journal of the plague year by Daniel Defoe (Penguin classics)
Review of 'A journal of the plague year' on 'Goodreads'
3 stars
A haunting account of the 1665 plague in London, this almost reads like Dante's Inferno or Purgatorio, in which the author takes you on a tour of the world that seems to be falling apart around them.
Reading this in 2020, you'll see many parallels (stay-at-home orders, social distancing, daily numbers, etc), but it's also a small consolation that we live in more modern times and that the mortality rate of COVID19 isn't as bad as the bubonic plague.
Defoe gives us statistics along the way and throughout the year, although having a geographic grasp of each town he mentions would help while reading it. There's also a short tale about a small group of men who escaped the city and went from town-to-town in the countryside. On one hand it's very descriptive and thrilling, but on the other it makes you wonder how he came across the information.
tiegz reviewed Cryptonomicon, tome 3 by Neal Stephenson
Review of 'Cryptonomicon, tome 3 ' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
Epic weaving of historical fiction. Definitely some fun parallels to Bitcoin that predate it (a digital currency, cryptography, a circle of people operating under a Japanese psuedonym, etc).
tiegz rated Shovel Knight: 3 stars
tiegz reviewed Ray Tracer Challenge by Jamis Buck
Review of 'Ray Tracer Challenge' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
This is now one of my favorite programming books! Not only is it a methodical building-block-approach to learning how ray tracers work, but it's a genuinely good way to familiarize yourself with the ins and outs of a programming language. For myself, I used Go after a year of learning it on the side -- this posed challenges because of its lack of OO inheritance, default/optional arguments, etc., and solving those challenges was equally as fun as implementing the ray tracer itself. The bonus chapters and forum are also a great supplement to the book. Thanks Jamis!