User Profile

Richard M

xinit@bookwyrm.social

Joined 11 months, 1 week ago

In all honesty, it had been years since I regularly read anything of note. An occasional audiobook (of while I have an intimidating collection of unread volumes. I've been collecting epub and pdf books from bundles and sales, etc.

2024 was the year of my dropping Twitter and (mostly) Facebook. It was also the year of stopping dropping most things Google and Reddit and other sites that encourage division. I deleted my podcast app, as nothing I was listening to was truly compelling or really even that interesting.

It's been a year now, in July 2025 and I've completed over 40 novels and novellas. Short story collections, poetry, etc. I have about six books on the go at any time, just like I used to do when I was a teenager. Instead of a stack of open books stacked up beside my bed, it's all on my phone and tablet.

As of this writing I have read 30 books of the 12 I thought I might finish in all of 2025. I think I might need to up my estimate a bit.

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Richard M's books

Currently Reading (View all 6)

2025 Reading Goal

Success! Richard M has read 31 of 12 books.

Sophie Poldermans: Seducing and Killing Nazis : Hannie, Truus and Freddie (2019, BookBaby)

Hannie, Truus and Freddie deserve better than this.

Hannie, Truus and Freddie deserve better than this.

Reading 'Seducing and Killing Nazis: Hannie, Truus and Freddie' and the writing style 20% of the way in, it still feels like it's an essay written by someone using only a single volume of an encyclopedia as reference.

At times paragraphs of detail on simple things, seeming to inflate word counts and then skipping 3 years without mention.

Sort of "They were born, moved, then a guy came and tried to recruit them to join the resistance, but oh no he was gestapo! JK it was only a test! They passed!"

It has some interesting photos of places I know in Haarlem, though.

The author spent time with Truss and Freddie, subjects of the book, but none of that really shows here. I'd love to see stories told in their voices, not a sort of bullet point retelling from an invisible narrator. …

Sarah Wynn-Williams: Careless People (Hardcover, Macmillan)

Sarah Wynn-Williams, a young diplomat from New Zealand, pitched for her dream job. She saw …

Mixed feelings

No rating

Stories that the author seems to think are hilarious, like crashing events, getting stuck in military dictatorships, etc. -- well, they just aren't. They're terrifying. The seeming simplicity with which she was able to drag Facebook into the global stage.

All while taking ZERO blame.

This would be better named "Diary of a Collaborator"

Sarah Wynn-Williams thinks she's the heroine in the story, but she's not. She's part of the reason we're where we are now with social media, and she doesn't see it.