just for the title alone...
Reviews and Comments
trans, nerd, techie, leftist, classical musician and many more things. my reading involves the interesting combination of classical fantasy, modern sci-fi and speculative fiction, contemporary nonfiction, anarcho-communist theory and John Green books.
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Talya (she/her) wants to read Move Slowly and Build Bridges by Robert W. Gehl
Talya (she/her) reviewed Le Mexicain by Jack London
well-structured and engaging
4 stars
my only complaint is that the writing is sometimes hard to follow and requires going back. but the characters are compelling, the motives engaging, and the plot structure built great to ramp up the tension. yes, the end is as you expect going in to chapter 3, but that doesn't hurt the story in my opinion, as it is not a story of plot, but of characters.
Talya (she/her) wants to read Revolutionary Witchcraft by Sarah Lyons
Talya (she/her) reviewed Anarchy Works by Peter Gelderloos
despite all the criticism, this is a good book
4 stars
this is a four star book. it's good, the author has clearly done their work, it's nuanced and it presents good theory. hold all of that in mind because now i'm gonna be negative.
due to the nature of the work, pretty much all given examples are simplified, and some of them (or at least those i know well enough to notice) have occasional omissions or errors. this however doesn't hurt the conclusion, especially since the conclusion is nuanced - not "humans are anarchists" but "humans can do anarchism", not "anarchism always works" but "anarchism can work". (for the curious folks, the specific examples i'm thinking of are the Israeli Kibbutzim, Wikipedia and the island of Rapa Nui.) the weakest chapter by far, at least in my opinion, is chapter 4 - environment, though possibly the fact i've recently read "The Solutions are Already Here" (a five star book specifically …
this is a four star book. it's good, the author has clearly done their work, it's nuanced and it presents good theory. hold all of that in mind because now i'm gonna be negative.
due to the nature of the work, pretty much all given examples are simplified, and some of them (or at least those i know well enough to notice) have occasional omissions or errors. this however doesn't hurt the conclusion, especially since the conclusion is nuanced - not "humans are anarchists" but "humans can do anarchism", not "anarchism always works" but "anarchism can work". (for the curious folks, the specific examples i'm thinking of are the Israeli Kibbutzim, Wikipedia and the island of Rapa Nui.) the weakest chapter by far, at least in my opinion, is chapter 4 - environment, though possibly the fact i've recently read "The Solutions are Already Here" (a five star book specifically about anarchism and the environment) plays a factor. the strongest, by contrast, is the first, possibly due to being the most nuanced. to me, of all chapters, it is the one that best speaks the important message of this book: anarchy works, we just have to choose it. perhaps my biggest issue with the book is the one i least know how to fix - that it sits in the uncomfortable space of intending to convince while by its very nature being mostly read by those already convinced. that is sadly the nature of almost every theory book under the sun, anarchist or not, and the ways to deal with it are either acknowledge this fact and aim it only at those already within the movement (as even those already in on an idea still always benefit from theory), or ignore it and hope your book becomes a gateway for at least some newcomers, somehow. this book did what to me seems the more common choice among anarchist, and chose the latter.
despite all my criticisms, this is a good book. even those who already read a bunch of theory like me can benefit from the new outlooks and varieties of anarchism offered by this book. there's better books talking specifically about anarchist organising, about anarchist economies, about anarchist ecology, about anarchist history throughout the world. but this one does a good job talking about them all at once. this is a four star book.
Talya (she/her) wants to read A Half-Built Garden by Ruthanna Emrys
after this rec, i have to give it a read. tweesecake.social/@zkrisher/114530044080025780
Talya (she/her) started reading The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine by Ilan Pappé
Talya (she/her) reviewed Carmilla by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu
no wonder it's a classic
4 stars
devoured this as an audiobook over less than a week. it's a good book of a comfortable length! yes, it's got its clunky parts (especially that last chapter that feels obligated to provide explanations to stuff that really didn't need too much of an explanation or that could have better been explained throughout), but i feel like that is mostly an issue of different stylistic expectations over a 150 year gap. still though, i enjoyed the book, as evident by the speed i read it, and it's nice to catch up on what is a vital piece of both vampire, gothic and lesbian literature.
Talya (she/her) wants to read Everything Is Tuberculosis by John Green
the most depressing hopeful book i've ever read
5 stars
it's not fair to give this book 5 stars, because i've given other books 5 stars in the past, and they pale in comparison. i've had my mind blown multiple times every chapter, and there's five of them. it's clear a lot of care was put into this book, and that care paid off. this book is at once depressing, because the solutions are already here, and encouraging, because the solutions are already here. and if that's not the correct way to address the human condition, i don't know what is. at the end of this book, i am left with the taste of the vision in the final chapter, feeling like i've been awoken from the sweetest of dreams - at once sad to find it was but a dream, and happy to have remembered it. now all i have is to wait for the day this dream becomes …
it's not fair to give this book 5 stars, because i've given other books 5 stars in the past, and they pale in comparison. i've had my mind blown multiple times every chapter, and there's five of them. it's clear a lot of care was put into this book, and that care paid off. this book is at once depressing, because the solutions are already here, and encouraging, because the solutions are already here. and if that's not the correct way to address the human condition, i don't know what is. at the end of this book, i am left with the taste of the vision in the final chapter, feeling like i've been awoken from the sweetest of dreams - at once sad to find it was but a dream, and happy to have remembered it. now all i have is to wait for the day this dream becomes reality.
Talya (she/her) wants to read The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin
Talya (she/her) finished reading سنتجاوز هذا معًا נעבור את זה ביחד
a brutally honest piece about the harsh reality that is living in this bleeding land. I would have read it even had a friend of mine not been one of the writers, but knowing his story just made it that more impactful. absolutely recommended to absolutely anyone.
Talya (she/her) rated سنتجاوز هذا معًا נעבור את זה ביחד: 5 stars

سنتجاوز هذا معًا נעבור את זה ביחד
ב-7.10.2023 פרצה המלחמה האכזרית ביותר של דורנו וגבתה את חייהם של עשרות אלפי אנשים, ישראלים ופלסטינים. הטרור והטבח איימו לבודד …
Talya (she/her) reviewed The Right to Be Greedy by For Ourselves
my gut feeling was right about this one
1 star
very early on this book felt iffy to me. it felt like an almost Randian view on anarchism, like an attempt to capture the Thatcher individualists. I gave up on listening to the next chapters when those came up on Audible Anarchist. however, when the chapter on sexuality was released, I decided to give that one a shot. I regret trying. that chapter was immediately disappointing, being extremely heterosexual from the very first sentence. having been written in the 70's is no excuse to me. anarchists of the time should have (and many did) known better. I'll just have to wait for them to finish with this one and move to some actually interesting theory.
Talya (she/her) reviewed The Bolshevik Myth by Alexander Berkman
The Bolshevik Myth - so much more educational than expected
5 stars
I was a bit skeptical at first. a long diary about the Bolshevik ideology that I already don't believe in from a writers whose magnum opus I liked but didn't feel was the best thing ever. But dang, I was wrong. I learned more about that period from a single book than I learned in decades. I even learned about stuff that I as a Jew should have already known of and was surprised to find out how shallow was my knowledge. The best way to know what the Russian revolution was like was to live through it. The second best way might genuinely be this book.