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4thace

4thace@books.theunseen.city

Joined 2 years, 5 months ago

Refugee from Goodreads. I try to review every book I finish. On Mastodon: noc.social/@Zerofactorial

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Salman Rushdie: Knife (2024, Random House Publishing Group)

On the morning of August 12, 2022, Salman Rushdie was standing onstage at the Chautauqua …

Reflections on surviving a devastating assault

This is mostly a straightforward account of what it is like to be the subject of an attempted murder in public, to recover from life-threatening wounds, to adjust to physical and psychological damage over long months afterwards, and to learn what the most important values were in life. It includes one section of imaginary conversation between the author and his assailant which shed light on the frame of mind of the former and seems to have served a therapeutic function. To me, the tone was not one of conceit or celebration of his own superiority, but that of a man truly shaken to the core, which I found sympathetic. He finds himself forced to think back to the fatwa issued against his life over thirty years ago which took away his ability to go out in public with ease without fear of bloody violence. He was pleased to find that …

Kevin Barry: Night Boat to Tangier (AudiobookFormat, 2019, Bolinda/Canongate audio)

A harrowing story of loss

This book follows a pair of Irish criminals over a few decades, but specifically at an important point in their old age while they are waiting for the daughter of one of them to appear in Algeciras having gone off to Morocco. All their lives, Maurice and Charlie have engaged in criminal activities to support themselves, sometimes amassing enormous quantities of cash through the international drug trade. But the money never lasted as long as they hoped even after laundering it because of their addictions and other vices. The book spends some time from the point of view of the missing daughter, Dilly, who's been warned off of her father Maurice by her mother in her dying days. Now that Dilly is grown she understands why she should have nothing to do with them, to be free of their control and their malignant influence, and yet they still represent all …

Ollie Shane: Notes from the Void (Paperback, Wild Ink Publishing)

Poetry collection in English

A thought-provoking collection of poems

This is a first collection from an emerging poet which ranges over many topics, particularly the neurodivergent experience and gender and relationship issues. Most are told from a first-person point of view but not all are confessional in nature. A few come across as experiments with form and feature such techniques as erasures, and I noticed that a few ventured into wordplay which I always appreciate. In my opinion it seemed better than several other poetry collections I have read, whether first-time outings or those by more established poets. I will be interested in seeing where this author's writing will go in the future.

Victor J. Strecher: Life on purpose (2016)

"A pioneer in the field of behavioral science delivers a groundbreaking work that shows how …

A crushing loss informs life advice from this author

This is another one of those books describing how to find values that are meaningful to you in life. But the big difference is the experience the author had when his daughter was born with a congenital heart defect and how that played out over decades. It was a condition that even the medical experts had problems coming up with really very reliable prognosis for the treatment. So over an extended period of time the author's family went through a series of episodes of despair and hope regained and some normal stretches of time which were interrupted by declines. Although his daughter did outlive the first estimates given by the doctors she did eventually succumb to her illness, leading her father to rediscover meaning in life afterwards. He describes a dramatic story of a time when he had lost all sense of life being worth living, which culminated in an …

reviewed How to listen to jazz by Ted Gioia

Ted Gioia: How to listen to jazz (2016)

Music scholar Ted Gioia presents a lively, accessible introduction to the art of listening to …

A good starting point for listeners who might be interested

This book goes all the way back before jazz itself was a genre up to the 2010s, providing an overview that even most aficionados are unlikely to be familiar with. The author writes with enthusiasm about the things a newcomer would want to know - where jazz had its stat, who was influential in changing the direction it would go, the kinds of audiences that listened to early jazz both live and recorded, the waves of re-creation it went through during the mid-century decodes as new players reacted to what went before. The author is a well known music journalist whose articles and books have won him a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Jazz Journalists Association. He has performed himself on piano and writes here about the struggles a practicing musician typically finds keeping up with ever increasing new ideas in the art form. He does not dive deep into …

Ayodeji Awosika: Real Help (Paperback, Independently published)

The message is okay, but maybe incomplete

I don't recall how this self-help book got on my to-read list, unfortunately. I am not in the stage of life where I can apply the principles being taught here, which are intended for a young person trying to get established. I would say that now happiness is not tied to a paycheck now but self-actualization is important. So the advice to do your research, aim high, make a stab at doing something on your own, refining what you deliver until you find traction are all familiar but not super relevant.

I was a little unnerved at the beginning when he spoke about some people whose fans make me nervous: people like Robert Kiyosaki, Marianne Williamson, Scott Adams, Robert Greene, Scott Adams, and Peter Thiel. But to his credit the author specifically disavows any claim that the road to success is easily attainable or within anyone's grasp. He even …

No cover

Kij Johnson: Spar (2009)

Not for anyone objecting to explicit content

This was a much talked-about short story I read a few months after it came out, which amazed me because of how it committed to the alien body horror topic and left me with questions about the moral aspects of what happened. In a survival situation, basically a lifeboat scenario, how much loss of autonomy would you put up? And if you don't have any actual choice in the matter, how does it change how you picture yourself afterwards? Would you start to think of your body as something that can be hacked from the outside like some mechanism, or is that too hard to separate so easily from the idea of self? The story should be fenced around with trigger and content warnings for readers who might be set off by scenes of sexuality and possible violence.

reviewed Rogue Protocol by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #3)

Martha Wells: Rogue Protocol (2018)

SciFi’s favorite antisocial A.I. is again on a mission. The case against the too-big-to-fail GrayCris …

The action was more intricately choreographed

The main trouble I had with this novella was visualizing the locations the action took place within at the failed terraforming operation where it was set. There was a transport shuttle, the station, the terraforming facility with a tractor array and some number of pods connected by transport tubes, a zipper spacecraft, and maybe I didn't catch along the way. Murderbot does not give a detailed description of these places (which would be unnatural), except when the precise layout would affect the action or decisions being made. So, with a fairly large cast of humans and robots it was tough keeping straight who was doing what where. Following the dialogue, both spoken and transmitted wirelessly on feed channels, was a little easier, though fairly intricate owing to various falsehoods and acts of double dealing. It felt more like the second book as a whole than the first one partly because …