Reviews and Comments

Phil in SF

kingrat@books.theunseen.city

Joined 1 year, 3 months ago

I have moved my Bookwyrming to @kingrat@sfba.club

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From the introduction, it's very clear that Gary Bass is not going to spare anyone. He doesn't spare Japan for failing to engage with their own imperialism while being very explicit that much of the court was conducted by European colonial powers because it was their colonies that suffered, not them. The Soviet Union was killing a quarter million Japanese in Manchuria even as the trials went on. and that the United States has faced no serious repercussions for targeting civilians during the war (which is perhaps understandable) or since (which is much less understandable if there is truly to be a law of war).

The Deep Sky (EBook, 2023, Flatiron Books) 3 stars

Competent teams vs teams of competent individuals

3 stars

The Deep Sky is the story of a crew of late teen/early 20s women (mostly) who make up the crew of the first interstellar spaceship. Their goal is to establish a colony on a planet orbiting another star, hence why everyone has to be capable of bearing children. There's mention of one trans dude and a couple of possibly non-binary folk, but by and large the crew is female. The story alternates between episodes on board and flashbacks to crew member Asuka's time on Earth with her family and in the ultra-competitive institute that is both training and selecting crew members.

When the story begins, Asuka and her friend Kate are about to go on a spacewalk to investigate an anomaly on the exterior of the ship. They decide to race, and Kate reaches the anomaly first and thus is the person who dies when the bomb goes off.

Despite …

A Matter of Facts (Paperback, 2019, ALA Neal-Schuman) 2 stars

The safeguarding of authentic facts is essential, especially in this disruptive Orwellian age, where digital …

Chapter 1 is pure polemic. ironically, it has no real evidence of the value of evidence. though perhaps this will be a properly outlined book that makes subsequent chapter detail the evidence for evidence.

Nothing to Lose (EBook, 2008, Delacorte) 3 stars

Two lonely towns in Colorado: Hope and Despair. Between them, twelve miles of empty road. …

Competence porn with a somewhat preposterous setup

3 stars

Standard Jack Reacher. Teacher blows into town. Gets hassled and rather than move on, decides to mess with the people who hassled him

The preposterous part is the entire town of Despair Colorado is complicit. Even more preposterous is that no one talks. They just run Reacher right out of town for mysterious reasons. But if you can suspend disbelief on that, the rest falls into place.

Missing, Presumed (EBook, 2014, Random House) 4 stars

The police work seems like police work

4 stars

A police procedural where the police work seems like police work. Looking up documents. Canvassing for surveillance camera footage. Interviewing witnesses. Getting warrants.

The main police character, Manon Bradshaw, is annoying AF with her dating life though. I think that's intentional by the author though.

Biking Uphill in the Rain (EBook, 2023, University of Washington Press) 4 stars

Seattle was recently named the best bike city in the United States by Bicycling magazine. …

Solid overview of Seattle bicycle activism in Seattle

4 stars

More an overview of bicycle activism than bicycling activity and culture, and much of it feels like a history of car expansion. Really good parts are how the early bicycle clubs turned explicitly into car clubs and drove the first car expansion in Seattle. Also, the book does not avoid the racism that touched both cycling and car expansion.

Lessons in Chemistry (EBook, 2022, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group) 3 stars

Neatly tied together, a little too neat

3 stars

Content warning minor spoilers

The Anatomy of Fascism (EBook, 2007, Vintage) 4 stars

Good overview of fascism

4 stars

Paxton reviews the beginnings of fascism, its rise to power, and how it governed in order to try to suss out the common threads between successful and unsuccessful fascisms. Published in 2004, I hoped the book would explain how regimes with fascist tendencies like that of Donald Trump could be thwarted. Interestingly, Paxton hesitated to call Trump a fascist until Trump's unsuccessful attempt to retain power. Indeed, in the book Paxton makes an attempt to do away with democratic norms with the threat or actuality of a populist uprising one of the key part of fascism during stage 2, when it becomes influential, rather than mere groups of people obsessed with the unity and purity of the national people. Very solid and I recommend it.

The Anatomy of Fascism (EBook, 2007, Vintage) 4 stars

Chapter 3 examines how fascisms changed from their original programs to gain power. In particular, Paxton notes that Mussolini was pro League of Nations, anti professional military, anti Catholic, pro nationalization of industry and anti capitalist in 1919. By 1922, he'd reversed course on those issues. This was how Italian fascism became successful (according to Paxton).

A Fatal Grace (EBook, 2007, Minotaur Books) 3 stars

Uses some deceptive writing techniques

3 stars

Chief Inspector Gamache returns to Three Pines, where a person universally disliked, C.C. de Poitiers has been murdered in elaborate fashion in front of a crowd watching a curling match.

Unfortunately, the author used a technique i detest, so this will be the final book i read in the series. On at least three occasions we're following along in the mind of a character, but to keep the suspense going leaves out crucial thoughts.

"Her cell phone rang. She hesitated, knowing who it was, and not wanting to leave her last thought."

So, despite getting visibility into the character's thoughts, suddenly she doesn't think of the name of who is calling? Of course not, but the author doesn't want to let us into the scheme just yet. Rather than write from a different point of view or work around this limitation, she just leaves the thought out. And does this …

Mastering Genealogical Documentation (EBook, 2017, National Genealogical Society) 4 stars

The value of your family history research relies in large part on the thoroughness and …

Frustrating but useful

4 stars

I found Mastering Genealogical Documentation to be very very frustrating, but ultimately it was very useful. The author says this book is a textbook, whereas Evidence Explained is a reference work. To some degree that's true.

Despite having read Genealogy Standards a few times, I've clearly missed some important points. That's mostly because Genealogy Standards does not include discussion of the standards. I read a lot of technical standards for a living. BCG's Genealogy Standards leave a lot to be desired for explanation.

That's a preface to the first really good point about Mastering Genealogical Documentation: it's an extensive discussion and breakdown of BCG standard 5, which lays out the 5 facets/elements/components of a citation: who, what, where, when, and wherein. What satisfies as good information for each element? Thomas W. Jones answers that. (Evidence Explained really does not.)

The second really good thing about Mastering Genealogical Documentation is that …