Reviews and Comments

loppear

loppear@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 years, 3 months ago

Reading for fun, threads over the years of scifi, history, social movements and justice, farming, philosophy. I actively work to balance out the white male default in what I read, but have a long way to go.

He/they for the praxis.

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Red Team Blues (Hardcover, 2023, Tor Books) 4 stars

A grabby next-Tuesday thriller about cryptocurrency shenanigans that will awaken you to how the world …

I'm so jaded about SV and wealth

3 stars

A cute techno-thriller, this time focused on an aging retiring accountant rather than a YA scene, and the usual cogent and analytical depictions of today's hyped technologies and social implications. In this case, when money is no object, which cheapens most of the choices.

A Brief History of Time: From the Big Bang to Black Holes is a book …

still fair to ask who this is for, now

3 stars

By now well-covered only-so-popularizable territory of special relativity, black holes, expanding universe, quantum mechanics, anthropic principle, string theory, and does a reasonable job of remaining humble while inquisitive about the parts that might have no answer.

Saving Time (Hardcover, 2023, Vintage) 3 stars

Our daily experience, dominated by the corporate clock that so many of us contort ourselves …

somewhat a letdown

3 stars

Less revelatory than her How To Do Nothing or Bridle's Ways of Being, the intent is there to re-examine the colonial capitalist and puritan influences on time's central role in living - our drive for efficiency, self-improvement, fixed hours and seasons - but even if the message is to de-focus, this is a scattered book. "The point isn't to live more, to but to be more alive in any given moment."

The third desert (2011, Liturgical Press) 3 stars

An inside historical perspective

3 stars

Benedictines encounter Buddhists over the 20c and debate how to live hospitably in the world and balance a transition from monastic to missionary to peace-building. "The risk of religious isolation from dialogue is fundamentalism; to be religious is to be interreligious." Real peace is sustained encounter, not diplomatic negotiation.

Bright Green Lies (2021, Monkfish Book Publishing Company) 4 stars

Save life on earth, or save industrial civilization?

4 stars

Has the environmental movement shifted its goals from saving the earth's biodiversity, creatures, healthy ecosystems etc to arguing instead for the much-less-contentious saving of human industrial civilization with "green technology" promises of convenience, continued extraction, and ecological depletion? The book is a bit heavy on bashing the myths contained in how solar, hydro, recycling, cities, etc are not solutions to the root causes of extractive industrial consumptive convenience, but fair enough. Save life on earth, or save industrial civilization? It's a bit of a false bind, but it's also important to see when options marketed as "environmentally friendly" are mostly friendly to our continued inaction.