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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Centuries of childhood (1962, Vintage Books) 3 stars

a friend said it best, this was filled with wtf moments

3 stars

Curious in-depth examination of childhood depicted in art and writing from the middle ages through early modern focused on France and England, a necessary but ultimately bizarre citation for any claim of change in family or schooling over shorter recent periods in its cataloging of moralistic and class-driven changes in views on protecting innocence and justifying corporal punishment etc.

These Burning Stars (2023, Orbit) 4 stars

On a dusty backwater planet, occasional thief Jun Ironway has gotten her hands on the …

impressive craft

4 stars

Starts off in a stock fantasy of clerics and assassins, and clearly riffing on some familiar themes of space classics, but as this thriller's clever use of flashback and recall keeps weaving a strong set of character relationships and loyalties in unflinching intrigue, the wide-ranging story pulls off a lot of sharp turns without losing the individual threads. I'll likely read the next one, and thankful it's not just left as a part two.

Well of Souls (Hardcover, 2022, W. W. Norton & Company) 3 stars

juxtaposes conditions of slavery to music and dance's jubilee

3 stars

A curious history through dramatizing a series of primary sources in paintings, dioramas, and travelogues depicting the banjo at a uniquely African-Caribbean intersection of slavery, music, worship and celebration, and adaptation. As some of the threads are light echoes, I wish there was a bit more sense of engaging with other supporting or supplanted accounts of the instrument's background.

Chain-Gang All-Stars (2023, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group) 5 stars

Loretta Thurwar and Hamara “Hurricane Staxxx” Stacker are the stars of the Chain-Gang All-Stars, the …

unsubtle!

5 stars

Ultraviolent prison abolition set in an immediate future where our societal capacity to inflict pain is only limited by death. Our characters are flawed violent criminals given by the author a full capacity for love and loss and trauma without any easy redemption.

Personal aside, it's six years since Begley's "Concussion Protocol" short video ended my watching American Football. The only parts of this book that are a little faint or maybe subtle are the few views outside of the penal world, and implicate so much more of our lives, in how our jobs and our passions and corporate interests deaden us to pain of others.

Good Inside (2022, HarperCollins Publishers) 4 stars

Dr. Becky Kennedy, wildly popular parenting expert and creator of @drbeckyatgoodinside, shares her groundbreaking approach …

mostly nodded along

4 stars

If you agree with her view of human relationships - the first section is 'principles', that parenting is relationship building and repairing, that we're good, that happiness depends on connection and regulating fear and distress first, that behavior reveals our struggles not defines us, that shame and lies and control are all self-defeating ways to relate - then the specific advice in the second section gets fairly repetitive. Solid overlap with Whole Brain Child and Montessori-esque self-will-development. Pretty narrowly focused on parent-child and mostly younger to school age kids.

The archaeology of Ocmulgee Old Fields, Macon, Georgia (2005, University of Alabama Press) 3 stars

archaeology and analysis

3 stars

This is local history, a post-dig analysis of the post-contact ("historic") record of a town and trading post superimposed in a site of pre-historic indigenous habitation - the Creek communities from the Chattahoochee moved here temporarily from 1690-1715 before returning. In addition to analysis of the artifacts and building sites, context is provided for the larger Creek community in this period, looking at historic accounts and maps with many partial variations in place and community names and interactions to ask who the larger network of villages and relationships were in this period, which helped me identify other local sites of interest that remain much less rigorously examined.

Against the Grain (2017, Yale University Press) 5 stars

Why did humans abandon hunting and gathering for sedentary communities dependent on livestock and cereal …

Non-state history of the state

4 stars

Collects modern archaeological evidence - which has zoomed out from 19C teleological (and "navel gazing") history of empires and temples to cover ecological, epidemiological, and regional analysis - to undermine any sense of inevitable city-state domination from the cultural adoption of agriculture or sedentism, highlighting the fragile downsides to domestication which civilization avoided fully succumbing to for millennia. Focuses on what domestication - of fire, grains, animals, and ourselves - creates, and on the ways in which forced labor and exploitation are the central inevitable basis for the state.

The Dawn of Everything (Hardcover, 2021, Signal) 4 stars

For generations, our remote ancestors have been cast as primitive and childlike--either free and equal …

weakens under closer inspection

3 stars

Wide-ranging on themes of pre-history and archeological evidence for alternative social organization., a rich history of creative perspectives on human relations. Many of the arguments are compelling for non-domination, non-hierarchical societies and rejecting a still-common "myth of progress", "stages of social evolution", or that social inequality is an inevitable or inherent outcome of agriculture or urbanism or social complexity. Instead they find our societal problems in violence, patriarchy, and domination, and point us to look at the margins of history and society for answers.

Upon digging in to most of the areas discussed, looking to cited sources and other current experts in a topic, much of what is presented as novel or based in new evidence gets weaker, unsupported conjecture, or misrepresentation. It took me a while to write this review as it took me a while to become comfortable with this disappointment. There is just too much too broad …

Time Shelter - a Novel (2022, Liveright Publishing Corporation) 3 stars

A 'clinic for the past' offers a promising treatment for Alzheimer's sufferers: each floor reproduces …

half of this is wonderful, but it's not clearly in the first nor the last.

3 stars

An unraveling of memory and retreat into the past on a personal and national scale, somewhat disjointed and the author's fragmented voice comes through more irritatingly as we progress into an uncertain lack of future, but there's a lot to savor in a sarcastic sun-faded-sepia way.

reviewed Is Maths Real? by Eugenia Cheng

Is Maths Real? (Hardcover, 2023, Profile Books Limited) 4 stars

Why is -(-1) = 1? Why do odd and even numbers alternate? What's the point …

math as curiosity and questioning

4 stars

Delightfully retracing basic math concepts to show mathematicians motivations and enthusiasm, emphasizing an openness to not assuming things are "obvious", an educator's deep interest in honest innocent questions that do not have one correct answer, and the relevance of math's interest in contextual "why and when is such true?" in seeing similarities and differences in analogy to current political and cultural rifts.