Finished reading: Foundation by Isaac Asimov πŸ“š So many men. One woman, I think, and all she cares about is jewelry.

Currently reading: Ahsoka by E. K. Johnston πŸ“š

Currently reading: Foundation by Isaac Asimov πŸ“š

Finished reading: Ready Player One πŸ“šRead it mostly so that I could say, “yeah, I read it.” A fun read but not very deep or meaningful.

Currently reading: Binti by Nnedi Okorafor πŸ“š

Ministry for the Future Book Club

πŸ“š One of my favorite futurists is Bryan Alexander, thinker in the academic space. I’m reading this book because he’s sponsoring a book club for it. The comments so far from fellow readers have been fascinating and thought-provoking. The book club is back with Ministry for the Future | Bryan Alexander

The plot focuses on a new United Nations agency tasked with addressing the problem, and how they proceed.Β  A counterpoint character is an aid workers who survives a horrible disaster and tries to figure out how to live afterwards. It’s a rich, ambitious, and frankly optimistic book, and might be just what we need now.Β 

Finished reading: Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson πŸ“š Definitely 5 ⭐. The best book I’ve read in a while and one that gives me some hope for the future of our planet amidst climate change. It’s speculative fiction and I’m sure there’s a bunch of unrealistic enthusiasm for things like blockchain and regenerative agriculture, but this is an educational read and a fine novel. Everyone should read this book.

Finished reading: Breaking Bread with the Dead by Alan Jacobs πŸ“šI think my favorite thing about this book (thank you @ayjay) is the permission it gives to read old books. If the book is no longer politically correct, that’s OK, accept it and use that for insight into the time when it was written. @ayjay is much more nuanced and this book is definitely worth reading.

Currently reading: Ready Player One by Ernest Cline πŸ“š

Finished reading: A Song for a New Day by Sarah Pinsker πŸ“š I enjoyed this novel a lot, even though it’s about a post-pandemic world. It was written pre-COVID and she got an amazing number of details correct. As an occasional sound tech and concert producer myself, I loved the little snippets about live sound production.

Currently reading: White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo πŸ“š

Finished reading: The Mermaid, the Witch and the Sea by Maggie Tokuda-Hall πŸ“šAnother one that I quit reading, it just wasn’t doing it for me.

Currently reading: The Mermaid, the Witch, and the Sea by Maggie Tokuda-Hall πŸ“š

Finished reading: The Guest Book by Sarah Blake πŸ“š I loved this book. It’s a good story, with interesting and unexpected plot twists. It’s also a fine history of the changing role of (admittedly, white well-to-do) women over the past 100 years.

Currently reading: A Song for a New Day by Sarah Pinsker πŸ“š

Currently reading: Breaking Bread with the Dead: A Reader’s Guide to a More Tranquil Mind by Alan Jacobs πŸ“š

Currently reading: Ulysses by James Joyce πŸ“š

Finished reading: David Copperfield by Charles Dickens πŸ“š

Finished reading: Inland by Tea Obreht πŸ“š I didn’t love it, mostly because I liked none of the characters, except perhaps Burke the camel.

Currently reading: The Guest Book by Sarah Blake πŸ“š

Currently reading: David Copperfield by Charles Dickens πŸ“š

Finished reading: Seabiscuit: An American Legend by Laura Hillenbrand πŸ“šA cracking good read. Interesting insights into the world my parents grew up in - 1930s and 1940s America (they had nothing to do with horses!).

Currently reading: Seabiscuit: An American Legend by Laura Hillenbrand πŸ“š

Currently reading: Inland by TΓ©a Obreht πŸ“š

Finished reading: Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel πŸ“š Turns out this is a novel about surviving a pandemic, one which kills 99% of the world’s population. The tension is that I think the author believes the world would be a better place. It is good storytelling.