Kritikak eta Iruzkinak

Paul

Paul@books.theunseen.city

duela urte 1, 6 hilabete(e)an batu zen

I will read pretty much anything, although my preferences tend to veer towards Science Fiction (especially Space Opera) and Fantasy (especially Epic Fantasy).

You can also find me on Mastodon

Esteka hau laster-leiho batean zabalduko da

The Life-Changing Science of Detecting Bullshit (Hardcover, 2021, St. Martin's Press) 5 izar

Bullshit is the foundation of contaminated thinking and bad decisions that leads to health consequences, …

Critical Thinking 101

5 izar

We've all encountered bullshit and with this book, Petrocelli provides a very readable overview of what it his, why we tolerate far too much of it, some of the effects it can have and how we can counter it.

In doing so, he also provides a much needed reminder of the importance of critical thinking.

Even the appendix is worth a read.

Ministry for the Future (2020, Orbit) 3 izar

Established in 2025, the purpose of the new organization was simple: To advocate for the …

Strong ideas, weak execution

3 izar

There are a lot of ideas in this novel that do bear thinking about but the narrative, heavily reliant on a series of vignettes from the future, feels disjointed to the point that it keeps stumbling over itself. I do like the eventual optimism of the novel, but did find it a bit too reliant on hand-waving and buzzwords for me to really buy into it.

As a novel, The Ministry for the Future felt a lot like an exercise in wasted potential.

The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet (EBook, 2015, Hodder & Stoughton) 4 izar

Follow a motley crew on an exciting journey through space-and one adventurous young explorer who …

More soap opera than space opera

3 izar

Reading this feels a lot like watching a soap opera. It's very much a character driven story with the plot serving merely to prod the story along as and when needed. And the characters are an entertaining and likeable bunch of misfits, doing their job and surviving as best they can.

It's also worth noting that this is a really nice story. The characters have spent years learning to get along with each other and... they get along with each other. What tensions there are are relatively minor and never distract from the fact that these people are looking out for each other.

The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet is a very easy read and a solid debut from Becky Chambers.

(e)k Glyn Moody(r)en Walled culture kritika egin du

Walled culture (Paperback, 2022) 4 izar

Walled Culture is the first book providing a compact, non-technical history of digital copyright and …

Worth reading

3 izar

Walled Culture can be a bit heavy going at times, but Moody does do an excellent job of highlighting the many areas in which copyright as it's currently implemented does more harm than good.

It's certainly true that this is something for which much reform is badly needed. I remain unconvinced, however, that Moody's preference to completely abolish copyright would prove to be quite the panacea he suggests.

The fixed period (1993, Oxford University Press) 4 izar

My utopia is your dystopia

4 izar

Written in 1882, The Fixed Period does show it's age a bit. Not so much in the writing, but in the pace of the novel and some of the attitudes expressed. That said, the dialogue-heavy style does make for a very easy read.

What really makes the novel so readable, though, is the central idea: The attempt to build a dystopia from the point of view of the utopian trying to build it.

In this, Trollope very effectively, captures the core point that one person's utopia is a dystopia for many others.

A Very British Coup (Paperback, 2001, Politico's Publishing) 2 izar

Not enough development

2 izar

The cover of this book claims that the novel predicted the rise of Corbyn, which it doesn't. What it does do is speculate about a very left-wing Labour government coming to power and the reaction of the establishment.

It's all a bit conspiracy laden, but the plot moves along at a fair old clip, which is both good and bad. On one hand, the pacing makes for a very readable story but the downside is that neither the themes nor the characters are really developed.

(e)k C.J. Cherryh(r)en Invader kritika egin du

Invader (1996, DAW) 5 izar

The first book in C.J.Cherryh's eponymous series, Foreigner, begins an epic tale of the survivors …

A truly immense story

5 izar

That was superb. There is so much going on in this novel that I am still taking it in -- I'm sorely tempted to go back and read it again... But I also really want to know what happens in the next book

(e)k Franz Kafka(r)en The Trial kritika egin du

The Trial (Paperback, 2016, Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform) 2 izar

Byzantine and claustrophobic novel of a man arrested by the secret police and charged with …

Disappointing

2 izar

That was disappointing. Too dense, too random and K is such an annoyingly obnoxious character that, by the second chapter, I was wishing they'd just lock him up and throw away the key.

The story can be read as a warning against the banal bureaucracy ot totalitarianism, but these themes have been much better handled by subsequent writers.

(e)k Sheri S. Tepper(r)en Grass kritika egin du

Grass (Paperback, 1993, Spectra) 5 izar

Generations ago, humans fled to the cosmic anomaly known as Grass. But before humanity arrived, …

Superb

5 izar

That was absolutely superb!

It's very much a book about ideas, and the novel is packed with them. The environment, ecology, the conflict between religion and belief, the problem with perfection, and how humanity’s relationship to other species. It’s a novel that takes a bit of time to get into, but once you do, the pay-off is well worth it.

If you want a solid story that gives you plenty of food for thought, then I can’t recommend this highly enough. (less)

Two hundred and twenty-one Baker Streets (2014, Abaddon Books) 3 izar

This is Sherlock Holmes as you've never seen him before: as an architect in a …

Inevitably, a bit hit and miss

3 izar

This is an interesting collection of stories although, inevitably, there are some that I enjoyed more than others. Highlights for me included Kelly Hale’s Black Alice which shifts Sherlock Holmes to the Enlightenment and pits him against the parochial superstitions of seventeenth-century Worcestershire. This felt like a near-perfect setting for the great detective and I would loved to have seen more like this.

Then there was Kaaron Warren’s The Lantern Men which was very dark. If you can imagine Edgar Allen Poe having set a Sherlock Holmes story in Australia, then you have pretty much captured the feel of this story. Emma Newman’s A Woman’s Place imagines a near-future dystopia and explains — rather brilliantly — why he unflappable, ever-present Mrs. Hudson continues to put up with Holmes.

The Small World of 221B by Ian Edginton is an overtly strange story that I found myself enjoying a great deal more …