Kritikak eta Iruzkinak

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coldwave@book.dansmonorage.blue

duela 2 urte, 4 hilabete(e)an batu zen

Esteka hau laster-leiho batean zabalduko da

(e)k Albert Camus(r)en The Stranger liburuaren kritika egin du

Albert Camus: The Stranger (2016) 5 izar

L'Étranger (French: [l‿e.tʁɑ̃.ʒe]) is a 1942 novella by French author Albert Camus. Its theme and …

don't care

Baloraziorik ez

I read this for French practice. It did do its job of being simple in language and short, while being a whole serious "classic" book for adults.

I'm not the type of person for philosophical debates. I know the answers and/or don't care. You shoot someone for no reason -> you go to jail so that you don't do it again. I don't have time for what exactly what might be wrong with this guy or whether he loves his mother.

But maybe I missed the point because I don't even speak French?

(e)k Becky Chambers(r)en A Closed and Common Orbit liburuaren kritika egin du (Wayfarers, #2)

Becky Chambers: A Closed and Common Orbit (Paperback, 2017, Hodder & Stoughton) 4 izar

Once, Lovelace had eyes and ears everywhere. She was a ship's artificial intelligence system - …

even better than previous

Baloraziorik ez

More feel-good scifi. (No spoilers:) It's Pepper backstory, and another minor character from A Long Way to a Small Angry Planet. I think this one benefits a lot from taking it slowly and focussing on just two characters.

Umberto Eco: Foucault's Pendulum (Paperback, 1997, Ballantine Books) Baloraziorik ez

En el año 2002, el estudio central de la Cadena SER se transformó en la …

unfortunately, too relevant

Baloraziorik ez

I feel like this book has had some bad luck by becoming increasingly true and relevant. Since conspiracy theories have proliferated this decade, we're all thoroughly familiar. Although this book was there first, if you've already had a read through everything on wikipedia and countless thinkpieces on the issue, this feels like more of the basics. What might have been obscure and exciting conspiracy theories, a mindblowing social milieu, and novel analysis when presented for the first time is just not so exciting anymore.
This is solidly a good book - its just that the other Eco novels are better. The ones set in the middle ages are more immersive, more imaginative, more vibrant. It also seems like Eco is taking this seriously instead of "just" having fun. There's an analytical and didactic feel at the heart of this novel, which I didn't like.

(e)k Samuel Greengard(r)en The internet of things liburuaren kritika egin du (The MIT Press essential knowledge series)

another contender for worst

Baloraziorik ez

The author loves his smart scale and will tell you about it in every chapter. He can't wait to have all of our faces tracked in the supermarket. Zero criticism, zero information. Seriously don't bother buying this.

bad

izar 1

The most badly-written work of non-fiction I have seen in a long time. If this is really a hit with Britain's top judges, as claimed on the back, I am seriously worried for their literacy. Nothing interesting in here. Serial killers bad and we are shocked. You'll find better stories on wikipedia.

Charles Palliser: The Quincunx Baloraziorik ez

The Quincunx (The Inheritance of John Huffam) is the epic first novel of Charles Palliser. …

This is great

Baloraziorik ez

A huge book, described as "eccentric" on the back blurb. A postmodern pastiche of Dickensian and gothic tropes, arranged in a fractal fivefold structure if one is looking for it. At the same time, it's pretty readable linearly as a story, without knowing any literary theory. It's brilliant how everything just feels slightly off. Every Dickensian storyline is played almost perfectly straight, but we just know it isn't meant that way because of the shape of the whole assembly and underlying hints. I guess this is postmodernism. As the author afterword says, as much about the cumulative effects of decades of austerity in the UK as the ostensible setting. The characters slowly descend from one terrible housing situation to worse, and now I'm permanently afraid of the modern equivalent. Somehow very dark and scary - about poverty, social conditions, and betrayal - below the apparent adventure-novel surface. Unlike the source …