Great collection
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Mostly reading sci-fi, fantasy, and comics/graphic novels, but occasionally some other stuff too.
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2025 Reading Goal
80% complete! Barbarius has read 32 of 40 books.
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Barbarius finished reading Nightfall and Other Stories by Isaac Asimov
Barbarius wants to read Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality by John Boswell

Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality by John Boswell
John Boswell's National Book Award-winning study of the history of attitudes toward homosexuality in the early Christian West was a …
Barbarius started reading Nightfall and Other Stories by Isaac Asimov
Barbarius reviewed Dune : the Battle of Corrin by Kevin J. Anderson
Just a giant list of everything's origins, and almost none of them satisfying.
2 stars
This is more about the entire trilogy, rather than this one book.
I wanted to read this series because I wanted a story about how the thinking machine rose up and took over, and how the human race dealt with that and the subsequent aftermath. Instead the series begins centuries after the thinking machines have conquered everything, and little exposition is given to explain how it all occured. What this series actually is is nothing more than a fan service crawl through the origin of everything and anything that the authors could think of from the original book. The real icing on the cake though is how dull and, honestly, rubbish most of the origin stories are, and they get worse the further through the series you get. (seriously, by the end it would have been just as convincing to say "a wizard did it")
If you want a story …
This is more about the entire trilogy, rather than this one book.
I wanted to read this series because I wanted a story about how the thinking machine rose up and took over, and how the human race dealt with that and the subsequent aftermath. Instead the series begins centuries after the thinking machines have conquered everything, and little exposition is given to explain how it all occured. What this series actually is is nothing more than a fan service crawl through the origin of everything and anything that the authors could think of from the original book. The real icing on the cake though is how dull and, honestly, rubbish most of the origin stories are, and they get worse the further through the series you get. (seriously, by the end it would have been just as convincing to say "a wizard did it")
If you want a story about the rise and fall of the thinking machines: don't read this series. If you want a story about the origins of everything you can think of from the original book: also don't read this series, just use your imagination, it'll probably be better.
Barbarius finished reading Dune : the Battle of Corrin by Kevin J. Anderson
"When did you become such a hawk, Supreme Bashar?..." ... "...Yes, I have become a hawk." He clapped his hand on Abulurd's shoulder. "From now on the hawk will be my symbol. It will always remind me of my duty."
— Dune : the Battle of Corrin by Kevin J. Anderson, Brian Herbert (Page 567)
ARE YOU FOR REAL!? First, on your giant bucket list of everything that MUST originate in this trilogy, you really thought it was important to explain why Atreides has a hawk symbol. And second, THIS is what you came up with? Was this contributed by two kids in a creative writing class? Honestly...
Barbarius rated Earthsea: The First Four Books: 5 stars

Earthsea: The First Four Books by Ursula K. Le Guin
A boy grows to manhood while attempting to subdue the evil he unleashed on the world as an apprentice to …
Barbarius reviewed Bored and Brilliant by Manoush Zomorodi
Good, but a bit long. The neuroscience was quite interesting!
4 stars
I appreciate the irony of stating that a sub-200-page book is long, but what I mean by that is that it felt a bit like there was a page number that was required to be reached; there is a lot of unnecessary repetition, or drawing out of a point that could have been achieved with half as many paragraphs.
That being said, I did enjoy reading the book. I remember listening about the original challenge in the author's podcast, and thinking it was interesting then. What was good about the book, however, is the interviews she made with academics and researchers about what technology is doing to us on a social and (more interestingly) neurological level. It was far more interesting to me to read about the quantifiable evidence gathered from research and experimentation, rather than the anecdotal stories.
Ultimately, the book gets you to think about your relationship with …
I appreciate the irony of stating that a sub-200-page book is long, but what I mean by that is that it felt a bit like there was a page number that was required to be reached; there is a lot of unnecessary repetition, or drawing out of a point that could have been achieved with half as many paragraphs.
That being said, I did enjoy reading the book. I remember listening about the original challenge in the author's podcast, and thinking it was interesting then. What was good about the book, however, is the interviews she made with academics and researchers about what technology is doing to us on a social and (more interestingly) neurological level. It was far more interesting to me to read about the quantifiable evidence gathered from research and experimentation, rather than the anecdotal stories.
Ultimately, the book gets you to think about your relationship with technology, not in a negative or positive way, but in a critical way. What relationship do you want to have with technology, and how does that compare with the relationship you actually have? I've been thinking about this a lot lately, due to the fact I have young kids right now, and the book really gives pause for thought about how and when phones should be used, not just within the home, but more broadly as well.
Barbarius finished reading Bored and Brilliant by Manoush Zomorodi

Bored and Brilliant by Manoush Zomorodi
vii, 192 pages ; 25 cm
Barbarius set a goal to read 12 books in 2024
True
4 stars
Basically, business as usual is sending us off a cliff to extinction, and the neoliberal capitalist elites are telling us everything is fine. The solution? Overthrow the government.
This very short book is heavy on its suggestions and implications, but nothing said in it is wrong... at all.
Barbarius reviewed Communist Manifesto by Friedrich Engels
Available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License: www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/communist-manifesto/
One of the most …
Still relevant
5 stars
It's incredible, and not, how little has changed in 175 years...
Barbarius finished reading Communist Manifesto by Friedrich Engels

Communist Manifesto by Friedrich Engels, Karl Marx
Available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License: www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/communist-manifesto/
One of the most influential political tracts ever published …