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Whom@bookwyrm.social

Joined 11 months, 2 weeks ago

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Franny and Zooey (1999, Tandem Library) 4 stars

Meet Franny and her younger brother, Zooey, in two Salinger stories.

I don't like titles for reviews what do I put here

4 stars

These are the kind of mental circles one goes in when they don't appreciate the hard-earned simple wisdom of the saccharine and sentimental. I say that not to dismiss what's here but just to make clear that I have a fundamental disconnect with the struggle described, especially as someone whose religious interest has never been particularly theistic. I moved past the feeling that people are self-interested fakes with no real insight into the world young enough that I never really tried to build intellectual and spiritual supports around that feeling, yknow what I mean? If there was one thing being a young kid exposed to 4chan early actually did for me, it was shuffling me through that stage much earlier than I would have otherwise.

That said, I really love the alternate approach to that mindset we get. Rather than exploring what drives the emotions which create its immature form …

American Psycho 4 stars

American Psycho is a novel by Bret Easton Ellis, published in 1991. The story is …

jesus

3 stars

disdain for the rich and empty. brands, GQ, unrelenting violence, unreality, misogyny, brands, designer, restaurant, more expensive restaurant, donald trump, brands, hair, cocaine, huey lewis and the news, thinner, bulkier, taller, hatred, hatred, aimless empty prejudice, everything empty even violence

Ultimately successful in its aims as a hatred-induced breakdown of a particular kind of insufferable person but so unbearably gruesome that my honest feelings are mostly just disgust. I appreciate its rage but want nothing to do with the result. This has messed with my dreams on several separate days.

Wise blood. (Paperback, 1962, Farrar, Straus and Cudahy) 3 stars

Wise Blood, Flannery O'Connor's astonishing and haunting first novel, is a classic of twentieth-century literature. …

I wish I could connect

3 stars

Much as I love O'Connor, I always felt like the short stories that Wise Blood was made up of were so loose and dissociative that they fall through my fingers, and reading their modified forms strung together doesn't really change that. Her portrayal of the south is as compellingly rancid and distant as ever. Everyone talks past each other, rambling in ways that only have meaning to themselves. They're all dirty, hell-bound, and know it. This is of course O'Connor's strength, but I have a harder time connecting with her earlier work which feels so directionless in comparison to the much more pointed The Violent Bear It Away.

Ultimately I think faith in any real sense is too foreign to me for any of this to really strike a chord.

Astrotopia (2022, University of Chicago Press) 4 stars

More than just "Musk bad lol" (but also Musk is bad lol)

4 stars

Both a fantastic history of how the tropes and imperial intent of Christianity at its worst made its way to a bunch of atheist science nerds looking to claim the stars and a thorough straightforward critique of today's spacefaring corporations and the way the US government paved the way for privatizing what was supposed to be the "common heritage of mankind" ...oh, and dissecting what the "common heritage of mankind" even meant in the first place. While most of what I have to say about Astrotopia is critical, I want to make it clear that I think this is an excellent read that is especially useful for environmentalist and social justice-minded lefties like me who still think space is pretty neat despite our distaste for SpaceX or NASA or the Space Force and don't know how to reconcile the conflicts that brings.

My criticisms are minor frustrations over things of …

Dinosaurs Rediscovered (Hardcover, 2019, Thames & Hudson) 4 stars

Anchiornis huxleyi is really cute

4 stars

Chances are that unless you're extremely young, the models of dinosaurs you see nowadays are very different from the ones you grew up with. There's a lot of us who are vaguely aware of these more modern images of dinosaurs with lots of colorful feathers, but haven't really looked into it beyond that, and this book is fantastic for catching us up on what we missed.

What makes Dinosaurs Rediscovered stand out is that it's not content to just tell you all the cool new stuff we know and leave it at that. No, this is a lot more concerned with the Hows, because our drastically different modern understanding of dinosaurs compared to the big lumbering lizards of old is a result of massive changes in the practice of paleontology and its related fields. The 20th century saw the transformation of paleontology as a matter of collectors making educated guesses …