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Andrew Goldstone

agoldst@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 weeks, 3 days ago

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Lexical Sets for Actors (EBook, Ontario Open Library) 5 stars

Good (FOOT) fun (STRUT)

5 stars

I spend quite a bit of time thinking about the English sound and spelling systems, for...familial reasons. I went looking in Wikipedia's footnotes for an accessible account of Wells's Lexical Sets, and landed on this open-access textbook (ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub/lexicalsets/) which I then read with pleasure. It's a training manual for actors working on English accents, but the explanations of the vowels were so clear, and the information about various accents and their relationships so entertaining, that I simply read it for pleasure. Armstrong works hard to present the material without privileging any accent as a reference, which is a marvelous technique for defamiliarizing the vowel system and revealing some of the historical splits and mergers that I didn't know about in my own accent.

Changes (The Dresden Files, #12) (Hardcover, 2010, Roc/New American Library) 4 stars

Changes is the 12th book in The Dresden Files, Jim Butcher's continuing series about wizard …

Is that a shark I see going by underneath this car?

No rating

Have been gradually administering doses of this series to myself for quite a while now, spacing it out so as not to blunt the empty-calorie thrills too much. This one doesn't even make a token attempt at the detective half of "magical detective" and continues the drift towards a bog-standard apocalyptic confrontation, messianic hero, etc. Even some family romance thrown in (spoilers! but really, I'm not the one spoiling the fun here). The always chauvinist representation of women gets a bit more chauvinist, but the thing that really irked me was that Murphy's Aikido expertise is once again underlined and once again Butcher has not bothered to finish reading the wikipedia entry on Aikido; he seems to think it's a kind of karate. I can suspend my disbelief for vampires, "soulfire" magic, fairies (I'm sorry, Sidhe), etc. but hands off my niche martial art. These extremely serious and probing criticisms …

The Sources of Social Power (Hardcover, 2012, Cambridge University Press) No rating

The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggle and a bunch of other things too and sometimes not class struggle actually

No rating

Content warning Why there is no socialism in the USA, why World War I happened

totally normal beast

No rating

I really liked The Social Construction of What? and this sounded pretty neat. It was, but it was hard, certainly harder to follow than TSCOW. Like that book what is fun here is the teasing apart of normally bound-together strands (astronomy and measurement error, physiology and the "normal" state of organs, positivism and its social physics, etc. etc.). Hacking's historigraphic method, which is to focus mainly on exemplary but obscure 19th-century figures in European state data-collecting and their infights and grand schemes, is good for lots of laughs. And I got a clearer sense of the "state" in statistics: as Hacking memorably points out, statistics are typically collected by US about THEM: they, the workers, the poor, the peasantry, etc., need us, the enlightened administrators, to study them and assess what can and can't be done for them. This leads in one direction to the idea of the "average man" …

Love and Longing in Bombay (Paperback, 1998, Back Bay Books) No rating

From the acclaimed author of Red Earth and Pouring Rain, Five haunting stories that point …

Shrug

No rating

I picked this up because I'd heard the detective story ("Kama)" was a good one. It's all right, with an ambiguous non-conclusion it certainly doesn't earn. The other stories are in other genres, and there is a portentous running background motif about communal violence and partition, but I suspect there's less here than meets the eye. There is one very funny moment in "Artha."