User Profile

Literally a Blue Cup

literallyyy@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 4 months ago

This link opens in a pop-up window

Literally a Blue Cup's books

View all books

User Activity

Private Government (2019, Princeton University Press) 5 stars

Why our workplaces are authoritarian private governments--and why we can't see it

One in four …

Pre-Industrial Egalitarians + Industrial Revolution = Current System

5 stars

Short at 144 pages + references, this is an essay + critical reactions + reactions to the reactions. A good audience would be anyone with a job with interest in history, economics, and labor. The pre-industrial egalitarian ideals and philosophy meeting the industrial revolution and the invention of the firm are covered quite a bit.

It would be interesting to compare the history and thought presented in this book with what happened in other regions that were not colonized by the UK.

Platform Capitalism (Paperback, 2016, Polity) 4 stars

What unites Google and Facebook, Apple and Microsoft, Siemens and GE, Uber and Airbnb? Across …

Platforms as part of the ecosystem of capital

4 stars

Thought this was going to be a book more about platforms than about economics, but it leaned more on the side of economics.

Short review of the modern internet age (which really isn't so long) and how platforms have grown, prospered, and become more efficient since the 90s.

README.txt (Hardcover, 2021, Farrar, Straus and Giroux) 4 stars

An intimate, revealing memoir from one of the most important activists of our time.

While …

warts-and-all biography of a complicated figure, must-read for any 90s kid

4 stars

A clear-eyed, sometimes painfully straightforward accounting of Chealsea Mannings life. Although everyone rewrites their past, you can feel the goal was to not hagiographise but rather an honest-as-possible accounting of the impacts of Don't Ask Don't Tell, the war on terror, and Mannings disillusion with the war.

The Fifth Sacred Thing (1993, Bantam Books) 4 stars

An epic tale of freedom and slavery, love and war, and the potential futures of …

Gripping eco-utopian, pagan

4 stars

Pros: * Eco-utopians fighting (nonviolently of course) against Gilead in a Mad Max style post-apocalyptic world, it's a cliche, but done well. * Not a starry-eyed communist utopia where everyone gets along, the author makes sure to bring up that not everyone agrees with decisions made by community, and these decisions are hard in times of conflict * Many threaded story lets reader see different points of view

Cons: * There are so many sex scenes that it makes the pacing of the book confusing. It's like a lot of the characters are bonobos. The scenes aren't bodice-ripper style or particularly uncomfortable, there's just a lot of them * Lots of chi'i and accupressure (this might be a pro to some)

The Withdrawal (Hardcover, 2022, The New Press) 4 stars

A short review of negative US interactions with various countries

4 stars

Being a small book, and based on conversations, it didn't get into great detail, but does offer a launch point for exploring perspectives on the other side of US intervention.

4 stars because it was like a rehash / continuation of an existing conversation - not a bad thing but since ratings are subjective it doesn't matter.

Parable of the Sower (Paperback, 2000, Warner Books) 4 stars

In 2025, with the world descending into madness and anarchy, one woman begins a fateful …

The government is useless and we're all gonna get raped and our houses burned down

4 stars

Both right-wing and left-wing preppers will find something for them in this book. Written from the POV of a teenager in a life-or-death situation, the book is pretty much on survival mode the entire time, with the accompanying lack of nuance and fear permeating throughout. Still, seems like an important and balanced read.

The Conquest Of Bread (Paperback, 2007, Kessinger Publishing, LLC) 5 stars

Peter Kropotkin's "The Conquest of Bread", along with his "Fields Factories and Workshops" was the …

Classic imagining of a future that sorta came true?

5 stars

First published in 1906, a lot of the things Kropotkin imagined (soon we will all have electricity! And food delivery!) actually came to pass, and a lot of the social issues (child labor) have been mitigated, in the west. Many of his suggestions / predictions did not come to pass (we still have money). Very interesting to review what the pressing issues of his day, and feel some degree of hope that although we have our own problems, we have less cases of 8 year olds out-competing their parents in the workplace.

The confidence game (2016) 4 stars

Explores the psyches, motives, and methods of con artists to reveal why they are consistently …

Great Read, Quite Dense

4 stars

Like a pound cake of cons, this is a psychology-oriented review of cons and swindles. Very dense with many examples, some of which are a bit hard to keep track of since con-people have various aliases. Generally well-written, focuses on "classic" cons (ponzi schemes, fortune tellers) as opposed to religious cons/cults.