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Ika Makimaki

pezmico@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 day, 2 hours ago

342.53 ppm Tāmaki-makau-rau, Aotearoa. Ngāti Te Ata land.

This is the place for the books I read, I half-read and even I don't read but think about.

You've been warned.

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Ika Makimaki's books

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Slow Down (2024, Astra House) 5 stars

Why, in our affluent society, do so many people live in poverty, without access to …

Essential reading

5 stars

It has been a while since a book so accurately responded to my deepest worries. I had heard the name of Kohei Saito but never approached his writing before. This book is amazing, clear and easy to read but also profound and dare I say it, truly revolutionary. Saito is a Marxist scholar, and in this book he approaches the climate and environmental crisis through Marxism and proposes Degrowth Communism as the solution for human civilisation to survive. His argument is cogent. He starts out by debunking the myth of green growth and argues why capitalism is ill suited to respond to the needs of our time. He then writes how Marx himself had arrived to the idea of degrowth communism (although likely never actually called it that way) as he got older and his unpublished notes and research prove this evolution in his thought. The book closes by showing …

A Psalm for the Wild-Built (EBook, 2021, Tom Doherty Associates) 4 stars

It’s been centuries since the robots of Panga gained self-awareness and laid down their tools; …

A warm cuddle in a wicked scary world

5 stars

As other reviewers have already said: it is a truly gentle, hopeful, beautiful story about connection and self discovery and communication. It's got a post capitalist, solarpunk vibe of a world I'd love to inhabit, an appreciation for little pleasures and little deals, loveable characters, and it's also insightful and wise. Plus the main character rides a bicycle as their main form of transportation!

I now want to leave it all and become a wandering tea monk with a bike. That's how perfect this book is. Loved it.

Free to Learn (2015, Basic Books) 4 stars

A good introdution to alternative ideas about education.

4 stars

Parts of it feel already a bit dated. Specially the assumption of the jump from hunter/gatherers to agricultural societies assumed as a given and linear progression (this idea is heavily disputed in The Dawn of Everything, Graeber and Wengrow).

But overall a good overview and questioning of the educational structures we have built and subject our kids to. It proposes some clear actionable strategies to reinvent education and centre the children's experience and interests. Personally I found it to be a great tool in my family's journey into unschooling.

The God of Small Things (Hardcover, 1997, Random House) 4 stars

The year is 1969. In the state of Kerala, on the southernmost tip of India, …

Review of 'The God of Small Things' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Short but intense book, with lots to say about caste, class and family.
It was a powerful read but I honestly am not sure if I can say I liked it. It is disturbing and confronting. It is also extremely well structured, I will probably need to sit with it for a while.

Making Money (Discworld, #36; Moist Von Lipwig, #2) (2007) 5 stars

Review of 'Making money' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Great follow up to Going Postal, but not as enjoyable as the first one. In this one, the reformed thief/con man/scammer Moist Von Lipwig is put in charge of the Ankh-Morpork Bank.
It is an outrageous and sarcastic commentary on the financial systems and the very meaning of money in our own world. I have grown to love the character of Von Lipwig and the whole world of Discworld.
This instalment is one of the more "mature" ones in terms of content and themes. But it pulls off a stinging critique of our obsession with money and the power it conveys.

Teaching To Transgress (1994, Routledge) 5 stars

"After reading Teaching to Transgress I am once again struck by bell hooks's never-ending, unquiet …

Review of 'Teaching To Transgress' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Been wanting to read more material from Bell Hooks and got this on loan from the library. It is an outstanding view on education and intersectionality in the classroom. She makes it very clear how the complexities of power, class, gender, race and even language generate a dynamic environment that should not be ignored and assumed to be neutral in the classroom. She tells her own experiences as a student and a teacher and links them to the needs of nurturing young souls.
She also talks about colonisation and its legacy and the fact that the very language we use is a tool of oppression, that needs to be owned and wielded by the powerless to reclaim their very humanity. She sums it up and elaborates from this phrase from a poem by Adrienne Rich: “This is the oppressor’s language yet I need it to talk to you.”
Powerful thoughts …

Review of 'Raising the Resistance' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I am not quite the target audience for this book, but I still enjoyed it. It is a book for moms, it deals a lot with very feminine subjects, like pregnancy, body shaming, and being a woman in the world today. I do not have direct experience with any of that, but enjoyed learning about it and the more radical angles the book takes on anti-racism, feminism and progressive politics as applied to parenting.
It is very American centered and clearly inspired by the Trump period, which is fine but limits it's scope a little bit.
The other criticism I have is it also tends to feel a little bit naive in terms of the possibilities of electoral politics. And as often happens with American liberals, The rejection of Republicans pushes them to embrace Democrats and glorify figures like Hillary Clinton and Obama, giving them a blind spot to actually …

Going Postal (Paperback, 2005, HarperTorch) 5 stars

Suddenly, condemned arch-swindler Moist von Lipwig found himself with a noose around his neck and …

Review of 'Going Postal' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

One of my favourite Discworld books so far! It is funny as usual, but also incredibly deep and touching and smart and weirdly political as well. The golems have become complex characters, pondering freedom and happiness. The swindler must be good to keep up the facade of being good. The postal system faces technology and hackers are involved in its downfall that implies a rescue and rejuvenation of the system itself.
Definitely Terry Pratchett at his very best! Will be returning to this one for sure.