My Reading List
From charlesreid1
This is a list of books that I have read or am in the process of reading.
You can also check out all of the highlights over the course of four years from my Kindle: My Kindle Clippings
2014
| Title | Author | Year | Started | Finished | Genre | Opinion
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| Methods of Logic | Willard Van Quine | 8/19/2014 | Non-Fiction | Picked this up from the dollar bin at Adobe Books.
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| The Death and Life of Great American Cities | Jane Jacobs | 1961 | June 2014 | ? | Non-Fiction |
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| Beginning NFC: Near Field Communication with Arduino, Android, and PhoneGap | Tom Iggoe et al | 2014 | 7/2014 | Meh | Non-Fiction |
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| Building Wireless Sensor Networks: with ZigBee, XBee, Arduino, and Processing | Robert Faludi | 2011 | 7/2014 | ? | Non-Fiction | This was one of the worst technical books I've read in a long time. While the technical descriptions were adequate, and the concepts were explained fairly clearly, the author interspersed extremely elementary concepts (as in, "This is what a computer network is") with concepts that assumed the user had very sophisticated programming knowledge. The result is a book that fails for both audiences.
While reading the book, I would try and imagine the target audience for some of the sections. One section would be written for a technically incompetent person who had just bought a Windows laptop at Best Buy, and would have to ask a tech-savy friend for help setting up a printer. The next section would be written for hackers with years of programming experience and a deep understanding of network protocol layers. The result was pages of boring garbage, mixed with a few sections of very useful information. To make matters worse, the author used some of the most banal examples imaginable. Here is a technology - wireless sensor networks - with enormous potential for interesting applications - in science, engineering, business, social studies, robotics, you name it. And yet, what example does the author use to explain the technology? A "romantic light sensor," for a hypothetical awkward male nerd stereotype. Umm, what? This is idiotic on so many levels, I don't even know where to begin. Is this what O'Reilly has been reduced to? Books inflated with pathetic applications that exclude everyone but its niche audience of techies and brogrammers? It would take literally zero effort to improve on the author's complete and utter lack of creative examples. Other than that, though, the book was pretty useful.
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| Ripley Under Ground | Patricia Highsmith | 6/2014 | 6/2014 | Fiction |
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| Up in the Old Hotel | Joseph Mitchell | 6/2014 | 7/2014 | Non-Fiction |
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| San Francisco's Mission District (Images of America Series) | Bernadette C. Hooper | 6/2014 | 6/2014 | Non-FIction |
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| The Exploration of the Colorado River and Its Canyons | John Wesley Powell | 5/2014 | 6/2014 | Non-Fiction |
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| Wars of Watergate | Stanley Kutler | 3/29/2014 | Non-Fiction | Re-reading. See Wars of Watergate page for a book summary and quotes.
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| Legacy of Ashes: A History of the CIA | Tim Wiener | 2008 | March 2014 | 3/29/2014 | Non-Fiction |
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| The Sword of Welleran and Other Stories | Lord Dunsany | 1908 | March 2014 | Fiction |
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| Fifty One Tales | Lord Dunsany | 1915 | March 2014 | Fiction | Wow. These stories are pretty mind-blowing; more like poems. Short, succinct. The influence of Dunsany on Lovecraft is immediately obvious from reading these stories, and those influences were some of the reasons I most liked Lovecraft. So Dunsany was an excellent find.
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| Cuba Since the Revolution of 1959: A Critical Assessment | Samuel Farber | 2012 | February 2014 | March 2014 | Non-Fiction |
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2013
| Title | Author | Year | Started | Finished | Genre | Opinion |
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| The Friends of Eddie Coyle | George Higgins | 1970 | 12/17/2013 | 12/21/2013 | Fiction | Re-reading
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| Cuba: What Everyone Needs to Know | Julia Sweig | 2009 | December 2013 | January 2014 | Non-Fiction | A great book, despite its format.
The good: Sweig gives a very comprehensive treatment of the current state of things in Cuba - the book actually lives up to its title. There were many topics covered that I had simply not thought about before, and whole periods of Cuban history that I had never heard of. Given the fact that Cuba's role in U.S. history is largely marginalized in U.S. schools and colleges, this book provides a lot of important information that simply isn't communicated to everyday people. The bad: The book is written as a series of questions and answers, which is cute and pithy for the first chapter, but gets really old, really fast. The book felt like an endless FAQ. I had a really hard time finishing it. Read it anyway.
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| Watergate: The Hidden History | Lamar Waldron | 2012 | October 2013 | March 2014 | Non-Fiction | The book was a deluge of interesting information. Waldron does a good job of tying together topics that are seemingly related but whose connections aren't made clear in other books. This was a book where, almost every chapter, I found myself going, "Oh, that's why this happened that way."
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| Roughing It | Mark Twain | 12/14/2013 | Non-Fiction |
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| The Turn of the Screw | William James | 1898 | 12/8/13 | 12/9/13 | Fiction | So, so, so creepy. See essay Unreliable Narrators for more thoughts on this novella.
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| The Decameron | Giovanni Boccaccio | 1350-ish | December 2013 | ? | Fiction | For a pre-Renaissance Medieval book of stories, written at the time of the Black Plague, this book is surprisingly dirty, perverted, irreverent, and anti-religious; there are even some fart jokes. Gotta love those Italians.
Originally read/learned of this book from a New Yorker book review.
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| Collected Works of Edgar Allen Poe | Edgar Allen Poe | 19th century | December 2013 | Fiction | Inspired by a discussion of "The Cask of Amontillado," a delicious revenge story, this led into re-reading all the good Poe classics, plus reading some short stories I've always passed over (in favor of the ones I know will be sufficiently scary, insane, and/or violent).
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| Dracula | Bram Stoker | 1897 | 12/1/2013 | 12/4/2013 | Fiction | I started reading this because I saw someone sitting on a park bench reading Dracula, and I thought to myself, it's high time I re-read a good monsters and vampires book.
The book is wordy, to an absurd degree (as many gothic romantic horror novels are), so you have to be dedicated to make it through the book. But several parts have some pretty delicious language.
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| The Years of Rice and Salt | Kim Stanley Robinson | 2002 | 11/21/2013 | Meh | Fiction | While I enjoyed the Mars trilogy, and while I was highly impressed with the premise and opening of the book, I felt like, by Book 6 (of 10), the book lost some of its punch, and I lost steam in reading through it. (Hence, why I dropped it for several days in favor of reading Dracula). There are some really fantastic descriptions of alternate-history great scientists, in particular Book 4 (The Alchemist); but overall, I didn't feel as though the author accomplished what some said he accomplished, namely, "explor[ing] the way history is made and discuss[ing] ideas on the evolution of history and the purpose of civilization" [1]. To the contrary, I felt that the perspective of the characters was too microscopic for me to understand, (a) how the author thinks sweeping arcs of history are shaped by individuals, or (b) what those sweeping arcs actually were. I had to do a lot of cross-comparison between maps to try and uncover what exactly was going on (this page helped a lot). Ultimately, I think the author should have either limited the scope of his novel to a shorter time span (2000 years is a hell of a lot to cover in a single novel, leading to a lot of gaps in coverage) or expanded the breadth of the writing, to be multiple volumes. This would have allowed better exploration of the big-picture topics. The author tended to get bogged down in microscopic dramas that didn't always advance the story, so although he did tell engrossing stories and moved them along quite rapidly, he would have benefitted by giving himself more room to stretch out - with a longer novel, or with a shorter timespan. |
| The Brothers: John Foster Dulles, Allen Dulles, and Their Secret World War | Stephen Kinzer | 2013 | 11/5/2013 | 11/20/2013 | Non-Fiction |
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| The Drowned World | J G Ballard | 1962 | September 2013 | October 2013 | Fiction |
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| Bleeding Edge | Thomas Pynchon | 2012 | September 2013 | Meh | Fiction | |
| Paintwork | Tim Maughan | 2011 | September 2013 | September 2013 | Fiction |
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| Red Plenty | Francis Spufford | 2012 | August 2013 | September 2013 | Fiction |
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| Halting State | Charles Stoss | 2007 | July 2013 | July 2013 | Fiction | A good pulp cyberpunk novel. The central technology was a Google Glass-like augmented reality. It was interesting to see how some of the ideas were implemented. Unfortunately, the story took a long time to develop, so that the bulk of the really interesting action didn't begin until about 75% of the way through the book. The story also had a pretty sappy back-story. It was a quick read, interesting, and good, but I'm not sure I would read more of this author's books.
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| Infinite Jest | David Foster Wallace | ? | Meh | Fiction | In an interview with To The Best of Our Knowledge, DFW said he didn't want this book to be the kind of book that the reader wants to throw at the wall after 100 pages. But 100 pages in, I wanted to throw the book at the wall. The pace is slow, and while it is sprinkled with DFW's signature hilarious descriptions, the story itself is empty and boring; everything moves at a snail pace; you're left wondering when something will finally happen. 200 pages in, you are suffering and ready to give up.
I genuinely wanted to enjoy and finish this book. But it has been nearly two years since I began it, and every time I try to pick it up and get further with it, I end up putting it back down after 20 or 30 pages. It is simply not worth it. I have given up trying. | |
| On China | Henry Kissinger | 2011 | July 2013 | ? | Non-Fiction | Great, sweeping history of the country. Much more macroscopic and broad-brushed than Stanley Kurnow's Vietnam. Kurnow's book was very microscopic, relying a lot on personal experiences that were widely-spaced and journalistic. But it was intended to cover the entire history of the country. Kissinger, being involved with dealings with the Chinese government at a very high level, and for an extended period of time, got to know them intimately, and so really has the optimal perspective for the type of book he's trying to write.
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| A Vast Machine: Computer Models, Climate Data, and the Politics of Global Warming | Paul Edwards | 2010 | June 2013 | June 2013 | Non-Fiction |
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| Room | Emma Eonaghue | 6/9/2013 | Meh | Fiction | Read for the Bay Area Bookworms Bookclub.
This book SUUUUUUUUUCKS
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| River of Shadows: Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West | Rebecca Solnit | 2004 | 6/6/2013 | ? | Non-Fiction | Read for the Tech Bookclub.
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| The 13.5 Lives of Captain Bluebear | Walter Moers | 2006 | 5/8/2013 | ? | Fiction | You can't go wrong by starting a book with miniature pirates who are born with eye-patches and get pretend-drunk...
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| Nonlinear Mathematics | Saaty and Bram | June 2013 | ? | Non-Fiction/Technical |
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| Selected Essays | Montaigne | June 2013 | ? | Non-Fiction |
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| Catalytic Chemistry | Bruce Gates | June 2013 | ? | Non-Fiction/Technical |
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| Oil! | Upton Sinclair | 1927 | 5/24/2013 | 5/30/2013 | Fiction |
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| The Plague | Albert Camus | 1947 | 5/2013 | 5/24/2013 | Fiction | A disturbing book, much like his book The Stranger. While reading this book, I stagnated a bit, as the bulk of the book is spent on somewhat drawn-out and unpleasant descriptions
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| Conversations with William Burroughs | William Burroughs & various others | 2000 | 5/2013 | 5/30/2013 | Non-Fiction | Fantastic read. I felt like this book really helped make Burroughs more accessible. Unfortunately, Burroughs' work is a complete enigma; it is incomprehensible and unapproachable. But reading what Burroughs had to say, not just about his own work but about his philosophy and world-view, really helped. He's essentially communicating some of the key ideas and themes in his work. In addition to all of that, he's got some really fantastic quotes.
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| The Great Shark Hunt | Hunter S. Thompson | 5/2013 | ? | Fiction/Non-Fiction | Always a fantastic read... I try to read the Kentucky Derby piece, at the very least, whenever Derby season rolls around...
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| In Sputnik's Shadow | Zuoyue Wang | April 2013 | ? | Non-Fiction |
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(Job change. Lots of stress. Not much reading.)
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| Mark Twain's San Francisco | Mark Twain, Ed. by ___ | 1863-1866 | 3/25/2013 | 4/2013 | Fiction and Non-Fiction |
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| San Francisco Noir | (Various) | 3/24/2013 | Meh | Fiction | A rather awful collection of mostly uninteresting stories, this anthology purports to be in the noir genre, and to tell stories of memories of a sense of place, which sounds promising. Given San Francisco's rather concentrated geography, there's plenty of potential in a series like this. But, alas, both the editor and the authors of the various pieces repeatedly stumble, failing to live up to promises, succeeding only in presenting a fractal view of memories of a bunch of mistakes and tragedies, and the city ends up fading into the backdrop, barely noticeable in the ruinous messes that play out (or, don't) in each story. | |
| Blindness | Jose Saramago | 3/21/2013 | Meh | Fiction | Could not finish. Moved very slowly. Writing style seemed deliberately obfuscatory, which was irritating. The storyline was moving slowly, and even when it was moving, I didn't care that much about what was happening -- mainly because I did not empathize with the (rather wooden) characters. Some books can grab your attention and have you best friends with a character a mere two or three paragraphs into a story or book. This book, though, was the opposite -- as mentioned before, wooden characters, forced dialogue, and an air of confusion and superficiality. WInning the Nobel Prize certainly doesn't make your books any more readable, or make your books matter a single bit more to its readers. | |
| The Friends of Eddy Coyle | George Higgins | 3/18/2013 | 3/20/2013 | Fiction |
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| Advise and Consent | Allen Drury | 1960 | 3/2/2013 | 3/17/2013 | Fiction |
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| Right Ho, Jeeves! | P.G. Wodehouse | 3/1/2013 | 3/2/2013 | Fiction |
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| Lyndon Johnson: Path to Power | Robert Caro | 1985 | 3/1/2013 | Non-Fiction |
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| Forty Signs of Rain | Kim Stanely Robinson | 1/30/2013 | 2/2/2013 | Fiction |
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| The Great Gatsby | F. Scott Fitzgerald | 1925 | 1/25/2013 | 1/25/2013 | Fiction |
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| Starship Troopers | Robert Heinlein | 1959 | 1/18/2013 | 1/26/2013 | Fiction | Listened to this in an audiobook format. It was good for a long drive. The main content of the book is basic training, which provides the author an interesting mechanism through which to present a lot of his ideas/material in a "classroom" or training format. It also did a good job of highlighting the modern military and its many parallels with militaries of the past, the long line of tradition, the way the narrator would alternatively take for granted, and claim how little he knew about, different types of information. Also got me thinking about how Presidents will be viewed from (presumably) a very long historical telescope, much like Roman emperors...
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| Best Travel Writing 2007 | (Various) | 1/7/2013 | 1/30/2013 | Non-Fiction |
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| Dune | Frank Herbert | 1963 | 1/6/2013 | 1/10/2013 | Science Fiction | Dune has some really lucid descriptions, is wildly imaginative, and is sprawling in its scope. The book also has many layers, and many perspectives can be taken on what kinds of messages and lessons Herbert is sharing.
Strongly recommend reading Brian Herbert's afterword while you are reading the book. I read it about a third of the way through the book, and it really enhanced my enjoyment of it and gave me some cues of things to look for that I would have otherwise missed.
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| Legacy of Ashes: A History of the CIA | Tim Weiner | 12/26/2012 | 1/25/2013 | Non-Fiction |
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2012
| Title | Author | Year | Started | Finished | Genre | Opinion |
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| Heavy Weather | Bruce Sterling | 1994 | 12/21/2012 | Meh | Fiction | |
| Zone One | Colson Whitehead | 12/22/2012 | 12/23/2012 | Fiction |
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| Soul Music | Terry Pratchett | December 2012 | December 2012 | Fiction |
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| Vietnam | Stanley Karnow | 11/13/2012 | 12/27/2012 | Non-Fiction | An excellent, sprawling, comprehensive narrative that covers, not just the Vietnam War, but what is truly the proper context of the Vietnam War, namely the entire history of Vietnam, stretching back to pre-Common Era times, when Vietnam was in conflict with China. Karnow does an excellent job of tracing important threads from chapter to chapter, showing the cause-and-effect cascade that led to the Vietnam War, and the effect it had on the country afterwards.
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| Revolutionary Road | Richard Yates | 11/12/2012 | 11/13/2012 | Fiction | Absolutely haunting book. I couldn't get the book out of my mind. Made me realize that, just as in dreams we sometimes transition between first and third person seamlessly, so too do we do this in fiction, sometimes getting so engrossed in the story that we feel like we are the main character, experiencing everything ourselves, firsthand. This is how memories and books read can sometimes become jumbled...
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| London Fields | Martin Amis | November 2012 | Meh | Fiction | Starts really... really... really slowly. | |
| The Spy Who Came In From The Cold | John Le Carre | 11/6/2012 | 11/8/2012 | Fiction | A pretty good spy novel, and a fast read.
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| Hitch 22 | Christopher Hitchens | 10/1/2012 | 12/2012 | Non-Fiction | Not what I was expecting, but good nonetheless. Great prose and writing style. Lots of good literary references dropped in here and there. Great way to find out about new authors and books.
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| Taming the Bicycle: Essays, Stories, and Sketches | Mark Twain | ? | October 2012 | ? | Fiction/Non-Ficton | Hilarious.
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| Electronic Noses | Julian Gardner and Philip Bartlett | 1999 | 08/10/2012 | ? | Non-Fiction | Extremely interesting scientific treatment of smell. Comprehensive coverage of the influence of chemistry and molecule shape, biological process, electronic synthesis of smell, and the many applications of electronic noses and smelling.
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| Viking Portable Marx | Karl Marx | August 2011 | August 2011 | Non-Fiction | Reading an anthology of Marx's work, rather than a single work like Capital, gives a much better comprehensive portrait of Marx as a man and as a thinker. This seems really important, given some of the ideological shifts that occurred in his life, and is also important for putting his work into the context of who he was as a person.
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| Their Eyes Were Watching God | Zora Neal Hurston | 06/28/2012 | 07/04/2012 | Fiction |
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| Outliers | Malcom Gladwell | June 2012 | June 2012 | Non-Fiction | Excellent. Lots of good food for thought. 10,000 hour rule: to master anything, you need 10,000 hours of practice.
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(Lost track of reading for a while, but was mostly reading The Economist, Foreign Affairs, and Lapham's Quarterly, as well as the occasional New Yorker.)
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| Collected Stories of Philip Dick | Philip Dick | ? | ? | Fiction |
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| Blood Meridian | Cormac McCarthy | April 2012 | June 2012 | Fiction |
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| The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | April 2012 | April 2012 | Fiction |
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| Ubik | Philip Dick | March 2012 | March 2012 | Fiction | Damn crazy. Like so much of Dick's work, deals with some mind-blowing concepts - like being dead but still interacting with people, or realizing that what you thought was reality turned out to be a simulation (ontological uncertainty)... was inspired to read this by To The Best of Our Knowledge and their show on P. K. Dick, and their interview with Umberto Rossi, discussing this particular novel and its creepiness.
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| Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire | William Gibbon | March 2012 | ? | Non-Fiction |
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| Reaper Man | Terry Pratchett | March 2012 | March 2012 | Fiction | Excellent!
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| My Great American Unhappiness | Dean Bakopoulos | 03/03/2012 | 03/03/2012 | Fiction | Wow. A narrator who becomes harder and harder to like as the novel goes on. I couldn't stop reading this fascinating picture of a man whose life becomes a slow-motion train wreck. The author pulls off (really well) a slimy and unpleasant person. One word... Schaudenfraude.
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| The Trial | Franz Kafka | February 2012 | February 2012 | Fiction |
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| Consider the Lobster | David Foster Wallace | 02/01/2012 | 02/03/2012 | Non-Fiction | The title essay was outstanding. The imagery and sensory picture Wallace paints is so unique it's unforgettable. I like how he brings up this really awkward question and then cuts the essay off without giving you an easy way out - like someone handing you a grenade, and pulling the pin as they walk away.
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| Stiff: The Curious Lives of Cadavers | Mary Roach | 02/16/2012 | 02/19/2012 | Non-Fiction | (Pittsburgh trip)
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| Infinite Jest | David Foster Wallace | February 2012 | Meh | Fiction | Really, really slow. Wallace said in an interview that he didn't want the book to be so dense that the reader wants to throw it at the wall after 100 pages. I wanted to throw it at the wall after 100 pages. | |
| Equal Rites | Terry Pratchett | February 2012 | February 2012 | Fiction |
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| Beyond Good and Evil | January 2012 | February 2012 (re-reading is ongoing) | Non-Fiction | Like anything by Nietzsche, this isn't a sit-down-and-read-it-cover-to-cover book. I got through a large chunk of it, and thoroughly enjoyed it. Having thought more about the philosophy of science, some of the themes Nietzsche addresses really resonated with me. There were parts I had read before, and hadn't really understood or fully appreciated, that now, on re-reading, were much more powerful.
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| Snow Crash | Neal Stephenson | January 2012 | February 2012 | Fiction | One of the most engaging opening chapters I've ever read.
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| The Best Short Stories 1992 | Robert Stone (editor) | December 2011 | January 2012 | Fiction |
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| Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep | December 2011 | January 2012 | Science Fiction |
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| How Rome Fell | Adrian Goldsworthy | December 2011 | January 2012 |
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2011
| Title | Author | Year | Started | Finished | Genre | Opinion |
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| Blue Mars | Kim Stanley Robinson | December 2011 | December 2011 | Science Fiction |
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| Green Mars | Kim Stanley Robinson | November 2011 | November 2011 | Fiction |
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| Red Mars | Kim Stanley Robinson | October/November 2011 | November 2011 | Fiction |
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| The Nick Adams Stories | Ernest Hemmingway | October/November 2011 | October/November 2011 | Fiction | Great writing, as should be expected from Ernest Hemmingway. Simple stories, crisp, well-written, terse, like a soup with a few simple ingredients but full of flavor.
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| Stoner | John Williams | October 2011 | October 2011 | Fiction | NYRB series. Recommended by staff of Dog Eared Books in San Francisco. Good character profile. A book that is fascinating in its lack of fascinating qualities, the soul-numbing boredom of the main character's life like some kind of slow-motion train-wreck.
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| Market Forces | Richard Morgan | (?) | Meh | Fiction | awful. deceiving advertised as a "Philip K. Dick Award Winner" (they meant the author, not the book). petty, whiny author voice. uncreative, unoriginal waste of time. stopped reading halfway through out of sheer boredom with the predictable, boring characters and slow, small-minded plot.
SUCH A CRAPPY BOOK | |
| Collapse | Jared Diamond | ? | November 2011 | Non-Fiction | So-so book. The point was interesting, but his examples began to blend together, and he didn't do a particularly good job of bringing the story to life or making it engaging. It was like being hit with a hammer repeatedly. The first time gets your attention, but after a while it loses the intended effect.
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(New job. Lost track in the chaos of moving.)
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(Dissertation. Lost track of my reading entirely, but was reading mostly technical books.)
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| The Federalist Papers (No. 1 - No. 20) | Alexander Hamilton et al | 06/14/2011 | ? | Non-Fiction |
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| The Great Crash, 1929 | John Kenneth Galbraith | 05/15/2011 | July 2011 | Non-Fiction |
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| The Wars of Watergate | Stanley Kutler | May 2011 | July 2011 | Non-Fiction | Gives an exhaustive level of detail, and a lot of information to sift through. It was very rewarding to go through it and learn so much about the details of Watergate.
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| Mathematics: The Loss of Certainty | Morris Kline | ? | 05/22/2011 | Non-Fiction | Fantastic read about the complete lack of certainty in mathematics. It destroyed some of my long-standing beliefs about mathematics and the concept of mathematical truth. I would highly recommend it to anyone interested in, or studying, science.
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| Moby Dick | Herman Melville | 03/04/2011 | Meh | Fiction | It really couldn't keep my attention. I stopped around Chapter 60-something. | |
| Little Brother | Cory Doctorow | 04/04/2011 | 04/05/2011 | Fiction | An excellent book for young people that belongs in more hands. It's released under the Creative Commons license, which makes it easy to get it in more hands. I originally found out about this from a To The Best of Our Knowledge podcast, called "Inside Information" (03/12/2011).
The underlying message of the book is to be curious about the world around you, to take control of the world around you, and to be subversive: something young people rarely hear from "grown-ups" around them.
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| Ulysses | James Joyce | 01/07/2011 | 03/09/2011 | Fiction | Great book. With the exception of a few chapters, on which the majority of time was spent, the book read quicker than I anticipated, and was very funny. I recommend reading it with a guide, like Sparknotes, Don Gilbert's book James Joyce's Ulysses, or Gifford's Ulysses Annotated (I used all three).
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| The Secret Man | Bob Woodward | 2005 | 03/03/2011 | 03/03/2011 | Non-Fiction | Extremely light reading; a disappointing re-hash of All The President's Men with the main difference being Deep Throat is replaced by Felt; there is also an interesting explanation of how Woodward and Felt were first introduced, and a discussion about Felt 30 years later (losing his memory) and Woodward's dilemma in deciding whether to reveal Felt as Deep Throat; the whole book is written in really choppy English, very short sentences, very bad English; a somewhat boring but fast read
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| All The President's Men | Carl Bernstein, Bob Woodward | 1974 | 03/01/2011 | 03/02/2011 | Non-Fiction | Very interesting book; there are a lot of names thrown out, and it's difficult to follow much of the time; many of the details included are of marginal importance; it's somewhat difficult to get a "big picture" by reading this; but it gives a very accurate play-by-play of how the Watergate reporting in the Washington Post unfolded over the course of 1972 and 1973. Ends in 1973, before Nixon's resignation. (Second book by Bernstein and Woodward is The Last Days and does the same thing except it follows the resignation of Nixon). I recommend reading this as a supplement to a more comprehensive book on Watergate.
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| Nixonland | Richard Perlstein | 2008 | 02/20/2011 | 02/28/2011 | Non-Fiction | Looking past the sometimes crappy writing mistakes of the author, the grammatically ambiguous sentences, the use of last names for people introduced 50 pages ago, the lack of any year being given for frame of reference for many events mentioned in chapters that jump around... the book is great. It covers its subject matter well - focusing primarily on the way Nixon appealed to so many people, the way he won elections, the way he ultimately brought about his own end. It skips over Watergate, ending when Watergate begins (since it focuses on Nixon's elections), but gives an excellent background for learning more about the people and events involved in the leadup to Watergate. It covers the details of some of the events that receive only casual mentions in books like All The President's Men, and provides a very disturbing glimpse into the psyche of the Nixon administration, and the psyche of American society, in the late 1960s/early 1970s.
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| Harlot's Ghost | Norman Mailer | 02/11/2011 | 02/19/2011 | Fiction | Outstanding book. I picked it up looking for a CIA/cloak-and-dagger plot, and did not get what I was expecting. However, it was a very enjoyable read - I finished it because Mailer is an outstanding wordsmith.
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| I Can Get It For You Wholesale | Jerome Wiedman | 01/28/2011 | Fiction | Very funny narrative voice; fast-paced writing style; perspective of a Jewish New Yorker in 1920s who basically uses the capitalist system to rob his friends and leave them twisting in the wind. While it's hard to have any sympathy for the narrator, you do anyway, because he's so likable; does a great job of capturing the style of the time.
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| Poems New And Selected | James Laughlin | 01/28/2011 | Poetry | Great, clever poems.
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| The Stranger | Albert Camus | 01/27/2011 | 01/28/2011 | Fiction | Re-reading
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| Perks of Being a Wallflower | Stephen Chbosky | 01/19/2011 | 01/20/2011 | Fiction | Re-reading
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| Terrible Swift Sword (Civil War Trilogy Vol. 2) | Bruce Catton | 01/10/2011 | 02/10/2011 | Non-Fiction | Civil War history; covers the years 1861-1863; very good
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| The Coming Fury (Civil War Trilogy Vol. 1) | Bruce Catton | 01/02/2011 | 01/09/2011 | Non-Fiction | Excellent history of the Civil War. explores a lot of the behind-the-scenes politicking and buildup to the Civil War, ends with first CW battle (Battle of Bull Run)
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2010
| Title | Author | Year | Started | Finished | Genre | Opinion |
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| Quicksilver: Baroque Cycle Vol. 1 | Neal Stephenson | December 2010 | Meh | Fiction | The storyline was interesting at first, but then it got really boring and disappointing. Won't finish. Gave to thrift store. Saw an additional copy of this book at the same thrift store. | |
| Spook Country | William Gibson | November 2010 | November 2010 | Fiction | No interesting storyline, boring characters, nothing interesting happens in the entire story, forgot the entire storyline of the book a few days after I read it | |
| American Gods | Neil Gaiman | November 2010 | November 2010 | Fiction | Boring storyline, but reads really fast, forgot most of what I had read a few days after I read it | |
| Cryptonomicon | Neal Stephenson | November 2010 | November 2010 | Fiction | Very unusual fiction style; Stephenson goes off on these tangents that are often very in-depth (and fascinating) technical explications (probably the only fiction book where you'll ever see a Perl script); covers a lot of interesting cryptography subjects
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| Memories of the Future | Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky | May 2010 | May 2010 | Fiction (short stories) | Amazingly clever and haunting short stories
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2008-2009
| Title | Author | Year | Started | Finished | Genre | Opinion |
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(Intermission, during which I read a couple of books, but not that many, probably all engineering textbooks, and did not record any of their names.)
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| Godel, Escher, Bach | Douglas Hofstadter | 07/12/2008 | Meh | Non-Fiction | Started out as a really interesting book, but it started to get kind of tedious halfway through; may try to read through it again later | |
| The Sound and the Fury | William Faulkner | 07/07/2008 | Meh | Fiction | Confusing | |
| Pale Fire | Vladimir Nabokov | 06/25/2008 | 07/06/2008 | Fiction | Extremely clever book, unlike any other I've ever read
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| The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon | 06/16/2008 | 06/19/2008 | Fiction | Really good... like a big puzzle, lots of different layers and references and fun things. Reminds me of Kurt Vonnegut.
The Wikipedia article on Thomas Pynchon is really interesting.
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| Chaos | James Gleick | 02/12/2008 | Meh | Non-Fiction | Presents some very interesting ideas, but does not explore any of the math or technical parts (which is frustrating). Pulls together lots of interesting subjects.
Tailed off, without finishing. | |
| The Cleft | Doris Lessing | 03/07/2008 | 03/12/2008 | Fiction | Interesting, but kind of weird; I don't know if I would recommend it
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| Varieties of Disturbance | Lydia Davis | 02/16/2008 | 02/29/2008 | Fiction (short stories) | Really really creative, original, funny, easy to read... very enjoyable... won a National Book Award
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| Fahrenheit 451 | Ray Bradbury | 02/12/2008 | 2/21/2008 | Fiction | Good, but not great, book
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| Persian Mirrors: The Elusive Face of Iran | Elaine Sciolino | 01/11/2008 | 02/15/2008 | Non-Fiction | Provides a "behind closed doors" view of Iran
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| Postmodernism & Islam | Akbar Ahmed | 01/09/2008 | Meh | Non-Fiction | Written in 92, updated in 96; interesting pre-9/11 viewpoint of Islam and the West, and funny because he keeps bringing up Madonna as a "contemporary" figure... it got weird tho, and boring for non-Muslims (just as detailed Christian theology or apologetics can get really boring for non-Christians). | |
| Under the Banner of Heaven | Jon Krakauer | 01/05/2008 | 01/09/2008 | Non-Fiction | Superbly written; lots of info on Mormonism, with a focus on Mormon fundamentalism (both modern & historical)
Reading this book was the first time I realized that not only can the Mormon church be weird, but it can also be kind of evil; a pattern I started to see cropping up more often after reading this book. Easily as shocking/disturbing as Lolita
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2007
| Title | Author | Year | Started | Finished | Genre | Opinion |
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| The Great Shark Hunt: Strange Tales from a Strange Time | Hunter S Thompson | 09/13/2007 | ? | Non-Fiction (anthology) | Awesome awesome awesome writer.
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| The physics of baseball | Robert Kemp Adair | 9/26/2007 | 10/6/2007 | Non-Fiction | Interesting perspective on baseball, esp. given that most of the pitching physics is fluid mechanics...
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| The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time | Mark Haddon | 9/18/2007 | 9/22/2007 | Fiction | written from POV of autistic 15 y/o... very interesting take on mental disability and how austics function
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| Fire on the Mountain | Edward Abbey | 9/10/2007 | 9/13/2007 | Fiction | Nowhere near as good as Desert Solitaire, but an enjoyable read. Probably wouldn't recommend it though.
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| Visiting Mrs. Nabokov | Martin Amis | 8/28/2007 | Meh | Non-Fiction (anthology) | Collection of short magazine-article length pieces for Esquire, Vogue, New Yorker, etc.
Got kind of hard to follow on about half of them, what with all of his literary/cultural references. Clever fellow, Martin Amis. | |
| Bear vs Shark | Chris Bachelder | 9/8/2007 | 9/10/2007 | Fiction | a clever and funny satire
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| Getting sued and other tales of the engineering life | Richard L. Meehan | 9/5/2007 | 9/7/2007 | Non-Fiction | Very handy account of what lawsuits are like - i.e., never what you expect. Does a terrible job of using 10-dollar words that NOBODY uses, but also passes on a useful set of skills - the author's life experiences distilled into the important stuff
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| Einstein's Monsters | Martin Amis | 9/2/2007 | 9/5/2007 | Fiction | A sensible look at nuclear weapons and how utterly ridiculously stupid they (and their masters) are
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| Live from Golgotha | Gore Vidal | 09/01/2007 | Meh | Fiction | Awful book... NOT funny, and in the worst kind of way - tries really hard to be funny but just fails miserably | |
| In Cold Blood | Truman Capote | 08/30/2007 | 09/01/2007 | Nonfiction | Great, great storytelling... amazing piece of work.
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| Islam | Caesar E. Farah, Ph.D. | 08/23/2007 | Meh | Non-Fiction | Very preachy - written on the subject of Islam, from a Muslim point of view (why Mohammad was so great, why the Qu'ran is right, which infidels will be burning in hell, etc) | |
| Dead Babies | Martin Amis | 08/26/2007 | 08/28/2007 | Fiction | AWESOME satire, as funny as "Breakfast of Champions" but with a more New-Yorker kind of feel
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| Maximum Bob | Elmore Leonard | 08/20/2007 | 08/23/2007 | Fiction | Elmore Leonard says he leaves out the parts of the book that the reader doesn't read... Very quick-moving writing with a good storyline, but pretty shallow
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| The Psychology of Love | Sigmund Freud | 08/14/2007 | 08/21/2007 | Non-Fiction | Interesting theory - how EVERYTHING is related to sex - but boring after the first one or two chapters
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| Virtual Light | William Gibson | 8/18/2007 | 8/20/2007 | Fiction | Very fast-paced writing style, gritty dialogue, grim presentation of the future; interestingly, it takes place in 2005 - and was written in 1993
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| Brain Sex | Dr. Anne Moir | 08/11/2007 | 08/14/2007 | Non-Fiction | Obviously written by someone with an agenda, but provided some very interesting insights. It was difficult to separate scientific fact from allegorical speech & conclusions (or opinions) drawn from scientific facts, because references were all grouped by chapter, as opposed to having a reference or citation with each fact, study, etc. discussed.
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| The Grapes of Wrath | John Steinbeck | 8/9/2007 | 8/14/2007 | Fiction | This novel is as much of a literary milestone as it is a political milestone (reminded me of a readable and well-written version of "The Jungle" by Upton Sinclair)
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| Lord Jim | Joseph Conrad | 08/01/2007 | Meh | Fiction | Very slow-moving novel... The pace of the novel never picked up, and it got really boring after abt 40 pages | |
| Lolita | Vladamir Nabokov | 07/30/2007 | 08/01/2007 | Fiction | Shocking, discomforting, but totally incredible...
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| The Secret Agent | Joseph Conrad | 07/29/2007 | 7/30/2007 | Fiction | interesting insights into human psychology
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| Breathing Lessons | Anne Tyler | 07/23/2007 | 07/24/2007 | Fiction | Scary view of marriage and family
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| Home of the Gentry | Ivan Turgenev | 07/21/2007 | 07/23/2007 | Fiction | Made me think about that point where you look back and realize, this IS my life, it's been lived... it's no longer "going to be made", it is now already "made"
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| Crime and Punishment | Fyodor Dostoyevsky | 07/15/2007 | 07/20/2007 | Fiction | Great presentation of human psychology, guilt, behavior, etc
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