A Memory Called Empire (Teixcalaan, #1)

54th book of 2019 – I enjoyed it. It felt like a sci-fi version of bureaucratic fiction (i.e. 驻京办主任) where the grinding gears of tradition and succession are as much an element of the plot as the living characters. Moreover, it captures the feeling of being a foreigner, and to quote another review: “This is for all those who have ever fallen in love with a culture that was not their own.” ...

2019.09.01 · 1 min · Arkady Martine

A Colony in a Nation

This was a frustrating book. I came into this book hoping to learn more about how policing works from the perspective of the policed, and the underlying problems about policing and criminal justice in America. There are really interesting questions in this area: How representative are police forces? How does that affect policing overall? Should police spend time optimizing for the perception of safety rather than safety itself? How much lattitude should police be given to enforce local norms? The author sidesteps these questions and instead spends most of the book complaining. We get a simplistic explanation of how our criminal justice system is inherently biased due to race (duh), and that local govornments are responsive to the desires of affluent voters more than perceived riff-raff (duh again). ...

2019.08.25 · 2 min · Christopher L. Hayes

A History of Western Philosophy

TBW

2019.08.25 · 1 min · Bertrand Russell

Doomsday Book (Oxford Time Travel, #1)

The premise was great, and the focus on everyday Medieval life was fascinating, but I disliked every single character from the future timeline (i.e. just about all the main characters). They kept acting in dumbfounding ways, such that by the time I was halfway through I was rooting for reality to win and one of them to die due to their mistakes. Alas it never happened, and I lost interest about 2/3 of the way through.

2019.08.25 · 1 min · Connie Willis

When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management

Misaligned incentives, hubris, and too much leverage. It’s the hero’s journey of finance, and I like reading about it every time.

2019.08.25 · 1 min · Roger Lowenstein

The 5 Love Languages: The Secret to Love that Lasts

48th book of 2019. Came into this book expecting to hate it. I was asked, ‘What’s your love language?’ and none fit, so I assumed the framework was broken. Only read the book to make sure I wasn’t missing anything before dismissing the idea altogether. So it was surprising to find useful advice. The most important takeaway for me was a thorough argument for using the platinum rule to relationships — don’t love others as you want to be loved, love others in the ways that they want to be loved. None of the natural love languages are natural to me, so it’s great to get a guide for the crazy ways others might want to receive affection. ...

2019.08.04 · 2 min · Gary Chapman

The Martian Chronicles

45th book of 2019 Came into this book with a strong recommendation from a friend thinking that I would get a novel similar to Foundation or Childhood’s end. Instead it was a collection of short stories, pretty depressing, confusing, unbelievable, or all three. Considering all the higher ratings from people I respect, that must be some sort of literary value to this book that I’m missing, or some higher art form that I should enjoy, but I just haven’t been able to get into it. Bailing.

2019.07.23 · 1 min · Ray Bradbury

Childhood’s End

45th book of 2019. A unique take on first contact, perhaps the perfect antidote to (三体) the three body problem. In the hundreds of sci-fi books I’ve read, I can’t think of any we encounter truly benevolent and advanced aliens. It’s so obvious in hindsight as to be surprising. Themes around the progress and stagnation of human civilization, rebellion against authority, dissatisfaction with even the highest standard of living and even mass suicide all get little more than a page each as Clarke steamrolls through with the main story, but part of me wishes this was more of a GRR Martin style epic told with painstaking detail. ...

2019.07.12 · 1 min · Arthur C. Clarke

How Democracies Die: What History Reveals About Our Future

One good way to gain perspective on the current presidency is to compare it to the myriad examples from the past where democracies have failed over time. This book presents the thesis that Democracies die via combination of undermining institutions (guardrails) and abandoning unwritten norms that keep democracy as the arbitrater of power is a given system. The authors compare democracy to a game of pickup basketball, the players change, and many of the rules are not well defined, but with enough norms and good-actors everybody can have fun, rather than getting into a brawl. ...

2019.06.29 · 1 min · Steven Levitsky

The 4-Hour Workweek

This felt like ’the Game’ for entrepreneurs. I do run a company spending ~4h a week, and I don’t think I’ve read so much bad advice in a single book before. Still, Tim Ferris’ sheer enthusiasm his own genius led to some ideas that actually landed. The good: The Parkinson principle + the Pareto principle. A simple reminder that prioritization is important, and a decent formula to approximate why. Being busy is a form of laziness. ...

2019.06.28 · 1 min · Timothy Ferriss