Young Money: Inside the Hidden World of Wall Street's Post-Crash Recruits

Enough to convince me that finance is not a great career path.

2015.02.04 · 1 min · Kevin Roose

Hatching Twitter: A True Story of Money, Power, Friendship, and Betrayal

2.5 stars. Nothing but boardroom drama, kinda like watching an episode of gossip girl, which I suppose isn’t all bad. Although the recounts of Facebook’s acquisition attempts and scuffs over Twitter’s contact importer were definitely enough to make the book worth reading.

2015.02.02 · 1 min · Nick Bilton

The Diamond Age: Or, a Young Lady's Illustrated Primer

Started out quite good, ended up a jumbled, mildly racist mess.

2015.02.02 · 1 min · Neal Stephenson

The World of Ice & Fire: The Untold History of Westeros and the Game of Thrones

It’s like reading wikipedia in fictional form, which is what I was doing for Song of Ice and Fire anyways.

2015.01.08 · 1 min · George R.R. Martin

Decoding the New Consumer Mind: How and Why We Shop and Buy

Lots of hand waving and overuse of the word ‘increasingly’. The facts are scattershot trivia, nothing unified or edifying here. I’m out.

2015.01.01 · 1 min · Kit Yarrow

Far from the Tree: Parents, Children, and the Search for Identity

Not sure how to rate this book. It wasn’t fun to read. It starts with a deaf child being molested by her father and rarely gets more cheery. I teared up reading some of the passages, and put down the book multiple times because I just couldn’t handle it. The scope is massive, and the book is the opposite of focused. However, this is the first book I can think of that probably made me a better person. It helped me relate to people that I would otherwise dismiss and gives a broader vantage for those of us who grew up normal. ...

2014.12.01 · 1 min · Andrew Solomon

Wool Omnibus (Silo, #1)

Wow. Some great twists, an appealing narrative structure, and a realistic antagonist. Great scifi.

2014.11.09 · 1 min · Hugh Howey

The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon

Biased? Probably. Interesting? Yes. Lots of cool info about the intersection of tech and retail.

2014.11.03 · 1 min · Brad Stone

Ready Player One (Ready Player One, #1)

The robotic obsession with references to 80’s pop culture was tiresome, and the world itself seemed devoid of forward looking creativity. I didn’t find the antagonists believable, thought the egghunt was dumb, and disliked every protagonist except Shoto and Daito. The VR facets of the plot were engaging, and I’m always down for a book about video games. But really, am I the only one that thinks watching Monty Python and the Holy grail 153 times is not something to admire?

2014.10.31 · 1 min · Ernest Cline

All You Need Is Kill

I enjoyed it as an opportunity to ponder the value of experience, routine, and what it means to become an expert. This book felt very similar to [b:The Forever War|21611|The Forever War (The Forever War, #1)|Joe Haldeman|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1386852511s/21611.jpg|423], another military sci-fi using time manipulation as a device to examine the development of personality through war. Although it shares a premise with Edge of Tomorrow the movie, the character development and conclusion are completely different, similar to the difference between [b:The Children of Men|41913|The Children of Men|P.D. James|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1388271989s/41913.jpg|1142] the book and Children of Men the movie. ...

2014.10.11 · 1 min · Hiroshi Sakurazaka