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Tag: reviews

Book Review: David Mitchell’s “Cloud Atlas”

After several years of observing the barrage of praise that’s been heaped upon Cloud Atlas by friends and critics, I finally sat down to read it, convinced it couldn’t possibly live up to the hype.  One hundred pages in, I’d already dismissed David Mitchell’s well-loved book as nothing more than a garish, sprawling, unfocused coterie […]

Book Review: Julio Cortázar’s “Hopscotch”

In this novel’s table of instructions, Julio Cortázar states that Hopscotch “consists of many books, but two books above all.”  The reader is given a choice: read the book in normal fashion and stop at the end of Chapter 56 (in which case a large portion of the book will remain unread), or jump between […]

Book Review: Dana Goldstein’s “The Teacher Wars”

This book’s title might connote a tense battlefield, with ruler-brandishing teachers firmly entrenched against the remonstrations of an angry citizenry.  But, like any serious student of history, author Dana Goldstein knows such simplistic images belie the messy truth about wars, which is that they are rife with broken borders, double crossings, unexpected victories, and crushing […]

Book Review: Bernard Williams’s “Philosophy as a Humanistic Discipline”

I almost quit reading this book after the first few chapters.  Bernard Williams’ opaque arguments about metaphysics and epistemology––hardly my favorite philosophy subjects––are enervating to the point of somnolence.  I’ve never enjoyed or been particularly enlightened by analytical philosophy, which typically deploys the tropes of formal logic to imbue philosophical arguments with an air of […]

Book Review: Iain M. Banks’ “Look to Windward”

The Culture universe is an undeniably brilliant creation, containing more than one writer’s fair share of imaginative inventions and astonishing moments.  I have been impressed with every Culture novel I’ve read, but often complete them wondering what Banks could have done to warm my heart the same way he enchants my brain.  After this refreshing […]

Book Review: John Dewey’s “Reconstruction in Philosophy”

John Dewey is my intellectual hero, so taking up one of his works is always a distinct pleasure for me.  There is no other thinker at this point in my life who can challenge and delight me the way Dewey does; his philosophy is deeply contemplative but also distinctly practical, and his insights reflect the […]

Book Review: Pat Frank’s “Alas, Babylon”

Given the recent popularity of post-apocalyptic narratives, it seems a good time to pick up Pat Frank’s Alas, Babylon.  Frank’s portrait of a small Florida community coping with nuclear fallout is an early contribution to the genre, one that demonstrates considerable cleverness and technical merit.  Sadly, this story of Cold War-era anxiety and ingenuity has […]

Book Review: Dave Szulborski’s “This Is Not a Game”

I’d never heard of Alternate Reality Games (ARGs) until a friend suggested I read this book. As someone interested in the intersection between gaming and narrative, I think the ARG world is full of promise. Dave Szulborski has written a fine introduction to this embryonic genre; his tripartite offering is a conceptual manifesto, brief history, […]

Book Review: Neal Stephenson’s “The System of the World”

Of the many reasons I do not play chess, the main one is that I’m lousy at strategy.  I struggle to think more than one or two moves ahead, can’t easily reposition pieces in my mind’s eye, and am hapless when it comes to sniffing out and thwarting my opponent’s battle plan.  I’ve had similar […]

Book Review: Jeremy Rifkin’s “The Zero Marginal Cost Society”

A hefty portion of humanity’s uniqueness can be traced back to future projection.  We constantly weave narratives that stretch moments and months and millennia ahead, even as we fumble to figure out what to do with today, each day.  Everyone needs some kind of intellectual framework to navigate this tricky tension, which is where futurists […]