February 4, 2021

Vaccine Pledge 2021


Took my medicine like a good boy. 

January 26, 2021

On China Mieville's "The City and The City"

 

Today I'm looking at the City and the City by China Mieville. This is a science fiction book that came out a little over a decade ago. I want to like this author's works mainly because he's a comrade. I first read him a couple of years back when he did that version of the Russian Revolution called October. It was a historical novel that was like Ten Days that Shook the world but was better than Ten Days that Shook the World. Since then, I've read a couple of his books, This Census Taker and Three Moments of an explosion and Neither were particularly memorable.

Just Vibing

 


 This book is a New York Times bestseller and one that you go to and it's supposed to be one of his better ones. If you read the blurbs and just try to get a sense of what's that about you really might not know. The basic premise is that there are two cities that exist independently but in the same geographical space. The people who live in those cities are trained from their youth to ignore what's going on right next to him if they get the signals and the cues that it is from one of them the other City. The thing is that it just didn't really work for me. It was about page 74 and I realized that I was getting most of the World building for this aspect that I was going to get as a reader. I just said I don't believe it. Now here's the thing, everything else is good enough that despite me not believing the world building and the central premise I still want to keep reading. 

 

There's a murder mystery and that very Central thing plays huge role in it. What it really got me thinking was what this two-city thing really represented. Was it some geographical political commentary, which I think is a reading that is the end of the easiest to do because it seems like it's right there for analysis? There's also the possibility that isn't there a bigger metaphysical thing. I kept asking myself  are these people already dead are they in purgatory I don't know. The problem with that is there are  people that come in from outside and visit the cities. And then they leave again so that might not be the best reading. Overall, I did read it and I enjoyed it, but I just tried really had to not think about that central thing of the setting because the minute I started thinking of the central premise it didn't work so just kind of was that thing if you ignore the man behind the curtain it's okay but like that curtain just really lamp shaded.

 

Solutions and Other Problems is a pretty amazing book and I think you should read it.

Today I want to talk about Solutions and Other Problems, the newest book by Allie Brosh. She is the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book Hyperbole and a Half.  I first pre-ordered the book sometime in 2016 and  I didn't even know it was coming back out because Amazon did something to my listing on the pre-order and they created another listing so that I know it was released until too late.

This is me actually reading the book


 
There are a couple of things to know about the book. The first is that it is printed on a thick stock and there's a lot of paper that is heavy. The other thing to note is that a lot of the stories are very very funny. I would be reading them, and I would be laughing and my wife, who goes to sleep earlier I do would be next to me in bed and she'll be mad because I was laughing out loud at the stories. She actually told me I wasn’t  allowed to read in bed because of that.  But it is not just funny stories that are intermingled with all sorts of personal tragedy from the author, they really kind of go together with the funny parts and highlight both the tragedy and comedy of life it's a pretty amazing book and I think you should read it.