Monday, December 28, 2020
Friday, December 25, 2020
Pattern Recognition by William Gibson

This book is not Gibson's best work but the story centers on brand, marketing, and oligarchs so I was curious. The book is mildly interesting but became too bizarre and surreal as the powers behind events and spy-craft became more sophisticated. I may or may not read the next book in the series. 2/5 Stars.
Sunday, December 20, 2020
Tuesday, December 15, 2020
Tuesday, December 8, 2020
Agent to the stars by John Scalzi
I liked Scalzi's "big idea" serious books from 15 years ago (Old Man's War universe) but I like his recent humorous, sarcastic books much better (Collapsing Empire universe). This book is very funny, somewhat contrived (magic system kept changing to adhere to the plot) but it was very enjoyable. Short & fun, 5/5 Stars.
Thursday, December 3, 2020
Cobra Slave by Timothy Zahn
I remember reading these "Cobra" stories in Analog magazine but I have not read other books by Timothy Zahn in the last few decades. Some of the tech is inconsistent and not all of the physics works but the magic system is relatively consistent. The politics are fun, except that the aliens are not alien. I'll read the rest of the series, eventually. 3/5 Stars.
Tuesday, December 1, 2020
Saturday, November 28, 2020
Inside the Five Sided Box by Ash Carter
I knew almost nothing about the history and topics Ash Carter covers in this interesting autobiography. I do know a little about the politics of whistleblower Eddie Snowden that the author misrepresents and distorts. So I am forced to doubt other slanted and omitted points of view on the topics he covers. Nonetheless I learned a lot and recommend the book, 3/5 Stars.
Wednesday, November 18, 2020
PLATO, GÖDEL, SPINOZA, AHAB - interview with Rebeca Neuberger Goldstein
This wonderful interview with Rebbeca Goldstein is a great summary of her books and thoughts. I have become more curious about philosophy and found the concepts very interesting.
Labels:
philosophy
Monday, November 16, 2020
Inspired by Marty Cagan
The second edition of this book is really good. It is insightful, prescriptive, and detailed. The author is harsh and unapologetic in his observations and criticisms of the anti-patterns plaguing many companies, putting a sharper contrast on why the winners are winning. Highly recommended. This one is definitely one of the top-5 management books I have read this year. If you need the cliffs spark notes summary, here is a decent one. But the author gives great color and nuance to the points, so read the book. 5/5 Stars!
Labels:
biz
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