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nerd teacher [books]

whatanerd@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 years, 2 months ago

Exhausted anarchist and school abolitionist who can be found at nerdteacher.com where I muse about school and education-related things, and all my links are here. My non-book posts are mostly at @whatanerd@treehouse.systems, occasionally I hide on @whatanerd@eldritch.cafe, or you can email me at n@nerdteacher.com. [they/them]

I was a secondary literature and humanities teacher who has swapped to being a tutor, so it's best to expect a ridiculously huge range of books.

And yes, I do spend a lot of time making sure book entries are as complete as I can make them. Please send help.

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Ryan Conrad: Against Equality (AK Press)

Does gay marriage support the right-wing goal of linking access to basic human rights like …

Disappointing

Look, I'm sorry, but there are some major question marks that I have on the essays that someone consciously chose to include in this book. I have major questions because I know those essayists could've been replaced by people who were engaging with the whole equation of issues... but they weren't.

Most essays were anodyne and trite. Even when I agreed with the premise, the argument was made so awkwardly that I was baffled by it. Nothing was particularly revelatory, especially as someone who had experienced a good chunk of this stuff. The complete closure of the already few queer spaces in my teenage and young adult years in the rural US because of the redirection of resources towards a single issue has not left me with a positive feeling toward the political cause of gay/same-sex marriage; I empathise with this highly. The frustration of watching queer people demanding and …

Nikolai Gogol: Dead Souls (Paperback, 2017, Alma Classics)

A mysterious stranger named Chichikov arrives in a small provincial Russian town and proceeds to …

Definitely Not For Me

I do not have the patience to deal with this book, and I think it requires a great deal more than patience to endure it. I like the concept of it, but I find it tedious beyond measure. The repetition is fine until it feels excruciating. Reading this felt like my ability to enjoy a book was being destroyed, even as I kept pushing myself to read because the premise is something I know I enjoy.

I have to wonder how much of that is the responsibility of the translation. I often find myself wondering this with Russian books because the translations often feel so incredibly flat and dull in their presentation, even of interesting events, that I'm baffled by it. This has rarely been the case for me with books translated to English from any other language, so I do have to wonder to what extent this translation made …

Ryan Conrad: Against Equality (AK Press)

Does gay marriage support the right-wing goal of linking access to basic human rights like …

A few things as I've been going back through my highlights to collect notes of things I wanted to go back to.

  1. I hate how none of these people question the school or university. They talk about cuts to public school and the development of private/charter schools, focusing on how workers cannot unionise and "worse outcomes" for students. But I have to wonder what that means when public schools were already questionable and have always been. There's a lot of "question the state" in other areas (we should), but none of them really care to question it within the public school or consider how it is that people grow up with certain ideas... as if they didn't spend a formative time in an institution that propped them up. (Homeschooling gets this criticism all the time because people conflate all homeschooling with the Christian Nationalist variation of it, since they overtook …
Ryan Conrad: Against Equality (AK Press)

Does gay marriage support the right-wing goal of linking access to basic human rights like …

One of the interesting things to have happen while reading this is being reminded of how close the repeal DADT and the DREAM Act were and also being reminded of how people hyper-focused on those aspects but NOT on anything that actually would've improved lives for queer people or immigrants.

And then remembering how a lot of people were in support of repealing DADT... without considering what that even would mean (go fight for the imperial war machine, queers!). And how so much of our time, energy, and resources went to that...

... and then considering where a lot of even really "left" people are with regards to how they engage with the military... which isn't fawning but is, I think, overly empathetic for something that is specifically VOLUNTARY in the US.

Lawrence M. Krauss: The War on Science (EBook, 2025, Post Hill Pres)

An unparalleled group of prominent scholars from wide-ranging disciplines detail ongoing efforts to impose ideological …

Unsurprisingly, Bigots Write Shit

This book is the "war on science" instead of being about the war on science, which is unsurprising because of how many of the people in it are absolute bigots (racist, misogynist, every flavour of transphobic). The amount of abuse minimisation that is done to obfuscate what people actually did is... amazing.

For example, one of the "renowned scientists" is Christian Ott. He is a man who pushed to fire a student who he fell in love with, he creepily wrote and posted Tumblr poetry about her, he repeatedly abused his position of power over others, and he was very clearly such a terrible advisor that most of his students either transferred to other advisors or didn't complete their degree. He tries to claim he was "cancelled for what people say he did," when the truth is that he did what people say he did and there was ample evidence. …

Lawrence M. Krauss: The War on Science (EBook, 2025, Post Hill Pres)

An unparalleled group of prominent scholars from wide-ranging disciplines detail ongoing efforts to impose ideological …

Losing my mind just on the basis of the structure of this book. Literally feels like reading the same essay over and over at varying lengths, where they reference the same things and each other time and time again. And it's even worse on that repetition aspect because not only do all of the essays sound the same, the essays repeat themselves within themselves. Just... All of it is terrible writing.

And a lot of it is obviously nonsensical. Gribble's essay complains about flattening women into this horrible concept of "people" or "individuals." A lot of the phrases that she takes issues with either sound fine when placed within a context (e.g., "If you have a cervix..." or "someone who menstruates," though she hates the word 'someone' for some reason). She also seems to conflate other so-called replacements (e.g., a particularly egregious example is her complaining that "pregnant women" was …

Ryan Conrad: Against Equality (AK Press)

Does gay marriage support the right-wing goal of linking access to basic human rights like …

I know the goal of this book was for archival (it says), but I also find that it keeps doing the "support quality public education" while ignoring why it is that maybe people grow up from being children who mostly went through public education to being adults who think the epitome of queer existence is gay marriage? Like, that refusal to connect those two ideas is infuriating.

Lawrence M. Krauss: The War on Science (EBook, 2025, Post Hill Pres)

An unparalleled group of prominent scholars from wide-ranging disciplines detail ongoing efforts to impose ideological …

Janice Fiamengo could've solved her entire problem with being an apparent "equity hire" by just giving up her job to someone else who knew how to do it. Like, literally anyone else at all because she seems entirely uninterested in actually understanding language or comprehending meaning of sentences (e.g., she pretends to not understand racism as long as it's phrased in a 'polite' or 'conciliatory' genteel fashion). Unsurprisingly, though, she's a professor of English literature who doesn't know what words mean... though that's because she willfully obfuscates their meanings in order to benefit her racism and sexism.

Also, her whole essay feels like an "I hate Dan-el Padilla Peralta" screed. Granted, a few essays prior, the same thing was happening with Katz/Gold and their essay feeling like "I hate Patrice Rankine specifically."

I wonder why these bigots would hate either Padilla Peralta or Rankine. Hmm~. What a difficult question~. /s

Ada Moncrieff: Murder Most Festive (2020, Penguin Random House)

It's Christmas at Westbury Manor and amateur detective Hugh Gaveston must unravel a fiendish mystery... …

Frustratiningly Obvious

Upon starting the book, once you're introduced to all the characters involved, it becomes frustratingly obvious who is going to be the person 'whodunnit'. At some points, you're hoping there will be a small twist and that you'll be wrong, but it keeps getting glaringly obvious with every passing page.

And it's not a fun kind of obviousness, either. Sometimes I can forgive that if there is a wider story or theme at play or if there's a good reason for making the murderer the obvious candidate, but this was just... meh.

I also distinctly feel like the author didn't really care about her characters. I don't think she needs to like them as people, but I do think she needs to care about them as people... and then write them as people. So many of these characters were frustrating caricatures of stereotypes, which is also fine in a specific …

commented on Murder Most Festive by Ada Moncrieff (A Christmas Mystery, #1)

Ada Moncrieff: Murder Most Festive (2020, Penguin Random House)

It's Christmas at Westbury Manor and amateur detective Hugh Gaveston must unravel a fiendish mystery... …

I get the feeling that the author doesn't care about most of her characters. I don't care if she likes them, but I don't think she actively cares about the characters that she's writing, and it kind of shows in the ways that only one character seems to reflect something close to human.

Lawrence M. Krauss: The War on Science (EBook, 2025, Post Hill Pres)

An unparalleled group of prominent scholars from wide-ranging disciplines detail ongoing efforts to impose ideological …

I didn't think this was going to be a good book, but wow. It is somehow worse? than I thought it'd have been. Like, I knew going into it that there'd be so much bigotry of all forms because all of these people have complained about "aggressive progressives" and how "progressives are authoritarian."

But I was expecting at least, I don't know, maybe a bit more variety in their essays? And it's like I've read the same thing about 6 times now with varying additions and cover-ups; everyone has tried to obfuscate the abuses or harassment that someone did to pretend they were cancelled.

Jesse Kirkwood, Seicho Matsumoto: Tokyo Express (Paperback, 2023, Penguin Books)

In a rocky cove in the bay of Hakata, the bodies of a young and …

Tight, Engaging Story

One of the things that I've found I like about the few novels by Matsumoto that've been translated is that they rarely read like the very traditional detective fiction. There are often common elements, but they routinely have another structure that makes them feel completely different.

This one reads like a travelogue (with murder in it) and letters between the detectives, and I love it for that. I also like how you're able to kind of guess what the overall next action'll be, but you're always going to be just a little off. It's never enough to be frustrating, but it is enough to push you forward. In that way, you feel just like the protagonist working on this case.

Tom Mills: The BBC (Hardcover, 2016, Verso)

Though Obvious to Me, Still Interesting.

A lot of what is written here should be obvious, though I think it isn't because so many people have put the BBC up on this pedestal of journalistic integrity that it's just never truly had (nor can I think of any journalistic enterprise that would deserve such a pedestal).

Much of what makes this interesting are the varying pieces of historical documentation that provide examples of the ways in which the BBC has shifted towards a specific goal and how the British state has ensured that direction. Though the book also highlights counter-examples of the BBC doing decent work or supporting certain causes, it also makes it clear that this institution will subsume certain ideas and help to redirect them elsewhere.

Definitely a good introduction into the relationship between the state and media, at the very least.