Reviews and Comments

nerd teacher [books]

whatanerd@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 8 months ago

Anarchist educator 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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Banana Yoshimoto: The Premonition (2023, Faber & Faber, Limited) 3 stars

Yayoi lives with her perfect, loving family – something ‘like you’d see in a Spielberg …

A Little Torn...

3 stars

Content warning The thing I'm torn about is basically a spoiler for much of the purpose of the story.

Ira Levin: The Stepford Wives (Paperback, 2011, Corsair) 4 stars

The Stepford Wives is a 1972 satirical novel by Ira Levin. The story concerns Joanna …

Interesting Concept, Mediocre Execution

4 stars

The absolute worst part of this specific version of this specific novel is Chuck Palahniuk's introduction. I don't know why you'd ask him, of all people, to write a 'feminist intro' (or maybe he did that of his own accord, who knows)... But he failed miserably and engaged in misogynistic insult throwing while failing to understanding how structures of patriarchy, classism, and white supremacy intersect. (And he couldn't even recognise varying elements of queerphobia that were at play, either.)

Which is confusing considering Levin does a decent job at highlighting the horror of the 'feminist backlash'. Because it's much easier to see the backlash coming from the people in the middle- and upper- classes, this book is positioned well. It's still interesting to see that at least two of the women feel safe and secure with their "supportive" husbands, even though they have been steadily walking towards a tighter patriarchal …

Ira Levin: The Stepford Wives (Paperback, 2011, Corsair) 4 stars

The Stepford Wives is a 1972 satirical novel by Ira Levin. The story concerns Joanna …

Reading Chuck Palahniuk's introduction... and it feels off because it doesn't seem to recognise an accurate directionality of oppression.

In the end of it he says:

Nevertheless, it's odd how the bookshelves are filling with pretty dolls. Those glazed pretty dolls wearing their stylish designer outfits—Prada and Chanel and Dolce—swilling their martinis and flirting, flirting, flirting in their supreme effort to catch a rich husband. Always a rich husband. Instead of political rights, they're fighting for Jimmie Choos. In lieu of protest, they express themselves through shopping. And men, they're no longer the oppressors—these days other women are, older women. In The Nanny Diaries and The Devil Wears Prada and Confessions of a Shopaholic, in this new generation of 'chick lit' novels, men are once more the goal. It's successful women who torment our pretty, painted narrators. Brassieres are back, as are girdles, eyelash curlers, perfumed and meticulously shaved …

Agatha Christie: The ABC Murders (2013, HarperCollins) 4 stars

There's a serial killer on the loose, bent on working his way through the alphabet. …

An Enjoyable Mystery

4 stars

Content warning The end of the review is marked again with the spoiler in question.

Richard Dawkins: The Selfish Gene (Paperback, 2016, Oxford University Press) No rating

The Selfish Gene is a 1976 book on evolution by the ethologist Richard Dawkins, in …

... There are so many sentences that really just point to how many times he's making human-focused assumptions or is really talking about humans while he's trying to, like... pretend it's about animals.

And most of them involve the use of the word "wife." Sometimes "husband," but that's less common.

Another telling sentence was one where he was talking about how a parent can leave "his or her" child with the other parent and then immediately slipped into using "he" and "him" and "his" in the rest of the sentence.

So fucking telling, lmao.

Richard Dawkins: The Selfish Gene (Paperback, 2016, Oxford University Press) No rating

The Selfish Gene is a 1976 book on evolution by the ethologist Richard Dawkins, in …

This man is too verbose, and I think his verbosity is what makes people just zone out on what he's doing while reading this.

He double-speaks, he contradicts himself, and he treats the whole natural world like it's engaging in capitalistic tendencies. I do not understand the popularity this book has endured because it's so often just ridiculous.

And even on a review purely around his writing style and structure, it's just bad. The editors he thanks so often did him a disservice of not forcing him to write a coherent book, allowing him to drone on and on and on until you've forgotten what the point is.

And he keeps fighting in the notes with people who disagreed with him (especially Stephen J Gould, who he has a particular hate-on for).

Gary Wolf: Who Censored Roger Rabbit? (Paperback, 2015, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform) 2 stars

Such an Infuriating Read

2 stars

I want to first say that I wanted to like this book, especially because it's such a bizarre mystery story. I also had a bit of nostalgia for Who Framed Roger Rabbit and knew that it was largely inspired by this book, and I was fully aware that the book and the movie shared little in common when I started reading.

I don't mind that. I love when people take creative liberties and create something wildly different from the inspiration a piece of media gives them, so my issue isn't even that I wanted it to be the same.

My issue is that it really does have some great potential, and you can see how someone was able to create the movie from this book (and holy shit were we lucky that the movie was pushed in the direction it went because this Eddie Valiant is so bloody frustrating, while …

Gary Wolf: Who Censored Roger Rabbit? (Paperback, 2015, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform) 2 stars

Four pages later (125), and I get "from the Toons who had been living here" and then "imported from China"... which makes the Toons sound like an allegory for indigenous peoples and Chinese people, too? Basically, Toons are all non-white people, it seems?

Another three pages, and it's Appalachian Toons. Basically, humans are anyone white and from the city?

This book is messy.

Louis Sachar: Holes (2015, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc) 5 stars

Stanley Yelnats is under a curse. A curse that began with his no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing great-great-grandfather and …

The Ending Always Bothers Me

4 stars

Overwhelmingly, I adore this story. It's a book that I've often found interesting for how commonly it's recommended in schools and usually used within the curriculum of English classes, particularly as the core elements of the text should provide ample material for someone to start questioning everything that's happening.

It should provide kids with a moment to go "Wait, there are juvenile detention centers? Prisons for children?" But then I remember the ways in which the book is usually taught, and you find a bunch of teachers who seem to think that sometimes kids do need them, and they teach the book in a way that still reflects a common belief: If you're guilty of something, you should do the time. If you're not guilty, it's bad. (And if it's taught outside the US, it puts special attention on the fact that this is what Americans do... …

Louis Sachar: Holes (2015, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc) 5 stars

Stanley Yelnats is under a curse. A curse that began with his no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing great-great-grandfather and …

The Ending Always Bothers Me

4 stars

Overwhelmingly, I adore this story. It's a book that I've often found interesting for how commonly its recommended in schools and usually used within the curriculum of English classes, particularly as the core elements of the text should provide ample material for someone to start questioning everything that's happening.

It should provide kids with a moment to go "Wait, there are juvenile detention centers? Prisons for children?" But then I remember the ways in which the book is usually taught, and you find a bunch of teachers who seem to think that sometimes kids do need them, and they teach the book in a way that still reflects a common belief: If you're guilty of something, you should do the time. If you're not guilty, it's bad.

And I really like that it's one of the few books (especially that is usually accessible to kids) that earnestly engages …