Reviews and Comments

nerd teacher [books]

whatanerd@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 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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Steven Pinker: The better angels of our nature (2011) No rating

From Goodreads: Selected by The New York Times Book Review as a Notable Book of …

I mean, it's obvious that this man is an excruciatingly racist piece of shit, but holy shit.

In 2011, we knew that the Broken Windows Theory was wrong and that Wilson/Kelling had misrepresented it with full intent to support racist policing. Pinker doesn't seem to care that Zimbardo's original experiment never supported the Broken Windows Theory and talks about it as if it were truth. Granted, this chapter is also one in which he cites Charles Murray and Francis Fukuyama, so I can't be surprised he's a fan of it.

In terms of history, he has never engaged with anything beyond what little he seems to have learned from coffee table books (which he even explicitly points to as his inspiration for a chapter on torture). We knew in 2011 that the use of the Iron Maiden and similar contraptions, like the Virgin of Nuremberg, were largely believed to be …

Hafsah Faizal: A Tempest of Tea (Paperback, Pan Macmillan) No rating

On the streets of White Roaring, Arthie Casimir is a criminal mastermind and collector of …

I'm not entirely ... disliking it, but I'm still getting a very large "You fucked me over, so I'm going to fuck you over using this system" vibe that I'm just not keen on.

Am hoping for some kind of examination of the illogical structure of maintaining the colonial structures, even when done in a "decolonial" manner.

Steven Pinker: The better angels of our nature (2011) No rating

From Goodreads: Selected by The New York Times Book Review as a Notable Book of …

The number of dog whistles is just... So fucking many. This is not surprising, but it is just... whew.

He managed a citation that included BOTH Fukuyama and Murray. Not only did he cite them both INDIVIDUALLY, but one of the citations is them AT THE SAME TIME. What the hell.

And it's a serious citation. It's not a critique-based citation. It's a citation to prove the point and just... WHAT.

Hafsah Faizal: A Tempest of Tea (Paperback, Pan Macmillan) No rating

On the streets of White Roaring, Arthie Casimir is a criminal mastermind and collector of …

Concept seems cool, but some writing feels really obnoxious in some regards. Like, lower-class vampires are really being used as as an allegory for some kind of marginalised demographic, and I'm guessing... queerness? Though it also sometimes seems to be race... But overwhelmingly, it's giving me a vibe of "any," but queerness comes to mind with the fact that two non-vampires are running a teahouse that also caters for vampires and creates a "safe space" for them to be themselves (like gay bars) and profiting off them. While it also does a lot of anti-colonial writing? And it hasn't really hit any notes to point out that this is an inherent contradiction?

Also, I'm kind of tired of the "we'll get ours" kind of stories that end up with people working simultaneously within the system and outside of it, since the former seems to be the most important and receives …

Steven Pinker: The better angels of our nature (2011) No rating

From Goodreads: Selected by The New York Times Book Review as a Notable Book of …

He fucking cited CHARLES MURRAY. Immediately after citing Francis Fukuyama. After citing HIMSELF.

Also, all of his examples of how society was more violent in the 1960s are "based on demographics" BUT THEN HE DOESN'T TALK ABOUT WHAT WAS ACTUALLY HAPPENING IN THE 1960S.

He also thinks One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest was a movie ROMANTICISING INSANITY rather than a movie based on a book that was written as part of an effort to help combat abuse within PSYCHIATRY.

I am losing my MIND.

Keigo Higashino: The devotion of suspect X (2012, Abacus) 3 stars

Yasuko Hanaoka thought she had escaped her abusive ex-husband Togashi. When he shows up one …

Marketers Need to Stop Super-Ruining Books

2 stars

This book, had its author not been marketed as "The Japanese Stieg Larsson," would've been... Well, it would've been okay, and I would've left it with some of the same complaints. But I felt them more strongly because what I'd been primed for was met in the worst of ways possible, in a way that wasn't at all in line with the point of Stieg Larsson's original trilogy.

There are too few books that deal with abused women, especially abused women who actually succeed despite everything. There are too few books that even engage with the concept of killing your local rapist (or abuser) and what that can possibly mean. There are too few books that engage with the internal struggle of someone who has done that to save themselves (especially in a situation where it wasn't intentional) and actually engaged with what it meant.

This book isn't that, but …

Steven Pinker: The better angels of our nature (2011) No rating

From Goodreads: Selected by The New York Times Book Review as a Notable Book of …

I hate this man so much, lmao.

He loves pre-emptive arguments so much that he's ignoring spaces where he genuinely should include them, such as "how are homicide statistics determined" and "who counts as a homicide victim" and "how can we tell when a skeleton that is 10,000 years old or so has died from direct violence and not a lethal accident."

I cannot keep my ire straight; he's so largely misrepresenting so much that it's hard to point out EVERY BIT OF DATA that he's just manipulating or massaging.

Steven Pinker: The better angels of our nature (2011) No rating

From Goodreads: Selected by The New York Times Book Review as a Notable Book of …

I think the persistent reference to Napoleon Chagnon should be something everyone should question, considering the harm that Chagnon engaged in across the planet.

I mean, it's worth reading Marshall Sahlins' criticisms of Chagnon (and also Sahlins' resignation from the National Academy of Sciences after the election of Chagnon). Chagnon was a shit-stirring bastard who produced fraudulent "research," so referencing things that focus on supporting him should be an immediate question.

Steven Pinker: The better angels of our nature (2011) No rating

From Goodreads: Selected by The New York Times Book Review as a Notable Book of …

On his writing technique, the man struggles to know how to transition between sections or chapters without telling what this chapter or the next will be about. It's like he has one trick, and he's not quite sure how to lead in to something else.

In terms of the history, he makes a lot of assumptions that no one is qualified to make and that even the data we do have cannot possibly support. We cannot know precisely how violent people were in times where we have no documentation of violence; we can only make assumptions based on what artifacts remain, and it's silly to assume that the handfuls of skeletal remains can tell us precisely how violent a society was. This way of deciding how violent the world was is much in the same vein as when archaeologists categorise unknown objects as "religious relics," even when it's not. (This …

Steven Pinker: The better angels of our nature (2011) No rating

From Goodreads: Selected by The New York Times Book Review as a Notable Book of …

I don't know how this man ever got labelled a "public intellectual" at all when he clearly has absolutely no capability of providing any actual evidence or arguments.

Also, he said that in 2011... Israel would be peaceful with its neighbours? But I think we could've all predicted what's happening now in 2011 because of all that Israel (and its allies, to be clear) did to ensure that the "most peaceful democracy in the Middle East" or whatever it was called... would be able to commit the genocide and launch additional assaults (that also appear increasingly genocidal) that's happening today. I don't think, even in 2011, I would've said anything about the "peace" that was happening in a nation-state that was already engaging in clear segregation and an apartheid regime.

Umberto Eco: The Name of the Rose (2004, Random House) 2 stars

The Name of the Rose (Italian: Il nome della rosa) is the 1980 debut novel …

Whoever the intended audience is, it isn't me.

2 stars

"It is no accident that the book starts out as a mystery (and continues to deceive the ingenuous reader until the end, so the ingenuous reader may not even realise that this is a mystery in which very little is discovered and the detective is defeated). I believe people like thrillers not because there are corpses or because there is a final celebratory triumph of order (intellectual, social, legal, and moral) over the disorder of evil. The fact is that the crime novel represents a kind of conjecture, pure and simple. But medical diagnosis, scientific research, metaphysical inquiry are also examples of conjecture. After all, the fundamental question of philosophy (like that of psychoanalysis) is the same as the question of the detective novel: who is guilty?" [page 564]

I don't disagree entirely with this take on the novel by its own author, but I find it troublesome that he …

Umberto Eco: The Name of the Rose (2004, Random House) 2 stars

The Name of the Rose (Italian: Il nome della rosa) is the 1980 debut novel …

This book has practically halted my reading because I find it so dreadfully dull but feel compelled to finish it. I'm at the point where I'd rather skim it, since it seems to want to tell me what every chapter is going to be about by giving me a summary "in which" something is done.

There is so much that I don't care about and so much that has actually distracted me from being able to pay attention to what is happening. If there is a story, I don't remember it because I've been overburdened with lists of shit on statues or doorways or bookshelves. I cannot even care.

Riichiro Inagaki, Boichi: Dr. STONE, Vol. 6 (2019, VIZ Media) 3 stars

Senku’s father, the astronaut Byakuya, returned to Earth shortly after humanity turned to stone. What …

Always Fun, but Always Frustrating

3 stars

I genuinely enjoy the kind of story that is presented in Dr STONE, where people are having to struggle together and build solidarity with others in order to survive. I like that they place the science in it as a core narrative component, which makes it kind of fun.

But I hate the direction that it takes starting from around this volume, and it's largely because it's playing into these weird structures of: a) science is inherently good and scientific progress is a straight line from point A to point B to point C and so on; b) the people who didn't like that progressivist structure are inherently violent types who seek to destroy knowledge; c) people against hierarchies inherently want to instill another hierarchy, which also continues to use the propaganda conflation about the idea of 'anarchy' as being 'nothing but chaos' (even when it's not being explicitly stated). …