Reviews and Comments

nerd teacher [books]

whatanerd@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 1 month 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.

This link opens in a pop-up window

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). …

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 …

There are far too many moments of narrative that require the audience to care about characters, and I have not been given sufficient reason to give a single solitary shit about any of these monks.

Except maybe William? But the protagonist, Adso... Even he hasn't been sufficiently fleshed out as a person for whom I could care. I don't like any of these characters, and most of it is because I still struggle to tell who is who and why I'm supposed to care about the events surrounding them. Also, by 'like', I mean "even if I wouldn't like these characters as people, I can sufficiently see them as characters who are interesting enough to engage with."

Lauren Child: We Are Extremely Very Good Recyclers (Dial Books) 1 star

After Charlie convinces Lola to recycle her old toys instead of throwing them away, Lola …

Awkward Representation of Recycling

1 star

Genuinely baffled by this presentation of recycling. It doesn't even particularly explain why recycling is good (if it actually is), but it does position it as a school-wide contest so that they can get a tree to plant?

Again, while this isn't insulting, it is... excessively common and not quite right. And it's definitely a way that people reinforce very simplistic and common actions as inherently correct and without actually engaging with the topic at hand, even at a level that is good for a young child.

Lauren Child: I Am Going to Save a Panda! (2010, Grosset & Dunlap) 1 star

It's Save an Animal Week at school, and Lola and Lotta are going to raise …

Fails in its simplicity.

1 star

I feel like we could make better books about organising for children than those that focus on charity, and this includes climate- and environment-related actions. So much of what we do to tell children how they can help is to "donate money" or "find sponsors to donate money (while we do difficult things, like swimming)," and it's not... actual action to solve the problem at hand. This is my first issue with this (and many other) books on this subject.

But I also find it frustrating in it not putting responsibility on who (particularly in terms of region) has created a lot of the problems that exist across the globe. Yes, "people are cutting down all [the panda's] bamboo," but why? What is the reason for this? Yes, there has been a decrease in parrots in Mexico "because their trees are being chopped down" but why? Yes, some people steal …

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 is such a slow-going one to read because it's just... too much? There are too many parts where I feel like everything goes over my head because I zone out from all the details (or all the Latin!), which makes me feel like maybe I've missed something.

In a lot of ways, it reminds of of Les Mis because of all the irrelevant detail. You could probably rip out a couple hundred pages and have roughly the same story. But I think it annoys me more because there's a 'mystery' for the reader to solve, and it feels like it's buried beneath far too many details (with many of those necessary details being easily forgotten due to the sheer volume).

Like, I feel like I need to take notes in order to remember which monk or priest is which.

Lauren Child: I Am Too Absolutely Small For School (Orchard Books) 1 star

Charlie's little sister Lola is nearly big enough to go to school - but Lola …

As a School Abolitionist... Hard pass.

1 star

I knew there would be a lot of pro-school messaging in this book, but it is... excessive? It's also plainly wrong and really does provide a space for children to grow into adults who think that school is necessary for someone to learn to read, write, or do maths. It makes a lot of the same arguments for why children should go to school that people continue making even today, without even considering how these things can be done elsewhere or that they should.

So it's probably good for pro-school people, but it's definitely not good for anyone who sees schools as a tool to assimilate people into the "correct" existence.

Christopher Hitchens: The Missionary Position (2012, Signal) 3 stars

Recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, feted by politicians, the Church and the world's media. …

Surprisingly Okay

3 stars

Hitchens definitely had his problems, but critiquing Mother Teresa for all the absolute shit she did was not one of them. Because of his proximity to the other horsemen and as a result of some of his other views, I was expecting for there to be some major issues here.

But it's a good starting point for anyone who wants directions in critiquing the harms and impacts of Mother Teresa or, in general, the church system that supported her bullshit.

Masako Togawa: The Master Key (2021, Pushkin Vertigo) 3 stars

The K Apartments for Ladies in Tokyo conceals a sinister past behind each door; a …

Initially Disappointing to Me, but Not Awful

3 stars

My main issues include: The translator decided to use the sentence "She was a Japanese," which I'm surprised wasn't updated in newer versions but... okay. The naming conventions are inconsistent (sometimes last name-first name, other times first name-last name). There's an obvious failure of the translator to know what a child of an American would call their own mother when speaking English (even though this is a well-known difference, and it would've been true in the mid-century setting and when it was translated in the 80s), which is just a little obnoxious. But these are largely just small picks.

What I really think this book suffers from is improper marketing. Its inclusion as a 'mystery' book is correct, but I think its constant description as a 'classic mystery' and being marketed next to things that do fit 'classic mystery' does nothing to really help it. This is because a 'classic …

Masako Togawa: The Master Key (2021, Pushkin Vertigo) 3 stars

The K Apartments for Ladies in Tokyo conceals a sinister past behind each door; a …

I was hoping this book would change from the weird vignettes, but it hasn't.

I don't know how it's a mystery book at all when nothing is... a mystery? Other than this one random foreigner who hasn't existed as a person and doesn't seem to have a real place in any of the stories.

I also find it obnoxious for the translator not keeping things consistent? They couldn't decide on first name-last name or last name-first name for Japanese people. Also, the translator literally did "she was a Japanese."

Seishi Yokomizo: The Little Sparrow Murders (2024, Pushkin Vertigo) 4 stars

An old friend of Kosuke Kindaichi’s invites the scruffy detective to visit the remote mountain …

Engaging As Always

4 stars

The Kindaichi Kosuke series of books is currently one of my favourite, especially as it does a lot within the genre that typically goes undone. Something that I noticed this time around and was able to ruminate on was that a lot of the books still hold a degree of humanity for the murderer, even when they clearly don't support their behaviour. This is something that I appreciate because it really does highlight that people can and do horrible things but that they're still people (which I think actually makes them more terrifying instead of less terrifying).

I point this out because it's something that is done in the solution to the case, and it's something that I frequently find myself wanting to see more of because I think it's best that we not separate ourselves too much from these horrible people (as in, we can definitely separate ourselves ideologically, …