Le Petit Nicolas - Goscinny & Sempe
Rating: 3/5
Source: Bought for Kindle app on iPad
Date finished: May 18
Pages: 167
This is the first French book I've ever read. It's a children's book and is, I am surprised to find out, only 167 pages long. It took me weeks to read because I read one chapter (about 5%) a day. But hey, it's in a different language. So that's pretty good. And the stories were grand.
Coders: The Making of a New Tribe and the Remaking of the World - Clive Thompson
Rating: 3/5
Source: Local library app
Date finished: May 23
Pages: 448
An interesting anthropological history of the emergence of tech culture. Quite a few interesting insights (e.g. about women in tech, AI) I may write more about later. I knocked off a star because he said he was surprised to find out someone had Asperger's because he had liked them!
You Can Change the World! Everyday Teen Heroes Making a Difference Everywhere - Margaret Rooke
Rating: 2/5
Source: ARC from Netgalley for review
Date finished: late May?
Pages: 240
A variety of stories written by teenagers around the world about inspiring things they've done. Felt it was false advertising as it was really about things like overcoming adversity, being yourself etc more than changing the world. It was also pretty rude about non-teenagers and formatted terribly, even for an ARC. Full review here (I reviewed this one in full because I got it for review).
Bridge to Terabithia - Katherine Paterson
Rating: 4/5
Source: Local library app
Date finished: June 3
Pages: 128
A beautiful little story about a 5th-grade friendship with a devastating ending. I found it hard to get into at first because of the narrator's dialect, but it's really quite gorgeous.
Internal Medicine - Terrence Holt
Rating: 2/5
Source: Brown University bookshop
Date finished: June 4
Pages: 288
A collection of essays about life as a hospital doctor. I love these stories, except this was ruined because he says at the start that none of the stories are real - not even the narrator is really him. I understand changing patient names, and while it ruins it a bit if you change details of their diseases, fine - but he said he fully amalgamated patients so as not to profit off anyone's suffering. Noble ideal, but why write it in that case? There was also a completely fictional story at the end with some moral I couldn't understand.
On the bright side, it was compelling and I read it from the evening of June 3 into the evening of June 4. And it was pretty cheap, around $6. First physical book I've read in a while. That day I also bought Planet Earth is Blue even though it was physical and ridiculously expensive because I wanted to support the autistic author.
The Hate U Give - Angie Thomas
Rating: 5/5
Source: Local library app
Date finished: June 8
Pages: 444
This book was amazing. I'll list my few gripes first:
- the AAVE dialect bothered me a bit, especially them always saying 'out the' instead of 'out of the', but I get why it was used. Just hard to get used to.
- No idea why Starr didn't get arrested for one of the things she did in the book (not that I think she should've, morally, necessarily, but it seems like something you'd be arrested for)
- I felt uncomfortable criticising the book because I'm white, which is not ideal.
- Starr seemed rich (e.g. her dad owns a shop and she goes to a private school, albeit with a scholarship) and felt somewhat estranged from her black friends since she goes to the white school - I wondered whether this was done to make her more palatable. My gripe is that she says in the book something like 'X is white, I'm black. X is rich, I'm poor' when she's not poor!
Now back to the good stuff. It was seriously great. It's about Starr's friend, Khalil, being shot by the police while she's in the car with him, and her subsequent choice on whether to speak out and try to get justice for him. It was so compelling and really made me empathise with her situation (and feel angry that police departments get to investigate the crimes of their own officers?! Does that happen in real life?!). But what's really impressive is that even without the topical, compelling subject, this book was a great YA and reminded me why I love YA so much. It's hard to put your finger on, exactly, but it's the way you get up close to the narrator and feel their life around you. Also, the scenes with her family were super adorable, same with her boyfriend, and her little brother's name, Sekani, is cool.
Find Your Why: A Practical Guide to Discovering Purpose for You and Your Team - Simon Sinek, David Mead, Peter Docker
Source: Local library app
Date finished: June 9
Pages: 256
I like the core concept, which is that finding your WHY (he always bloody capitalises it) means looking for your origin story: what are the threads that go through your life experiences and show you what motivates you to do what you do. I may try to find out, though I dislike how he keeps saying you need a partner and can't do it by yourself - maybe that's true, but maybe he's trying to sell his workshops.
Apparently the process is to think of a load of specific childhood stories and figure out why they're important to you, then draw out themes from there.
This was one of three leadership books I just took out from the library - the Laidlaw Scholarship have got their claws into me apparently! Our Laidlaw workshops and other entrepreneurship stuff I've done have talked a lot about the importance of vision but I've struggled a lot with articulating mine, so I read this book. I'm glad I picked this one instead of the first book, START WITH WHY, because I would've been frustrated without practical instructions I think. I know I struggle with leadership - maybe it's because I'm autistic but I really find it very difficult. I am a leader in the sense I take the initiative to do new things, but I'm not good at working with teams and I want to be, both as an ordinary member of the team and as the leader of a group. One issue is that I do not naturally hold much authority or gravitas, so I got a book about leadership when not in a position of authority and another one about communication.
Now for my many gripes:
- He gives the template of a WHY statement as 'to ________________ so that _________', with the first blank being your contribution and the second its impact. All okay so far. But he gives many examples of supposedly good WHY statements throughout the book and nearly all of them are utterly shite!
- To innovate relentlessly in order to create opportunities for everyone*
- To believe in people so that they can, in turn, believe in themselves
- To provoke people to think differently so that they can be awakened to new possibilities (I guess this one is ok)
- To bring people together to savor life (the company makes coffee machines)
- To enable people to be extraordinary so that they can do extraordinary things
- To propel people forward so that they can make their mark on the world
- To provide for people so that they thrive and feel empowered to always do the right thing
The only good one I remember was about a guy wanting to promote sustainability to leave the Earth a better place for future generations.
- He says everyone has a WHY, and that the WHY must include helping people - this just seems unlikely. There have to be some people in the world who are not in fact driven by helping others.
- He says everyone has one WHY, and that the reason your colleagues, friends and significant other love you are all the same, which I doubt. He also says that the contribution you make to your family is the same as the contribution you make in other areas of your life, which is obviously false. Maybe this is why so many of the WHYs above are so vague. Or maybe it's that their jobs are to do this WHY training so it's very meta.
- Misuse of biology - reading this kind of book (what is it? It's not even pop science - pop psychology?) does put a biologist in danger of annoyance, but ugh.
- One of the tips is to think of a day where you left work and thought 'I'd do that for free' and figure out what it was about that day that made you think that. But I mean, I think that about most days at work (I would still like to be paid, thanks) and I don't think it's necessarily connected to some deep inner purpose. I do find biology fulfilling but I don't see what that has to do with helping others (it's not for medicine), and one major reason I say I'd do that for free is that I spend most of my day coding and doing data analysis and I do exactly that at home as a hobby. The money helps me stick with it through the tedious and tough moments. And also I need to eat and otherwise service my corporeal form.
Planet Earth is Blue - Nicole Panteleakos
Rating: 3/5
Source: Bought from Brown University bookstore
Date finished: June 11
Pages: 240
Rating: 3/5
Source: Bought from Brown University bookstore
Date finished: June 11
Pages: 240
I bought this book even though it was non-digital and very expensive because I wanted to support the #actuallyautistic author writing about an autistic person. I'm not sure how I feel about the book. The narrator had a very, VERY childish voice even though she's about twelve, which I didn't really enjoy. I liked it talking about the people who did and didn't believe in her because she couldn't speak, and it was accurate to the parts of the autistic experience myself and the character share.
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