This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone
This is How You Lose the Time War
The Joy of X
The Joy of X: A Guided Tour of Math From One to Infinityby Steven Strogatz
The Sound of Fire
The Sound of Fire by Renee Belliveau
Still in Love / Olivetti
Still in Love by Michael Downing
An audio book I enjoyed a great deal but suspect may not be for everyone. Several unsympathetic reviews dismiss it as being too narrow in its subject matter, but I like this particular subject matter and have to disagree.
Set in the university classroom of a writing workshop, it strays only far enough from that to round out the story a little. The class is given various writing assignments, with the resulting stories discussed and evaluated by the group. Between classes and one-on-one meetings with students during office hours, the (asst.) professor is struggling to write a book of his own. His personal life comes into it, but never as much more than background to his teaching/writing life.
If writing doesn't interest you I don't know that you'd find much to like in this. There is little action, but a lot of thinking and discussing. I liked the characters and particularly enjoyed the professor analyzing the student's stories and offering suggestions for improvement. I hope to buy a hard copy to keep and read again.
I've come across a number of books lately where the narrator is an inanimate object rather than a human being. When I saw this story was told by a typewriter it was simply too bookish to pass up.
The other narrator is a 12 year old boy, whose mother has been sick for some time and is now missing. The typewriter, Olivetti, remembers everything Beverly (the mother) ever typed on it and so may be able to provide clues as to where she has gone. The narrators alternate chapters.
The story - at times funny, at times sad - keeps you anticipating what comes next and is perfectly suited to the recommended reading age of 8 to 14 yrs. It touches on topics of cancer, difficult family situations, theft, anger, and being afraid, so may or may not be suitable for readers younger than that.
A uniquely interesting story.
More or Less Maddy
More or Less Maddy by Lisa Genova
Another gripping story by an author who shows us what it's like to live with debilitating neurological disorders. This time it's Maddie, a young girl with bi-polar disease whose dream is to become a stand-up comedian.
As Lisa Genova's stories always are, it was emminently readable, but I found this one a little harder to get through on an emotional level. Maddie's up times were truly frightening, with the increasing recklessness of her actions seeming to cross lines there could be no coming back from, and the lows were even worse. It was so convincingly written that her self-destructive actions start to make sense and seem reasonable in her circumstances. I wonder if that could make it risky reading for vulnerable people.
It is a good story and important in shedding light on this awful illness, but I'd be hesitant to give it to anyone I knew to be in the throes of a serious depression. On the other hand, I might be way off and it could be the very thing someone needs to hear. It would take a wiser person than I to say.
Genova's books have done much to show us the human side of these diseases and hopefully make us all more aware and more compassionate. And besides all that, they are darn good stories.
Careless People
Careless People by Sarah Wynn-Williams
Sarah Wynn-Williams worked at Facebook from 2011 to 2017, working up to the position of Global Public Policy Director. This is her personal account of the work she did there and the people she worked with. It begins slowly but the latter half of the book gets more intense as she describes her disappointment and frustration with things she saw and heard.
I went into this already doubting Facebook's - now Meta's - good intentions, and what I read did not encourage me to change my mind. Not that any of it was startling news, it simply confirms what we all suspect, that Facebook, like other large corporations, makes decisions based on profit rather than what's best for the people they claim to serve. No surprise there, still it may be a bit surprising to read about the careless way Meta is said to treat its employees. It's always interesting to get an inside perspective and see how powerful people conduct themselves and function in the world.
Of course (and this is only from info I've found online) Meta has retaliated, calling the book "false and defamatory". They sued the author for violating a "non-disparagement clause in her severance agreement" and the last I read, she has been legally prohibited from promoting the book.
It's a case of she says/they say, with lots of people on both sides claiming the other side is wrong. We can't know because we weren't there, but I don't believe she made all of it up. It's true that in the latter half of the book she seems a little less controlled and a lot more angry, but she still comes off sounding more credible than Meta does.
This is a story about a company that seems dissatisfied with simply being profitable. It appears they want to be more, and more, profitable, and more powerful. It's the power they already have and the reported carelessness with people that gives one pause. But that's just my opinion. Read the book and come back and tell me yours.
It's controversial, disheartening, and a little alarming, but it's a story that speaks to the times we're living in and so is worth reading.





