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January 03, 2012

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    Recent reading

    • China Mieville: Embassytown

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      Mieville's unquestioned return to form is pure SF; set on a vastly distant planet in a vastly different time, it explores the relationship between human settlers and a host species so alien that it calls into question the nature of language, thought and identity. I have a few minor quibbles, but really, this is virtuoso stuff and I enjoyed every page.

    • Marguerite Duras: Destroy, She Said

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      Barely a novel, but not quite a play - although later a film directed by Duras herself - this is an exquisitely lean, constantly threatening portrait of a few days in the life of a quartet of characters who might of might not be insane, in what might or might not be an asylum. Dark, erotic and surreal: a minimalist masterpiece.

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    • Steven Levitt        : Freakonomics

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      Hardly "The Black Swan" it's true, but for all its detractors - from "hard" economists to the simply skeptical - Levitt and Dubner's book is a three-night romp, charmingly written, thought-provoking and actually fun, even where some of their non economics-based observations are at best dubious (witness Levitt's weird optimism in the Peak Oil post).

    • Hugh Barker & Yuval Taylor: Faking It: The Quest for Authenticity in Popular Music

      Hugh Barker & Yuval Taylor: Faking It: The Quest for Authenticity in Popular Music
      I can't say this history of the pointless search for "authenticity" in pop music (and culture), was especially an eye opener, but then it was preaching to the converted with me. But it IS brilliantly researched and clearly argued; in my case, it provided a lot of evidence for some deeply held hunches.

    • Nassim Nicholas Taleb: The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable

      Nassim Nicholas Taleb: The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable
      Not sure I can add to the hubbub over NNT, but I will say that like all the best books this really leaves one looking at the world in a completely fresh way, and certainly skeptical about the unthinking use of statistics and spurious historical narrative.