This intimate manga anthology is about the struggles and triumphs of individuals learning to navigate …
A tough read, but worth it
5 stars
Pretty hard going in parts as most of the stories involve the people concerned struggling through school and being bullied, and then the teachers joining in :( Ultimately pretty hopeful, though, as each contributor receives a diagnosis which at minimum allows them to make sense of their earlier life, and often allows them to make adaptations or receive accommodations to make things easier in the future.
CWs for suicidal ideation/attempts, abusive parenting, and bullying
Selected Political Writings gathers Stuart Hall's best-known and most important essays that directly engage with …
A work of art
5 stars
Admittedly I find it hard to imagine giving Stuart Hall's writing any less than five stars, but this really was an absolute pleasure to read. The editors have collected a series of essays all the way from the Suez crisis to the first years of the coalition government. There's so much perceptive and prescient analysis in here, and with writing that, even if only briefly, makes me feel more articulate and erudite. Just lovely.
"What if there were a way to stop climate change and end global hunger at …
Starts off well, but fades a little towards the end
4 stars
Well-written, as one has come to expect of Monbiot, the book starts off strongly with a deep dive into soil ecology, which helps to frame later discussion of how soil should be seen as a living matrix and not just an inert substrate for plants and chemicals. The book really takes off over the next few chapters, detailing all the many problems with the current system of food production. Of particular note is the way that so much land and food production is so inefficiently mediated through meat, particularly beef. The second half of the book felt considerably weaker. Monbiot visits several unconventional farms, examining each in quite some detail and, while each seems a healthier alternative to more usual agriculture, none seemed particularly viable if scaled up to feed everyone. There's definitely lots of good stuff in here, and some of his prognoses are, frankly, a bit terrifying, but …
Well-written, as one has come to expect of Monbiot, the book starts off strongly with a deep dive into soil ecology, which helps to frame later discussion of how soil should be seen as a living matrix and not just an inert substrate for plants and chemicals. The book really takes off over the next few chapters, detailing all the many problems with the current system of food production. Of particular note is the way that so much land and food production is so inefficiently mediated through meat, particularly beef. The second half of the book felt considerably weaker. Monbiot visits several unconventional farms, examining each in quite some detail and, while each seems a healthier alternative to more usual agriculture, none seemed particularly viable if scaled up to feed everyone. There's definitely lots of good stuff in here, and some of his prognoses are, frankly, a bit terrifying, but the stronger material felt rather let down by the weaker chapters.
First up, it has to be said that this book is breathtakingly brutal. The descriptions of the conditions under which Congolese artisanal miners work, and the injuries they suffer, are heartrending. The author has obviously shown great persistence, bravery, and empathy in investigating in the field. He counterposes statements from major electronics and EV manufacturers against the claim that there is no such thing as 'clean' cobalt, because artisanal (i.e., hand-mined) cobalt is merged into the supply chain so early that it can't be distinguished from mechanically-mined cobalt.
That said, I'd have liked to see more explanation of just how the supposed certification processes function and how they fail so badly. That would also likely alleviate my other criticism which is that focusing on his observations in the field, involving Congolese security guards and officials together with Chinese dealers, runs the risk of occluding the role of Western companies in …
First up, it has to be said that this book is breathtakingly brutal. The descriptions of the conditions under which Congolese artisanal miners work, and the injuries they suffer, are heartrending. The author has obviously shown great persistence, bravery, and empathy in investigating in the field. He counterposes statements from major electronics and EV manufacturers against the claim that there is no such thing as 'clean' cobalt, because artisanal (i.e., hand-mined) cobalt is merged into the supply chain so early that it can't be distinguished from mechanically-mined cobalt.
That said, I'd have liked to see more explanation of just how the supposed certification processes function and how they fail so badly. That would also likely alleviate my other criticism which is that focusing on his observations in the field, involving Congolese security guards and officials together with Chinese dealers, runs the risk of occluding the role of Western companies in this dismal supply chain.
The world is desperate for cobalt. It fuels the digital economy and powers everything from …
About 'Cobalt', but not 'cobalt'...
5 stars
Slightly embarrassing confession time -- I requested this from the library because the wait list for 'Cobalt Red' is so long, and only after I received it did I discover that it's about silver mining in the Northern Ontario town of Cobalt. Still, glad I did so -- so much great history here, examining how the utilization of the mineral reserves was based on the exploitation of the local Indigenous people, the mineworkers (many of whom were very recent European immigrants), and the environment.
The late nineteenth century was marked by brutal industrial development everywhere, but it feels as if it was even more naked in this 'frontier' town where the mining companies could just decide to excavate the main street or even within peoples' houses, and the mineworkers had to borrow to pay their way up north and could be hunted down if they tried to leave before their …
Slightly embarrassing confession time -- I requested this from the library because the wait list for 'Cobalt Red' is so long, and only after I received it did I discover that it's about silver mining in the Northern Ontario town of Cobalt. Still, glad I did so -- so much great history here, examining how the utilization of the mineral reserves was based on the exploitation of the local Indigenous people, the mineworkers (many of whom were very recent European immigrants), and the environment.
The late nineteenth century was marked by brutal industrial development everywhere, but it feels as if it was even more naked in this 'frontier' town where the mining companies could just decide to excavate the main street or even within peoples' houses, and the mineworkers had to borrow to pay their way up north and could be hunted down if they tried to leave before their debts were repaid.
The book also deals with the way the wealth generated in this northern town was rapidly funneled south to Toronto, building that town up to be the financial capital it now is. Particularly ironic that the nearby town of Temagami and its surrounding lakes were sold to the rich Torontonians as a location for 'rugged outdoorsy' activities such as canoeing, while only 40km away lakes were being drained for mining and others were polluted with arsenic and cyanide.
The silver was mostly mined-out by the end of the First World War, and the book then jumps to the present in the concluding three chapters, covering how mining in Canada still receives extraordinary tax breaks that are largely kept secret, how Canadian mining companies have exported their exploitative practices elsewhere in the world, and how the town looks set to experience another round of mining as there are local cobalt deposits that might be useful for batteries.
She arrived with her arts, her wits, and her only …
DNF'ed at 16%. I tried hard to like this, especially after enjoying Gideon so much, but the combination of all the second-person narration and the, for want of a better word, gore, was all too much. I opened my e-reader this morning and it estimated I still had 4 hours to go, and I just couldn't...
Seven students find unusual common ground in this warm, puzzle-like Japanese bestseller laced with gentle …
Just blew me away
5 stars
Genuinely moving, involving story following seven junior high students in Tokyo who have stopped going to school. The early part of the book may seem a little slow-paced, but I think it's just laying the groundwork and developing the characters, ready for the intensity to pick up with a wild twist in the middle and an ending that's both heartbreaking and yet, strangely, hopeful.
First serialized in the journal "The Dark Blue" and published shortly thereafter in the short …
So much to like
5 stars
Perhaps let down a little by a rather flat ending, most of the book does a wonderful job of dropping little clues that Carmilla might not be all she pretends to be, while also examining the intense relationship between her and Laura.
There are some absolute gems in here, and apparently I've been putting off reading Montaigne for far too long, but I found the accounts of Batchelor's experiences with Ayahuasca distinctly off-putting.
First, the good. It's mostly pretty clearly written, with only occasional excursions into obscurantism. Furthermore, a focus on the precepts makes for a more usefully-practical book than one that is more centred around the practice of zazen. Where I struggled with the book, though, was in the sense that Anderson is so stuck within the framework of traditional Zen, that he can't see beyond it to criticize it. The chapter on Right Speech seems particularly weak in this regard.
This volume in this exciting new series provides a detailed yet accessible study of Gothic …
Bit disappointing after the first book
4 stars
Not a bad book, per se, but felt like a definite downgrade after the first book in this series. In particular, the pacing felt a little odd -- the second chapter feels like a headlong rush through the Gothic authors of the period (Dickens! Wilde! Bronte! Stoker!) while the rest of the book takes a more leisurely wander through topics such as ghosts and spirituality in the Victorian age. The final chapter is an analysis of Gothic criticism which feels a bit, I don't know, too 'meta'.
This volume, which weds a socio-historical and intellectual approach to classic British Gothic literature, is …
Accessible history/analysis of the 'classic' Gothic period
4 stars
Fun guide to the Gothic period from Horace Walpole to C. R. Maturin. Introductory chapter has some quotes from people critical of the gothic, and then subsequent chapters each cover a particular author, such as Walpole or Radcliffe, or a 'type' such as Female Gothic.