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Frecklemaid

Unfreeze4257@books.theunseen.city

Joined 1 year, 4 months ago

Currently an International Studies/Software Development student with a love of speculative fiction. I also read a decent amount of nonfiction focusing on politics and philosophy. I read in French, Spanish, and (mostly) English with the potential for a foray into Esperanto.

Catch any full reviews or other random posts at my blog below: https://specual.me

My mastodon account: Humbly7362@todon.eu

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Frecklemaid's books

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Le livre noir de la mode (EBook, French language, 2021) 5 stars

La mondialisation a radicalement modifié l’industrie de l’habillement et le rapport au corps. Le contenu …

Great source on the environmental and human consequences of the fashion industry

5 stars

(Review in English -le français n'est pas ma langue maternelle, donc je peux m'exprimer d'une façonne plus efficace en anglais.)

This book provides what I think is a very comprehensive look into the key issues facing the fashion industry- labour, environment and consumerism. In each topic explored, Millet takes care to thoroughly examine the key issues, causes and where possible, potential solutions. There is no doubt that anyone could learn something new from this book.

As someone who had already previously done a lot of research on these topics, there were parts where I feel I didn't learn much. Nevertheless, I think the vast majority of people would have almost no idea about the true effect and scale of the fashion industry. In particular I was shocked to learn of the horrendous impact of the cotton industry internationally, as well as of the American predominance in it. I would be …

Berlin stories (2012, New York Review Books) 5 stars

In 1905 the young Swiss writer Robert Walser arrived in Berlin to join his older …

Review of 'Berlin stories' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Writing like this makes you love life. It made me want to write about any mundane thing with the same romanticism and positivity Walser approached his life with. What more can you want from a book than that?

Full review: specual.me/posts/berlinstories/

A time of changes (1975, Panther) 2 stars

In the far future, Earth is a worn-out backwater and humanity is spread across the …

Review of 'A time of changes' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

For me, the repetitive objectification of women was infuriating with little payoff. Perhaps it is true that his inability to evaluate women by any measure other than their attractiveness is symptomatic of the general lack of self-expression and open communication in the society, but this doesn't change at all after he experiences the souls of women through psychedelic use (even as his understanding of others in general grows.) The second half of the book was more interesting than the first as he starts to explore psychedelics, but there are probably better books out there if a fictional representation of 60s/70s drug culture is what you're looking for.

Full review: specual.me/posts/timeofchanges/

The Grand Chessboard (1997, Basic Books) 3 stars

As the twentieth century draws to a close, the United States has emerged as the …

Review of 'The Grand Chessboard' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Is The Grand Chessboard still worth reading? Mostly, I think so. The Grand Chessboard provides fascinating and prescient geopolitical analysis from a very historically influential figure. It is, however, outdated given its 1997 publication.

Full review here: specual.me/posts/thegrandchessboard/

Iron Dream,the (Paperback, 1986, Spectra) 4 stars

Norman Spinrad's 1972 alternate history, gives us both a metafictional what-if novel and a cutting …

Review of 'Iron Dream,the' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

What if Hitler had written science fiction?
This is the question that Norman Spinrad asks in The Iron Dream, and one I can't say I'd ever thought of exploring the answer to before. This story within a story contains an entertaining, homoerotic exploration of a post-Nuclear future where the quest for human genomic purity is centred by a Hitler self-insert. The satire of Nazism simply doesn't miss, even as we have passed the Cold War context in which it was written. Highly recommend giving it a shot if weird/bizarro fiction ever floats your boat.

Full review here: specual.me/posts/theirondream/

Esperanto and its rivals (2015, University of Pennsylvania Press) 5 stars

The problems of international communication and linguistic rights are recurring debates in the present-day age …

Review of 'Esperanto and its rivals' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This (I think) well-researched book traversed the beginnings of not only the Esperanto movement, but its predecessor Volapuk and failed offshoot Ido. In this, the author weaved throughout prominent social movements and aspects of political context to paint a picture of the people involved in artificial languages and why. The relative success among artificial languages of Esperanto is, according the author, not because of any particular genius of the language itself but of the (accidental) genius of Zamenhof’s approach to starting a community and movement around the language.

This book continually made me think about what could have been had these idealists succeeded in selecting a international language before English won out. The points behind it still make sense. I also wonder what would have happened if Esperantists were not persecuted so harshly during the interwar and Second World War periods. Would we all be speaking Esperanto now? Probably not, …

Out of the Ruins (EBook, 2021, Titan Books) 3 stars

WHAT WOULD YOU SAVE FROM THE FIRE?

In the moments when it all comes crashing …

Review of 'Out of the Ruins' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

For the most part, the stories didn’t capture much of my attention, were confusing or were forgettable. However, there were a few that I did enjoy (as listed below.) Rather than reading through the whole collection, I’d recommend those.

- The Rise and Fall of Whistle-Pig City by Paul Di Fillipo
- Mr Thursday by Emily St. John Mandel
- As Good As New by Charlie Jane Anders
- Malware Park by Nikhil Singh
- Maeda: The Body Optic by Rumi Kaneko
- Reminded by Ramsey Campbell

Most memorable

The Kaiju Preservation Society (Hardcover, 2022, Tor Books) 4 stars

When COVID-19 sweeps through New York City, Jamie Gray is stuck as a dead-end driver …

Review of 'The Kaiju Preservation Society' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I dunno, the concept was cool. On the other hand, every character had about the same personality, which wore thin as the book went on. It also suffered from what other reviewers have (accurately) termed a 'B-movie action plot' that was both shallow and predictable. Until this, I had been generally enjoying this book. It wasn't mind-blowing, but it was decently fun. Scalzi could have gone further, developed more and made something truly unique and worth recommending. Unfortunately, this just fell short.