luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
[personal profile] luzula
Ooops, have not written up books in a while.

Svensk överklass och högerextremism under 1900-talet by Karl N. Alvar Nilsson (2000)
Title means "The Swedish Upper Classes and Right Extremism in the 1900's". Wow, I didn't know how close we actually came to joining WWII on the German side--if some of the military brass had gotten their way. Luckily the government was firmly neutral. This was an informative book, maybe too much so. I wish there had been more analysis compared to the stacking of facts and names.

Norra Latin by Sara Bergmark Elfgren (2017)
YA urban fantasy by one of the co-authors of the Engelsfors Trilogy. The title is the name of a high school in Stockholm, one that in RL was closed down in the 80's, but in this one it's open. Overall I enjoyed it! There's a ghost story and also a love triangle. I do wish the love triangle had shown more of the eventual F/F than the long-drawn-out and destructive M/F relationship that preceded it, though. We didn't even get an onscreen kiss, FFS.

Warrior Scarlet by Rosemary Sutcliff (1994)
I was in the mood for some Sutcliff! It's been a while. This is a short book about a disabled boy in the Bronze Age and his struggles to be accepted as a warrior. I love her nature descriptions as always, but I think the female main character got a pretty rough deal.

Four Futures: Life After Capitalism by Peter Frase (2015)
Short, worth reading. He takes further automation as an axiom and investigates four possible cases of scarcity/abundance of natural resources, and equality/inequality. Abundance and equality = communism, abundance and inequality = rentism (with a lot of intellectual property rights), scarcity and equality = socialism, scarcity and inequality = exterminism. Most chilling is the observation at the end that these might not be mutually exclusive but that one could lead to another: if the rich kill off the poor first (exterminism) then the rich could live in communism...

I've read more books, but for various reasons will review them later.

(no subject)

Date: 2019-05-04 12:48 pm (UTC)
jesse_the_k: Fat ewe stares at camera (ewe looking at me?)
From: [personal profile] jesse_the_k
That last one sounds like the stuff of nightmares.

I’m reading a charming book called the Revolutionary Genius of Plants by Stéfano Mancuso. He waxes eloquent on how plants do a whole bunch of things that I never realized: move, mimic other plants, influence their environment. While totally lacking in scientific rigor, it makes me think of you.

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