Part-biography, part-political thriller, The Unaccountability Machine is a rousing exposé of how management failures lead …
Interesting but slightly disappointing take on cybernetics.
4 stars
I expected to enjoy this more than I did, being familiar with Cybernetics from previous books and sharing many of Dan's views on management and economics.
Parts of the book are very good, particularly the way he outlines why neoliberalism/neoclassical economics fail to manage effectively, and the flaws with accounting. Other parts feel strangely unfinished, as if he had an idea and wasn't quite sure how to complete it. It's never entirely clear how he thinks cybernetics ideas can be incorporated into management, or how measurement can in practice be improved. And I found his belief in AI and aspects of management strangely naive, as was his belief that increased complexity is inevitable and we must deal with it (that maybe we need to simplify instead never really occurs to him).
This book about a French woman, who grows up in pre-Revolutionary Ukraine, and then experiences the horrors of WWI and the revolution is more about atmosphere than plot.
The central character is a slightly implausible character that things just happen to, but who barely reflects upon how she feels or those experiences. Instead she just lives through a collection of events that do not entirely cohere (gifted ballerine, who just stops due to illness. Silent film star who just... stops. Lover of a man who just stops. And so forth). Psychological plausibility is not something that you will get from this book.
Instead what it provides is atmosphere and the strange, almost kinetic, experience of just drifting through history. Of a woman who unreflectingly just is, and who the other characters (mostly men) see what they want to see, or fear.
This is a pretty minor novel, but it is …
This book about a French woman, who grows up in pre-Revolutionary Ukraine, and then experiences the horrors of WWI and the revolution is more about atmosphere than plot.
The central character is a slightly implausible character that things just happen to, but who barely reflects upon how she feels or those experiences. Instead she just lives through a collection of events that do not entirely cohere (gifted ballerine, who just stops due to illness. Silent film star who just... stops. Lover of a man who just stops. And so forth). Psychological plausibility is not something that you will get from this book.
Instead what it provides is atmosphere and the strange, almost kinetic, experience of just drifting through history. Of a woman who unreflectingly just is, and who the other characters (mostly men) see what they want to see, or fear.
This is a pretty minor novel, but it is engrossing. I cannot imagine reading it a second time, but I'm glad I finally got round to it.
This book relies on a plot twist than when it finally arrives is neither surprising, or terribly well thought out. Stylistically it tries to use Venice as a way to disguise that it really doesn't have a lot to say.
Elderly and dying Cabalist, who has discovered how to use cabalism (though what he can do - we never really discover, oddly), tries to leave his legacy to the world. The world is fairly indifferent, and he fails. Which is really all that this amounts too.
A "best of" collection of creepy tales from Eisner award winner and legendary horror master …
One of the less essential collections.
3 stars
The standout story in this is 'The Enigma of Amigara Fault', which is one of Junji Ito's most disturbing and iconic stories. Like his best stories, the horror is entirely in the premise and its strange dream like logic that can't be resisted.
There are some adaptations which are fine, but not essential. And not all the stories are horror. Venus in the Blind Spot is more horror adjacent, and there are a couple of mildly amusing comic stories.
Of the remaining horror stories. They're all fine, but second tier.
A pair of twisted siblings—Yuuma, a young man obsessed with the devil, and Chizumi, the …
Fun but slight
3 stars
Fun romp with two siblings who cause havoc wherever they go. The premise is clearly intended as a parody of Japanese public apologies, and it works quite well as that. Gives off a similar energy to early Alan Moore (his British stuff). Would probably have worked well as a Deadline cartoon in the 90s.
The art is fine, though not comparable to his best work.
All the stories in this are decent, and while there are no classics, there are still a couple of stand outs. The level of originality in this collection is surprisingly high, while of course the artwork is glorious.
Earthbound is a great weird anime, where the twist is both surprising and powerful. While Secret of the Haunted Mansion is a lot of creepy fun (the other stories expanding its mythos are also pretty good, including a story with one of the most disturbing cats I've ever seen). And who knew nails could be that disturbing?
Death Row Doorbell is messed up in all the right ways. And smashed with its predictable, but still very funny, ending.
An innocent love becomes a bloody hell in another superb collection by master of horror …
Creepy
4 stars
The first sequence of stories is a wonderfully surreal (but still creepy) story about a town where when the fog comes in, you stand at an intersection and ask a stranger for your fortune. This being Juno Ito things take a creepy (and bloody) turn, though there's a surprisingly optimistic ending. One of his best. The artwork is particularly effective at evoking the fog, and creating a sense of dread that lingers long after finishing.
Sadly the rest of the collection is less good. While none of it is bad, none of it is essential.
The next series (of 2) is a comedy about a murderous family of siblings (the Addams family, minus the sophistication) and their misadventures. It's fun, though pretty lightweight.
'Mansion of Phantom Pain' is fine, but is fairly forgettable.
'Ribs' starts strong, but ends as a monster story that doesn't really connect with the beginning.
And …
The first sequence of stories is a wonderfully surreal (but still creepy) story about a town where when the fog comes in, you stand at an intersection and ask a stranger for your fortune. This being Juno Ito things take a creepy (and bloody) turn, though there's a surprisingly optimistic ending. One of his best. The artwork is particularly effective at evoking the fog, and creating a sense of dread that lingers long after finishing.
Sadly the rest of the collection is less good. While none of it is bad, none of it is essential.
The next series (of 2) is a comedy about a murderous family of siblings (the Addams family, minus the sophistication) and their misadventures. It's fun, though pretty lightweight.
'Mansion of Phantom Pain' is fine, but is fairly forgettable.
'Ribs' starts strong, but ends as a monster story that doesn't really connect with the beginning.
And then there's the story about shit. Which is... better than it should be.
"Junji Ito meets Mary Shelley! The master of horror manga bends all his skill into …
The other stories are better.
3 stars
Got bored of the Frankenstein adaptation, but the Oshikiri stories are great. I want more stories about the unfortunate high school student who keeps getting dragged into baffling and annoying supernatural mysteries.
Beautiful art and well told, but the twists are predictable.
3 stars
The artwork in this manga is gorgeous, and the story telling is effective. But it suffers from poor characterisation (like a lot of manga), while the twists are fairly obvious. A couple of stories stand out, but over all a little disappointing.
Souin Gyokusai seyo! is a "semi-autobiographical account of the desperate final weeks of a Japanese …
Surprisingly readable given its bleak subject matter
4 stars
Japanese soldiers at the end of World War II die pointlessly in a series of pointless battles, culminating in a suicide attack that exists for no purpose other than the honor of the Japanese military.
Despite the bleak and depressing material, this is a compulsively readable comic.
Nothing is harder to do these days than nothing. But in a world where our …
Escape the Rat Race
4 stars
A fun and rambling defense of doing nothing, and resisting our modern productivity culture. And unlike so many condemnations of our modern world, and all the problems within it, this book is calming. It may not give you the answers, but you may find you emerge from it with a better understanding of how to just 'be'.
[In this book, the author] draws on sources as diverse as the philosophy of Merleau-Ponty, …
Powerful, but flawed, analysis of humans and our place in the world.
4 stars
This is a wide ranging philosophical analysis of humans, and how we engage with/make sense of the world. Much of it will be familiar to readers of Merleau-Ponty, but his background as an anthropologist and naturalist allows him to bring a unique perspective on this. And for people who are not familiar with phenomenology, he provides one of the better introductions that I've read.
The most powerful parts of the book are where he draws upon his anthropological background, to make some interesting arguments about how 'civilized' humans perceive the world very differently from our indigenous ancestors, due to things like their need to pay more attention to landmarks and the behavior of animals. And he makes some very novel (to me at least - this may be common place for anthropologists) arguments about how indigenous myths are really a form of memory palace (c.f. Francis Yates), rather than stories …
This is a wide ranging philosophical analysis of humans, and how we engage with/make sense of the world. Much of it will be familiar to readers of Merleau-Ponty, but his background as an anthropologist and naturalist allows him to bring a unique perspective on this. And for people who are not familiar with phenomenology, he provides one of the better introductions that I've read.
The most powerful parts of the book are where he draws upon his anthropological background, to make some interesting arguments about how 'civilized' humans perceive the world very differently from our indigenous ancestors, due to things like their need to pay more attention to landmarks and the behavior of animals. And he makes some very novel (to me at least - this may be common place for anthropologists) arguments about how indigenous myths are really a form of memory palace (c.f. Francis Yates), rather than stories in the way that we think of them. Ways for a culture to pass on remember cultural knowledge about the land, traditions, praxis and moral precepts. He also makes some interesting arguments about how written language changed how human beings thought and interacted with the world.
Unfortunately while his arguments are fascinating and highly original, many of them rely upon dated (or in some cases) questionable sources. In particular his analysis of Amazonian tribes relies heavily on a very questionable memoir by a Brazilian medicine man, that most anthropologists believe to have been largely made up. Some of his other arguments rely upon anthropological texts from the 70s and 80s, suggesting that his knowledge of the field probably ended when he completed his graduate studies. So I'm not sure how reliable a guide he truly is.
Despite these reservations, this book is well worth reading. It will challenge your assumptions, and may provoke you to look at the world differently.
A good book to read in addition to this would be Tyson Yunkaporta's Sand Talk.