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garrett

garrett@books.infosec.exchange

Joined 1 year, 10 months ago

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garrett's books

Currently Reading (View all 5)

2025 Reading Goal

Success! garrett has read 12 of 12 books.

reviewed Vintage Didion by Joan Didion (Vintage readers)

Joan Didion: Vintage Didion (2004, Vintage)

None

This was a treat that delved into a lot of American history. Even the El Salvador essay speaks to certain qualities of being an American in the world. They're all to the point and explore things that weren't quite part of the original narrative. From the Central Park Five, to the Clinton scandal and even the aftermath of 9/11, the essays look at the context and impact. They take a dive into the points around that weren't popular to consider. I think this is one of the gifts of much of Didion's writing, exploring what it means to be part of something, an event or a group. What is created as a result of your participation. This is something that is always worth thinking about as an American, as a human.

reviewed Vintage Didion by Joan Didion (Vintage readers)

Joan Didion: Vintage Didion (2004, Vintage)

Review of 'Vintage Didion' on 'Goodreads'

This was a treat that delved into a lot of American history. Even the El Salvador essay speaks to certain qualities of being an American in the world. They're all to the point and explore things that weren't quite part of the original narrative. From the Central Park Five, to the Clinton scandal and even the aftermath of 9/11, the essays look at the context and impact. They take a dive into the points around that weren't popular to consider. I think this is one of the gifts of much of Didion's writing, exploring what it means to be part of something, an event or a group. What is created as a result of your participation. This is something that is always worth thinking about as an American, as a human.

Adam Greenfield: Radical Technologies: The Design of Everyday Life (2017, Verso)

Review of 'Radical Technologies: The Design of Everyday Life' on 'Goodreads'

I think this book might be a great primer for folks looking to understand emerging technologies as well as a serious critique of each to help temper a bit of the rampant hype that you're likely still seeing surrounding most of these. When new technologies are presented as a "paradigm shift" or an opportunity to increase our wealth, time, quality of life, we have a tendency to get swept up in the potential. Greenfield almost provides a framework for asking critical questions not just of the technology but of the role we take in it.

My "highlighter" ran out on this one with certain bites that really crystalized what I was already thinking about but hadn't encapsulated so succinctly. In particular, the section about blockchain beyond Bitcoin and its elaboration of DAO's, decentralized autonomous organizations. The author points to an example of a neighborhood organization that has a DAO pitched …

Adam Greenfield: Radical Technologies: The Design of Everyday Life (2017, Verso)

None

I think this book might be a great primer for folks looking to understand emerging technologies as well as a serious critique of each to help temper a bit of the rampant hype that you're likely still seeing surrounding most of these. When new technologies are presented as a "paradigm shift" or an opportunity to increase our wealth, time, quality of life, we have a tendency to get swept up in the potential. Greenfield almost provides a framework for asking critical questions not just of the technology but of the role we take in it.

My "highlighter" ran out on this one with certain bites that really crystalized what I was already thinking about but hadn't encapsulated so succinctly. In particular, the section about blockchain beyond Bitcoin and its elaboration of DAO's, decentralized autonomous organizations. The author points to an example of a neighborhood organization that has a DAO pitched …

Barry Meier: Pain Killer (Paperback, Sceptre)

"Between 1999 and 2017, an estimated 250,000 Americans died from overdoses involving prescription painkillers, a …

Review of 'Pain Killer' on 'Goodreads'

After already reading Empire of Pain and watching "The Crime of the Century" on HBO, I already had a fair amount of background on the opioid crisis although it's one of those broad issues that you never really get enough of. Since this book was presented as an early informer of many of the things that Empire of Pain touched on, I figured it was worth a read. Writing is concise, descriptions are powerful. The updated version is great although if you're looking for a one-and-done book on the topic, I'd probably recommend just going over to "Empire of Pain" by Patrick Radden Keefe, a phenomenally written and power account of the opioid crisis and in particular, the Sacklers role in its genesis.

Related:
"Empire of Pain" by Patrick Radden Keefe
"The Crime of the Century" by Alex Gibney (www.imdb.com/title/tt14055432/)

Barry Meier: Pain Killer (Paperback, Sceptre)

"Between 1999 and 2017, an estimated 250,000 Americans died from overdoses involving prescription painkillers, a …

None

After already reading Empire of Pain and watching "The Crime of the Century" on HBO, I already had a fair amount of background on the opioid crisis although it's one of those broad issues that you never really get enough of. Since this book was presented as an early informer of many of the things that Empire of Pain touched on, I figured it was worth a read. Writing is concise, descriptions are powerful. The updated version is great although if you're looking for a one-and-done book on the topic, I'd probably recommend just going over to "Empire of Pain" by Patrick Radden Keefe, a phenomenally written and power account of the opioid crisis and in particular, the Sacklers role in its genesis.

Related:
"Empire of Pain" by Patrick Radden Keefe
"The Crime of the Century" by Alex Gibney (www.imdb.com/title/tt14055432/)

None

The sentiment on the internet has always been that this is one of the best science fiction books to read, with its fresh take on what can often times be a stale genre. The perspective is unique and has moments of revelation that feel surprisingly different from the traditional "investigation of self" that I typically get from science fiction, identifying moments of hope despite the fractures in civilization. Despite the intense shift towards the end, it leaves a lot to feel good about which I don't commonly leave hard sci-fi with.

Cixin Liu: Death's End (The Three-Body Problem) (2018, Head of Zeus)

Sequel to The Dark Forest. Half a century after the Doomsday Battle, the uneasy balance …

Review of "Death's End (The Three-Body Problem)" on 'Goodreads'

The sentiment on the internet has always been that this is one of the best science fiction books to read, with its fresh take on what can often times be a stale genre. The perspective is unique and has moments of revelation that feel surprisingly different from the traditional "investigation of self" that I typically get from science fiction, identifying moments of hope despite the fractures in civilization. Despite the intense shift towards the end, it leaves a lot to feel good about which I don't commonly leave hard sci-fi with.

Deirdre Mask: The address book : what street addresses reveal about identity, race, wealth, and power (Hardcover, 2020, St. Martin's Press)

An exuberant work of popular history: the story of how streets got their names and …

None

This was a fun read with an interesting dive into the way that addressing impacts our lives as well as the way that our daily existence is informed by addressing. Honestly, never thought much about addressing at all and this gave a really fun non-fiction read.

Deirdre Mask: The address book : what street addresses reveal about identity, race, wealth, and power (Hardcover, 2020, St. Martin's Press)

An exuberant work of popular history: the story of how streets got their names and …

Review of 'The address book : what street addresses reveal about identity, race, wealth, and power' on 'Goodreads'

This was a fun read with an interesting dive into the way that addressing impacts our lives as well as the way that our daily existence is informed by addressing. Honestly, never thought much about addressing at all and this gave a really fun non-fiction read.

Ian Urbina: The Outlaw Ocean: Journeys Across the Last Untamed Frontier (2019, Alfred A. Knopf)

There are few remaining frontiers on our planet. But perhaps the wildest, and least understood, …

None

I wasn't really sure what to expect going into this although what I got was an excellently written and organized story about a slice of the world that we don't get a lot of time seeing. It's fair to say that most folks don't think much about what happens on the oceans. This story spends time jumping into a bunch of different topics that typically are rooted in the difficult enforcing what few rules we do have for international waters with the emphasis on how these waters, while seemingly disparate, actually tie us all together.