Rekommenderad av Kawa Zolfagary
Reviews and Comments
This link opens in a pop-up window
Amanda wants to read The Psychopath Test by Ronson, Jon
Amanda started reading Capitalist Realism by Mark Fisher
Amanda wants to read More Everything Forever by Adam Becker
Visited TrashFuture, episode released Oct 14th 2025; www.podbean.com/ep/pb-w9dhn-19925ad
Amanda reviewed Careless People by Sarah Wynn-Williams
You are not a good person, you know. Good persons don’t end up here.
4 stars
This book goes on the record with lots of things we’ve all guessed. I think it will be a crucial source text for history and it does give a glimpse into how the monsters behind Facebook became as they are and of the corrosive effects of hyper wealth on people. What strikes me about Mark and Sheryl as presented through Sarah’s eyes in the book is how human they seem. Reading it, I realise me I’d probably end up a lot like them under similar circumstances. In a way that’s nice because it means evil is a function of systems, not people, at least not primarily.
I also had to fast-forward some of the exhausting humble brags, not to mention some of the MaTeRnAl InStInCtS part, in which Sarah very clearly used the good/mother/nature vs bad/corporate/tech divide for narrative effect. Since I’m reading this as an audiobook while parenting …
This book goes on the record with lots of things we’ve all guessed. I think it will be a crucial source text for history and it does give a glimpse into how the monsters behind Facebook became as they are and of the corrosive effects of hyper wealth on people. What strikes me about Mark and Sheryl as presented through Sarah’s eyes in the book is how human they seem. Reading it, I realise me I’d probably end up a lot like them under similar circumstances. In a way that’s nice because it means evil is a function of systems, not people, at least not primarily.
I also had to fast-forward some of the exhausting humble brags, not to mention some of the MaTeRnAl InStInCtS part, in which Sarah very clearly used the good/mother/nature vs bad/corporate/tech divide for narrative effect. Since I’m reading this as an audiobook while parenting a month-old and a three year old I feel like I have at least the right to roll my eyes at that shit.
Here are my unstructured notes: - This really tells how early the social media people knew fascists were great for helping them get out of being regulated - It strikes me how human Sheryl and Mark are in their monstrosity; I’d almost certainly have been the same - Very good description of how money rots your brain; it freezes you wherever you currently are and supercharges whatever’s wrong with you - Main character tries to write it out of the story but she certainly is a piece of shit too - Facebook really really does not have a mind control ray - Jfc I hate this flavour of mom shit - Good god this is such a humble brag - Surprise! It was private health insurance all along! - Mark Zuckerberg is playing the world like high chaos Dishonored - Epilogue: ok it’s completely obvious she’s a piece of shit
Amanda rated The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue: 4 stars

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V. E. Schwab
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue is a 2020 fantasy fiction standalone novel written by American author V.E. Schwab. It …
Amanda commented on The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V. E. Schwab
Amanda stopped reading Resisting AI by Dan McQuillan
Amanda stopped reading Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality by Eliezer Yudkowsky
Amanda wants to read Trans/Rad/Fem by Talia Bhatt (Essays on Transfeminism, Book 1)
Read at study group with Framåt kamrater organisera.org/events/5b9cac70-5f31-40ee-ab81-3780f48d6bc2
Amanda started reading Resisting AI by Dan McQuillan
Amanda commented on The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V. E. Schwab
Amanda reviewed Simplicity by Mattie Lubchansky
Not bad, but maybe not what I was expecting
3 stars
This is a nice little graphic novel. I'm kind of bummed out that it wasn't funnier; Mattie is very funny; many of her online cartoons are some of the funniest I've seen. This graphic novel isn't funny, or at least isn't funny in the same way.
I also have trouble reading it as a novel, in particular following it as any kind of story or character arc. It feels a lot like it just...ends.
This is a nice little graphic novel. I'm kind of bummed out that it wasn't funnier; Mattie is very funny; many of her online cartoons are some of the funniest I've seen. This graphic novel isn't funny, or at least isn't funny in the same way.
I also have trouble reading it as a novel, in particular following it as any kind of story or character arc. It feels a lot like it just...ends.
Amanda wants to read Immediacy by Anna Kornbluh
Recommendation from TikTok @nyecanread vm.tiktok.com/ZNduRrUo9/
Amanda reviewed Really Cute People by Markus Harwood-Jones
A buzzfeed quiz from 2013 [book]
2 stars
This book is laser targeted towards queer millennials. I say this as a queer millennial who used to live in a destabilising collective not entirely dissimilar to the one described at the start of the book. The book makes excruciatingly dense reference to eg avocado toast sandwiches and all the rest of it. It’s entire tone is very buzzfeed quiz which quirky queer are you and for some reason it references some of those DIY space heaters a lot. Like, almost as an ad a lot.
I guess I’m supposed to feel pandered to, but I don’t. I just feel exhausted.










