User Profile

Billy The Kid

billythekid@bookrastinating.com

Joined 2 years, 3 months ago

I like science fiction, fantasy, philosophy and learning about stuff. I'm open to reading anything interesting.

I try to write reviews for everything I read.

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Billy The Kid's books

Currently Reading

John Green, John Green ( -1757): The Anthropocene Reviewed (Hardcover, 2021, Penguin)

The Anthropocene is the current geologic age, in which humans have profoundly reshaped the planet …

Review of 'The Anthropocene Reviewed' on 'Goodreads'

The Anthropocene Reviewed is a book where author/youtuber John Green reviews a random assortment of things and concepts that you wouldn't expect to see reviewed.

This gives him a lot of room to write about anything he feels like. John Green is an expert at what he does, but I don't find what he does to be very compelling.

Tugging at the reader's heartstrings by talking about your experiences as a child being bullied feels disingenuous coming from a multimillionaire author.

John should spend some more time swimming in his pool filled with gold instead of milking his audience.

W. James Potter: Media literacy (Paperback, 2004, Sage)

Review of 'Media literacy' on 'Goodreads'

Media Literacy teaches you how to navigate through the overwhelming flood of information found in today's media-saturated world. Drawing from thousands of media research studies, author W. James Potter explores key components to understanding the fascinating world of mass media. Potter presents examples and facts to help you understand how the media operate, how they attract attention, and how they influence you and the public.

A must read, don’t sit on this one!

Here’s some random quotes from the book that I highlighted for whatever reason:

“[…] while choice is attractive, too much choice can paralyze us into inaction. When we feel overwhelmed, we rely more and more on automatic routines, and leads us into a deeper and deeper rut of doing the same things over and over.”

That moment when you stare at the hundreds (thousands?) of games in your Steam Library (or books on your bookshelf) and proclaim: …

Terry Pratchett: The Color of Magic (2005, Harper)

The Colour of Magic is a 1983 fantasy comedy novel by Terry Pratchett, and is …

Review of 'The Color of Magic' on 'Goodreads'

An incompetent wizard is tasked with protecting a visitor from a faraway land. A fantasy novel for people who don't like fantasy novels.

I’ve read a lot of fantasy in my day but nothing quite like this. Somehow I had never read anything by Terry Pratchett, so I decided to read the first novel (of many) set in his Discworld universe.

The Colour of Magic is a fantasy book for people who’ve grown tired of fantasy tropes and for people who are looking for a talented (British) writer to poke fun at those tropes while using the fantasy setting to poke fun at the real world. All the while celebrating oddballs and weirdos by putting them center stage and relishing in their weirdness.

I read this book at the right time and the right place and I can’t wait to read more from Terry Pratchett.

Claire MacLeod: 9 Out Of 10 Climbers Make The Same Mistakes Navigation Through The Maze Of Advice For Selfcoached Climber (2009, Rare Breed Productions)

Review of '9 Out Of 10 Climbers Make The Same Mistakes Navigation Through The Maze Of Advice For Selfcoached Climber' on 'Goodreads'

A bunch of mistakes climbers (apparently) make and how to avoid them. Not as concrete and consise as I would like but if you're willing to filter out the fluff, there's some interesting information here.

Less concrete and more philisophical than the Self Coached Climber. It hides its interesting insights in a lot of fluff and repeated information.

It starts off with a +20 page diatribe on people being scared of making mistakes which wasn’t very useful to me as someone who already loves making mistakes.

The specificity of advice given (“if you’re a 15 year old climber, do X, if you’re a 16 year old climber, do Y”) reeks of bad editing. Advice this specific has no place in a book like this, because most readers are not going to be 15 year old climbers.

There's better books about climbing out there, feel free to skip this one.

Neil Gaiman: Norse Mythology (Hardcover, 2017, W. W. Norton & Company)

Neil Gaiman, long inspired by ancient mythology in creating the fantastical realms of his fiction, …

Review of 'Norse Mythology' on 'Goodreads'

Neil Gaiman's Norse Mythology is a retelling of a few stories from Norse mythology (which we don't know very much about). I'm a fan of Neil Gaiman's work generally but I found this to be quite boring.

Unlike Greek mythology, we don’t have many written records about Norse mythology. So, we don't know much about it.

In Norse Mythology, Neil Gaiman riffs on what we know about the Norse myths and creates his own retellings of the stories and some completely new ones.

It’s OK. I like a lot of Neil Gaiman’s work (especially American Gods), his passion for mythology of all sorts is clear and it shines through most of his work.

Unfortunately, I don’t think I have as much of an appreciation for Norse mythology as he does and reading this book didn’t change that.