Reading list
Things I am reading/want to read/have read. It's also fine to include articles, research papers, and videos.
Not all of the works listed here are present because I agree with or endorse their contents. Many are, but several are here in a “know your enemy” capacity, so to speak. Where applicable, I have assigned such entries an estimated “spiciness” rating.
Present
Title | Author | Summary | Subjects |
---|---|---|---|
Abstract Algebra, 3e | Dummit & Foote |
A thorough introduction to abstract algebra. | linear algebra, math, abstract algebra |
Linear Algebra Done Right, 3e | Axler |
The title is absolutely fitting. The text is well-written, typographically attractive, and playful at times. We worked through the first half during my latest linear algebra course, and I'd like to see it through to the end, which promises a deep, motivated understanding of determinants. | linear algebra, math |
Anti-Intellectualism in American Life | Hofstadter |
It's amazing to realize that Hofstadter was writing about a time now more than 60 years past; many of the issues he discusses feel lifted straight out of today's political climate. In this book, he highlights various strands of American hostility to intellect and intellectuals, arguing that this feature is deeply entrenched in the American identity. | history, politics |
SPQR | Beard |
A history of ancient Rome, which is something I've wanted to learn more about for a while. I'm reading it as a sort of palate cleanser and will not be taking extensive notes as I go. | history, Rome |
Friday Black | Adjei-Brenyah |
A collection of short stories that I picked up after hearing about the final entry (“Through the Flash”). That story did not disappoint, and I am certain the others won't either. | fiction |
The Elements of Computing Systems, 2ed | Nisan & Schocken | computing, ee, programming | |
Myths & Legends | Jackson |
A selection of myths from various cultures around the world. | |
The Coming of the Third Reich | Evans |
The first in his Third Reich Trilogy and likely to be the one I find most useful today. I'd like to take particular care to compare it against The Death of Democracy. | |
The Ethical Slut | Easton & Hardy |
Supposedly a foundational work on polyamory, which is a topic I wish to better understand. | |
The Great Risk Shift | Hacker |
Examines the origins of the ubiquitous sense of economic precarity. | |
Topology, 2ed | Munkres |
A thorough dive into general and algebraic topology. | |
Warrior Princesses Strike Back | Eagle Heart, Eagle Heart-White |
Future
Page | author | summary | subjects |
---|---|---|---|
A Culture of Conspiracy | Barkun | ||
A Libertarian Walks into a Bear | Hongoltz-Hetling |
Possibly a tiny bit spicy. I have doubts that the author fully grasps the ideological deficiencies of right libertarianism. We shall see. | |
A Queer History of the United States | Bronski | ||
A Scanner Darkly | Dick | ||
A Wizard of Earthsea | LeGuin |
The first in the Earthsea series. | |
Accelerando | Stross | ||
Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents | Gibson | ||
After Jesus, Before Christianity | Taussig |
Covers the first two centuries of Christian history. | |
All about Love | hooks | ||
All the President's Men | Woodward & Bernstein | ||
Alt-America | Neiwert |
I will need to start this over since my previous notes have completely vanished into the digital aether. Remember to take frequent breaks, because this book is heckin' stressful. | |
American Conspiracy Theories | Parent & Uscinski |
Argues that conspiracy theories reflect inter-group conflicts. | |
American Corrections | Clear, Cole, & Reisig |
No idea how spicy this might be. | |
An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States | Dunbar-Ortiz | ||
And the Band Played On | Shilts | ||
Anti-Semite and Jew | Sartre | ||
Applied Abstract Algebra, 2ed | Lidl & Pilz | ||
Are Prisons Obsolete | Davis | ||
As Nature Made Him | Colapinto |
A biography of David Reimer, who was raised as a girl following a botched circumcision. | |
Attack of the 50-Foot Blockchain | Gerard |
A discussion of cryptocurrency from a decidedly critical angle. Takes the position that the story of cryptocurrency is more psychological than technological. | |
Backlash: The Undeclared War against American Women | Faludi | ||
Beyond Fear | Schneier | ||
Black Skin, White Masks | Fanon | ||
Bowling Alone | Putnam | ||
Brave New World | Huxley | ||
Brief History of Neoliberalism | Harvey | ||
Bullshit Jobs | Graeber | ||
Catch and Kill: Lies, Spies, and a Conspiracy to Protect Predators | Farrow | ||
Complaint! | Ahmed | ||
Conservatives without Conscience | Dean | ||
Corsets and Crinolines | Waugh | ||
Cringeworthy | Dahl |
I forget why I originally wanted to read this. Maybe it was cited in a Contrapoints video? | |
Danubia | Winder |
A history of Habsburg rule of Europe. (I probably thought I was getting the author's other book, Germania. I'll start with this one and look into the other later.) | |
Dark Victory: Ronald Reagan, MCA, and the Mob | Moldea |
A history of MCA and its mob connections. | |
Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism | Case & Deaton | ||
Debt: The First 5000 Years | Graeber | ||
Democracy in Chains | MacLean | ||
Disney War | Stewart | ||
Dune | Herbert |
I keep seeing references to this franchise, so I'll need to read some of it eventually. | |
Eichmann in Jerusalem | Arendt |
Covers the trial of Adolf Eichmann, during which Arendt coined her controversial phrase “the banality of evil”. I believe most of the critics misunderstood her phrasing, but reading this book is the necessary first step to defending that position. | |
Elder and Younger Brothers | Eckardt |
Discusses the relations between Christians and Jews. | |
Embassytown | Miéville | ||
Failed States | Chomsky | ||
Final Destination: Disaster | Jehn |
The fall of Eastern Airlines. | |
Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said | Dick | ||
Folklorn | Hur |
I'll be honest, I picked this up because of the cover endorsement from Celeste Ng. | |
God's Own Party | Williams | ||
Heretics: The Creation of Christianity from the Gnostics to the Modern Church | Wright |
A history of the foundations of the modern Christian church, focusing on those figures declared heretics and their contributions to the faith. | |
How Democracies Die | Levitsky & Ziblatt |
Examines the falls of several liberal democracies across the globe and promises insights into the future of ours. This was written in the midst of the Trump presidency, and while I do agree with the authors that he was no good, I am hoping for more of substance from their recommendations than “Trump bad, electoralism good”. | |
How to Survive a Plague | France |
Covers the early AIDS pandemic. | |
I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream | Ellison |
I've heard it described as “a tone poem, where the tone is 'venom'.” | |
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings | Angelou | ||
I'm Thinking of Ending Things | Reid | ||
In a Dark, Dark Wood | Ware |
Ruth Ware was on my list of authors to look into, so I grabbed a copy of this book at a thrift store. | |
Islands of Abandonment | Flyn | ||
Japan's Infamous Unit 731 | Gold | ||
Killing Hope | Blum |
Discusses American military interventions since WWII. | |
The Late Great Planet Earth | Lindsey |
Definitely spicy | |
Libra Shrugged | Gerard |
The story of Facebook's short-lived Libra project. | |
Manufacturing Consent | Herman & Chomsky | ||
Messengers of the Right | Hemmer |
Tells the story of the first-generation conservative broadcasters. | |
Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me) | Tavris | ||
Neoreaction: A Basilisk | Sandifer |
A collection of essays surrounding contemporary reactionary movements, all of which I've heard are excellent. | |
Neuromancer | Gibson | ||
New England and the Bavarian Illuminati | Stauffer |
Not at all what it sounds like, I swear. It's a doctoral thesis on the history of the original group calling themselves the Illuminati, and according to Hofstadter, it's “the most vivid account of the hysteria over revolution and infidelity that followed the French Revolution.” | |
Nineteen Eighty-Four | Orwell | ||
Nixonland | Perlstein | ||
No More Police: A Case for Abolition | Kaba & Ritchie |
Part handbook, part road map for a future without police. | |
Not without My Sister | Jones, Jones, & Buhring |
Not to be confused with the historical WWII novel of the same name, this book outlines the authors' experiences living in the Children of God (AKA The Family International. | |
Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers | Faderman |
I believe this is a history of lesbians in media. | |
Oilcraft: The Myths of Scarcity and Security That Haunt U.S. Energy Policy | Vitalis | ||
On Revolution | Arendt | ||
Only Revolutions | Danielewsky |
As with all of Danielewski's work, Only Revolutions will take some effort to get through. Initial passes give the flavor of Finnegan's Wake, only with a greater proportion of English. | |
Ordered Sets: An Introduction, 2ed | Schröder |
An introduction to partially ordered sets, a topic that Lidl & Pilz sparked my interest in. Also, the author chaired the math department at my university. | |
Orphans of the Sky | Heinlein | ||
Our Missing Hearts | Ng |
I've enjoyed Ng's other novels, so I expect I will enjoy this one. | |
Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics, 10ed | Serway & Jewett | ||
Postcapitalism: A Guide to Our Future | Mason | ||
Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder | Fraser | ||
Profit over People | Chomsky | ||
Quiverfull | Joyce |
Ew | |
Ratfucked | Daley | ||
Rogue State | Blum | ||
Self-Made Man | Vincent |
Chronicles the author's time spent living as a man and integrating into male social circles. | |
Sisters in Hate | Darby |
A profile of women in the alt-right. | |
Slaughterhouse Five | Vonnegut |
Another of those classic titles that I need to read. | |
Someone Who Will Love You in All Your Damaged Glory | Bob-Waksberg | ||
Special Relativity | Woodhouse |
I may actually have studied enough mathematics to understand this. | |
Stamped from the Beginning | Kendi |
A history of the development of American racism. | |
Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers | Roach | ||
Stonewall | Duberman | ||
Suburban Nation | Duany | ||
Terror, Love, and Brainwashing | Stein | ||
The Age of Surveillance Capitalism | Zuboff |
Just a tiny dash of spice: Zuboff believes that capitalism would be fine if not for the surveillance capitalists. I strongly disagree, but I am sure the book contains many other valuable insights. | |
The Bell Jar | Plath | ||
The City & The City | Miéville | ||
The Computer Boys Take Over | Ensmenger |
Hopefully this covers the roles of women in early computing and their eventual displacement. | |
The Darkest Web | Ormsby | ||
The Death of Expertise | Nichols |
Should be an interesting companion to Anti-Intellectualism in American Life. | |
The Demon-Haunted World | Sagan | ||
The Divine Comedy | Dante |
I need to read this. | |
The Elements of Statistical Learning | Friedman, Hastie, & Tibshirani | ||
The Entrepreneurial State | Mazzucato |
Promises to debunk the myth that the private sector is the only innovator. | |
The Evangelicals | Fitzgerald | ||
The Forest and the Trees | Johnson | ||
The Fourth Political Theory | Dugin |
Very spicy. Supposedly Dugin's works have informed much of Russia's current policy. | |
The Giver | Lowry | ||
The Heyday of American Communism | Klehr | ||
The Histories | Herodotus |
This seems like one of those essential reads, right? I've heard plenty about it, and I think it's time I actually read it. | |
The History of White People | Painter | ||
The Making of a Moonie: Choice or Brainwashing? | Barker |
Wrestles with the question of whether people become Moonies by choice or through brainwashing. | |
The Myths That Made America | Heike | ||
The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas | LeGuin | ||
The Origins of Totalitarianism | Arendt |
I've been meaning to read some of Arendt's work. This is as good a place to start as any other (not least because I now have a copy). And wow, does it look dense upon initial scan. | |
The Plutonium Files | Welsome |
Details secret radiation experiments conducted in the US during the Cold War. | |
The Pol Pot Regime | Kiernan |
Covers the Khmer Rouge period in Cambodian history. | |
The Power Broker | Caro |
All about Robert Moses, whose (terrible) influence on city planning is still very much felt today. | |
The Price of Whiteness: Jews, Race, and American Identity | Goldstein |
Documents the uneasy place Jews have held in America’s racial culture since the late nineteenth century. | |
The Reactionary Mind | Robin |
An examination of the history of conservatism. A major theme is that conservatism does not exist without a liberatory movement to oppose. The conception of politics as a venture in which the average citizen could participate only emerged from the ashes of absolute monarchy. A monarch's authority is tautologically justified: he is the king because he is the king. Only when the populace began to challenge this notion was something more substantial needed, and thus was born what we know today as conservatism. Similar dynamics are at play today. As marginalized voices receive greater attention, reactionary movements rise to uphold the status quo. This is not to say that movements for equality are to blame for conservatism; rather, reactionaries view gains for egalitarianism as threats to their own positions. | |
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich | Shrier |
Yet another account of Nazi Germany. While popularly acclaimed, it has been panned by professional historians for its entire existence. | |
The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism | Klein | ||
The Testaments | Atwood |
A follow-up to The Handmaid's Tale. | |
The Utopia of Rules | Graeber | ||
The Will to Change | hooks | ||
This Nonviolent Stuff'll Get You Killed | Cobb | ||
Troll Nation | Marcotte |
Hard to say how spicy this will be. At least one person has referred to quoting this book as a red flag, so… | |
Ugly War, Pretty Package | Jaramillo |
Explores how media outlets help to sell citizens on war. | |
Understanding Analysis, 2ed | Abbott |
I bought this largely because I didn't pay enough attention during my two (!) semesters of real analysis — which used this as their text — and want to prove to myself that I can do better. | |
Unit Operations | Bogost | ||
Ur-Fascism | Eco | ||
Von Menschen und Mensch*innen | Payr |
This one might be a tad spicy. Judging by the subtitle (20 Gute Gründe, mit dem Gendern Aufzuhören) and a few snippets I picked up while skimming it, the author wishes to do away with gender-neutral conventions like the gender star. I haven't read far enough into it to know whether he proposes an equitable alternative or simply wants to halt efforts of linguistic inclusion. Only one way to find out! | |
When Prophecy Fails | Festinger, Schacter, Riecken, & Aronson |
What happens in the minds of the members of doomsday cults when their leader's predictions repeatedly fail to appear? | |
Witches of America | Mar | ||
Wonderbook | VanderMeer | ||
The Third Reich at War | Evans |
The third book in Evans's Third Reich trilogy, covering the second world war. | |
The Third Reich in Power | Evans |
The second in Evans's Third Reich trilogy, covering the latter part of the interwar period. |
Past
Page | author | summary | subjects |
---|---|---|---|
Jesus and John Wayne | Kristin Kobes Du Mez |
Discusses the long-running campaign of American evangelicals to masculinize Jesus and the ripple effects that campaign has had on the nation's political discourse. | politics, history, evangelicalism |
The Authoritarians | Altemeyer |
A highly accessible and frankly enjoyable introduction to authoritarianism, written by someone who has studied the topic for decades. | politics |
The Death of Democracy | Hett |
An examination of the Weimar Republic's final years. | history, fascism |
2312 | Robinson | fiction | |
Annihilation | VanderMeer |
I read this whole book in a single afternoon, and even though I finished it no more than an hour ago, I'm struggling for the words to describe it. | fiction |
Everything I Never Told You | Ng | fiction | |
House of Leaves | Danielewsky |
My all-time favorite novel, House of Leaves almost never leaves my head. If you hang around me long enough, I'll eventually pull out my copy and talk at length about the text. | fiction |
Little Fires Everywhere | Ng | fiction | |
The Alice Network | Quinn | fiction | |
The City in the Middle of the Night | Anders |
A young woman struggles to survive in a highly regimented city on an unforgiving planet. | fiction |
The Handmaid's Tale | Atwood | fiction | |
The String Diaries | Lloyd-Jones |
A fun ride undercut by its infuriating ending. | fiction |
Acceptance | VanderMeer |
The final book in the Southern Reach trilogy. | |
Authority | VanderMeer | ||
Let This Radicalize You | Hayes & Kaba | ||
More Than a Glitch: Confronting Race, Gender, and Ability Bias in Tech | Broussard |
Argues that racism, sexism, and ableism in AI are not glitches but are in fact built into its foundation. | |
The Civil War as a Theological Crisis | Noll |
An examination of Civil War-era theological schisms resulting from American slavery. I suspect/hope it will provide an interesting perspective on the recognition of queer identities within today's churches. |