darthsid's reviews
22 reviews

Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie

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5.0

Agatha Christie delivers. There's something I find uniquely fascinating about the style with which the plot unfolds. Rather than having to invent cheap thrills and action sequences, the focus is entirely on psychology and deduction. Occasionally we see glimpses of Poirot's character, but at all other times the reader's lens is honed in on the suspects. Christie exposes just enough clues for an astute reader to piece together that something is significant somehow, but never fully gives away the plot up until the very end.

A highly enjoyable read and I can't believe I took this long to add this to my collection.
Neuromancer by William Gibson

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4.0

Where to begin? Neuromancer took me on a rather remarkable journey, the likes of which I've never experienced before, in sci-fi or otherwise. The worldbuilding is quite spectacular, with unmatched evocative metaphors giving descriptive life to both real and cyber space. I mean, where else would you expect to see something like this as the opening line in a book?



"The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel."

Personally I found the narrative flow a tad weaker though. It might be just me, but I didn't find the elusive quality of a tale that grips my attention and makes me unable to put the book down — on the contrary, I did pause and continue the next day for about a week while reading Neuromancer. That said, there were segments of action and pulsing flow that made me get up and pace the room, strongly resisting the urge to flip pages to find out what happens next.


The characters — or at least the main ones — are realistic and well fleshed-out. Neuromancer's characters are imperfect and human. You navigate the tale through the lens of Henry Case, and the brilliantly descriptive writing makes it natural to be able to fall into his mind and experience the world as he does, with all his highs and lows.


All in all, an excellent novel and quite possibly a must-read for sci-fi fans. So much of the cyberpunk genre has directly evolved from this book. I was surprised to discover that Neuromancer (and a previous book by Gibson, Burning Chrome) was the origin of the term "cyberspace", a word I encounter frequently in my day-to-day work in software today.



"Cyberspace. A consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators, in every nation, by children being taught mathematical concepts... A graphic representation of data abstracted from the banks of every computer in the human system. Unthinkable complexity. Lines of light ranged in the nonspace of the mind, clusters and constellations of data. Like city lights, receding..."

Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality by Eliezer Yudkowsky

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Lady Midnight by Cassandra Clare

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4.0

The thing that surprised me the most about the book was how good the character development is. Even side characters are given life and personality — I was intrigued by the way the characters interact and have their own interpersonal relationships and problems. No character is perfect, all have their own flaws and personality traits.
Building a Second Brain: A Proven Method to Organize Your Digital Life and Unlock Your Creative Potential by Tiago Forte

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4.0

Good techniques -- I especially thought both PARA and Progressive Summarization look very helpful, and I'm immediately setting out to adopt both of them in my own notetaking.


That said, the book could easily be trimmed down way more. Personally found it suffering from the Wadsworth Constant problem. Maybe check out a good summary video of it, see if that helps you before choosing to read the whole book.


The one thing I do find this book to help with is that it's pretty inspiring: I might read random sections in the morning (especially from the last couple chapters) to prod me into being more productive.

The Golem's Eye by Jonathan Stroud

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5.0

This entire series is simply fantastic (this is probably my third or fourth re-read of this book).