mattbreading's reviews
229 reviews

Rejection by Tony Tulathimutte

Go to review page

5.0

Great fiction takes a mirror to reality and drags it through the mud 
The Dream Hotel by Laila Lalami

Go to review page

fast-paced

4.75

Some books make you wish for others to share them with - this is one of them. Deeply allegorical and brimming with conversational potential, tore through this one. 
Dirtbag: Essays by Amber A'Lee Frost

Go to review page

3.75

I’ve always been seemingly one step away from “getting” the Chapo schtick. And that’s not to say I didn’t try! Wayyy back when (2016) I craved the social media points of a follower seeing I also follow Felix or even better, thinking that another doom scroller might find themselves come across an endlessly verbose takedown of some politician with my account showing “Liked by.” I’ve been lucky enough to have been totally divorced from this style of political commentary for a while now, and reading this book was a total reversion. Of course, Chapo and Frost created something valuable. It was the first time real, smart people felt angry about things I felt angry about and said things I didn’t know I felt! But their schtick, while bemoaning academic takedowns, parrots their language in a way that is inaccessible to even those largely sympathetic and with similar academic credentials. I’ve never found Chapo adjacent media succinct or digestible and this book serves as another tally. But above all, the Chapo and dirtbag calling card just seems like they wanted to say mean things about people that were universally condemned by “their side”. Wait - we can call people pedophiles 😂 ? It’s no wonder these people started their shift rightward. They never cared about political change, they just wanted to have a circle of peers that allowed them to say “acceptable” slurs under the guise of political commentary. Frost is still a gifted orator with interesting stories to tell when she can get out of her way (read, not take a needless unfunny pot shot). Oh well - maybe Bernie will run in 2028! 
Bitcoin Billionaires: A True Story of Genius, Betrayal, and Redemption by Ben Mezrich

Go to review page

3.75

Mzerich kinda sniffs his own farts off the social network formula on this one but it’s still informative 
Stoner by John Williams

Go to review page

5.0

Gonna be thinking about this one for a while 
The Wedding People by Alison Espach

Go to review page

4.5

Do NOT let Blake Lively anywhere near this adaptation 
The Fall of Roe: The Rise of a New America by Elizabeth Dias, Lisa Lerer

Go to review page

4.75

The language around abortion is one of emotion and moral righteousness; to talk about it is to debate ethical ramifications, and how they might fit in to the greater legal context. The angle of this book is entirely different. It examines how the law got flipped playing by the established rules, rather than wading in to ethics. Surprise, surprise, it took slimy and underhanded tactics with a new Court bench willing to buck convention for their purview of ethics. Personal feelings aside, I was shocked at how without precedent this decision was. All along the way were lenient judges and dedicated crusaders, who got their way with a decision that was unlike any before it. Hard to stomach at times but ultimately very informative.