Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yaros

Jun. 4th, 2025 10:00 pm
[personal profile] swaldman

It's a magical school with a constant danger of death! There are dragons! Imagine if Naomi Novik's two series (Temeraire and Scholomance) were mushed together and you would have..... not quite this.

It's its own thing, and aside from the existance of dragons the magic is fairly background, most of the time. The murderous school^Wmilitary training college is the focus.

It's mostly the story of the protagonist making her way through that. It's also slightly a romance, and it's also a bit about somebody with a chronic illness / disability managing the above against expectations, sometimes due to assistive technology.

I found it gripping and fun to read, and also... not actually good? The writing isn't bad, but isn't great either. The characters didn't feel well developed except for two or three central ones. It didn't seem to have huge depth (or I missed it). The premise of the school and how it works doesn't seem to completely hold together. But, how much does that matter when i enjoyed reading it.

One neat trick that I really liked: dragons can read the thoughts of their riders, and the author showed this by having the dragons interrupt the first-person narrative to comment on it. It blurs the distinction between what is dialogue in the world, and what is narrative in the book, which ought to jar, but it works really nicely.

I don't feel that I need to seek out the rest of the series... but I probably will the next time I'm looking for a light but gripping story.


Energy drop to Squirrels

Jun. 1st, 2025 08:21 am
fresne: Circe (Default)
[personal profile] fresne
I've actually felt harder hit by my recent cold than any time I've caught Covid. Post energy drop can in fact happen in any instance of illness, sigh.

Thankfully, I'm in a cycle of working from home. So, mornings can be slow, so very slow, and I'm at work when I need to be. I'm very aware from the Friday's that I am at dad's and there's a lot few spaces to just take a break and rest when I need to how much I actually need that. 

Other-folks fictive wise, I finished my Murderbot Diaries re-read, and in a show adjacent way, just want to start back at the top again. Instead, checking out some other Martha Wells works from the library to lightly blink.

Longer term,  trying to decide if I have the energy to pull together some new costumes or other for SD Comic-Con. Hard when the thing I'm most jonesing on is The Rise and Fall of Sanctuary Moon - the fake show within a show in the Murderbot TV series - and they are over the top terrible outfits. So, it's...I could make a thing...a terrible thing...do I have energy to spend...no, but look how terrible that is...look how gen-x the amount of elipses I'm using is...squirrel. 



Utopia for Realists

May. 30th, 2025 10:14 am
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[personal profile] spacefem
I heard an interview in NYT with Rutger Bregman that really got my attention so I wanted to read his books - I started with Utopia for Realists.

In the interview, he was talking about climate change and how we can make the world a better place. He said a lot of people focus on NOT doing things. Don't use plastic, don't buy from bad companies, don't have kids. But using that mentality, you can achieve "net zero at best". The best thing you could really do for the planet is not exist at all. He wants us to have loftier goals. Some of the brightest minds we have are going to top schools, then to technology companies where they figure out how to make people click ads. Is that really what they wanted? We should attract the brightest minds to the puzzle of improving the world. Moral Ambition, he called it. Don't just negate your own bad effects on the climate, subtract MORE. Pick up your trash, AND the litter somebody else left - now you are net positive.

Cool!

So I picked up this 2014 book, he's got more, but here's the gist: Technology and progress have simplified our lives. 70 years ago when we were first getting things like dishwashers, we were really worried that we'd have so much leisure time we'd go crazy! But that is not what happened.

We didn't use progress to shorten our work weeks and make life easier. We used it to over-consume. When jobs were replaced by robots, we got really competitive and divisive about the remaining ones, further dividing the world's wealth and access to opportunity. So let's say we get so good that eventually you only need, like, 30 people to run the robots and the other 8 billion could just hang out. Do we make the 8 billion people starve because they're not working?

We are really stuck in this idea that people who aren't working are flawed and lazy and bad. But he lists several studies where we just gave them money and they thrived. They didn't descend into addiction - in fact the former addicts overcame it with a little help. People in poor villages started businesses, educated their children, lived healthier lives. The poor are experts in what it takes to not be poor. But politically it's a real mess to suggest just giving people money.

He loves shorter work weeks. 40 hours wasn't always a given, at one time people definitely thought we should spend 12x7 in factories, won't kids get into trouble if they're just running around? But Henry Ford thought that if his employees had some spare time, they'd be more productive, more loyal, happier, and they'd buy cars for weekend trips. He was right. And that's why we have it. A big experiment, that worked.

So he's like, why not experiment with a 15 hour work week? And universal basic income, and open borders so you're not predestined to your class by birthright?

I AGREE but I imagined myself explaining this book to my conservative family members - who always told me about how socialists are evil and destroy everything because there's no practical way to make people equal by bringing the bottom up, you can only bring the top down. Lower classes are inevitable, because a lot of people are lazy and need motivation and the thread of death/starvation to do anything. Okay they're not THAT mean about it but - but they really love trickle down economics, despite all evidence.

Maybe the problem is that we've all known some spoiled kid who doesn't want to do the dishes, so we think that's what humans descend to?

We are so scared of people "mooching" we are letting billions of people starve, all the time, every year. He says don't give up on changing it. For our world to survive, we must figure out a distribution system. People do change and come around. Evidence does get shared, eventually, and believed in.

It's a tough year to remember that, isn't it? But I'm trying.

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