ngaatee TBR'd a book

So Old, So Young
Grant Ginder
ngaatee TBR'd a book

Far and Away
Amy Poeppel
ngaatee started reading...

Workhorse
Caroline Palmer
ngaatee started reading...

The Home of the Drowned
Elin Anna Labba
ngaatee left a rating...
ngaatee finished a book

The Prophet and the Idiot
Jonas Jonasson
ngaatee wrote a review...
Thank you to NetGalley and Astra Publishing for providing this book as an ARC. All expressed views are my own.
This book is a timely and unflinching look at technology and society, which I could not put down. It offers an interesting view of different facets of technology, including racialisation, gendering, capitalism and more, effortlessly pulling your focus to the narratives of technology and its harms. I also appreciated how many new angles regarding technology were introduced to me, and it was a revelation to get an in-depth analysis of technology in the context of South America, particularly in the context of Argentina and its nation-building. The author also has a distinct voice and style, which gives the text a cadence and liveliness that emphasises the key arguments being presented and made.
ngaatee finished a book

Technology and Barbarism: or: how billionaires will save us from the end of the world
Michel Nieva
ngaatee started reading...

Technology and Barbarism: or: how billionaires will save us from the end of the world
Michel Nieva
ngaatee wrote a review...
Thank you to NetGalley and the University of North Carolina Press for providing this book as an eARC. All opinions expressed in this review are my own.
This book is a fascinating and incisive look at Rolling Stone magazine and how it is a product of its culture, economic system, and contributors. Explorations of race and gender are interwoven with commentary on the media landscape and politics in a way that not only contextualises Rolling Stone but also helps you understand the nature of the media and publishing landscape today. Whilst the moments that delve into politics won't interest everyone, this book makes a strong case for their inclusion, pairing politics with the ambitions of founder Jann Wenner. It is at its strongest, pulling different threads to explain the nature of monoculture, and it gives an interesting genealogy for the different iterations of Rolling Stone.
It does, however, sometimes falter in its analysis, with some analyses being incisive but others feeling overly simplistic. I honestly would have loved for it to be even longer because the research was there, and so the simplistic parts could have been more fleshed out, and there could have been even more analysis of Wenner as a celebrity figure and how that ties into capitalism.
ngaatee finished a book

Rolling Stone and the Rise of Hip Capitalism: How a Magazine Born in the 1960s Changed America
Charles L. Ponce de Leon
ngaatee TBR'd a book

Gatecrasher: How I Helped the Rich Become Famous and Ruin the World
Ben Widdicombe
ngaatee TBR'd a book

We Breed Lions: Confronting Canada's Troubled Hockey Culture
Rick Westhead
ngaatee wrote a review...
This book is a revelation and truly feels timely. Dekeyser crafts a narrative that blends philosophy, history, sociology and geography to give a look at the relationship that people and their environments have with machines. This book is rich with explorations of colonialism, labour, technology and morality and provides the language to explain what it feels like to experience technology. This book also challenges the assumptions that we often make about technological adoption and its inevitability, and why we should challenge those perceptions. This book is perfect for people who enjoy narrative fiction, anyone who has ever lamented the proliferation of technology and anyone who has ever been taught to think about technology in the language of progress. It is truly a great read, whether you are looking to learn something new or gain the language that allows you to think about technology in a more considered way.
ngaatee started reading...

A Killing in Cannabis
Scott Eden
ngaatee is interested in reading...

The Daughters' War (Blacktongue, #0)
Christopher Buehlman
ngaatee TBR'd a book

Empire of the Elite: Inside Condé Nast, the Media Dynasty That Reshaped America
Michael Grynbaum
ngaatee commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
I was wondering whether it would be possible to give users the ability to add journal articles that they have read or want to read by adding the doi link? I read a lot of journal articles and academic journals, and would love to be able to track what I have read.