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4222507d 6 <title>A Not So Fancy Listing of Books</title>
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4222507d 16 <h1>A Not So Fancy Listing of Books</h1>
023ad63c 17 <div class="contents">
18<dl>
4222507d 19<dt>
20<a href="#sec1">Douglas Adams</a>
21</dt>
22<dd>
23<dl>
24<dt>
25<a href="#sec2">Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy (collected)</a>
26</dt>
27<dt>
28<a href="#sec3">The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul</a>
29</dt>
30</dl>
31</dd>
32<dt>
33<a href="#sec4">Aeschylus</a>
34</dt>
35<dd>
36<dl>
37<dt>
38<a href="#sec5">Oresteia</a>
39</dt>
40<dt>
41<a href="#sec6">Prometheus Bound</a>
42</dt>
43<dt>
44<a href="#sec7">The Persians</a>
45</dt>
46</dl>
47</dd>
48<dt>
49<a href="#sec8">John Allison</a>
50</dt>
51<dd>
52<dl>
53<dt>
54<a href="#sec9">Looks, Brains and Everything</a>
55</dt>
56<dt>
57<a href="#sec10">Blame the Sky</a>
58</dt>
59<dt>
60<a href="#sec11">Skellington</a>
61</dt>
62<dt>
63<a href="#sec12">The Retribution Index</a>
64</dt>
65<dt>
66<a href="#sec13">Great Aches</a>
67</dt>
68<dt>
69<a href="#sec14">Ahoy Hoy!</a>
70</dt>
71<dt>
72<a href="#sec15">Heavy Metal Hearts and Flowers</a>
73</dt>
74<dt>
75<a href="#sec16">Ghosts</a>
76</dt>
77</dl>
78</dd>
79<dt>
80<a href="#sec17">Anonymous</a>
81</dt>
82<dd>
83<dl>
84<dt>
85<a href="#sec18">Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz</a>
86</dt>
87</dl>
88</dd>
89<dt>
90<a href="#sec19">Aristophanes</a>
91</dt>
92<dd>
93<dl>
94<dt>
95<a href="#sec20">The Frogs</a>
96</dt>
97<dt>
98<a href="#sec21">The Clouds</a>
99</dt>
100<dt>
101<a href="#sec22">Ecclesiazusae</a>
102</dt>
103</dl>
104</dd>
105<dt>
106<a href="#sec23">Aristotle</a>
107</dt>
108<dd>
109<dl>
110<dt>
111<a href="#sec24">Ethics</a>
112</dt>
113<dt>
114<a href="#sec25">Categories</a>
115</dt>
116<dt>
117<a href="#sec26">Poetics</a>
118</dt>
119<dt>
120<a href="#sec27">Rhetoric</a>
121</dt>
122</dl>
123</dd>
124<dt>
125<a href="#sec28">Marcus Aurelius</a>
126</dt>
127<dd>
128<dl>
129<dt>
130<a href="#sec29">Meditations</a>
131</dt>
132</dl>
133</dd>
134<dt>
135<a href="#sec30">William Blake</a>
136</dt>
137<dd>
138<dl>
139<dt>
140<a href="#sec31">The Four Zoas</a>
141</dt>
142<dt>
143<a href="#sec32">Jerusalem</a>
144</dt>
145</dl>
146</dd>
147<dt>
3c59982c 148<a href="#sec33">Mike Carey</a>
4222507d 149</dt>
150<dd>
151<dl>
152<dt>
3c59982c 153<a href="#sec34">Lucifer (series)</a>
4222507d 154</dt>
155</dl>
156</dd>
157<dt>
3c59982c 158<a href="#sec35">Confucius</a>
4222507d 159</dt>
160<dd>
161<dl>
162<dt>
3c59982c 163<a href="#sec36">Analects</a>
4222507d 164</dt>
165</dl>
166</dd>
167<dt>
3c59982c 168<a href="#sec37">Neil Gaiman</a>
4222507d 169</dt>
170<dd>
171<dl>
172<dt>
3c59982c 173<a href="#sec38">The Sandman (series)</a>
4222507d 174</dt>
175<dt>
3c59982c 176<a href="#sec39">Good Omens</a>
4222507d 177</dt>
178</dl>
179</dd>
180<dt>
3c59982c 181<a href="#sec40">John Taylor Gatto</a>
4222507d 182</dt>
183<dd>
184<dl>
185<dt>
3c59982c 186<a href="#sec41">Underground History of American Education</a>
4222507d 187</dt>
188</dl>
189</dd>
190<dt>
3c59982c 191<a href="#sec42">Kahlil Gibran</a>
4222507d 192</dt>
193<dd>
194<dl>
195<dt>
3c59982c 196<a href="#sec43">A Tear and a Smile</a>
4222507d 197</dt>
198<dt>
3c59982c 199<a href="#sec44">The Prophet</a>
4222507d 200</dt>
201<dt>
3c59982c 202<a href="#sec45">Sand and Foam</a>
4222507d 203</dt>
204<dt>
3c59982c 205<a href="#sec46">The Madman</a>
4222507d 206</dt>
207</dl>
208</dd>
209<dt>
3c59982c 210<a href="#sec47">Homer</a>
4222507d 211</dt>
212<dd>
213<dl>
214<dt>
3c59982c 215<a href="#sec48">The Odyssey</a>
4222507d 216</dt>
217</dl>
218</dd>
219<dt>
3c59982c 220<a href="#sec49">Aldous Huxley</a>
4222507d 221</dt>
222<dd>
223<dl>
224<dt>
3c59982c 225<a href="#sec50">The Doors of Perception</a>
4222507d 226</dt>
227<dt>
3c59982c 228<a href="#sec51">Heaven and Hell</a>
4222507d 229</dt>
230</dl>
231</dd>
232<dt>
3c59982c 233<a href="#sec52">William James</a>
4222507d 234</dt>
235<dd>
236<dl>
237<dt>
3c59982c 238<a href="#sec53">The Varieties of Religious Experience</a>
4222507d 239</dt>
240<dt>
3c59982c 241<a href="#sec54">The PhD Octopus</a>
4222507d 242</dt>
243</dl>
244</dd>
245<dt>
3c59982c 246<a href="#sec55">Henry James</a>
4222507d 247</dt>
248<dd>
249<dl>
250<dt>
3c59982c 251<a href="#sec56">The Altar of the Dead</a>
4222507d 252</dt>
253</dl>
254</dd>
255<dt>
3c59982c 256<a href="#sec57">Gregor Kiczales</a>
4222507d 257</dt>
258<dd>
259<dl>
260<dt>
3c59982c 261<a href="#sec58">The Art of the Metaobject Protocol</a>
4222507d 262</dt>
263</dl>
264</dd>
265<dt>
3c59982c 266<a href="#sec59">Søren Kierkegaard</a>
4222507d 267</dt>
268<dd>
269<dl>
270<dt>
3c59982c 271<a href="#sec60">Sickness Unto Death</a>
4222507d 272</dt>
273<dt>
3c59982c 274<a href="#sec61">Either/Or</a>
4222507d 275</dt>
276<dt>
3c59982c 277<a href="#sec62">Fear and Trembling</a>
4222507d 278</dt>
279<dt>
3c59982c 280<a href="#sec63">Repetition</a>
4222507d 281</dt>
282</dl>
283</dd>
284<dt>
3c59982c 285<a href="#sec64">Alisa Kwitney</a>
4222507d 286</dt>
287<dd>
288<dl>
289<dt>
3c59982c 290<a href="#sec65">Destiny: A Chronicle of Deaths Foretold</a>
4222507d 291</dt>
292</dl>
293</dd>
294<dt>
3c59982c 295<a href="#sec66">David Lamkins</a>
4222507d 296</dt>
297<dd>
298<dl>
299<dt>
3c59982c 300<a href="#sec67">Successful Lisp</a>
4222507d 301</dt>
302</dl>
303</dd>
304<dt>
3c59982c 305<a href="#sec68">Mencius</a>
4222507d 306</dt>
307<dd>
308<dl>
309<dt>
3c59982c 310<a href="#sec69">Mencius</a>
4222507d 311</dt>
312</dl>
313</dd>
314<dt>
3c59982c 315<a href="#sec70">Walter Miller</a>
4222507d 316</dt>
317<dd>
318<dl>
319<dt>
3c59982c 320<a href="#sec71">A Canticle for Leibowitz</a>
4222507d 321</dt>
322</dl>
323</dd>
324<dt>
3c59982c 325<a href="#sec72">Alan Moore</a>
4222507d 326</dt>
327<dd>
328<dl>
329<dt>
3c59982c 330<a href="#sec73">Watchmen</a>
4222507d 331</dt>
4222507d 332<dt>
3c59982c 333<a href="#sec74">V for Vendetta</a>
4222507d 334</dt>
335</dl>
336</dd>
337<dt>
3c59982c 338<a href="#sec75">Thomas More</a>
4222507d 339</dt>
340<dd>
341<dl>
342<dt>
3c59982c 343<a href="#sec76">Utopia</a>
4222507d 344</dt>
345</dl>
346</dd>
347<dt>
3c59982c 348<a href="#sec77">Friedrich Nietzsche</a>
4222507d 349</dt>
350<dd>
351<dl>
352<dt>
3c59982c 353<a href="#sec78">Beyond Good and Evil</a>
4222507d 354</dt>
355<dt>
3c59982c 356<a href="#sec79">On the Geneaology of Morals</a>
4222507d 357</dt>
358<dt>
3c59982c 359<a href="#sec80">Ecce Homo</a>
4222507d 360</dt>
361</dl>
362</dd>
363<dt>
3c59982c 364<a href="#sec81">George Orwell</a>
4222507d 365</dt>
366<dd>
367<dl>
368<dt>
3c59982c 369<a href="#sec82">1984</a>
4222507d 370</dt>
371<dt>
3c59982c 372<a href="#sec83">Animal Farm</a>
4222507d 373</dt>
374</dl>
375</dd>
376<dt>
3c59982c 377<a href="#sec84">Plato</a>
4222507d 378</dt>
379<dd>
380<dl>
381<dt>
3c59982c 382<a href="#sec85">Symposium</a>
4222507d 383</dt>
384<dt>
3c59982c 385<a href="#sec86">Euthyphro</a>
4222507d 386</dt>
387<dt>
3c59982c 388<a href="#sec87">Apology</a>
4222507d 389</dt>
390<dt>
3c59982c 391<a href="#sec88">Crito</a>
4222507d 392</dt>
4222507d 393<dt>
3c59982c 394<a href="#sec89">Phaedo</a>
4222507d 395</dt>
4222507d 396<dt>
3c59982c 397<a href="#sec90">Protagoras</a>
4222507d 398</dt>
399</dl>
400</dd>
401<dt>
3c59982c 402<a href="#sec91">Luke Rhinehardt</a>
4222507d 403</dt>
404<dd>
405<dl>
406<dt>
3c59982c 407<a href="#sec92">The Dice Man</a>
4222507d 408</dt>
409</dl>
410</dd>
411<dt>
3c59982c 412<a href="#sec93">Neal Stephenson</a>
4222507d 413</dt>
414<dd>
415<dl>
416<dt>
3c59982c 417<a href="#sec94">Snow Crash</a>
4222507d 418</dt>
419<dt>
3c59982c 420<a href="#sec95">Cryptonomicon</a>
4222507d 421</dt>
422</dl>
423</dd>
424<dt>
3c59982c 425<a href="#sec96">Bjarne Stroustrup</a>
4222507d 426</dt>
427<dd>
428<dl>
429<dt>
3c59982c 430<a href="#sec97">The C++ Programming Language (3rd edition)</a>
4222507d 431</dt>
432</dl>
433</dd>
434<dt>
3c59982c 435<a href="#sec98">JRR Tolkien</a>
4222507d 436</dt>
437<dd>
438<dl>
439<dt>
3c59982c 440<a href="#sec99">The Lord of the Rings</a>
4222507d 441</dt>
442<dt>
3c59982c 443<a href="#sec100">The Silmarillion</a>
4222507d 444</dt>
4222507d 445<dt>
3c59982c 446<a href="#sec101">The Lost Tales</a>
4222507d 447</dt>
448</dl>
449</dd>
450<dt>
3c59982c 451<a href="#sec102">H.G. Wells</a>
4222507d 452</dt>
453<dd>
454<dl>
455<dt>
3c59982c 456<a href="#sec103">The Island of Dr Moreau</a>
4222507d 457</dt>
458</dl>
459</dd>
023ad63c 460</dl>
461</div>
462
463
4222507d 464<!-- Page published by Emacs Muse begins here --><h2><a name="sec1" id="sec1"></a>
465Douglas Adams</h2>
466
467
468
469<h3><a name="sec2" id="sec2"></a>
470Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy (collected)</h3>
471
472<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•• </span> (8) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
473
474
475
476
477
478<h3><a name="sec3" id="sec3"></a>
479The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul</h3>
480
481<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•••• </span> (6) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
482
483
484
485
486
487
488<h2><a name="sec4" id="sec4"></a>
489Aeschylus</h2>
490
491
492
493<h3><a name="sec5" id="sec5"></a>
494Oresteia</h3>
495
496<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
497
498
499
500
501
502<h3><a name="sec6" id="sec6"></a>
503Prometheus Bound</h3>
504
505<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">• </span> (9) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
506
507
508
509
510
511<h3><a name="sec7" id="sec7"></a>
512The Persians</h3>
513
514<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•• </span> (8) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
515
516
517
518
519
520
521<h2><a name="sec8" id="sec8"></a>
522John Allison</h2>
523
524<p class="first">The author of the rather amazing <a href="http://scarygoround.com">Scary Go Round</a>.
525I highly recommend procuring the printed collections; the printing
526quality is superb (full color on glossy paper), and the long story
527arcs are much easier to read.</p>
528
529<h3><a name="sec9" id="sec9"></a>
530Looks, Brains and Everything</h3>
531
532<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
533
534
535
536
537
538<h3><a name="sec10" id="sec10"></a>
539Blame the Sky</h3>
540
541<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
542
543
544
545
546
547<h3><a name="sec11" id="sec11"></a>
548Skellington</h3>
549
550<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
551
552
553
554
555
556<h3><a name="sec12" id="sec12"></a>
557The Retribution Index</h3>
558
559<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
560
561
562
563
564
565<h3><a name="sec13" id="sec13"></a>
566Great Aches</h3>
567
568<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
569
570
571
572
573
574<h3><a name="sec14" id="sec14"></a>
575Ahoy Hoy!</h3>
576
577<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
578
579
580
581
582
583<h3><a name="sec15" id="sec15"></a>
584Heavy Metal Hearts and Flowers</h3>
585
586<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
587
588
589
590
591
592<h3><a name="sec16" id="sec16"></a>
593Ghosts</h3>
594
595<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
596
597
598
599
600
601
602<h2><a name="sec17" id="sec17"></a>
603Anonymous</h2>
604
605
606
607<h3><a name="sec18" id="sec18"></a>
608Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz</h3>
609
610<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
611
612
613
614
615
616
617<h2><a name="sec19" id="sec19"></a>
618Aristophanes</h2>
619
620
621
622<h3><a name="sec20" id="sec20"></a>
623The Frogs</h3>
624
625<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
626
627
628
629
630
631<h3><a name="sec21" id="sec21"></a>
632The Clouds</h3>
633
634<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
635
636
637
638
639
640<h3><a name="sec22" id="sec22"></a>
641Ecclesiazusae</h3>
642
643<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
644
645
646
647
648
649
650<h2><a name="sec23" id="sec23"></a>
651Aristotle</h2>
652
653
654
655<h3><a name="sec24" id="sec24"></a>
656Ethics</h3>
657
658<p><em>Nonfiction</em></p>
659
660
661
662
663
664<h3><a name="sec25" id="sec25"></a>
665Categories</h3>
666
667<p><em>Nonfiction</em></p>
668
669
670
671
672
673<h3><a name="sec26" id="sec26"></a>
674Poetics</h3>
675
676<p><em>Nonfiction</em></p>
677
678
679
680
681
682<h3><a name="sec27" id="sec27"></a>
683Rhetoric</h3>
684
685<p><em>Nonfiction</em></p>
686
687
688
689
690
691
692<h2><a name="sec28" id="sec28"></a>
693Marcus Aurelius</h2>
694
695
696
697<h3><a name="sec29" id="sec29"></a>
698Meditations</h3>
699
700<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•••••• </span> (4) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
701
702<p>At the time, I enjoyed reading this collection of meditations on
703Stoic philosophy, and it was a fairly quick read (fifteen minutes a
704day over the course of two weeks for me). Nowadays I've read
705Epictetus, and I suggest reading his <em>Discourses</em> instead.</p>
706
707
708
709
710<h2><a name="sec30" id="sec30"></a>
711William Blake</h2>
712
713<p class="first">Blake is my <a href="William%20Blake.html">favorite</a> of the English poets. His
714unique use of relief etching and watercoloring makes for very
715interesting Illuminated works. There is a very high quality
716<a href="http://blakearchive.org">complete archive of Blake's works</a> online
717with high resolution plate scans and full transcriptions among other
718things.</p>
719
720<h3><a name="sec31" id="sec31"></a>
721The Four Zoas</h3>
722
723<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
724
725<p>The unfinished manuscript of Blake's longest apocalypse. The
726Four Zoas divide from Albion and rage through the ages of dismal woe
727to bring about the end of the cycle of Ulro and restore the cycle of
728Beulah.</p>
729
730
731
732<h3><a name="sec32" id="sec32"></a>
733Jerusalem</h3>
734
735<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
736
737<p>The finest of Blake's Illuminated works.</p>
738
739
740
741
742<h2><a name="sec33" id="sec33"></a>
4222507d 743Mike Carey</h2>
744
745
746
3c59982c 747<h3><a name="sec34" id="sec34"></a>
4222507d 748Lucifer (series)</h3>
749
750<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•••• </span> (6) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
751
752<p>Of the <em>Sandman</em> spinoffs, <em>Lucifer</em> stands out as the best for
753the first half, but then the writer appears to take on far too great a
754task, and, with the introduction of some disagreeable character
755relations, fails to execute the story as well as it could have
756been. Still, it was worth reading to the end even though most of the
757stories after issue 35 or so were merely ok. If you like Kierkegaard I
758suggest issues 2, 3, and 62&mdash;they show the form of the incommensurable
759relation of the single individual to the absolute perfectly.</p>
760
761
762
763
3c59982c 764<h2><a name="sec35" id="sec35"></a>
4222507d 765Confucius</h2>
766
767
768
3c59982c 769<h3><a name="sec36" id="sec36"></a>
4222507d 770Analects</h3>
771
772<p><em>Nonfiction</em></p>
773
774
775
776
777
778
3c59982c 779<h2><a name="sec37" id="sec37"></a>
4222507d 780Neil Gaiman</h2>
781
782
783
3c59982c 784<h3><a name="sec38" id="sec38"></a>
4222507d 785The Sandman (series)</h3>
786
787<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
788
789<p>Perhaps the best comic book series of all time; I would say <em>The
790Sandman</em> as a whole ranks higher than anything even Alan Moore has
791written.</p>
792
793
794
3c59982c 795<h3><a name="sec39" id="sec39"></a>
4222507d 796Good Omens</h3>
797
798<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•• </span> (8) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
799
800<p>A friend of a friend decided one evening that I needed to read
801so-called <em>normal people books</em>, and so she lent me <em>Good Omens</em>. It
802was an enjoyable read and unearthed vague memories of comic book
803magazines I read when I was small and the name <em>Sandman</em>; thus through
804one book I found something far greater.</p>
805
806
807
4222507d 808
3c59982c 809<h2><a name="sec40" id="sec40"></a>
4222507d 810John Taylor Gatto</h2>
811
812<p class="first">Former teacher and now author-activist.</p>
813
3c59982c 814<h3><a name="sec41" id="sec41"></a>
4222507d 815Underground History of American Education</h3>
816
817<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">• </span> (9) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
818
819<p>An interesting <em>underground</em> history of the American education
820system. Available
821<a href="http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/underground/">online for free</a>.</p>
822
823
824
825
3c59982c 826<h2><a name="sec42" id="sec42"></a>
4222507d 827Kahlil Gibran</h2>
828
829<p class="first">Kahlil Gibran is fairly interesting; his earlier works do not
830agree with my æsthetic sense (blah blah), but <em>The Madman</em> onward are
831all rather nice. A few of his works are
832<a href="http://leb.net/~mira/">online</a>, but I recommend scouting used book
833stores for old hardcover editions. The (late 90s onward at least)
834<em>hardcover</em> versions from <em>Alfred A. Knopf</em> are in fact permabound
835paperbacks with a hardcasing, and are of seriously inferior quality to
836the editions from the 50s and 60s (and cost quite a bit more,
837naturally).</p>
838
3c59982c 839<h3><a name="sec43" id="sec43"></a>
4222507d 840A Tear and a Smile</h3>
841
842<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••</span><span class="rating-bad">••••••• </span> (3) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
843
844<p>One of Kahlil Gibran's earlier works, I did not much like <em>A
845Tear and a Smile</em> excepting the last poem (&quot;A Poet's Voice&quot;).</p>
846
847
848
3c59982c 849<h3><a name="sec44" id="sec44"></a>
4222507d 850The Prophet</h3>
851
852<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">• </span> (9) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
853
854
855
856
857
3c59982c 858<h3><a name="sec45" id="sec45"></a>
4222507d 859Sand and Foam</h3>
860
861<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">••• </span> (7) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
862
863<p>An interesting little book of aphorisms.</p>
864
865
866
3c59982c 867<h3><a name="sec46" id="sec46"></a>
4222507d 868The Madman</h3>
869
870<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•• </span> (8) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
871
872
873
874
875
876
3c59982c 877<h2><a name="sec47" id="sec47"></a>
4222507d 878Homer</h2>
879
880
881
3c59982c 882<h3><a name="sec48" id="sec48"></a>
4222507d 883The Odyssey</h3>
884
885<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
886
887
888
889
890
891
3c59982c 892<h2><a name="sec49" id="sec49"></a>
4222507d 893Aldous Huxley</h2>
894
895<p class="first">Perhaps the most overrated modern writer. Other people have written
896everything he has to write better and many years before he got around
897to it.</p>
898
3c59982c 899<h3><a name="sec50" id="sec50"></a>
4222507d 900The Doors of Perception</h3>
901
902<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> </span><span class="rating-bad">•••••••••• </span> (0) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
903
904<p>Huxley stains the name of Blake by naming this horrible
905pseudo-scientific and pseudo-poetic essay after a line from <em>The
906Marriage of Heaven and Hell</em>. Subjectivity and objectivity are
907incommensurable; his attempt and being subjectively objective is
908utterly worthless.</p>
909
910
911
3c59982c 912<h3><a name="sec51" id="sec51"></a>
4222507d 913Heaven and Hell</h3>
914
915<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> </span><span class="rating-bad">•••••••••• </span> (0) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
916
917<p>Blah blah LSD blah blah Mushrooms blah blah Peyote blah blah I'm
918Aldous Huxley I'm a pretentious jerk. Don't bother.</p>
919
920
921
4222507d 922
3c59982c 923<h2><a name="sec52" id="sec52"></a>
4222507d 924William James</h2>
925
926
927
3c59982c 928<h3><a name="sec53" id="sec53"></a>
4222507d 929The Varieties of Religious Experience</h3>
930
931<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">••• </span> (7) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
932
933<p><a href="William%20James%20-%20The%20Varieties%20of%20Religious%20Experience.html">A partially finished extended summary</a></p>
934
935
936
3c59982c 937<h3><a name="sec54" id="sec54"></a>
4222507d 938The PhD Octopus</h3>
939
940<p><em>Nonfiction</em></p>
941
942<blockquote>
943<p class="quoted">
944America is thus as a nation rapidly drifting towards a state of things
945in which no man of science or letters will be accounted respectable
946unless some kind of badge or diploma is stamped upon him, and in which
947bare personality will be a mark of outcast estate. It seems to me high
948time to rouse ourselves to consciousness, and to cast a critical eye
949upon this decidedly grotesque tendency. Other nations suffer terribly
950from the Mandarin disease. Are we doomed to suffer like the rest?</p>
951
952</blockquote>
953
954<p><a href="William%20James%20-%20The%20PhD%20Octopus.html">Full Text</a></p>
955
956
957
958
3c59982c 959<h2><a name="sec55" id="sec55"></a>
4222507d 960Henry James</h2>
961
962<p class="first">The novelist brother of William James; I've not read many (read:
963one) of his books, but what I did was decent.</p>
964
3c59982c 965<h3><a name="sec56" id="sec56"></a>
4222507d 966The Altar of the Dead</h3>
967
968<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">••• </span> (7) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
969
970<p>A short novella about a man who maintained an altar in a church
971for all of his lost loved ones on the surface, but something a bit
972more beneath.</p>
973
974
975
976
3c59982c 977<h2><a name="sec57" id="sec57"></a>
4222507d 978Gregor Kiczales</h2>
979
980
981
3c59982c 982<h3><a name="sec58" id="sec58"></a>
4222507d 983The Art of the Metaobject Protocol</h3>
984
985<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
986
987<p>AMOP is useful as a reference to the CLOS MOP (although less so with
988the online MOP spec), but the true value of the book lies in the first
989half of the book. It presents the design of the CLOS MOP through a
990series of revisions that fix limitations of earlier implementations
991and gradually work toward a generic and well designed MOP for
992CLOS. Through that process one is made more aware of a few general
993object protocol design skills, and gains insight into how to cleanly
994make mapping decisions customizable.</p>
995
996
997
998
3c59982c 999<h2><a name="sec59" id="sec59"></a>
4222507d 1000Søren Kierkegaard</h2>
1001
1002<p class="first">Kierkegaard was a master of style and philosophy; his writing is
1003interesting even if one finds the theistic extentialism espoused
1004disagreeable.</p>
1005
3c59982c 1006<h3><a name="sec60" id="sec60"></a>
4222507d 1007Sickness Unto Death</h3>
1008
1009<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1010
1011<p>I purchased this when I was looking through books at a store after
1012being unable to find the book I really wanted, and I must say that it
1013was better for me to have found this one.</p>
1014
1015<p>Contained within is a beautiful analysis of despair in the context of
1016Christianity (really theism in general). Even if the argument offends,
1017the presentation cannot. The dialectical nature of despair is
1018reflected in every aspect of the work, and the method of presentation
1019forces reflection.</p>
1020
1021
1022
3c59982c 1023<h3><a name="sec61" id="sec61"></a>
4222507d 1024Either/Or</h3>
1025
1026<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1027
1028<p>Composed of two portions, <em>Either/Or</em> is a rather lengthy but
1029rewarding read. The first book is a series of essays and a diary of a
1030young esthetician; the second is a pair of long letters from an older
1031ethicist friend to this esthetician. You are then left to resolve the
1032conflict between the views.</p>
1033
1034
1035
3c59982c 1036<h3><a name="sec62" id="sec62"></a>
4222507d 1037Fear and Trembling</h3>
1038
1039<p><em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1040
1041<p>An interesting dialectical lyric contrasting Despair and Faith.</p>
1042
1043
1044
3c59982c 1045<h3><a name="sec63" id="sec63"></a>
4222507d 1046Repetition</h3>
1047
1048<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1049
1050<p>He who despairs of esthetic repetition gets none; he who despairs
1051of ethical repetition receieves the esthetic. Is it true then that no
1052repetition exists? Is transition all one can hope for?</p>
1053
1054
1055
4222507d 1056
3c59982c 1057<h2><a name="sec64" id="sec64"></a>
4222507d 1058Alisa Kwitney</h2>
1059
1060
1061
3c59982c 1062<h3><a name="sec65" id="sec65"></a>
4222507d 1063Destiny: A Chronicle of Deaths Foretold</h3>
1064
1065<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•• </span> (8) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1066
1067
1068
1069
1070
1071
3c59982c 1072<h2><a name="sec66" id="sec66"></a>
4222507d 1073David Lamkins</h2>
1074
1075
1076
3c59982c 1077<h3><a name="sec67" id="sec67"></a>
4222507d 1078Successful Lisp</h3>
1079
1080<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•• </span> (8) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1081
1082<p>After learning Scheme, I read <em>Successful Lisp</em> and was able to
1083pick up Common Lisp fairly easily.</p>
1084
1085
1086
1087
3c59982c 1088<h2><a name="sec68" id="sec68"></a>
4222507d 1089Mencius</h2>
1090
1091
1092
3c59982c 1093<h3><a name="sec69" id="sec69"></a>
4222507d 1094Mencius</h3>
1095
1096<p><em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1097
1098
1099
1100
1101
1102
3c59982c 1103<h2><a name="sec70" id="sec70"></a>
4222507d 1104Walter Miller</h2>
1105
1106
1107
3c59982c 1108<h3><a name="sec71" id="sec71"></a>
4222507d 1109A Canticle for Leibowitz</h3>
1110
1111<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1112
1113
1114
1115
1116
1117
3c59982c 1118<h2><a name="sec72" id="sec72"></a>
4222507d 1119Alan Moore</h2>
1120
1121
1122
3c59982c 1123<h3><a name="sec73" id="sec73"></a>
4222507d 1124Watchmen</h3>
1125
1126<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•• </span> (8) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1127
1128
1129
1130
1131
3c59982c 1132<h3><a name="sec74" id="sec74"></a>
4222507d 1133V for Vendetta</h3>
1134
1135<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1136
1137
1138
1139
1140
1141
3c59982c 1142<h2><a name="sec75" id="sec75"></a>
4222507d 1143Thomas More</h2>
1144
1145
1146
3c59982c 1147<h3><a name="sec76" id="sec76"></a>
4222507d 1148Utopia</h3>
1149
1150<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">••• </span> (7) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1151
1152<p>I read most of Utopia in high school with the TI-89 ebook reader, but
1153the way the book was split up made it a bit difficult to grasp the
1154overall structure. I found a copy at a used book store one day, and so
1155I read it again, and found it much more comprehensible. It is a quick
1156read, and decent piece of literature. The interesting social system
1157espoused resembles resembles state communism (even if perhaps as a
1158negative ideal), but with an strange blend of 14th century European
1159social customs.</p>
1160
1161
1162
1163
3c59982c 1164<h2><a name="sec77" id="sec77"></a>
4222507d 1165Friedrich Nietzsche</h2>
1166
1167<p class="first">A bit acerbic and esoteric, Nietzsche is for me a good <em>secular</em>
1168counterpart to Kierkegaard's theistic philosophy. Nietzsche's
1169polemical works raise important questions for anyone who reads works
1170on ethics. As such it is a shame that he has gotten a bad reputation
1171by being read by far too many angsty teenagers who see (and relay)
1172only Nietzsche the asshole rather than Nietzsche the master of the
1173polemic.</p>
1174
3c59982c 1175<h3><a name="sec78" id="sec78"></a>
4222507d 1176Beyond Good and Evil</h3>
1177
1178<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•• </span> (8) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1179
1180<p>A somewhat more comprehensible, if a bit less aesthetically
1181pleasing, presentation of much of the philosophy found in <em>Thus Spoke
1182Zarathustra</em> in the negative form. The final chapters are very
1183important (not to detract from the value of the rest of the work) if
1184one wishes to understand <em>On the Genealogy of Morals</em>.</p>
1185
1186
1187
3c59982c 1188<h3><a name="sec79" id="sec79"></a>
4222507d 1189On the Geneaology of Morals</h3>
1190
1191<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">• </span> (9) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1192
1193<p><em>On the Geneaology of Morals</em> is a wonderful book of three
1194polemical essays on the origin of moral/ethical valuations, and the
1195blindness of modern philosphers whose very thinking is tainted by
1196these valuations unknowingly.</p>
1197
1198
1199
3c59982c 1200<h3><a name="sec80" id="sec80"></a>
4222507d 1201Ecce Homo</h3>
1202
1203<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">••• </span> (7) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1204
1205<p><em>Ecce Homo</em> is Nietzsche's very strange autobiography and
1206explanation of his own works. At points it is clear that it could have
1207used a bit more editing (prevented by Nietzsche ... falling into a
1208catatonic state and all), but is still a very useful book to read as
1209Nietzsche explains the overall structure of his works.</p>
1210
1211
1212
1213
3c59982c 1214<h2><a name="sec81" id="sec81"></a>
4222507d 1215George Orwell</h2>
1216
1217
1218
3c59982c 1219<h3><a name="sec82" id="sec82"></a>
4222507d 12201984</h3>
1221
1222<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1223
1224
1225
1226
1227
3c59982c 1228<h3><a name="sec83" id="sec83"></a>
4222507d 1229Animal Farm</h3>
1230
1231<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
1232
1233
1234
1235
1236
1237
3c59982c 1238<h2><a name="sec84" id="sec84"></a>
4222507d 1239Plato</h2>
1240
1241
1242
3c59982c 1243<h3><a name="sec85" id="sec85"></a>
4222507d 1244Symposium</h3>
1245
1246<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
1247
1248
1249
1250
1251
3c59982c 1252<h3><a name="sec86" id="sec86"></a>
4222507d 1253Euthyphro</h3>
1254
1255<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
1256
1257
1258
1259
1260
3c59982c 1261<h3><a name="sec87" id="sec87"></a>
4222507d 1262Apology</h3>
1263
1264<p><em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1265
1266
1267
1268
1269
3c59982c 1270<h3><a name="sec88" id="sec88"></a>
4222507d 1271Crito</h3>
1272
1273<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
1274
1275
1276
1277
1278
3c59982c 1279<h3><a name="sec89" id="sec89"></a>
4222507d 1280Phaedo</h3>
1281
1282<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1283
1284
1285
1286
1287
3c59982c 1288<h3><a name="sec90" id="sec90"></a>
4222507d 1289Protagoras</h3>
1290
1291<p><em>Fiction</em></p>
1292
1293
1294
1295
1296
1297
3c59982c 1298<h2><a name="sec91" id="sec91"></a>
4222507d 1299Luke Rhinehardt</h2>
1300
1301
1302
3c59982c 1303<h3><a name="sec92" id="sec92"></a>
4222507d 1304The Dice Man</h3>
1305
1306<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">••• </span> (7) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1307
1308<blockquote>
1309<p class="quoted">
1310And it's his illusions about what
1311constitutes the real world which are
1312inhibiting him...
1313His reality, his reason, his society
1314...these are what must be destroyed</p>
1315
1316</blockquote>
1317
1318<p>A quotation from one of my <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slaughter_of_the_Soul">favorite metal songs</a> inspired me to grab
1319this book; at worst it would be a waste of time. Much reward was found
1320in this random stab in the dark. The book is framed as an
1321autobiography of the author as a psychoanalyst, and his progression
1322through life as a Dice Man after deciding to live his life through
1323random chance.</p>
1324
1325<p>The style, plot, and content are equally neurotic; part comedy, part
1326attack on psychoanalysis, and part deep philosophy. It was often
1327difficult to put down, and was read in under a week of spare time.</p>
1328
1329
1330
1331
3c59982c 1332<h2><a name="sec93" id="sec93"></a>
4222507d 1333Neal Stephenson</h2>
1334
1335
1336
3c59982c 1337<h3><a name="sec94" id="sec94"></a>
4222507d 1338Snow Crash</h3>
1339
1340<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">• </span> (9) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1341
1342<p>As one must read the <em>Bible</em> to understand English literature, so one
1343must read <em>Snow Crash</em> today to be a nerd. In the realm of modern pop
1344fiction this is one of the better books I've read; it was devoured in
1345a mere four nights. Neal Stepheson may not be Milton, but he does come
1346up with enganging tales. <em>Snow Crash</em> has a nice undertone of (quite
1347accurate) political and social commentary that makes it worth reading
1348as more than mere cyberpunk fiction.</p>
1349
1350
1351
3c59982c 1352<h3><a name="sec95" id="sec95"></a>
4222507d 1353Cryptonomicon</h3>
1354
1355<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">•• </span> (8) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1356
1357<p>I read <em>Cryptonomicon</em> when it was new, and at the time I thought it was
1358good. It could have lost a hundred or so pages without detracting from
1359the plot, but it was easy reading and didn't take very long to
1360finish. The story was enganging, and the continual switching between
1361the 1940s and present day slowly unravelled the tale in a nice way.</p>
1362
1363<p>I'd still have to recommend <em>Snow Crash</em> if one wished to read only one
1364Stephenson novel.</p>
1365
1366
1367
1368
3c59982c 1369<h2><a name="sec96" id="sec96"></a>
4222507d 1370Bjarne Stroustrup</h2>
1371
1372
1373
3c59982c 1374<h3><a name="sec97" id="sec97"></a>
4222507d 1375The C++ Programming Language (3rd edition)</h3>
1376
1377<p><em>Nonfiction</em></p>
1378
1379<p>Once upon a time I was fifteen and I read this book. It was more
1380or less what taught me how to write programs just large enough to do
1381useful things, and so shall forever be remembered by me. A year and a
1382half later I stumbled upon a little language called Scheme and fell
1383down the rabbit hole.</p>
1384
1385
1386
1387
3c59982c 1388<h2><a name="sec98" id="sec98"></a>
4222507d 1389JRR Tolkien</h2>
1390
1391
1392
3c59982c 1393<h3><a name="sec99" id="sec99"></a>
4222507d 1394The Lord of the Rings</h3>
1395
1396<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">• </span> (9) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
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3c59982c 1402<h3><a name="sec100" id="sec100"></a>
4222507d 1403The Silmarillion</h3>
1404
1405<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> ••••••••••</span><span class="rating-bad"> </span> (10) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1406
1407
1408
1409
1410
3c59982c 1411<h3><a name="sec101" id="sec101"></a>
4222507d 1412The Lost Tales</h3>
1413
1414<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">••• </span> (7) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1415
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3c59982c 1421<h2><a name="sec102" id="sec102"></a>
4222507d 1422H.G. Wells</h2>
1423
1424
1425
3c59982c 1426<h3><a name="sec103" id="sec103"></a>
4222507d 1427The Island of Dr Moreau</h3>
1428
1429<p><em>Rating:</em> <span class="rating-good"> •••••••</span><span class="rating-bad">••• </span> (7) / <em>Fiction</em></p>
1430
1431
1432
4222507d 1433 <!-- Page published by Emacs Muse ends here -->
023ad63c 1434
1435 <p class="cke-buttons">
1436 <!-- validating badges, any browser, etc -->
3c59982c 1437 <a href="https://validator.w3.org/check/referer"><img
1438 src="https://www.w3.org/Icons/valid-xhtml10"
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1443 ]" /></a>
1444
3c59982c 1445 <a href="https://www.debian.org/"><img
023ad63c 1446 src="img/buttons/debian.png" alt="[ Powered by Debian ]" /></a>
1447
3c59982c 1448 <a href="https://hcoop.net/">
023ad63c 1449 <img src="img/buttons/hcoop.png"
1450 alt="[ Hosted by HCoop]" />
1451 </a>
1452
3c59982c 1453 <a href="https://www.fsf.org/register_form?referrer=114">
023ad63c 1454 <img src="img/buttons/fsf_member.png"
1455 alt="[ FSF Associate Member ]" />
1456 </a>
1457 </p>
1458
3c59982c 1459<p class="cke-footer">Jessie: but today i was a nerd
1460Jessie: i even read slashdot.
023ad63c 1461</p>
1462<p class="cke-timestamp">Last Modified:
3c59982c 1463 May 9, 2019</p>
023ad63c 1464 </body>
1465</html>