18 January 2006
Wed, 18 Jan 2006 22:28:23 GMT
1035 days ago
I like to make up a list of the books I’ve read, with quick reviews of each. 2004. I managed 46 books, counting make magazine (the shortest book I read) three times.
I’m a big fan of reading, and managed 12 more books then in 2004. I had a whole three months of not reading around the time I started college, because college got me real bored and I never managed to figure out the library.
- The Timeless Way of Building, Christopher Alexander. Alexander has some fascinating ideas. I really like his thoughts on organic – that people should do things (like building) for themselves. The whole idea of a pattern language, which provides for the effortless design of buildings, is a neat one. I wish I had that kind of language. 90
- Small Spaces, Azby Brown. A real interesting look at how Japanese embrace the size constraint in their architecture, coming up with all kinds of ways to maximize space and improve living conditions in small flats. 80
- Programming Ruby, 2nd Edition, Dave Thomas. The first book I’d ever read on programming. I feel it taught me well. I wouldn’t quite call myself a ruby wizard yet, and there are plenty of concepts in the pickaxe that I haven’t quite internalized. But without me coming across ideas in a project, I don’t think I’ll ever master a programming concept. And the book gave me a good awareness as to what is where in ruby for when I will need to use it. 90
- Mind Hacks, Tom Stafford & Matt Webb. I liked mind hacks, although really haven’t thought back as often as I should have since reading it. A better understanding of how my mind actually works is a nice thing to have, and I think a lot of the stuff I read over effects me on a less then conscious level almost daily. 85
- Le Petit Prince, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. A quick and short read, provides a lot of ideas to think over. A lot. I don’t have much to say, but that doesn’t reflect on how I thought of it. 95
- The Mind’s Eye, Henri Cartier-Bresson. Interesting look at photography I took up around the time Cartier-Bresson died. Musings of an artist, it was a nice read, but I got a bit bored working through it. 70
- A Pattern Language, Christopher Alexander. The second time through for me, a pattern language was still nice. As The Timeless Way above, Alexander comes up with some good ideas that make you think. Which is the best thing about reading. 90
- Adobe Photoshop CS in a Book, Adobe Creative Team. A nice intro to photoshop, which I wanted to learn to use to touch up my digital photos. I don’t do all that much, but I got a good basic understanding of the controls and manipulations you can get done. 60
- Defensive Design for the Web, Matthew Linderman and Jason Fried. A nice concise look at how to get the basics in interaction right at your site – even baser then having a pretty look, make sure that the your users won’t get frustrated and close the window while trying to make an order or finding information. 80
- Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Hunter S. Thompson. I ordered it from the library when news came through of his death. Nice read, crazy shit. 75
- Camera and Lens, Ansel Adams. Another look at photography. I skipped the section on his zone system, but the rest of the book was a good look at the logistics, techniques, and equipment needed to do a good job at photography. 70
- Make Magazine Volume 1, Mark Frauenfelder. I got caught up in the make hype, and bought a subscription. It’s a nice magazine.
- Test Driven Development, Kent Beck. I can’t say I didn’t get test driven development, but I couldn’t quite make myself practice it. I still don’t after having read the book, but I do a better job. 65
- Les Aventures de Petit Nicolas, Sempe. A cute book on the adventures of little nick, a preschooler in suburban france. Charming tales with beautiful illustration. I read it to keep on learning french. 80
- Cradle to Cradle, William McDonough, Michael Braungart. Fascinating look at how things should be done sustainably around the world. In manufacturing and building of consumer goods – any and all consumer goods – you shouldn’t have to recycle, but upcycle. Things shouldn’t deteriorate as they get used and discarded and cycled, but better. We’re in enough of an environmental crisis right now that we need all we can get, and if the methods proposed here could be adopted all over the world things out to get a lot better. 85
- Un été pas Comme les Autres, Hughette Zahler. Worst book ever, read to learn a little french. 0
- Ordinary Wolves, Seth Kantner. Fascinating recollection (partly fictional?) of the author’s childhood being raised by his father nomadically in the alaskan arctic. Interesting look at society from someone who grew up foreign to it, tried it out a bit around college, then married and moved back into the wilds. 90
- Planting Green Roofs and Living Walls, Nigel Dunnett and Noel Kingsbury. Good look at what todays green roof technology/methods can achieve, when I build myself a house it will sure have a green roof or two. But a little less then interesting. 60
- Make Volume 2, Mark Fraudenfenlder. I haven’t managed to construct lots of projects from make, I usually do one or two of the littler ones – money always provides obstacle to the harder ones. I’m debating as to whether or not I’ll renew my subscription after one more issue. I like it, but haven’t actually built any of the stuff.
- Rhinocéros, Eugène Ionesco. A great play written after ww2. In french, to learn french, I fell that I understood most everything. And there were lots of interesting ideas I came away with. 90
- The Long Emergency, James Howard Kunstler. We’re fucked. We’re fucked. We’re fucked. Kunstler lays out his drama filled vision of why our society is massively unsustainable, and is on the verge of complete and utter collapse. As much as I want to have an optimistic view of the whole thing, Kunstler provides a good case, and I can’t help but believe almost everything he says. Let’s go humans, we’ve dug ourselves a hell of a hole. 90
- Bogtrotter, Richard A. Coffey. A man and wife chronicle making the move to their central Minnesota cabin, living off the land and the money they made working at a nearby county museum in the summer. I’m still looking for something more compelling then suburban life and the 9 to 5, I’m not sure what part these ideas will play. 70
- Allen & Mike’s Really Cool Backpackin’ Book, Allen O’Bannon & Mike Clelland. Nice cute book on backpacking, with great common sense instructions and nice illustrations. Before reading this I’d done a bit of camping, nothing more then a few days. I read a few backpacking books this year, and liked ‘em all. 80
- Lost in Norway, Per Eide. Beautiful book of photos. Photos from all over norway, all of nature, with lots of wide images (which I just love). 80
- The Very Small Home, Azby Brown. Another from Azby Brown, again on japanese solutions to the problem of space. In japan there isn’t any. Real estate is prohibitively expensive, and architects have figured out how to maximize livability in the minimum amount of space.
- Lord Foul’s Bane, Stephen R. Donaldson. The first in a series of three, it was enjoyable fantasy. But I haven’t moved on in the trilogy, so as compelling as it was, it didn’t keep me interested. 60
- Natural Born Cyborgs, Andy Clark. On how ubiquitous or pervasive computing is just the extension of the differentiating factor between humans and less successful members of the animal kingdom – their ability to master tools and further their abilities. 90
- Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince, J.K. Rowling. Nobody hates Harry Potter. Vestiges from my preteen days still hang, but now instead of my mom reading it before bed, I can rip through a Potter in a day. 70
- Agile Web Development with Rails, Dave Thomas. I’m a fan of rails, which I’d been using intermittently over the summer. But sitting down and reading through the tutorials really helped cement my understanding, and after it I mostly rewrote the two apps I’d been fooling around with. 80
- Make Volume 3, Dale Dougherty. Make switched editors, but has always had the exact same page count. Interesting fact.
- The Complete Walker IV, Colin Fletcher & Chip Rawlins. Another book on backpacking, I’ve been yearning to get out on some longer trips. It’s a goal of mine to thru hike one of the real long trails, and I was reading books to try and measure how much I really wanted to and how much it just seemed like something fun. The books increased my interest, whatever that comes to mean. 75
- The Pragmatic Programmer, Andrew Hunt, David Thomas. I always try to reinforce what I want to be with books, and I;m not much of a programmer, so I went for the book. I couldn’t say it quantifiably improved me, but like the pickaxe, it gave me a solid idea of what tools were there for me to use so that when I needed them I could get and use them. 75
- Snow Crash, Neal Stephenson. Real good read. My first time going at Stephenson, the only reason I stopped with The Diamond Age was that my school library doesn’t have much of a collection. Fascinating stuff. 95
- Enders Game, Orson Scott Card. Stolen from my brother on the trip to montana, nice read. 80
- Einstein for Beginners, Joseph Schwartz & Michael Mcguinness. Found in the attic – I think I better understand all that relativity stuff, but it’s still a bit out there for me. 80
- A Short History of Nearly Everything, Bill Bryson. Good fun read, encompassing all threads of science as time progressed. The kind of book that throws you off on a different tangent every page. Real good. 90
- The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Mark Haddon. Interesting look, but I was real let down when I heard it was fiction. Damn misleading books. 50
- Cryptonomicon, Neal Stephenson. I’m the kind of guy who can’t ever pick favorites, but Stephenson is approaching favorite territory. I can’t say which of his novels I like better (I’m not much at favorites…), but all I’ve read have been spectacular. 90
- The Diamond Age, Neal Stephenson. Ditto. 90
- God’s Debris, Scott Adams. I went two or three months at a dramatically slower pace then I’d been following to date, college really just sapped a lot of the gungho out of me. But a real interesting philosophical dialog, although I haven’t thought too hard about it since. 85
- Make Volume 4, O’Reilly Publishing. I think my standing on Make has been make clear in the last three issues, and I haven’t been rating it, as it isn’t quite a book.
- Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town, Cory Doctorow. Nice book from Doctorow. He’s curbed a good genre, I’m looking forward to finding and reading more from him. 80
- 1984, George Orwell. I hadn’t read 1984 before, the whole government spying and manipulating us thing made me snap it up. I don’t think I got the best chance of absorbing it, having listened to it instead of reading, but good none the less. 85
- Don’t Make Me Think, Steve Krug. Good look at web accessibility, and how simple it really is. 75
- A Walk in the Woods, Bill Bryson. Great read from Bryson, equal parts biting social satire, lament over lost wilds and illustration of how much of the natural world is still out there to be enjoyed.
- Catch-22, Joseph Heller. I’ve yet to put any coherent thoughts on Catch-22 together, I don’t know what’s keeping me from thinking it over. I’ll get to it.
04 January 2005
Tue, 04 Jan 2005 00:45:09 GMT
1415 days ago
I figured for the end of the year I would log and link to all the entries for books I’ve read this year, all 34 of ‘em in descending order by date. I rated and wrote a little about all of them too, which was a lot more then I was planning on doing an hour ago.