Books of May

Well, it’s the first of June, and it feels like summer has been here for weeks already. I keep trying for four books per month in order to get one read every week, and I don’t quite manage every month, but this time I did. Hopefully long, light June evenings on the terrace will help me improve, but for now, here are the titles I read last month:

Poltava (Englund) – the first book I’ve read in Swedish for a while, and what magnificent Swedish! It describes the destruction of the Carolinian army in Ukraine in gory detail, but also provides a look at the psyche of people back in early 1700’s, and how foot soldiers can be made to make the ultimate sacrifice for little or no reason. Seemed topical. 4.5/5

Under the skin (Villarosa) – a harrowing, unflinching look at what it means to be Black/Brown in the US, specifically in regard to health care, and with special attention to the compounding effects of intersectionality. Not an easy read. I knew it was bad, but not that bad. 4/5

A Thousand Brains (Hawkins) – an interesting insight into the brain and how it functions, this also offers an exposé of what intelligence is, and what it can mean for our species. Fittingly, it’s thought-provoking. 4.5/5

Learning in the zone (Magana) – this book purports to describe habits of meta learning. It does not. This is the worst jumble of pseudo-scientific goobledigook I have ever had the bad luck of encountering. Awash with cryptically contorted nonsense-statements and with precious little on offer in terms of actual advice, this book serves one purpose only: providing a zero on the scale on which to measure good books. 0/5

On refugees

June 2015

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My son woke me up this morning by telling me that he loved me. I was in my own bed, in my own house, and I counted my blessings.

Imagine having all that torn away by powers utterly beyond your control, having to abandon your home for fear of being raped, tortured, killed, having to flee for your life, seeing friends and family die on the way into the unknown and still have to carry on, since it’s the lesser of evils.

Imagine finally making it to a place where prosperity and peace reigns, only to be met by racism and xenophobia, by people wanting to send you back to the utter hell you’ve escaped (a hell created by a lack of action from those same countries that you now have to flee to).

Now imagine that’s you. How would YOU like to be treated?