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Archive - Book Review
The Housing Monster
author: prole.info
name: Steev
average rating: 3.86
book published: 2011
rating: 5
read at: 2015/02/10
date added: 2015/02/24
shelves: politics, gentrification, own-it
review:
Excellent. Essentially a marxist analysis of the housing and construction industries, but a modern one. Includes an erudite chapter on Soviet Russia and why it wasn't really communism but was in fact just another form of state capitalism.
In addition to the smart writing, the graphics are brilliant. Some of them I feel like blowing up into poster size and wheatpasting around town.
Alternadad
author: Neal Pollack
name: Steev
average rating: 3.41
book published: 2000
rating: 5
read at: 2014/11/15
date added: 2014/12/31
shelves: children, fun, gentrification, own-it, homesteading, memoir
review:
Just what I needed.
It was surprising how much of the book is about not just "alternative" parenting but about gentrification. The story is the story of a dude growing up and starting to value a way of life (domestic, family-based, child-centered) different than he used to, and trying to reconcile that with his values about class and urbanity and growth and re-development, etc.
American Psycho
author: Bret Easton Ellis
name: Steev
average rating: 3.80
book published: 1991
rating: 4
read at: 2014/11/16
date added: 2014/11/18
shelves: novels, own-it, fun
review:
This is an odd novel. It's a light-hearted, absurdist satire about rich people and New York and trendiness and fashion. But it's also a violent, misogynist horror story full of ultra-graphic, impossibly extreme gore and brutality. Oh and super graphic, porn-style sex scenes.
It's one of those books where I wondered often why I was still reading, and yet couldn't put it down.
Some things I really enjoyed about it:
1. One running gag is that the narrator is always mistaking people for other people, and in turn he's always being mistaken for others. Co-workers or acquaintances come up and greet him by other names, etc. It happens so often as to be this hilarious and biting commentary on modern alienation.
2. The anachronism of the time the book is set in. It's so clearly late-80s, it almost hurts, to read about the cordless phones, video rentals, answering machines and INXS playing at the clubs.
3. The porn-style sex scenes. Really just because they, along with the killing scenes, are such a stark contrast with the rest of the book, which is mostly vapid recountings of evenings spent dining at trendy eateries and the designer brands everyone is wearing.
Anyway. I hate to admit I've never read any other Bret Easton Ellis, but this makes me want to.