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Alex Fink

finktank@books.idas.social

Joined 9 months, 1 week ago

Exploring and supporting Community Informatics and Youth Power for just futures.

Loving hard sci-fi, queer & BIPOC-authored sci-fi, abolition and abolitionist futures, Afrofuturism, Solarpunk, cooperativism, pedagogy, social change.

he/him

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Alex Fink's books

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Autonomous (Hardcover, 2017, Tor Books) 5 stars

Autonomous features a rakish female pharmaceutical pirate named Jack who traverses the world in her …

Another wonderful one ...

5 stars

Loved The Terraformers, so picked up Autonomous. I liked the former more, but it was such a high bar that Autonomous was still excellent. Different, though related themes. Terraformers is environmental where Autonomous is health care / pharmaceutical, but both tell deeply compelling future narratives about attempts to create survival and thriving in the face of terrible, dystopian, and yet believable futures. Appreciate wrestling with parallels between human freedoms and post-human freedoms, with both taking place in the context of capitalism that is recognizable today... On to Newitz's next work.

Cooperatives at Work (2023, Emerald Publishing Limited) 5 stars

For too long, cooperatives have been considered marginal players in the global economy, and as …

A great summary of the worker cooperative movement

5 stars

Fast, engaging, and information packed, this book sent me tracing down references with excitement, energized me to think about the cooperative movement even more, and perhaps most importantly, gave name to things I've been studying better than I have yet to do. If you are at all interested in the futures of work, in economics beyond capitalism, or in more democractic ways of coming together, I highly encourage this book. It would be a great place to start.

Gideon the Ninth (EBook, 2019, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 4 stars

"The Emperor needs necromancers.

The Ninth Necromancer needs a swordswoman.

Gideon has a sword, some …

The only horror-genre novel I've ever liked?

No rating

I'm not into horror. Period. Don't like to read it, don't like to watch it. Don't even really like to hear it talked about. But this was a good ride, engaging, with profoundly beautiful visual description. It managed to be quite long and complex, and yet still relatively simple too. It turned cliches about and brought them back with something new.

reviewed The Martian by Andy Weir

The Martian (Paperback, 2015, Del Rey) 4 stars

I’m stranded on Mars.

I have no way to communicate with Earth.

I’m in a …

Fun read.

4 stars

And probably at least semi realistic? Didn't like it as much as Project Hail Mary by the same author. This sorta read as a sequence of "oh crap, another thing went wrong" problems, followed by solutions. I'm certain this is realistic - or even still overly optimistic, given what they were surviving through - but kinda made for an overly long, repetitive narrative. I suspect this is part of why they cut some of these out of the movie (and to save time, but also it got repetitive). Nevertheless, a fun read if you enjoy sci-fi that sticks close to contemporary science.

This is a collection of essays, reflections and poems by Nora Bateson, the noted research …

Lovely book on systems thinking

5 stars

Close echoes to Gregory Bateson and Gilles Deleuze both. Easier to understand than both, I think. Nora Bateson's prose is often lovely, compelling, poetic. It represents in form the ideas she espouses. Symmathesy and Warm Data are her concepts and she circles them, especially in the latter half of the book. A worthwhile read to those who want to think differently as they work on the problems of our world. And a different way in to understanding Deleuze than Deleuze himself. I'll return to some of the essays in here over the next years, I'm certain. Can be read in small sections.

We Make the Road by Walking (Paperback, 1991, Temple University Press) 5 stars

This dialogue between two of the most prominent thinkers on social change in the twentieth …

Beautiful dialogue between two heroes of experiential education and critical pedagogy

5 stars

This is at least my second reading of this book and I still love it. I see new things in it each time. This time, I see how much Paulo Freire prompted Myles Horton with questions about his work. According to the introduction, Freire wanted to introduce Horton to thinkers in Latin America. And Horton wanted to do the same with Freire, but either the editors were siding with Freire's prompting or he did more to ask the questions, because I do feel like Horton is a bit more primary in terms of representation in this dialogue. As always before, I find Horton's starting every response with a story and sticking to stories is so compelling and so clear that he lived what he practiced. I don't know that a reader walks away getting any clear sense of what Freire or Horton were up to in specifics from this book, …

Atomic Habits (2019, Avery, Penguin Random House USA) 5 stars

No matter your goals, Atomic Habits offers a proven framework for improving every day. James …

Quick, useful, but over written

4 stars

Like many self help books, this could be an article and just as usefully make all the points. I've found what was said to be true to my learning about creating and keeping productive habits. So it is useful if this is what you are trying to do - or at least would be to someone like me. I think you can probably generally just skim, dive into interesting parts, and read chapter summaries to save time.

The Charm Offensive (AudiobookFormat, 2021, Simon & Schuster Audio and Blackstone Publishing) 4 stars

Fun. And..?

3 stars

Solidly in the rom-com genre, with a gay romance at the heart of the story. It seems like the real emphasis though is on the mental health struggles of both characters - and the ways they help and support each other through them. In that sense, it warps the genre some, because so few emphasize mental health almost exclusively. However, for me at least, the story started to drag about half way through and was kind of slow to the finish. Loved the idea more than the execution.

Pleasantville (Paperback, 2016, Harper Perennial, Amistad) 5 stars

From Attica Locke, a writer and producer of FOX’s Empire, this sophisticated thriller sees lawyer …

Race and racism, modern America, and perfect detective genre

5 stars

Never read anything by Locke I didn't love. She's a genius in her writing and description, and also for the profound complexity through which her stories unfold. I don't like the detective/mystery/crime genre, but I love her work. That she can bring in race and racism in a tale of the modern U.S. and bend but not break the detective genre is an awesome feat. I'll read everything she publishes.

The Troubled Girls of Dragomir Academy (Hardcover, 2021, Walden Pond Press) 4 stars

If no one notices Marya Lupu, is likely because of her brother, Luka. And that’s …

A fun and meaningful journey

4 stars

I think the author does a nice job of capturing a dystopian universe, alongside the strengths of characters coming into their own and making sense of a world through a critical lens. A quick read, series and playful at the same time. Ursu follows YA adventure fantasy genre... and also busts it up.

reviewed The Rithmatist by Brandon Sanderson

The Rithmatist 5 stars

More than anything, Joel wants to be a Rithmatist. Rithmatists have the power to infuse …

Fun YA fantasy

5 stars

A fun YA fantasy novel based in mathematics of all things. Classic Brandon Sanderson twists a reader should come to expect but can rarely predict. I wish Sanderson would continue this series (maybe he will - but he has so many open series at this point).

Klara and the Sun (Hardcover, 2021, Faber & Faber) 4 stars

From her place in the store, Klara, an Artificial Friend with outstanding observational qualities, watches …

Ishiguro is a modern master

5 stars

I love everything I've ever read by Kazuo Ishiguro. His prose isn't filled with vocab words and doesn't ever even feel anything but mundane, and yet somehow, every single line is poetry. This book did not disappoint. Lovely, loving, heart-rending... and also exploring the very real potential futures of artificial intelligence, machine learning, friendship, and disposability.

Immersive Cartography and Post-Qualitative Inquiry (2021, Taylor & Francis Group) 4 stars

Immersive Cartography and Post-Qualitative Inquiry introduces immersive cartography as a transdisciplinary approach to social inquiry …

Many useful ideas, but perhaps longer than it needs to be

4 stars

A wonderful introduction both to Rousell's concept of "immersive cartographies" and to post-qualitative inquiries in general. There was a lot here worth learning / taking away. I found myself reading the first few chapters intently and skimming the rest. While Rousell's project was a very useful case study (and sounded like fun to participate in), I felt the larger purpose of the work got lost in the weeds.

The Telekommunist Manifesto (Paperback, 2010, Institute of Network Cultures) 5 stars

About the publication: In the age of international telecommunications, global migration and the emergence of …

Helpful framing for digital age communist thinking

5 stars

Kleiner examines capitalism and the possibilities for cooperativism/communism in the digital age, especially in regards to peer production and licensing. Useful distinctions drawn around production, materials vs. digital, and digital labor. Growing dated in some areas, but on the whole still very relevant to today. Kleiner proposes a new licensing model to promote Peer Production / Venture Communism and presents meaningful and substantive arguments against both copyright and standard copyleft licensing models (like GPL, Creative Commons, etc.) from a leftist perspective.

Gilles Deleuze (2005, Cambridge University Press) 5 stars

This book offers a readable and compelling introduction to the work of one of the …

A "must-read" introduction

5 stars

Perhaps scholars of Deleuze would disagree, but as someone trying to get an understanding of the landscape of Deleuze's admittedly challenging philosophical thinking, I think May's book is a remarkably salient and clear introduction. I've returned to it a few times over the years, having gotten so interested in Deleuze's ideas that I've wondered off to read other related things. Finally finished it this February and really appreciated it from start to finish.