Friday, August 5, 2022
Bart D. Ehrman - Heaven And Hell - A History Of The Afterlife (OneWorld, 2020) ****
Tuesday, January 4, 2022
Books of the Year 2021
I spent a great deal of my time this year re-reading my favorite comic books (by Joann Sfar, Lewis Trondheim, Christophe Blain), and watching a lot of television series (possibly too many).
That is why my focus on reading was more directed towards non-fiction, mostly about the situation of our human species, in the universe, in our history, our interactions, our society.
Two books really stood out for me: Joseph Henrich's "The WEIRDest People In The World", about what historical aspects - including the church's prohibition to marry first cousins - created a drive toward innovation and democracy in Western Europe in the past 700 years. The second is Francesca Stavrakopoulou's "God, An Anatomy", in which she details all the body parts of god based on biblical and other ancient texts, helping us interpret some of the strange sayings in the bible, and to understand its origins from other and earlier religions. Both books show an incredible knowledge of the subject matter, inventive insights and craftfully written.
I also enjoyed "Metazoa", a book that explores the level of consciousness among living things, from the simplest to the most complex.
Non-fiction- Joseph Henrich - The WEIRDest People In The World (Allan Lane, 2020) *****
- Francesca Stavrakopoulou - God - An Anatomy (Picador, 2021) *****
- Peter Godfrey-Smith - Metazoa - Animal Minds And The Birth Of Consciousness (William Collins, 2020) ****½
- Francis Fukuyama - Identity - Contemporary Identity Politics and the Struggle for Recognition (Profile Books, 2019) ****
- Michio Kaku - The God Equation - The Quest For A Theory Of Everything (Allen Lane, 2021) ****
- Rebecca Wragg Sykes - Kindred - Neanderthal Live, Love, Death And Art (Bloomsbury, 2020) ****
- Martin Amis - Inside Story (Jonathan Cape, 2020) ****
- Carlo Rovelli - Helgoland (Allan Lane, 2021) ****
- Anil Seth - Being You - A New Science Of Consciousness (Faber & Faber, 2021) ****
- Sarah Rose Cavanagh - Hivemind - The New Science Of Tribalism in our Divided World (Orion Spring, 2019) ***
- Heidi J. Larson - Stuck "How Vaccine Rumors Start - And Why They Don't Go Away"(Oxford University Press, 2020) ***½
- Ronald F. Inglehart - Cultural Evolution (Cambridge University Press, 2018) ***½
- Brian Clegg - Dark Matter & Dark Energy (Icon Books, 2019) ***
- Salman Rushdie - Quichotte (Penguin, 2019) ****
- Mario Vargas Llosa - Harsh Times (Faber, 2021) ***½
- Fiona Mozley - Elmet (John Murray, 2018) ***½
- Kent Haruf - Plainsong (Picador, 1999) ***
- Tim Winton - That Eye The Sky (Penguin, 1986) ***
- Yasser Abdel Hafez - The Book Of Safety (Hoopoe, 2013) **½
- Julian Barnes - The Only Story (Penguin, 2018) **
- Ocean Vuong - On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous (Penguin, 2019) **
- Denis Johnson - The Largesse Of The Sea Maiden (Vintage, 2018) *
Monday, January 3, 2022
Mario Vargas Llosa - Harsh Times (Faber, 2021) ***½
Kent Haruf - Plainsong (Picador, 1999) ***
You can only admire the humanity of this book. It describes the lives of several families living in the town of Holt, Colorado. One story is about two boys growing up with their father and increasingly absent mother. The other is about the teenage girl getting pregnant and deciding to keep the baby.
Ron Newby - Tribalism - An Existential Threat To Humanity (Lulu, 2020) *
The topic obviously deserves better.
Salman Rushdie - Quichote (Penguin, 2019) ****
Sarah Rose Cavanagh - Hivemind - The New Science Of Tribalism in our Divided World (Orion Spring, 2019) ***
Francis Fukuyama - Identity - Contemporary Identity Politics and the Struggle for Recognition (Profile Books, 2019)
Friday, December 31, 2021
Julian Barnes - The Only Story (Penguin, 2018) **
Carlo Rovelli - Helgoland (Allan Lane, 2021) ****
Tony Tanner - Thomas Pynchon (Methuen, 1982)
Heidi J. Larson - Stuck (Oxford University Press, 2020) ***½
Thursday, December 30, 2021
Yasser Abdel Hafez - The Book Of Safety (Hoopoe, 2013) **½
Peter Godfrey-Smith - Metazoa - Animal Minds And The Birth Of Consciousness (William Collins, 2020) ****½
Wednesday, December 29, 2021
Joseph Henrich - The WEIRDest People In The World (Allan Lane, 2020) *****
Martin Amis - Inside Story (Jonathan Cape, 2020) ****
Tuesday, December 28, 2021
Rebecca Wragg Sykes - Kindred - Neanderthal Live, Love, Death And Art (Bloomsbury, 2020) ****
Anil Seth - Being You - A New Science Of Consciousness (Faber & Faber, 2021) ****
Michio Kaku - The God Equation - The Quest For A Theory Of Everything (Allen Lane, 2021) ****
Ronald F. Inglehart - Cultural Evolution (Cambridge University Press, 2018) ***½
In the 70s he wrote "The Silent Revolution" about the intergenerational change of values between parents and their children. The data in this book clearly show that people's values are largely shaped by their economic situation. People who live in survival mode, will be more focused on their in-group, more nationalist and more intolerant to other groups. People who do not live in a survival mode, have a more tolerant view on other people. Inglehart looks at intergenerational differences, democratic differences (such as the possibility for 'Self Expression'). He analyses religion and its impact on values, the different situation of ex-communist countries with Latin America, Asia and the Middle East. He also sees income inequality in countries such as the United States and the United Kingdom as some of the reasons for the rise in populism and intolerance. The evolution is not linear but evolves in jumps.
The great value of this book is also somehow its weakness: there is a graph on every page, with fascinating differences of how countries score on different values based on their economic, democratic or religious situation, but at the same time this somehow does not make for fluent reading. Nevertheless, the book is hopeful for humanity. We can only hope that the trends towards more democracy and more equality will continue for all of us.
















