rfunk: (babelfish)
I don't take much time for reading anymore, but I do occasionally like to read a bit before going to sleep. At some point I decided to read Dangerous Visions, the famous 1967 collection of short stories edited by Harlan Ellison.

I got mired somewhere in the middle of the longest story in the book (also Ellison's favorite), and I'm stubborn about not skipping ahead. (I think I'm being reminded that I'm not into mixing science fiction with politics, though.) Throwing in a novella early in a short story collection just isn't fair. :-)


Then a couple months ago I was at a library book sale, and picked up a couple of biographical books that seemed like the kind of thing every geek should (or would want to) read: Alan Turing: The Enigma by Andrew Hodges, and iWoz: From Computer Geek to Cult Icon: How I Invented the Personal Computer, Co-Founded Apple, and Had Fun Doing It by Steve Wozniak.


I started with the Turing book. Only problem was that that book started by describing where in the British class system Turing's ancestors came from, starting somewhere in the 1600s and going on down the generations with what everybody did for a living. Even when we finally got to Turing's life, the writing about his childhood was not much more compelling. Good for sleep, but not for wanting to continue reading.


Then I tried the Wozniak book, which at least starts with his parents (and having little knowledge of his father's job) rather than his distant ancestry. It's written as an autobiography, but with a credited ghostco-writer, and the more I read the more I imagined tortured interview sessions where his collaborator struggled to get coherent stories out of him. At one point early on, Wozniak mentions his philosophy that all technological development is a good thing, a common idea among geeks and techies, but one that I long ago rejected as naive.

I finally had to throw the book down when I got frustrated with his (their?) simplistic short sentences. It was like reading the writing of a ten-year-old sometimes (possibly related to writing about his childhood?), or a bad imitation of Hemingway. And, ironically, quite the opposite of the Turing book.


Maybe it's time to try tackling Dangerous Visions again....
rfunk: (phone)
posted by [personal profile] rfunk at 10:00pm on 09/08/2009
  • Thu 7:47am wishing I'd actually earned the patch of poison ivy on my arm. Now I have to go for a hike in the woods, since I already suffer the effects. #
  • Thu 3:44pm lunchtime coffee seems to have had an effect opposite the intended one. Wishing for siesta time. #
  • Fri 8:47am Kinda wishing I were at #erubycon today, but can't really justify it since I'm not currently working with Ruby. :-( #
  • Fri 9:01am There's something about summer mornings in the central city (any city), before everyone is settled into their offices, that I really like. #
  • Fri 10:47am just realized that the package I use for quick&easy host-firewall setup was removed from Debian & Ubuntu in January. Must find a substitute. #
  • Fri 6:18pm after reading the #erubycon day 1 tweets, wishing not only that I were there, but also that my CTO & CIO were there. #
  • Sun 7:19am Went to lunch too late for Indian: rhey closed at 2. Gotta find a plan B. #
  • Sun 7:20am With Ani Difranco's "Deep Dish" in the earphones, went with Donato's. Picking their thicker crust seemed best, if not exactly deep. #
  • Sun 9:17am woke up on a Sunday morning to discover that Twitter is having flashbacks to Friday. #
  • Sun 11:57am Safety tip: while the reverse is safe, it can be hazardous to think about brushing your teeth while shaving your cheek. #
  • Sun 12:07pm "survived unscathed": too many letters for everyday Twitter usage, sadly. #
  • Sun 7:16pm waking up from a 1.5-hr nap. Did I miss anything? #

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