Reviews and Comments

Will Sargent

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Joined 1 year, 7 months ago

I like books.

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Gerd Gigerenzer: Simple heuristics that make us smart (EBook, 1999, Oxford University Press) 5 stars

Review of 'Simple heuristics that make us smart' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

What is the best way to make decisions? Given a limited amount of time and information, how do we decide on the best course of action? And how do we determine what "the best" is?

Cognitive Science studies how people make decisions in real life. There's also a branch of cognitive science which tries to form models of decision making. I read Simple Heuristics That Make Us Smart as a way to figure out if there were any shortcuts to decision making. I didn't find anything globally applicable, but the book is fascinating, and I've been meaning to write about it for two years now... so bear with me while I run through this.

Decision making in academic literature is referred to as rational choice theory or rationality. The book goes into some detail about different kinds of rationality: unbounded rationality assumes total knowledge of the situation (as in the …

John Clute: Appleseed (2003, Tor) 2 stars

Review of 'Appleseed' on 'Storygraph'

2 stars

Almost entirely unintelligible. Not in the sense of a Gene Wolfe artistry, but more like a twisted version of Mary Gentle and M. John Harrison. A combination of a refusal to use a simple word where a complicated one would do and a tendency to ignore quotation marks and full stops lead to an interesting, if somewhat anonymous experience. Of course, if you're describing a world where identity is mutable and there is no clear distinction between thought and speech then it all makes sense, but it makes a mockery of asking what is happening to whom.

Neil Gaiman: Signal to Noise (Paperback, Dark Horse, Dark Horse Books, Brand: Dark Horse Books, Dark Horse Comics Inc.) 5 stars

Review of 'Signal to Noise' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

Worth reading if nothing else for the amazing art. The story blew me away when I first read it, but now I feel like I almost know Gaiman's style too well -- here's the hook, here's the spoken word poetry, here's the magical interlude, here's the "magic as a system of belief" statement.

Still. It's good.

David R. Palmer: Emergence (Paperback, Spectra) 4 stars

Review of 'Emergence' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

So the protagonist is a supergenius super cute preteen girl who is also a blackbelt in karate and has a talking parrot who can read her thoughts. Everyone around her dies in a plague (except her) and she finds out she's alive because she's the "next rung up the evolutionary ladder" -- Homo Novus. Which explains how she's just totally awesome and stuff.

She meets up with a boy, they have adventures, they run into some bad guys... and then stuff gets interesting. There's no pretense of this being "realistic" or anything -- it's entertainment and there's a surprising amount of humor for a book that starts off by wiping out humanity. Imagine if Buffy was crossed with Mad Max and you'd be close.

This book was nominated for a Hugo ages ago, and it's easy to see why. The plot is nothing you haven't seen before, but it's a …

David R. Palmer: THRESHOLD (Paperback, Eric Flint's Ring of Fire Press) 4 stars

Review of 'THRESHOLD' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

Man, I loved this book. It was cheesy as hell when I picked it up (in Norwich, mostly for the man riding a pterodactyl) and reading the first few pages -- naked girl and her cat proclaims to be space aliens to the multi-millionaire protagonist (who they reveal is precisely the ridiculously perfect human being he is because he's the end result of a thousand year long eugenics program, so that's alright then) and then fly the alien's planet where they get shot down and he's stranded naked at the wrong end of the planet surrounded by a huge variety of things that want to eat him.

So yeah, it's cheesecake. It's also remarkably effective cheesecake -- you never spend time worrying about whether this makes sense or not, because the author makes it clear this is a ride and lampshades the silliest bits of it (in the vein of …