@threetonesun

@threetonesun

Joe

87 Reads

Followers6

Following6

Joined 2 years ago

Boston-ish

Joe's Books by Status

7 Books

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The Notebook: A History of Thinking on Paper
Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art
The Sirens of Titan
Dedicated
Seeing with Fresh Eyes: Meaning, Space, Data, Truth
Kill It with Fire
The Singer's Gun

Joe's Pinned Prompts

Featured Prompt

5,996 books

What are your favorite books of all time?

When you think back on every book you've ever read, what are some of your favorites? These can be from any time of your life – books that resonated with you as a kid, ones that shaped your personal...

hardcover
Hardcover
Team
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
A Tale for the Time Being
How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy
Circe
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

Joe's Most Popular Reviews

Being in tech a lot of the information about how things went wrong was not new to me, but it’s a detailed account of who and what made the current Internet so shitty. I think it’s a bit more optimistic about the future than I am, and avoids the topic of today where we’re condensing the shitty-net into like 3 giant AI companies.

But in doing my part, I bought the book at the local book store, I’ll donate it to the library, this review is on Hardcover not Goodreads, none of it was written by AI, fuck Jeff Bezos.

I enjoyed the writing of all of these stories. I don’t know that they all landed the horror elements but at the very least they had interesting plots. Some of the standouts were “Dark Home”, by Nnedi Okorafor, “Your Happy Place” by Terence Taylor, and “Hide & Seek” by P. Djèlí Clark.

The central plot is interesting and I liked the characters, but this could have been edited down a lot and little would have been lost. Parts of it almost read like it is the script for a movie itself, with a lot of explanation instead of action. Also while I found parts of Mexican Gothic to be genuinely creepy, the horrors here don’t quite hit the same level of intensity.

Sometimes I go to the library and judge books only by their cover. This one seemed interesting, and I can say it was. The writing is fantastic, and while I had no idea what the book was about going in, I became weirdly engrossed in the main character's life, just as they became engrossed in their work.

The idea was interesting, the humor was fine, but I’m pretty sure the main character’s personality and backstory was generated by AI.