Reading List

Home, 2010-01-12

Read 2009
"Robin Sloan"
The Math Book: From Pythagoras to the 57th Dimension
How We Decide
Six Easy Pieces
Coders at Work
Booked to Die
"How we decide"
What I Talk About When I Talk About Running
"Network Links"
"Futurlogical Congress"
"Inner Economist"
The Princeton Companion of Mathematics
The Story of Art
Drunkard's Walk
The Paradox of Choice
Trick and Treat
Kolesterol
Bonk
Discover Your Inner Economist
The Cyberiad
The Pillars of the Earth
Economic Facts and Fallacies
The Book of Illusions
The Printed Picture
Nothing to be Frightened of
Uncommon Grounds
Slaughterhouse-Five, or The Children's Crusade: A Duty-Dance With Death
Anathem
The Tao is Silent
The Book Thief
Read 2008
Tower of Babylon & Division by Zero
Netherland: A Novel
Solaris
2001
It Must've Been Something I Ate
Medici Money -- Banking, Metaphysics and Art in Fifteenth-century Florence
The Mind's Eye
Daybooks of Edward Weston
Mountains of Madness
Dialogue with Photography
How Proust Can Change Your Life: Not a Novel
Catching the Big Fish
Cryptonomicon
The Art of the Infinite
The Passenger
The Devil's Cup
The Enchantment of Lily Dahl: A Novel
The Nature of Photographs: A Primer
You Can Negotiate Anything
The Man Who Ate Everything
New York Trilogy: "City of Glass", "Ghosts" & "The Locked Room"
Read 2007
De religiøse ideers historie (Geschichte der religiöse Ideen)
On Being a Photographer
Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring the Science of Flavor
QED
Why People Believe Weird Things
Den boggale (La Bibliomane)
Kierkegaard - hvad vil han?
The Blindfold
The Library
Dune
What I Loved
Into the Wild
Collected Fictions
Gödel's Proof
Lest Darkness Fall
Timbuktu
Occam's Razor: An Outside-In View of Contemporary Photography
From Gagarin to Challenger
In the Country of Last Things
The Right Stuff
Memoria de mis putas tristes (Memories of My Melancholy Whores)
The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing
Skeletons on the Zahara: A True Story of Survival
Hooking Up
Coffee: A Guide to Buying, Brewing, and Enjoying, Fifth Edition
Det Lykkelige Arabien [Felix Arabia]
Read 2006
Microserfs
Vertigo
Kaffe [danish]
Ansel Adams
A Gentle Madness : Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books
Why People Photograph
The Big Sleep
Leviathan
The Book of Illusions
The Music of Chance
Gateway
White Noise
The Dante Club
Scribes and sources: Handbook of the chancery hand in the sixteenth century
The Helsinki Rocamations
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell
Fermata
The Debian System
Zen Flesh, Zen Bones
The Book of the New Sun
Shogun
The Bread Baker's Apprentice
Linux Kernel Development
Read 2005
Getting Things Done
The Three Musketeers
Mcgee on Food & Cooking
The Count of Monte Cristo
Ham on Rye
Moon Palace
Freakonomics
The World According to Garp
Interface
The Baroque Cycle
Volume 1: Quicksilver
Volume 2: The Confusion
Volume 3: The System of the World
Baudolino
The Best Science Fiction of Isaac Asimov
Club Dumas
A Fire Upon The Deep
Oracle Night
Read 2004
Altered Carbon
Angels and Demons
The Athenian Murders
Axiomatic
The Big U
The Catcher in the Rye
The Chronoliths
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
The Da Vinci Code
Diamond Age
Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom
The End of Eternity
The Illuminatus Triology
Killing Time
Life of Pi
Moby Dick
Permutation City
Shella
Hackers
Introducing Aristotle and Introducing Plato
In the Beginning was the Command Line
Leonardo da Vinci
Longitude
Metamath
A New Kind of Science
Revolution in Time
A Short Story of Nearly Everything
Vol de nuit
Read 2003
Cobweb
The Crisis of Global Capitalism
A Deepness in the Sky
The Forever War
Neuromancer
Night's Dawn Triology
Hawk: Occupation: Skateboarder
The Pleasures of Counting
Read Before 2003
Black Water
Cryptonomicon
Darwins Radio
Foucault's Pendulum
In the Name of the Rose
The Last Samurai
The Lord of the Rings
Musashi
Uncle Petros and Goldbach's Conjecture
Zodiac
Introducing Joyce
The Man Who Loved Only Numbers: The Story of Paul Erdos & the Search for Mathematical Truth
Open Society and its Enemies, Hegel and Marx

Read 2009Contents

"Robin Sloan"Contents

The Math Book: From Pythagoras to the 57th DimensionContents

How We DecideContents

Jonah Lehrer

Six Easy PiecesContents

Richard P. Feynman

Coders at WorkContents

Booked to DieContents

John Dunning

"How we decide"Contents

What I Talk About When I Talk About Running Contents

Haruki Murakami

"Network Links"Contents

"Futurlogical Congress"Contents

"Inner Economist"Contents

The Princeton Companion of MathematicsContents

read 2009, excellent-masterpiece

The Story of ArtContents

read 2009, excellent-masterpiece

Drunkard's WalkContents

read 2009, excellent-masterpiece

The Paradox of ChoiceContents

Barry Schwartz, read 2009, excellent

Trick and TreatContents

Barry Groves, read 2009

KolesterolContents

Uffe Ravnskov, read 2009

BonkContents

Mary roach?, read 2009, excellent

Discover Your Inner EconomistContents

Tyler Cowen, read 2009

The CyberiadContents

Stanislaw Lem, read 2009, excellent-masterpiece

The Pillars of the EarthContents

Ken Follett, read 2009, good

Economic Facts and FallaciesContents

Thomas Sowell, read 2009, good-excellent

The Book of IllusionsContents

Paul Auster, re-read 2009, excellent-masterpiece

The Printed PictureContents

Benson, read 2009, excellent-masterpiece

Nothing to be Frightened ofContents

Julian Barnes, read 2009, good-excellent

Uncommon GroundsContents

Mark Prendergast, read 2009, good

Slaughterhouse-Five, or The Children's Crusade: A Duty-Dance With DeathContents

Kurt Vonnegut, read 2009, excellent

AnathemContents

Neal Stephenson, read 2009, excellent

The Tao is SilentContents

The Book ThiefContents

Markus Zusak, read winter 2008-2009, good

My impression of this book reminds me of that given by Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell; The book is filled with really great ideas, but they are not used fully.

Read 2008Contents

Tower of Babylon & Division by ZeroContents

Ted Chiang, read 2008, good

Netherland: A NovelContents

Joseph O'Neill, read 2008, excellent

SolarisContents

Stanislew Lem, read 2008, excellent

2001Contents

Arthur C. Clarke, read 2008, good-excellent

It Must've Been Something I AteContents

Jeffrey Steingarten, excellent

Medici Money -- Banking, Metaphysics and Art in Fifteenth-century FlorenceContents

Tim Parks, read 2008, good

The Mind's EyeContents

Henri Cartier-Bresson, 2008, good-excellent

Daybooks of Edward WestonContents

Edward Weston, read 2008, excellent

Mountains of MadnessContents

H.P. Lovecraft, 2008, good

Dialogue with PhotographyContents

2008, good-excellent

Interviews with 22 interesting photographers.

How Proust Can Change Your Life: Not a NovelContents

Alain De Botton, read 2008, excellent

Catching the Big FishContents

David Lynch, read 2008, excellent

Interresting look into a directors mind.

CryptonomiconContents

Neal Stephenson, reread 2008, good-excellent

The Art of the InfiniteContents

Robert Kaplan, read 2008, excellent

The PassengerContents

The Devil's CupContents

Stewart Lee Allen, excellent

The history of coffee presented in true gonzo-style by Stewart who literally follows the history from Ethiopoa through Yemen, Turkey, Austria, France, and ending in the US.

The Enchantment of Lily Dahl: A NovelContents

Siri Hustvedt, read 2008, excellent

The Nature of Photographs: A PrimerContents

Stephen Shore, read 2008, excellent

You Can Negotiate AnythingContents

Herb Cohen, excellent

The Man Who Ate EverythingContents

Jeffrey Steingarten, excellent-masterpiece

New York Trilogy: "City of Glass", "Ghosts" & "The Locked Room"Contents

Paul Auster, good-excellent

Read 2007Contents

De religiøse ideers historie (Geschichte der religiöse Ideen)Contents

Mircea Eliade, masterpiece

I only read the parts on buddhism and they were better than any other work I have seen on the same subject.

On Being a PhotographerContents

David Hurn & Bill Jay, excellent

Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring the Science of FlavorContents

Hervé This, excellent

A great collection of short chapters on many subjects on food and cooking. The format works great for reading from beginning to end (or just random reading) but this is no reference work.

QEDContents

Richard P. Feynman, excellent-masterpiece

Why People Believe Weird ThingsContents

Michael Shermer, excellent

Den boggale (La Bibliomane)Contents

Charles Nodier, excellent

Kierkegaard - hvad vil han?Contents

Birgit Bertung, excellent

The BlindfoldContents

Siri Hustvedt, read August 2007, excellent

The Library Contents

Zoran Zivkovic, read August 2007, good

DuneContents

Frank Herbert, ok-excellent

What I LovedContents

Siri Hustvedt, read August 2007, good-excellent

There are some resemblences to Auster, but less mysteries and more love. The first third is excellent, the second part is good, the third part is almost good.

Into the WildContents

Jon Krakauer, read August 2007, good

A long essay consisting of stories of young men exploring the wilderness (most of them dying) with Christopher McCandless' story as the main attraction.

Collected FictionsContents

Jorge Luis Borges, read summer 2007, good-excellent

Gödel's ProofContents

Ernest Nagel, read 2007, excellent

Lest Darkness FallContents

L. Sprague de Camp, read June 2007, ok-good

Corny, but insteresting.

TimbuktuContents

Paul Auster, read June 2007, good-excellent

I read the danish translation.

Occam's Razor: An Outside-In View of Contemporary PhotographyContents

Bill Jay, read May 2007, excellent

From Gagarin to ChallengerContents

Peter Bond, read May 2007, good-excellent

In the Country of Last ThingsContents

Paul Auster, read spring 2007, good

This is one of Auster's weaker works. The first half did not work very well for me, I did not feel hooked and there was none of Auster's typical treatises of any subjects (e.g. like silent movies in The Book of Illusions). Also, Auster's world is stylistic interesting, but seems unrealistic and that bothers me.

The Right StuffContents

Tom Wolfe, read spring 2007, excellent

Wolfe is a great writer and the interesting hisory about the Mercury space project is retold extremely well by Wolfe. There are a few boring passages in the book, but otherwise it is very exiting.

Memoria de mis putas tristes (Memories of My Melancholy Whores)Contents

Gabriel García Márquez., read March 2007, good-excellent

Nice writing and interesting story, but not my kind of book.

(I read the danish translation)

The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing Contents

Martin Davis, read February 2007, good-excellent

A readable account by a mathematician on the history of computation. Highly recommended.

Skeletons on the Zahara: A True Story of SurvivalContents

Dean King, read February 2007, excellent

After about fifty rather dull pages this painfull adventure takes of and tells not only the story about how much man can endure, but also about the lifes of some of the inhabitants of the Sahara and what harsh conditions the live in general.

Hooking UpContents

Tom Wolfe, read January-March 2007, good-excellent

Wolfe is a great writer and speaks up in a refreshingly loud and clear language. I found the last part (The New Yorker Affair) boring and uninteresting, but the rest was interesting even though I often find I disagree with Wolfe's conclusions. I will read more by Wolfe.

Coffee: A Guide to Buying, Brewing, and Enjoying, Fifth Edition Contents

Kenneth Davids, read January 2007, excellent>

Great guide to the coffee world. Kenneth knows what he is writing about and the writing is clear and readable. This is not the typical book on coffee with a nice photos and 101 recipes on coffee-drinks, but an overview of all the aspects of coffee, including growing, roasting, brewing, tasting, economy and environment, health issues (and much more).

Det Lykkelige Arabien [Felix Arabia]Contents

Thorkild Hansen, read Winter 2006-2007, excellent

A great account on the expedition now known (at least in Scandinavia) as the Carsten Niebuhr expedition. This is part non-fiction based on Carsten Niebuhr's journals mixed with Thorkild's speculations about the expedition. I really like Thorkild's style, particular that he sometimes steps forward as the author and comments directly on the story.

I have discoverede that there is an english edition: Thorkild Hansen, Arabia Felix. The Danish Expedition of 1761-1767. ISBN: 0710310102.

Read 2006Contents

MicroserfsContents

Douglas Coupland, read winter 2006, excellent

First time I read this book I found it funny and entertaining, on second reading it also made me think alot.

VertigoContents

Paul Auster, read autumn 2006, excellent

An amazing adventure for adults. A bit different from most other Auster books, it might be a good introduction to Auster.

Kaffe [danish]Contents

Rud Christiansen, read autumn 2006, good

A beautiful little book. It gives a good overview over the coffee from different regions and also covers the making og coffee from fruit to cup. I like the authors relaxed attitude to coffeemaking -- do it well, but there is no reason to overdo it. I miss a little more details on coffeemaking, but this would perhaps not fit this book well.

Ansel AdamsContents

Mary Street Alinder, read autumn 2006, excellent

A Gentle Madness : Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for BooksContents

by Nicholas A. Basbanes

Why People PhotographContents

Robert Adams, read summer 2006, excellent

The Big SleepContents

Raymond Chandler, read summer 2006, good

I was really impressed with the style and language and think anyone remotely interested in crime stories should read some Chandler. The story itself is not that interesting--the style is what makes this interesting.

LeviathanContents

by Paul Auster, read summer 2006, good-excellent

A good book, but not one of Auster's best. The story never gets really interesting which makes it the most boring book I have read by Auster (while not a boring book on its own).

(Note: I read the danish edition)

The Book of IllusionsContents

by Paul Auster, read summer 2006, excellent-masterpiece

Another fantastic book by Auster. Austers writing is great and he has that rare ability to produce works well both as simple entertainment and thought provoking literature. One of his best books.

(Note: I read the danish edition)

The Music of ChanceContents

by Paul Auster, read summer 2006, excellent-masterpiece

Except for the ending, this is a well-written masterpiece by Auster, one of his best in my opinion.

(Note: I read the danish edition)

GatewayContents

by Frederik Pohl, read summer 2006, good-excellent

Another good example of how well good science fiction ages.

White NoiseContents

by Don Delillo, read summer 2006, good-excellent

Delillo is a great writer and he has some great insights to share on especially death and our relation to death. But I still miss something, the story is a little boring to me, no real surprises and not funny enough.

The Dante ClubContents

by Matthew Pearl, read summer 2006, good-excellent

After a slow, boring, and confusing start (around 70 pages), this book takes off and gets quite interesting.

The quality of the story and writing varies greatly in the book.

Scribes and sources: Handbook of the chancery hand in the sixteenth centuryContents

edited by A. S. Osley, read spring 2006, excellent-masterpiece

Original texts with illustrations from the writing masters of the sixteenth century. It is interesting to read texts on hand writing and note how little have changed in this handcraft.

The Helsinki RocamationsContents

2004 edition, by Yann Martel, read spring 2006, good-excellent

All the writing is excellent. The book contains the following stories

Jonathan Strange & Mr. NorrellContents

by Susanna Clarke, read spring 2006, good-excellent

This is a great well-written story, and it is hard for me to point out what is wrong with it, maybe it just read a little to polished?

I love images, and drawings fit this book well, but the drawings found in this book are ugly and the style all wrong. They should have been done in the style of paintings og engravings.

FermataContents

by ??, read spring 2006, ok-excellent

This is a celebration of the woman. The idea behind the book is excellent, but it should have been a short story (actually, I believe it is based on a short story), as it gets boring pretty quickly.

The Debian SystemContents

by Martin F. Kraft, "read" 2006, ok-excellent

A good book but the lack of a good index makes it a poor reference. I wanted to reconfigure the interface for configuring packages, but could not find an entry in the index (it is in the book). However, probably still the best book on debian. Also, it should be noted that the book is not a book on general system administration.

Zen Flesh, Zen BonesContents

compiled by Paul Reps, read February 2006, masterpiece

This a collection of different works, I really love the first half of the book consisting of 101 small stories. Forget about Zen, just read, love, and learn from these small stories.

The Book of the New SunContents

by Gene Wolfe, read February 2006, good-excellent

ShogunContents

by James Clavell, read January 2006, good-excellent

I did not have big expectations for this book and only bought it because I found it for less than a euro at a book sale. I was a big surprise and it is a rather fast paced adventure with lots of interesting information about Japan and Europe in the 16th century.

The Bread Baker's Apprentice Contents

by Peter Reinhart, read January 2006, excellent-masterpiece

After I bought Mcgee and after reading got interested in baking, I looked after a good book on bread baking and found this. It is a well written guide to baking. It begins with a good introduction with theory and techniques and after that around 50 recipes with detailed instructions. Most of the questions I had before I got this book (and that was quite a few) was answered in it.

Linux Kernel DevelopmentContents

by Robert Love, read winter 2005/2006, excellent

I bought this to learn about the Linux 2.6 kernel internals and it does a wonderful job on that. It is written in a casual language which eases the reading and all the explanations are good and easy to follow. Reading requires som knowledge of operating systems and the c programming language.

Read 2005Contents

Getting Things DoneContents

by David Allen, read 2005, excellent

Excellent book on productivity and how you can make a system that actually works to keep track on all projects, tasks, todo's etc. The basic idea is to have a system that will keep track of everything so your mind is free to focus on what you actually are doing.

Not everything in the book will work for everyone, but the text will help you redesign and optimize the way you work.

An overview of method in book here: http://www.minezone.org/wiki/MVance/GettingThingsDone

The Three MusketeersContents

by A. Dumas, read autumn 2005, ok-good

After reading the Count of Monte Cristo, this was a big disappointment. The story is rather boring and the characters a little uninteresting.

(Note: I have not completed reading of this)

Mcgee on Food & CookingContents

by Harold Mcgee, 2005, masterpiece

A book about how food chemistry works, filled with easy to understand practical advice and spiced with historical notes. The writing is a pleasure to read (definitely not a dry text) and it is well organized. It does not contain any photos but has a number of interesting figures illustrating the explantions in the text.

This is indispensable for anyone serious interested in cooking and baking.

The Count of Monte CristoContents

by A. Dumas (Robin Huss 1996 translation), read autumn 2005, masterpiece

One of the best novels I have read. The writing is great and the story is good. One of the things I really like is that the story develops to show that most of the characters are not just good or evil, as in the real world, things are more complex.

Ham on RyeContents

by Charles Bukowski, read September 2005, excellent

A novel based on Bukowski's young years, a book about a poor boy and all his troubles. Bukowski is no hero and does not try to describe himself as one.

Moon PalaceContents

by Paul Auster, read September 2005, excellent

Much better than Oracle Night. A collection of interesting stories connected by the character MS Fogg.

(Note: I read the danish edition)

FreakonomicsContents

by Steven D. Levitt, Stephen J. Dubner, read September 2005, ok-excellent

Well-written and different book on economy pragmatically based on data and regression analysis. There are some good and interesting points and it is always nice to be shown how data can be explored to find answers. But more method should have been discussed and what is up with the praise that prefix each chapter?

In some ways this reminds me of The Pleasures of Counting by T. W. Korner, that a math book but consists of a number of real life cases where math was used to find an answer to a problem.

The World According to GarpContents

by John Irving, read August 2005, ok-excellent

I have had this book for years and started to read it once, but did not like at all. Then someone told me wrestling had a big part in it and that Irving was great...

I think it starts out great, but it gets worse after half of it, and the rest is definitely not up to the first part.

One thing I never understood was how Garp and his mother had money to live in Europe without working??

InterfaceContents

Read August 2005, by Neal Stephenson and J. Frederick George (originally under the pseudonym Stephen Bury), excellent

Maybe Stephensons best book? It is about the presidential election and has conspiracies, biotech and the usual cartoonish Stephenson characters, what more could be wanted. Oh yes, it is has a (good) traditional ending compared to the usual Stephenson ending.

The Baroque CycleContents

by Neal Stephenson, ok-masterpiece

A long long book with many stories and notes. As a lesson in 16th century european history it is interesting and an easy read, but read as a long novel it is simply too long and without a "big" story. However, it is well written and there are many interesting stories in the books.

Volume 1: QuicksilverContents

read Spring 2004, ok-excellent

Second book is boring in my opinion, Jack and Eliza are not as cool as Daniel and his friends.

Volume 2: The ConfusionContents

read Summer 2004, good-masterpiece

Much better than Quicksilver. It consists mosly of action packed adventures, some financial stories and a few boring passages. There is not much science in it compared to Quicksilver.

Volume 3: The System of the WorldContents

read Spring 2005, good-excellent

Mostly about Daniel, not much action.

BaudolinoContents

Umberto Eco, read summer 2005, good-excellent

This is a relaxed Eco, it is easy reading about the happy-go-lucky Baudolino and his adventures in the middle ages. The book gets a bit long in the middle, but the ending does up for this.

(Note: I read the danish edition, and I cannot recommend the edition from the publisher Forum (2nd edition), it has unacceptable many spelling errors and misplaced words)

The Best Science Fiction of Isaac AsimovContents

Read summer 2005, by Isaac Asimov, ok-masterpiece

It is nice to read a collection of old SF stories, many written in the fifties, and still find them exitingly fresh. Some things are dated, like the presentation of computers, but I actually like that.

The stories I liked the most:

Club DumasContents

Arturo Perez-Reverte, read May 2005, excellent

I saw the movie, The Ninth Gate, back when it it arrived in the cinemas and I was not that impressed. Fast forward to spring 2005 when I incidentally read about Club Dumas and learned that The Ninth Gate was based on the book (and ordered the book), the next time I was on the library I stumbled upon the The Ninth Gate, took it home and was pleaseant surprised -- much better than I remembered. When I returned the dvd I stumbled upon the book and read it.

The book contains an interesting story about Corso, the book detective hunting a special book (the Nine Gates), this story is excellent in itself with many references to classical works, especially by Dumas. But the book is more than that, in some ways it is a little like The Athenian Murders but in a more subtle way.

(Note: I read the danish edition)

A Fire Upon The DeepContents

by Vernor Vinge, read March 2005, verdict: ok-good

I loved the ideas and discussions in "A Deepness in the Sky", but this book is more space opera and not as interesting. It is still a book with good parts, but it does not live up to "Deepness", and the ending is a little to deux ex machina. Sometimes it reminded me of Peter F. Hamiltons "Nights Dawn Trilogy", because it has some of the same elements and also seems a bit too long.

Oracle NightContents

Paul Auster, Read june 2005, good-excellent

It starts at a nice slow pace but speeds up in the end where most of the action is placed (too much action in my opinion). I have read parts of the New York triology and did not like it, I found this to be much better.

(Note: I read the danish edition)

Read 2004Contents

Altered CarbonContents

by Richard Morgan, read autumn 2004, excellent

A thriller where a special detective is hired to solve what looks like a failed suicide. It is a world where it is possible to transfer people into other bodies and the "hero" is communicated from another world to the earth. Extremely violent. Reminds me alot of Neuromancer.

Angels and DemonsContents

by Dan Brown, read autumn 2004, ok-good

The Athenian MurdersContents

by Jose Carlos Somoza, read summer 2004, good

It is well written and the author seems to know a lot about ancient Athen, it also features some interesting characters. Definitely a good story with some interesting ideas, but not as good as I had expected.

AxiomaticContents

by Greg Egan, read autumn 2004, good-masterpiece

The Big UContents

by Neal Stephenson, (re)read July 2004, good

This is Neal's first book and I have read that he did not want it to be reprinted. I think it is a good book. The first half is excellent, the next is a little more rushed, but nevertheless good.

The Catcher in the RyeContents

by ??, read summer 2004, excellent-masterpiece

I cannot understand why this book has caused such an amount of controversy, as I understand it has mostly to do with the use of foul language. The story is interesting and the writing excellent. Much better than I had expected.

The ChronolithsContents

by Robert Charles Wilson, read 2004, excellent

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-TimeContents

by Mark Haddon, read July 2004, excellent

A different book. It is told by Christopher, a boy with Asperger's syndrome. It is a serious book decribing how a person with Asperger's syndrome experiences the world, but it does it with a sense of humor and without being to serious. I do not agree with those who finds the book very funny, but it is on the other hand not sad either.

The Da Vinci CodeContents

by Dan Brown, read April 2004, good

Interesting book, lots of conspiracies. There are some strange things that makes the story unbeliveable, fx regarding the girls abilities as a cryptographer. Still a good book though, but I will probably not read other books by Brown.

Diamond AgeContents

by Neal Stephenson, (re)read June 2004, good-excellent

I bought the book in May 2000 and I think I has started to read it about four times, but lost interest the three first times. When I started this time I began around page 100 and I now find it a great read. As with most books from Neal the last 50 pages does not live up to the promise of the preceeding pages.

Down and Out in the Magic KingdomContents

by Cory Doctorow, read spring 2004, ok-good

A nice book, but not quite as good as I expected. There are interesting ideas but I miss something, either more action or "philosophy".

The End of EternityContents

Isaac Asimov, read spring 2004, masterpiece

Masterpiece on the issues concerning regulation of society and timetravel. This could be the perfect movie if made in a Naked Lunch/12 monkeys style.

The Illuminatus TriologyContents

by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson, read autumn 2004, weird

It is hard to describe or evaluate this book, it is a weird trip into a world of conspiracies, both the story and the style is weird (but the last is not so strange as I had feared from reviews). There are interesting lessons hidden in the strange story... The book has one big problem, it is too long. I thought book two and three was easier to read than the first. The book is often described as funny, but it did not make me laugh. The plot twists a number of times, and the ending is essential reading to understand the rest of the book.

Killing TimeContents

by Caleb Carr, read May 2004, ok-good

Interesting story and settings, but written much like a comic book. The characters are simply unbeliveable and many situations are predictable. It has been described as very Jules Verne -- and it is (I mean this as a compliment).

Life of PiContents

Yann Martel, read February 2004, masterpiece

Book about a boy struggling to survive on a lifeboat with a tiger. I expected something a little more "Calvin and Hobbes"-style. It is well-written and one really get to feel how bad Pi's condition is on the small lifeboat without much water and food -- and together with a tiger. The survival story is great in itself, but there is much more than that a layer down...

I you like to read about how some have survirved the extreme I would recommend the real stories of Steven Callahan (Adrift: Seventy-six Days Lost at Sea) and Joe Simpson (Touching the Void: The True Story of One Man's Miraculous Survival), and of course one of the books about Shackleton.

Moby DickContents

by Herman Melville, read may 2004, ok-excellent

Interesting read. I loved the start with a description of Ismaels doings, but as the book moves on Ismael is put in the background and there are written alot on whaling. Interesting, but not directly relevant for the story about Moby-Dick. Moby-Dick is actually only present in the last 50-100 pages. It was not a hard read as I had been told, but I did not find it as enlightning as told (I know I missed a lot).

Permutation CityContents

by Greg Egan, read spring 2004, excellent

A masterpiece about simulating people on computers and touching topics such as immortality and cloning. It was hard to read through the first couple of chapters, but then it got very interesting. It made me think harder on the philosophical issues than when I studied philosophy on the university (back then I had a hard time understanding the big issues).

ShellaContents

Andrew Vachss, read October 2004, excellent.

I bought this because it was offered at a very low price. It is a book about the man Ghost who has been badly treated and now works as an assassin. Ghost reminded me of Ghost Dog in the Jarmusch movie "Ghost Dog". It is an interesting and sad story, and Vachss writes in a simple realistic style.

HackersContents

Steven Levy, reread October 2004, excellent

I reread the first, and in my opinion the best, part of the book about the early hackers at MIT. I now find the lifestyle described a bit sad, but it is still a good story of the origins of hackerdom.

Introducing Aristotle and Introducing PlatoContents

Introducing Aristotle by Rupert Woodfin and Judy Groves, read June 2004, excellent.

Introducing Plato by Dave Robinson and Judy Groves, read June 2004, excellent.

I have read and enjoyed the book on James Joyce in the same series, and then bought these two. I really liked these books, they are simple reading, but they still provide a good overview of the two great philosophers.

In the Beginning was the Command LineContents

Neal Stephenson, reread 2004, good-excellent

Neal's rant on computers, operating systems, and user interfaces. It is written in essay style and is not that well-structured, but it presents many good ideas and the writing is very funny. (It is a bit dated, but the main points are still valid.)

Leonardo da VinciContents

By Alessandro Vezzosi, read June 2004, excellent

I bought this book on London's National Gallery after viewing a few da Vinci paintings (inspired by Brown's Da Vinci Code). The book is well-written and contains many beautiful pictures of art and notes.

LongitudeContents

Dava Sobel, read July 2004, excellent

This is a biography about John Harrison and his famous clocks and watches build to make it possible for navigators to find the longitude with great precision. It is good story, but it lacks details on the clocks and watches (it should at least have had an appendix with 5-10 pages about the techical details). I really respect Harrison, but every time I read about his story I think it is presented a little to black and white, and his "enemies" too cruel. Was Nevil Maskelyne and the others really so evil? Was it really unfair to require that Harrison should turn over his design and show it was possible to build more than a few timepieces?

MetamathContents

by Gregory Chaitin, read summer 2004, good-excellent

It can be found in a free online-edition.

A New Kind of ScienceContents

by Stephan Wolfram, I began reading October 2004, verdict: bad-excellent

I bought this because I wanted an overview on cellular automata written in a simple way (for bed time reading). I have no intentions of reading it end to end. After reading the first two chapters two things are clear to me: 1. the book looks promising, 2. Stephen Wolfram has some problems. The constant mentioning on how "new" and groundbreaking the work is, becomes tiring fast. Why do some people have to focus on how good their work is? Just present it and let the reader judge...

I would suggest a potential reader of this book started by reading some of the long reviews of the book before buying/reading the book itself:

Revolution in TimeContents

2nd edition, by David S. Landes, read autumn 2004, excellent

A Short Story of Nearly EverythingContents

by Bill Bryson, summer 2004, excellent-masterpiece

An interesting collection of facts about life, our universe, and everything. Includes great anecdotes on the scientists involved in the research. Your view on many famous scientists will probably change after you read it, and many brilliant, but unknown scientists are praised in the book. One minor problem I found: on page 270 the myth of liquid glass is repeated.

Vol de nuitContents

by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, read spring 2004

(note: I read the danish edition, I am not sure about the english title of this book.)

I loved the first two thirds that described how it felt to be a pilot doing impossible missions. After that it turned more and more into boring pocket philosophy.

Read 2003Contents

CobwebContents

by Neal Stephenson and J. Frederick George (originally under the pseudonym Stephen Bury), read 2003, good-excellent

Well written techno-thriller.

The Crisis of Global CapitalismContents

by George Soros, read summer 2003, excellent

(Note: I read the danish translation.)

George Soros is the infamous finance genius who speculated against the british pound. In this book he give his thoughts on the problems related to capitalism. Soros points out that theories on economics have some general problems and are usually un-scientific. It sounds like he has some good points.

A Deepness in the SkyContents

by Vernor Vinge, read 2003, good-excellent

There is a lot of really good ideas in this book, and it leaves something to think about. It describes som ethical problems we in some ways already face, but that will only get more clear in the future. The story also gives a view on liberalism and socialism's view on people -- and why totalitarian socity can be a very tempting solution to some problems. I look forward to read "A Fire Upon the Deep" of the same author.

I think the book is too long and the characters feels like the are described from a distance, I did not really care much for them until at the end of the story. Also there are too many hints for the surprises in the book for my taste. There are also a few things in the plot that seems very unlikely.

The Forever WarContents

by Joe Haldeman, read 2003, good-excellent

Written by a Vietnam veteran who knows about military procedure.

NeuromancerContents

by William Gibson, reread 2003, masterpiece

I read this in a danish translation in 92 and it really influenced my thoughts. I read another danish translation about five years later and it was still good. I finally read it in english in 2003 and it is still a master piece. Many of the ideas presented shows up in later works, for example high tech samurais and the rastafari culture, in Neal Stephenson's works and in The Matrix trilogy.

Night's Dawn TriologyContents

by Peter F. Hamilton, read 2003

I read 1.5 books of the trilogy. First book is great with lots of exciting technology, stories, and cool characters. I really loved Joshua -- think Han-Solo with more attitude. In part two I got tired of all the small subplots, and lost interest in the main plot.

I think it is great writing, and if I get a lot of time I will surely read it all, but it is a little to long for my taste right now...

Hawk: Occupation: SkateboarderContents

by Tony Hawk, read summer 2003, ok

The Pleasures of CountingContents

by T. W. Korner, read 2003, excellent

A interresting math book, which concentrates on scenarios from history, where math was used to solve problems. The stories are interesting and the math is well explained. I found the book because it was recommended for future students of computer science on Cambridge.

(Note: I have not finished this book)

Read Before 2003Contents

Black WaterContents

by Joyce Carol Oates, read October 2002, good

Good, but nothing special, it lacks some details to catch the reader. Written in an interesting style with the story broken into small pieces.

(Note: I read the danish edition)

CryptonomiconContents

Neal Stephenson, reread 2001, excellent

Neal's writing is some of the best. It is very funny and cool -- and I always feel close to the characters. The characters do not surprise much, they are incarnations of personality types we already know, but I don't experience that as a problem. It's hard to explain why I love this book so much. Maybe it's because it incorporates a lot of subjects that are also my interests. This includes math, cryptography, intelligence, and paranoia.

I really like Stephenson's style, but I think the story gets worse in the ending (happens to many of Stephenson's works).

Darwins RadioContents

by Greg Bear, read summer 2002, good-excellent

I wanted to buy a book by Greg Egan, but ended with this book because I couldn't remember the name...

People all over the world get sick, women miscarriages, but get pregnant again -- without sexual activity -- and the new babies are different. Some think it is a natural part of the evolution, but panic breaks out... Very thrilling, in places one of the scariest stories I have read. I learned some biology on the way.

Foucault's PendulumContents

Umberto Eco, read ??, good-excellent

One of the great books on conspiracies, not an easy read and occasionally it feels a bit long (I read the danish translation).

In the Name of the RoseContents

Umberto Eco, read summer 1998, good-excellent

(I read the danish translation).

The Last SamuraiContents

by Helen DeWitt, read autumn 2002, good-excellent

A book about a single mother with a poor job trying to care for herself and the son Ludo (when she is not watching the Seven Samurai). Ludo is a little genius, reading the classics on the original language as well as doing other wonders as a little boy. The story is interesting and surprising, and I learned a good deal about languages (and other stuff). I specially liked the many anecdotes about fictional persons. The smart Ludo and his elitist mother gets a little annoying and it is a little unclear whether this is a goal of the author.

The Lord of the RingsContents

by J.R.R. Tolkien, reread summer 2001, good-excellent

Great book, that deserves to be read in a short period of time (does not apply to people with a very good memory ). It is a very exciting adventure, but I still think a lot of people overestimate it's importance.

MusashiContents

by Eiji Yoshikaw, read autumn 2002, masterpiece

One of the best books I have read. The story is great and based on a real story about (one of) the world's greatest sword fighters.

It is an adventure that is comparable to LOTR, the world seems strange and exotic as Middle Earth (Japan). The persons feel a lot more real than Tolkiens (they have problems that are easier to relate to). Also, this is a tale with ideas from eastern philosophy, and there are things to be learned from the story.

Uncle Petros and Goldbach's ConjectureContents

by Apostolos Doxiadis, read december 2002, good-excellent

A good novel about an old eccentric mathematician. However, I think the biography about Paul Erdos (The Man Who Loved Only Numbers) is a better story about an eccentric mathematician and his love for math.

ZodiacContents

Neal Stephenson, read ??, excellent

Introducing JoyceContents

by David Norris, read October 2002, excellent

Entertaining and educating introduction to James Joyce and his work, with drawings in the style of Monty Python (at least half the book consists of drawings).

The Man Who Loved Only Numbers: The Story of Paul Erdos & the Search for Mathematical TruthContents

by Paul Hoffman, read ??, excellent

Funny and informative biography about the most productive mathematician in modern times.

Open Society and its Enemies, Hegel and MarxContents

By Karl R. Popper, read summer 2003, masterpiece

(Disclaimer: I read the danish translation and I have only read part two.)

This is a well-written work on political philosophy. It is mainly a critique of totalitarian government forms. The book uses Hegel and Marx as case studies. I am not really sure if these are referred correctly, but I did not find it important for my reading, as I concentrated on the points about dicatators.