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John Patterson

JigsawPieces@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 1 year ago

Runner, cat minion and music addict. Even reads books occasionally!

Mastodon: mastodon.social/@JigsawPieces

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avatar for JigsawPieces John Patterson boosted

An interesting look at how our politics is going wrong, along with practical suggestions for how anybody can get involved to stop it

5 stars

This is the second “our politics is completely messed up” book that I’ve read in a row, and it made an interesting contrast to Ian Dunt’s “How Westminster Works … And Why It Doesn’t?”. In the latter Dunt argues convincingly that little of the system works on a fundamental level (partially on purpose, partially because the wrong incentives are in play), but Campbell is more interested in how the changes in our society over the last decade or so have been driven by and enabled the rise of populism in a way that we would once have thought of as unthinkable.

The book comes in two parts, the first is an examination of the problem as Campbell sees it – most of which was familiar to me from listening to the Rest is Politics podcast, but is presented here in a more coherent and structured form. Essentially our society is …

Ian Dunt: How Westminster Works ... and Why It Doesn't (2023, Orion Publishing Group, Limited) 5 stars

A clear description of the problems with a complex establishment

5 stars

A well-written, clear and readable look at all the elements that make up our government in Westminster, explaining how they're set up and what the problems are. You'll learn a lot about them, and maybe even change how you think of some of them.

It's rather depressing, and in places even frightening. If you've been feeling like things are f-d, this will confirm it and tell you why they're f-d.

Despite all that, the final chapter puts forward a range of pragmatic suggestions that could improve it all -- if we collectively are persuaded they're important enough to ask for.

Aidan Dodson: Tutankhamun, King of Egypt (Hardcover, 2023, American University in Cairo Press) 5 stars

A concise and readable review of what we currently know

5 stars

Continuing his "life and afterlife" series, Aidan Dodson takes a considered look at that most well-known of pharaohs, Tutankhamun.

Chapters cover: who he was, the events and significant figures of his reign (or reigns - Dodson splits it into pre- and post-name change), his death and the events that followed, his memorial temple and tomb, how he was remembered, and the processes of learning, discovery and exhibition that have brought us up to date.

It felt like it petered out a little right at the end, but having said that it brings the reader right up to date with the latest significant studies and exhibitions, so I'm not sure what more I would have liked there. Just a little more detail, perhaps.

Overall though the book is a really welcome step back to take a fresh and level-headed look at what we actually know about this pharaoh and why we …