User Profile

Nick Barlow

Nickbwalking@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 1 year, 10 months ago

I read a lot, and try to keep things varied and am always interested in broadening my outlook through something new. Currently writing a memoir about walking, mental health, and grief. Can be found elsewhere on the fediverse talking about things other than books at nickbwalking@zirk.us and nickbwalking@me.dm

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Nick Barlow's books

Currently Reading

2024 Reading Goal

28% complete! Nick Barlow has read 14 of 50 books.

Angela Saini: Inferior (2017) 4 stars

Inferior: How Science Got Women Wrong and the New Research That's Rewriting the Story is …

Science and the patriarchy

4 stars

Recommended by a friend following some earlier reading (Heart of Maleness) this is an interesting feminist angle on popular science tropes. It takes aim at the science, from Darwin onwards, that's been used to "prove" women are inferior to men, and that sex differences are somehow innate and unavoidable. Across a range of different areas, Saini exposes how some big scientific findings are based on very shaky ground. Weak science and patriarchal beliefs have led people to take tiny studies and blow them up out of all importance to reinforce stereotypes, and those working to correct and challenge these assumptions are left to the fringes. Ocasionnally a bit frustrating as she takes her time to debunk flaws that are obvious in the way she describes a study, and she perhaps gives some people a bit too much of the benefit of the doubt, but still well worth reading.

Kurt Vonnegut: Galapagos 3 stars

Galápagos (1985) is the eleventh novel published by American author Kurt Vonnegut. Set in the …

Good idea but doesn't really go anywhere

3 stars

Though I guess that's what you could say about humanity as a whole, right?

Anyway, this is a story about how the next million years of humanity begin with a shipwreck on one of the Galapagos islands, leading to the few people surviving it becoming the ancestors of the next stages of humanity, all narrated by a ghost. But of course, being Vonnegut, it's not really about that, it's about evolution and the dead end of thinking our "big brains" will solve everything for us. There's some good lines and some interesting thoughts in there - this is Vonnegut, after all - but it's slight and unfocused, unsure of what to focus its attention on.

Arkady Martine: Desolation Called Peace (Paperback, 2022, Pan Macmillan) 4 stars

An alien armada lurks on the edges of Teixcalaanli space. No one can communicate with …

Excellent sequel

5 stars

Rare for me to find a sequel more interesting than the original, but this was one of those occasions. It takes the world-building from Memory Called Empire and then allows the characters to step further forward in the story. After being at the heart of the Empire before, we're now at the fringe, where it faces a threat and a potential war, with politics at play that might lead to a catastrophe. Really enjoyed watching how this all played out and the way the characters grew and developed through it.

Julian Rathbone: The last English king (1999, Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin's Press) 5 stars

An imaginative take on historical fiction

5 stars

Originally read this years ago, but found a copy in a charity shop a few months ago and decided to reread it. Very glad I did, as it's a really good read. It's a tale of the vents of 1066, told mainly from the perspective of one of Harold's close guards after the event. The story is interesting in itself, of course, looking at how Harold and the Godwin family rose to power, how England found itself the focus of attention from potential invasions from Scandinavia and Normandy, and how the web of obligations and oaths tied them all together politically. However, Rathbone's ingenuity is in telling this story in the knowledge that this is historical fiction, not history, so he has a lot more leeway to insert an authorial voice, to highlight the incongruities of looking back at this from hundreds of years later and to purposefully deploy anachronism …

James Rice: Walk (Paperback, Hachette) 4 stars

Stephen had seemed enthusiastic about the walk, when Benny first invited him. He kept going …

A ramble into toxic masculinity

4 stars

A book I found by chance, when a friend saw it on the shelf at a bookshop and passed it on to me. 'm glad she did, this is a really interesting book that starts as an account of two old friends' attempt to walk Offa's Dyke Path. I felt like I knew the sort of story it was going to be then, but suddenly another voice is added into the narrative and it becomes a lot stranger and a lot more interesting. It examines and challenges the conventions of masculinity and male friendship, pitting that within the directionless life of twentysomethings in the current economy, searching for meaning in a world that refuses to give them any. Sometimes the foreshadowing - we know something is going to happen, but it takes a while to come about - is a bit much and there's a bit of wheel-spinning (foot-dragging?) before …

Antony Shugaar, Raphaël Liogier: Heart of Maleness (Paperback, 2020, Other Press) 4 stars

Extended essay on men's view of women

4 stars

This is a very interesting essay and brings together a lot of different ideas and within it. It's definitely a challenge to modern masculinity and men's view of women, but perhaps because of the length of it feels like there's more missing from it. Yes, men's attitudes towards women are terrible and are rooted in a terrible history, yes, women need to be freed from the constraints patriarchy places upon them but in concentrating on these issues he doesn't reach the "heart of maleness" of the title, or only uncovers one aspect of it. What it does is mostly very good, but I wanted more on how maleness is a trap in and of itself, a ridiculous idea that traps men into toxic behaviours beyond misogyny, but I'll need to look elsewhere for that.

Kim Stanley Robinson: Shaman (Paperback, 2014, imusti, Orbit) 4 stars

Interesting but overlong

3 stars

An intricately detailed novel, where Robinson attempts to depict what life would have been for a prehistoric tribe during the Ice Age. No explicit date or location is given, but context indicates it's about 35-40,000BCE. It's an impressive mental leap to get that far back in time and depict the early days of humanity, but the problem is that it often reads more as imaginative anthropology rather than a novel. Robinson often descends into morasses of description instead of plot, and this has the same issue: after Loon's wander concludes, very little happens in the first part of the book. Any novel like this is going to end up being compared to Golding's The Inheritors, and for me it comes up short in that respect. Golding's world felt stranger and rawer, this one becomes mundane too soon.

Ursula K. Le Guin: The Unreal and the Real Volume 1: Volume 1: Where on Earth (Unreal & the Real Vol 1) (2014, Gollancz) 4 stars

A mix of stories

4 stars

I always find short story collections - especially if the stories weren't planned to be collected together - somewhat awkward reads as there's always some that catch my attention and leave me regretting that there isn't more, while others don't engage me at all. Which is the case here, there are some that I really liked and others in that tradition of short stories where nothing much really happens but it's all very immaculately described.