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Kalle Kniivilä

kallekn@kirja.casa

Joined 2 years, 11 months ago

Journalist på Sydsvenskan. Finns mest på Mastodon: mastodonsweden.se/@kallekn Ruotsinsuomalainen toimittaja. Lueskelen kaikenlaista monella kielellä, ja kirjoitankin. www.kniivila.net

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Kalle Kniivilä's books

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Lavanya Lakshminarayan: Ten-Percent Thief (2023, Black Library, The, Solaris)

A revolution

In a way, this is a book about the world we already live in, even though it is also a book about a world that could be the result of the climate collapse we are headed for. It is also a book about a revolution, but it doesn't tell what happens after the revolution. Well, you probably never know that. The best part of the book are the different perspectives it offers, from the top one percent to the analog bottom of the society, including the old man who is skeptical to the resistance and insists everything will be as it always has been.

Kim Stanley Robinson: The Ministry for the Future (2020)

Nice idea

A climate crisis novel with a positive twist is nice for a change. And there is a plot. However, the story is too often interrupted not only by technical explanations, which could have been presented in a more integrated manner, but also by quasi-philosophical passages which generally do not contribute anything of value. Would have been 3 stars, but one extra for the good idea.

Serhii Plokhy: Українська Кліо (Hardcover)

Нова книжка знаного українського й американського історика Сергія Плохія уміщує нариси про Україну від ранньомодерних …

Цікаво й корисно

Дуже цікаве та корисне зібрання статей про українських істориків і про те, як у різні епохи писали історію України. Не всі статті однаково актуальні сьогодні, але особливо те, що Плохій пише про використання історії в політиці та про викладання історії в школах дуже злободенно.

Robert Penn Warren: All the King's Men (Hardcover, 1946, Harcourt Brace & Company)

The story is about Willie Stark, a slick politician of humble birth, who was based …

Of life, universe and politics

I picked up the book because a respected Russian political scientist, now living in the West, mentioned that it made a lasting impression on him during his childhood and taught him much about politics. The book was published in Russian in the Soviet Union in 1968 and was adapted into a Soviet film three years later, though the movie omits much of the original content.

I didn't know what to expect, but the book turned out to be about much more than just politics and politicians. It was clear that the author was not only familiar with the circumstances in the US South during the 1930s, but also with the work of a news reporter from that era. I even suspected he might have been a reporter himself, which he never was.

It's evident that populist politics in the US South and Fascist Italy served as inspiration for the author. …

Arkady Martine: Rose/House (EBook, Subterranean Press)

Basit Deniau’s houses were haunted to begin with.

A house embedded with an artificial intelligence …

But why did it end?

This is a book I wanted to read immediately when I found out it existed, because I very much liked Arkady Martines two earlier, totally different novels. Then I found the book actually didn't exist, or only kind of. It was printed but is out of print and the e-book is not available either, as the rights according to the publisher now have reverted to the author. There seems to be a new edition coming at the end of the year, but right now the only way to access the book legally seems to be to listen to the audio version through a streaming service which I'm not going to subscribe to, even if I was into audio books, or to learn French, which might prove even more time-consuming than waiting for the new edition. In the end I did find a way to access the book anyway, and I …

Naomi Kritzer: Catfishing on CatNet (2021, Tor Teen)

Because her mom is always on the move, Steph hasn't lived anyplace longer than six …

An educational thriller

This is obviously a young adult book, and I am an old adult. I enjoyed the book anyway, even though some passages are a bit too educational. Interesting thoughts about how a real AI might relate to humans and the physical world.