Anders Hansen
Tijs Teulings 🦑
@tijs.org
iOS developer from The Hague, NL
Terrible Worlds: Revolutions
★★★★

Instead of a re-read of 1984 I would recommend Americans to read this
The Making of Prince of Persia
★★★★

I did not enjoy this book as much as the first as it seemed a bit too self conscious and less about the process. The author has less too lose, or to prove, at this point making the whole thing a bit less interesting. Still thought this was a good read though especially if you recognize the ‘struggle’ of having to figure out what you actually want of life.
The Making of Karateka
★★★★

This hits all the Ready Player One like nostalgia pleasure points for me only with interesting cultural references instead. Also it's not about a dystopia but a kid growing up and making an indie game hit. Straight up the guys diary though so that format might put some people off.
Archery Fitness: Physical Training For The Modern Archer
★★★★

Good overview of relevant exercises. Nothing more, nothing less.
Game Programming Patterns
★★★★

Although not directly relevant to my day job I enjoyed this quite a bit. It’s basically a more readable version of the gang of four original. Fun read, nice examples. I do mostly UI & library dev these days where a lot of these patterns will look familiar.
Arbitrary Stupid Goal
★★★

Interesting enough but at some point I’d hear enough quirky New York anecdotes. Abandoned at about half way.
Aphantasia: Experiences, Perceptions, and Insights
★★

Absolutely fascinating topic, and some real nuggets in the interviews that form the basis of this book. But.. the books setup where each chapter is simply a statement, two paragraphs of introduction, and then a whole bunch of quotes from the interviews does not work for me. I really wish the interviews would instead be turned into a coherent narrative. In its current form it’s just very tiresome and repetitive to read.
The ART of BAREBOW Shooting: and its mental game
★★★★

Quite enjoyed this one. Extremely practical book on how to train well and what works and why. Especially liked the chapters on process and aiming. Learned a lot.
Nophek Gloss
★★★★

For some reason I started with Azura Ghost not having noticed it was a sequel after being too far in. Between the two I thing part two is a bit more interesting. Nophek Gloss is a bit more a predictable SF story but still highly entertaining. You’ll like this, and if you did you’ll love the next one is what I’m saying.
The Lonely Century: How to Restore Human Connection in a World That's Pulling Apart
★★★★

Gnomon
★★★★★

Very dense. Very deep. Halfway through it seems to derail into madness, but if you stick with it it all fits together in the end.
Archery: A walk through its history
★★★

Really wanted to like this one. And I did enjoy the big stories and odd tidbits of specific bows making the difference in such and such battle. But the book suffers a bit from its lack of overall story or structure. It’s a collection of articles not so much a book. Also the translation is just horrible with composite consistently being translated as compound and other errors. Just a better translation would help a lot on readability.
The Doors of Eden
★★★★★

Some next level world building here. Truly original setup and ideas. And just a very enjoyable read. Looking forward to read more from this author.
The Robert C. Martin Clean Code Collection
★★★

Should be read as historical lore not as golden rules. With that taken into account these are two quite readable books that will contain some good pointers on how to level up your craft.
Intuitive Archery - The art of not standing in your own way
★★★

It’s not exactly an inspiring read. But it’s a reasonably practical book. Some good tips and some new subjects to dive into that I found interesting enough at least.
Tentacle
★★★★

This is a tough one to review! I think it’s worth your time simply because it’s so different from other books in the genre (which genre?). I’ve never read a book set in the Dominican Republic before, nor has this particular type of voodoo featured heavily in anything I’ve read. Also; simultaneously experiencing the lives of people in different era’s was a novel concept to me. This was all definitely confusing at times but also interesting for sure.
Hieroglyph: Stories and Visions for a Better Future
★★★

Very much a mixed bag with even the bigger name writers underperforming. Mostly a bit disappointed that the uplifting big ideas this is supposed to cover never seem to go much beyond gadgets in space.
October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
★★★★

The most entertaining way to read up on the Russian revolution i'm sure.
The Lonely Century: How to Restore Human Connection in a World That's Pulling Apart
★★★★

★★★