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#bookreviews

7 posts7 participants2 posts today

Why Join a Book Club? Boost Your Reading Experience

The author reflects on the benefits of joining a book club, highlighting how it enhances reading through shared perspectives, accountability, and social interaction. Book clubs encourage exploration of diverse genres, promote in-depth discussions, and provide a break from everyday chaos, ultimately enriching the reading experience and fostering connections among members. Continue reading Why Join a Book Club? Boost Your Reading Experience

thebookhaven.blog/2025/04/13/w

🎻 Light From Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki 🎻

⭐ 3 out of 5

"𝘛𝘩𝘦 𝘸𝘰𝘳𝘭𝘥 𝘪𝘴 𝘤𝘩𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘪𝘯𝘨, 𝘺𝘰𝘶 𝘬𝘯𝘰𝘸. 𝘈 𝘱𝘪𝘵𝘺 𝘺𝘰𝘶 𝘢𝘳𝘦𝘯’𝘵 𝘳𝘦𝘢𝘥𝘺 𝘵𝘰 𝘭𝘪𝘷𝘦 𝘪𝘯 𝘪𝘵."

I'm having such a hard time articulating how I feel about this book. There was SO many good, solid parts about this story. The bare bones were excellent, and so was the writing. But it was also extremely disappointing for those same reasons - because it had so many wonderful things, I'm disappointed that I didn't love it more.

The whole storyline revolving around the aliens was extremely random, disjointed, and did not feel like it fit within the story about Katrina and Satomi. If they really wanted Satomi to have a relationship, Lan could've still been that as a human. Lan's family also provided a lot of plot convenience. It felt like the author had 50 ideas and messages she was trying to portray in under 400 pages, which left many of the side stories unfinished.

What I did really love was the family that Satomi, Katrina, and even Astrid found within each other. It was obvious that Katrina had been saved by Satomi, but it wasn't so obvious that Satomi had also been saved by Katrina. I also adored how the author uses music to explain things like gender, judgement, and life in general. The part that stuck out to me the most was when she explained how people live life in "sections", like sections of music, and when a section doesn't go how they expect it, things can go off the rails.

Please don't take the negative parts of my review as a reason not to read this book. While there are very realistic parts involving hateful things people say about trans people, and there are definitely parts I liked more than others, there is also trans joy and familial love and many good, amazing things to gain from reading this story.

🏷️🏷️🏷️
#bookreview #bookreviews #booksta #bookstagram #bookpics #bookrecs #kobo #lightfromuncommonstars

just read Jonathan Haidt's "The Anxious Generation"... i have thoughts

it was a less a serious analysis of youth mental health and more a boomer panic attack dressed up in footnotes.

his big idea? that smartphones and social media broke childhood around 2010, and absolutely nothing else contributed. not inequality, not climate collapse, not mass shootings, not racism, not the slow-burn apocalypse of capitalism. just... the phone.

you almost expect him to add "get off my lawn" as a chapter title.

he calls it "the great rewiring". which sounds like a sci-fi reboot but is actually Haidt's excuse to blame every modern adolescent crisis on TikTok and Insta.

depression? ... screens.
gender identity questions? ... screens.
girls under pressure? ... not patriarchy, just selfies.
queer kids, poor kids, disabled kids? ... briefly mentioned, then memory-holed for getting in the way of the thesis.
the data? ... cherry-picked and dressed in objectivity drag.

Haidt ignores anything that doesn't sync perfectly with his smartphone-doom narrative. his solutions? ban smartphones till 14, kill social media until 16, and throw kids into "risky play" like it’s 1956 and there's a jungle gym made of asbestos behind every school. it's policy by Norman Rockwell painting.

for all his talk of "norms", Haidt utterly refuses to explore how different communities actually experience the digital world. he's too busy assembling a diorama out of rotary phones and stoic quotes.

his "cure" is useless to the kids who need it most because they're not even visible in the diagnosis.

worst of all, Haidt frames it all like this is "just the science talking" while serving up moral panic with a stoic flavor.

of course, it's **always** the stoics.

he doesn’t just ignore structural violence, he actively erases it. his "help" is only for kids with middle-class parents and ipad guilt.

also... "the mars hypothesis".... yes, really.

he spends pages describing how raising kids today is like raising them on mars. because of gravity. because of isolation. because apparently analogies about actual child development weren't dramatic enough, and he needed to imagine Earth as a space colony of lord of the flies being destroyed by Insta.

if anyone ever tells you that social science is boring, just show them the part where Haidt earnestly compares TikTok to a breakdown in atmospheric pressure.

this isn't a serious intervention. it's tech-blaming fanfic from a man who lost an argument to an algorithm and decided to write a book about it. and if Jonathan Haidt really wanted to help, maybe next time he should stop diagnosing the future like it’s a software glitch and actually ask the kids what they think.

no wonder it's on so many conservative parenting book lists... the scholarly equivalent of someone shouting "SATAN IS IN THE SNAPCHAT" while shaking a fist at the sky.

fuck this guy.

edited to add a part

#SkipIt #NotWorthThePaperItsPrintedOn

I finished Lakelore by Anna-Marie McLemore for the #TransRightsReadathon. I loved it. I cried. I texted myself quotes. I had to pause and stare into the distance. I cried more. I texted friends. This was so good. I talk too much about Amanda in this video, Lore and Bastian are the real heart of the story, but I was really moved by the Amanda storyline and Lore being treated with care, naming injustice. Here's the video - videos.tiffanysostar.com/w/aiS