Dedicated to Eva M because I told her I'd make a list of books and I finally did.
I live 10 miles away from campus, but our lovely bus takes about an hour and a half to reach campus. In other words, I've had plenty to time to do some reading.
Here's some I liked (there might be spoilers! Although most are non fiction, so I guess I'll be spoiling you with facts. Hehe.)
I live 10 miles away from campus, but our lovely bus takes about an hour and a half to reach campus. In other words, I've had plenty to time to do some reading.
Here's some I liked (there might be spoilers! Although most are non fiction, so I guess I'll be spoiling you with facts. Hehe.)
- The Unified Neutral Theory of Biodiversity and Biogeography by Stephen Hubbell. Let's start out really nerdy. This is a book I had to read for one of the last classes I took at Davis, Evolution of Ecological Systems, but then I read it again when I was back in San Jose. Good stuff. It's about, well, the Unified Neutral Theory, which explains the distribution of species with a lot of math, instead of with niche theory. A lot of math I couldn't follow, even in the comforts of my home and all the time in the world, so no theoretical ecology for me.
- Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte.I don't like this genre of English literature, but since Jaime says good things about this book, I decided to check it out. I liked the beginning a lot, and Heathcliff and Catherine together were adorable. And then it just got weird in the end. But, still good. I used to really like tragedies though, so who knows. I don't know how Jaime manages to read this every year though; it's so long.
- The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood. This is a fiction book I actually like so I'll be careful not to spoil anything. It's a really really good dystopian novel. That's all - go read it. After a quick google search, it's apparently a movie too. If you don't like it, you should watch it, cause this concept is really interesting. Plus today's May Day so I should be excited about it. Well, May Day Lei Day, not Mayday, but heh.
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams. I love this series now, and I can't believe it's taken me so long to read it. It's so short! Everyone should at least read the first book. I have an irrational, but almost paralyzing, fear of aliens, so I try not to read books with creepy aliens on the cover, but this was totally worth it!
- The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins. Such a guilty pleasure, but if it helps, I read this while stranded in the Seattle airport, and then had to finish the rest of the series, because I'm not a quitter. I wouldn't recommend the third book, but the first two were ok. The writing isn't that great, but it's written for teenagers, and I got through Twilight fine (no regrets) so whatever.
- Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies by Jared Diamond. I unsuccessfully tried reading this book so many times in the past and then finally I realized that 1) prologues are boring and I really should stop reading them and 2) he's explaining why there is unequal distribution of guns, germs and steel. Ah. Anyways, a must read if you ever wondered why there are third world countries, and why Western Europe is so powerful.
- Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed by Jared Diamond. This is the the library book I awkwardly left in North Carolina. Many many thanks to Wake Forest for getting it back to me before the due date. One thing I realized about Jared Diamond is that he is very thorough. So most of the book, though it is very thick, repeats itself. I think there's 5 case studies, and I only read through a couple of them. I think the first couple of chapters is enough if you want to know, well, why societies fail or succeed (PS it has to do with the environment. And the population.)
- Nutrient Cycling and Limitation: Hawai'i as a Model System by Peter Vitousek. Yea. I read it. And I actually understood it, which is good because otherwise I don't know what I had been doing in Davis. The first couple of chapters serve as a good introduction to biogeochemistry and Hawaii, and then it gets hard. But read the first chapter. It's fun. It made me remember why I love Hawaii so much. :D
- A Bunch of Books about Ender and his Friends by Orson Scott Card. I know 'about' is a preposition but it feels so weird leaving it uncapitalized. Anyways, after Hitchhiker's Guide, I decided to give aliens a chance, and I had read Ender's Game and Ender's Shadow before and liked it. It's cool seeing what the kids are up to after their Battle School days, but it's also more serious and not as fun (not that sending little kids up to space to become military masterminds isn't serious, but they're kids! Little people!) The books with Ender had aliens in it, which still creeped me out, but Bean's stories are ok...until it got depressing.
- The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals by Michael Pollan. Good thing I was reading this book at the time and not one of those Enders books because one of the questions University of Wisconsin asked me was what book I was reading. I really liked this book and it made me think about food, which is nice. (Mmm I think it might be time for a midnight snack!) I'm not sure what the four meals were, because if I can remember correctly, it was 1) normal (aka corn. Thanks subsidies) 2) organic and 3) foraging. I like this book, but I never read books again if I can help it, so someone will just have to read it and tell me. Yay.
- The Botany of Desire: The Plant's Eye View of the World by Michael Pollan. I'm becoming one of those people who read books by the same author! Good for me. This was a fun book. He tracks the social/evolutionary history of a couple of plants: the apple, the tulip, the potato, and marijuana.
- How We Decide by Jonah Lehrer. Basically what the titles says. And it's a lot like the next book:
- Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking by Malcom Gladwell. Fun examples about the subconsciousnes playing a part of our every day lives. I read these books back to back, so I'm having a hard time remembering the differences. The perils of hanging around the library and just pulling random books off shelves...I get too excited and just take home an entire section. I must warn you though, the ending is very depressing. The book is filled with stories of stereotyping and first impressions, which is cool at first, cause it's about trumpet players, and other not as intense stuff. Then he busts out the Amadou Diallo Shooting, which everyone should know about so I can infect you all with the despair I felt reading about it. There is hope though. According to Gladwell, people who were exposed to positive figures of a minority groups have better feelings towards that group. Which makes sense, but the only way I see that happening right now is through sports. Yay sports! This justifies my hours spent watching baseball...
- The Tao Te Ching of Lao Tzu. I thought it'll be cool to learn Chinese by reading this (because I just didn't learn from my last attempt of learning Arabic by reading the Quran). I quickly gave up and read the English version. Hehe. For those of you who don't know, this is the teachings Daoism is based off of. It's very...middle way. Hah.
- Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov. The first half of the book was pretty interesting, and what I expected. And then, the second part just got really really weird. And boring. Really boring. :( For those of you who don't know, the book written from a pedophile's (not to be confused with soil pedons!) perspective, which I guess was the ground breaking part of the book. It actually starts out pretty witty and charming. Unfortunately the bus I take is filled with little kids and I feel really awkward reading it.
- Hawaiian Natural History, Ecology and Evolution by Alan Ziegler. One of the first books I read on the island, I was pleasantly surprised it was the one book professors suggested I read. It concisely summed up Hawaii's environment, and not too hard to read. I liked it.
- A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson. A fun book that explains science through eccentric stories. I liked it. :D It reminded me why I got into science in the first place. He goes through subject by subject, charting its history and the drama that follows. It's like Gossip Girl, but for science!
- Seeking the Sacred Raven: Politics and Extinction on a Hawaiian Island by Mark Jerome Walters. The 'alala is a bird endemic to Hawaii and is now extinct in the wild. The story follows the state's actions in trying to protect it through their captive breeding program, and the rancher who owns the land in which these birds are found. I actually didn't know the status of the 'alala before hand so I was super depressed afterwards. They grew on me.
- The Geography of Thought: How Asians and Westerners Think Differently...and Why by Richard Nisbett. I picked this book because the word geography was in the title, but it was actually pretty interesting. Most of it is common knowledge now (that Westerners are more independent, and Asians are more communal, and Asians born in Western areas are mixed), but it also delves a bit into why (the geography!) and has fun little stories (apparently some Asian countries uses tangram puzzles as quizzes instead of...real...quizzes...). It's an academic book, so it's not easy reading, but it's still pretty interesting.
- The Growth and Collapse of Pacific Island Societies: Archaeological and Demographic Perspectives by Patrick V Kirch and Jean-Louis Rallu. Hawaii currently has a population of 1.2 million people. Hawaii pre-European contact is said to have 3 million. That's a lot! Especially since right now we have skyscrapers and are importing 95% of our goods and a bunch of technology. How did they do it? I read this book to find out. This book looks into those claims with a lot of science. It pretty much says we don't really know how many people were here before Europeans came, but we know it was probably more than 1 million. Or at least over 500,000. There is no consensus. It also doesn't saying how they did it, but that's because I don't read the titles of books well enough...
- A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn. Five words: We've got some major issues.
- The Geography of Bliss by Eric Weiner. I adore this book. I think this was the campus book for class 2012, so many of you guys might have heard of it. It's about a reporter's search for the happiest place in the world. But it's so much more than that. It's such a happy feel good book. I really really like it. Everyone should read it. I want to move to Iceland now.
- The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference by Malcom Gladwell. Maybe it' because I sat next to a creepy person on the bus while reading this, but I didn't like this book as much as Blink. The book's about well, the tipping point. There's certain conditions that makes certain things cool. For example, in Brooklyn, by reducing graffiti and cracking down on people who abuse subway fares, they managed to drastically lower murder rates. Pretty neat.
Books! |
If you guys have read any of these books, we must discuss! That's my favorite part about reading. :D
I've read Ender's Game, Diamond's books, and Hitchhiker's.
ReplyDeleteI agree about both of Diamond's books. I still haven't read all of Collapse, mostly because he repeated himself so much.
Ender's Game was the most depressing happy book that I've read. I didn't really like the bit about the bugs hiding an egg. I thought it ended pretty perfectly with the first book too, so didn't read any others.
Hitchhiker's Guide is an awesome book. The entire series is awesome. Now you know to always have your towel with you and to be careful with your Scrabble pieces.
Read all of Malcolm Gladwell's books on this list (you need to watch his Ted talk...amazing)
ReplyDeleteA Short History of Nearly Everything. Read this in my freshman cluster. Literally, the history of the universe in one book. Man, our universe is pretty freaking cool
We talked about The Handmaid's Tale
I need to start reading those Jared Diamond books
Hitchhiker's Guide is def on my list. I love Douglas Adams