jesse_the_k: iPod nestles in hollowed-out print book (Alt format reader)

Find in library • DRM-free audiobookBARD

As I hoped back in December, last month I found enough brain to tackle An Immense World by Ed Yong. I was convinced by [personal profile] pauraque’s extensive summary and review, and the 24 days I spent reading were a pure delight. Ed Yong is a great narrator: he fluently pronounces the Neo-Latinate species names as well as the international assortment of human researchers. He somehow manages not to giggle at his own (frequent) jokes.

He wildly succeeds at explaining the distinctive sensory worlds of many of our planet’s inhabitants. Along the way, he explores how scientists design experiments to pin down how, for example, a scallop sees or a leafhopper senses vibrations. He tells the truth that our current understanding is not necessarily the whole answer — that science means change. So much of the current state of the art began as theories mocked by the scientific establishment.

Yong is keenly aware of human as well as animal variety. When addressing the senses, he fluently acknowledges that not humans all have a standard complement—for example, his researchers are described as sighted when that’s relevant. He consciously seeks out women and non-binary researchers, as explained in his 2018 Atlantic article "I Spent Two Years Trying to Fix the Gender Imbalance in My Stories -- Here’s what I’ve learned, and why I did it.".

Most importantly, he’s such a good writer. He clearly loves his subject, and he plays with formal and informal registers. He provides enough detail to enthrall while lightly alternating between technical explanations and emotional delights. He organizes the books by sense, and each one almost stands alone. It helped that I gave myself permission to read for enjoyment, not trying to remember the details because there is no test. I'm looking forward to rereading it.

I do recall some stunning facts:

  • Scallops have many eyes — from a dozen to more than 200.
  • Owls have asymmetrical ears, enabling them to locate sounds both horizontally and vertically.
  • Some creatures use the Earth’s very weak electromagnetic field to navigate—but we don’t know how. The signal is so subtle that it’s not contemporaneous: the whales, birds, and turtles must travel several miles before they can know if they’re headed in the right direction.

He starts with dogs, guaranteeing sympathy from half his readership. (I was charmed by references to his own Corgi pup, Typo.) In this 350-word excerpt, he introduces the canine olfaction expert, Alexandra Horowitz, and her dog Finnegan:

Read more... )

jesse_the_k: Bambi fawn cartoon with two heads (Conjoined Bambi)

Money, marriage, and madness:
The life of Anna Ott

Kim E. Nielsen

Nineteenth century feminists battled patriarchal definition. Learned men asserted that women's bodies were constitutionally subject to weakness and madness. This is sexism and it's also ableism. Men asserted our defective bodyminds disqualified us from public education, voting, and many kinds of work.

Nielsen writes about Anna Ott, an early 19th century Swiss immigrant. Ott married and divorced a doctor in Ohio, gaining enough money to move to Madison and purchase property just as the town was booming into Wisconsin's capital city. She married again and practiced medicine. Her violent husband committed her to the local insane asylum, where she lived for 20 years until her death. A handful of "newsy" facts about her can be found in local newspapers: her divorce, that every room in her house had two doors, her alleged deathbed confession to bank robbery.

Nielsen writes as an historian of feminism and disability. I found her prose, midway between popular and academese, to be quite understandable. She always recognizes Ott’s peculiar social status: negatives include woman, immigrant, "mad" while positives include: property owner, doctors, whiteness. Even Anna Ott, who was remarkable for several reasons, is more clearly seen by her absence from the historical record. Before I read this short work that statement would have mystified me. That most of the events are set where I live makes this an engaging read, even though it’s full of physical and emotional violence and repression. Content notes: forced commitment and treatment in 19th century asylums; domestic violence; children disappearing.

ETA: Thanks to [personal profile] tarascon for getting the book's title right!

425 words capture Nielsen’s style and philosophy:

words words words )

Get yours here:

ebook - Bookshare - Find in library - U of I publisher - JSTOR

jesse_the_k: Comic speech balloon containing one ellipsis (there are no words)

Anna Hamilton is another great writer I met through FWD. I just found their graphic memoir NERVOUS SYSTEMS, hosted on their blog, Too Much Tea. I surprised myself by really liking their basic confessional art style. I generally prefer consciously arty, carefully drawn and colored comics. But these simple pictures, paired with their well-read insight into growing up disabled, managed to break through into my feelings. There are excellent disability studies footnotes. AND, you can learn a bunch without reading any of them. I particularly appreciate the parallels they expose between marked bodies, both "woman" and "disabled."

As Anna says in their afterword:

One aspect of academic writing, and theory, that has confused me for a long time is the expectation that both will be—and should be—written in a style that is inaccessible to all but a comparatively select few. Part of my reason for choosing a format—the graphic novel—that is not looked at as “serious” was to make some very important theoretical concepts accessible to a non-academic audience. Additionally, my own theoretical project of examining women’s chronic physical pain in contemporary culture relates a lot to my own life experiences, and I have had trouble writing about these experiences “academically enough.”

The art is 48 print pages, broken into three web-pages, plus complete image descriptions — which make it very convenient for me to quote the comic-as-text:

700-word sample and links )

Content notes: disability slurs; divorce; emesis; CP, anaphylaxis, fibromyalgia, depression, anxiety, sexism, normate bigotry

[ETA corrected Anna’s pronouns 12 Mar 2024]

jesse_the_k: Red leaf from a pin oak tree (pin oak leaf)

E Lily Yu’s story about a sentient hemlock was particularly relevant to my interests because I just finished a pair of novels by Sue Burke:

Semiosis and Interference

https://semiosispax.com/

Significant chunks of these books are told from the POV of an alien plant, interacting with the idealistic colonists fleeing Earth to create Pax, a utopian alternative to what they left behind.

136 words comparing the books )

jesse_the_k: Scrabble triple-value badge reading "triple nerd score" (word nerd)
  • she explains what the ~swung dash~ aka ~mid-line tilde~ signifies
  • her prose is accessible and insightful -- I read it through twice!
  • she confronts academic snobbery and doesn’t blink
  • she installed several entirely new thoughts, among them:
    • that humans have been sharing oral culture for 99% of our time on the planet. The net is now someplace where humans can communicate orally, except we do it with unedited text (and images).
    • locating the source of the disconnect between very early adopters (who began pre-web, myself among them) and Kids These Days. Before the web, getting online required some technical sophistication. We’d already passed through a number of gates. For most people online today, the net has always existed. They no more think of the underlying technology than all folks now alive care how landlines work.

[twitter.com profile] GretchenAMcC is highly networked, so there’s lots to sample online
https://gretchenmcculloch.com

Gretchen's daily blog "All Things Linguistic"
https://allthingslinguistic.com

The monthly Lingthusiasm podcast, coproduced with Laura Gawne — full transcripts available
https://lingthusiasm.com/

This essay makes it into the book almost intact: LOL funny meditation on "Summoning Benedict Cumberbatch"
http://the-toast.net/2013/12/02/a-linguist-explains-the-rules-of-summoning-benedict-cumberbatch/

All of Gretchen's essays for now-dormant and still nutritious site, The Toast
http://the-toast.net/tag/gretchen-mcculloch/

Here's the rousing finish of the book: 3700-word sample )

jesse_the_k: Short white woman in blue flat cap lurks behind ornamental grass (JK 64 loves grass)

Unbound: Transgender Men and the Remaking of Identity by Arlene Stein (Author)

four of four stars

print, ebook

Appreciated this book, aimed at cis folks like me. review and long quote )

jesse_the_k: ASL handshapes W T F (WTF)

Reading Sounds: Closed-Captioned Media and Popular Culture—Sean Zdenek5 of 5 )

BB-8 chirps and it's good )

Integrating Captions into the Artistic Process )


  1. this word is used, like “queering,” to suggest ways that the experiences we bring to a topic can generate a new way of doing things ↩︎

jesse_the_k: Big cheryl haworth deadlifts under Olympic Rings (cheryl wins olympic gold)
Meetings With Remarkable Manuscripts: 12 journeys into the Medieval—Christopher de Hamel5 of 5 )
jesse_the_k: text: Be kinder than need be: everyone is fighting some kind of battle (Default)
[personal profile] wild_irises mentioned this book as a relevant to my interests.

Operators and Things—Barbara O’Brien4 of 5 )

jesse_the_k: text: Be kinder than need be: everyone is fighting some kind of battle (Default)
The Gorilla and The Bird by Zack McDermott, 2017
print and ebook

The author writes with honest details, humor, and horror about his experience with psychosis during his initial years with bipolar disorder.

Forced hospitalization, drugging restraints; child abuse, systemic racism and classism, copious substance abuse )

I couldn’t put this book down. McDermott’s writing is both funny and insightful. He enabled me to watch a mind slowly spinning out of control, and then struggling back to lucidity again. His both-sides perspective is invaluable.

jesse_the_k: White woman riding black Quantum 4400 powerchair off the right edge, chased by the word "powertool" (JK 56 powertool)
I’ve just finished four days trying out a shiny new Whill Ci “ultra-portable personal mobility device.” The manufacturer is not seeking FDA approval, so in the U.S., it’s not a “power wheelchair.” It is a customizable seat atop four wheels controlled by a joystick. A lithium-ion battery powers the two rear-wheel drive motors.

http://whill.us/model-ci/

Full photo of Whill Ci )

This is the Japanese company Whill’s third version of “let’s reinvent the power wheelchair.” See their site for more about the initial Model A personal mobility device and it’s-actually-FDA-approved Model M power wheelchair. All these devices have won design awards, and it’s clear they’ve consulted with actual wheelchair users in some of the excellent details.

Quick Specs
  • 115 lbs with Li-Ion battery
  • Disassembles into three parts
  • 10.5 in rear wheel drive with two motors
  • Joystick control on one side. On/off, speed, horn, battery charge display on other.
  • 9.8 in front omni wheels replace casters
  • large fold-up footplate
  • available now $4000; arrange test drive at site
  • 2.5 in ground clearance, 30 in turning radius with footplate
Nifty, Dislike, and Wow )
Final Thoughts
  • I am the target market: part-time wheelchair user, likes Apple products & appreciates nifty design, needs a joystick not a scooter with tiller
  • If my insurance won’t pay for a rehab chair, I’d buy this rather than a bottom-of-the-line basic chair
  • Whill’s doing good marketing: you can rent it via Scootaround, buy it online on many DME sites (Spinlife, 1800Wheelchair), or test drive from National Seating and Mobility, which is all about customizing high-end seating and meeting individual needs
  • My trial came from NSM, and they said they could get an 18" back on it, which I’d need

  1. Sometimes known as a poly or Mecanum wheel ↩︎

  2. http://douglasjcross.com/d_cross_WC_StdsMarkingTether_R10_APTA%20B&P_May%202016.pdf ↩︎

jesse_the_k: Extreme closeup of dark red blood cells (Blood makes noise)

We Wear the Mask: 15 True Stories of Passing in America—Brando Skyhorse and Lisa Page, eds.4 of 5 )

jesse_the_k: text: Be kinder than need be: everyone is fighting some kind of battle (Default)

SHOWA: a History of Japan, 1926–1939 by Shigeru Mizuki - 4 of 5 stars
history on two levels )

Visual-only sample pages at the publishers’ web site:
https://www.drawnandquarterly.com/search/showa

Brief histories of everyday objects—Andy Warner - 4 of 5 stars
the extraordinary origins of the mundane )

A sample item: undescribed comic about brown paper bags
https://medium.com/the-nib/meet-the-mother-of-the-modern-paper-bag–941e6517a870

Queer by Meg John Barker & Julia Scheele — 3 of 5 stars
Behind the popular formations of theory )

Meg-John’s uncaptioned video trailer for the book:
http://www.rewriting-the-rules.com/sex/queer-the-video/

jesse_the_k: That text in red Futura Bold Condensed (be aware of invisibility)
You don't have to say you love me —Sherman Alexie, Jr.did not finish )


An excess male—Maggie Shen King3 of 5 )

Reviewing Five Comics

Thursday, May 4th, 2017 02:36 pm
jesse_the_k: text: Be kinder than need be: everyone is fighting some kind of battle (alanna is amazed)

Out on the Wire by Jessica Abel - 4 of 5 stars

review )

IRMINA by Barbara Yelin 5 of 5 stars

more inside )

The Best We Could Do by Thi Bui - 4 of 5 stars

read why it's great )

Diabetes and Me by Challoner & Bertozzi - 2 of 5 stars

a disappointment )

A Chinese Life by Li Kunwu & Phillipe Otié - 5 of 5 stars

great book and personally meaningful )

VISION (volumes 1 & 2) by Tom King / Gabriel Hernandez Walta / Jordie Bellaire - 4 of 5 stars

Pure pleasure )

Reading Tuesday

Tuesday, April 25th, 2017 04:15 pm
jesse_the_k: Two bookcases stuffed full leaning into each other (x1)

Past imperfect : history according to the movies edited by Mark Carnes

4 of 5 stars )

Truevine by Beth Macy

4 of 5 stars )

Chenoo by Joseph Bruchac

3 of 5 Stars )

A Life Discarded by Alexander Masters

3 of 5 stars )


  1. discovered in my Cumberbatch-completist mode ↩︎
jesse_the_k: cap Times Roman "S" with nick in upper corner, captioned "I shot the serif." (shot the serif)

Making a Point: The Persnickety Story of English Punctuation

David Crystal5 of 5 )

I'd appreciate knowing what you mean when you deploy the swung-dash (~) character?

jesse_the_k: BBC John Watson wearing coat full of plastique (JW hates semtex)
On my sidebar you'll find more than 140 fanfic recs for BBC's Sherlock fanfic. I loved ACD Sherlock Holmes growing up, and I clearly like Sherlock fic now. It's the perfect show in that regard: it's often called the first fandom to be ficced, and the showrunners excel at episodes that need fixing.

The most recent example is the New Year Special: The Abominable Bride. You can read the entire show thanks to [livejournal.com profile] arianedevere's loving transcripts:
http://arianedevere.livejournal.com/81144.html

Satisfying Hate-reading )
Another Fandom Rescue by Plaid Adder )

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