Dust by Hugh Howey
Reviewed by Simon Harris★★★
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I enjoyed this perhaps more than Wool as I had no preconceived ideas from the TV series.
★★★
I finished reading Wool, the first in the Silo trilogy.
I really enjoyed it. I also wish I had read it before I’d watched the Apple TV series. Not only was the book better (unsurprisingly), I found the differences distracting. Thankfully, the first (and as of writing, only) season of the TV series only covers the first half of the book, so I enjoyed the second half even more.
Now, I’m onto book 2, Shift.
★★★★★
Nothing has changed, seriously. Drucker had it figured out.
★★★★★
Jill Lepore covers hundreds of years of history from ancient times, Columbus, British settlement, independence, the civil war, right through to the modern day, all backed by meticulous research.
I found the almost poetic story telling style challenging at first but once I got into it, I couldn’t put it down stop listening. The fact that it’s read by the Author makes it all the more enjoyable.
Lepore doesn’t shy away from addressing head on the racism, sexism, bigotry, and injustice that have been an integral part of the history of the United States of America since before its founding.
I can’t stop thinking about this one line:
Slavery seemed like a monster, that each time it was decapitated, grew another head.
As with Capitalism and Slavery, if you feel like having your eyes opened, go read the book.
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Full of privileged white male energy while trying desperately not to.
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Williams battled the establishment to get his book published, eventually financing it himself. To my layperson’s eyes, he puts forward an eye-opening and compelling narrative that capitalism as we know it has its roots in white supremacy, racism, and slavery.
I got the impression that Williams was writing for a majority white, largely racist, academic audience and, while he touches on other countries, he focuses primarily on Britain as the model for slavery across the globe.
One thing that continues to ring in my ears since I read (actually listened to) the book is something Williams calls “The Triangular Trade”: Britain took people from Africa and enslaved them in the West Indies to cultivate crops. Those crops were sent to Britain and powered the manufacturing industries of Manchester, Bristol, Liverpool, Glasgow, etc. Manufactured goods were then shipped across the globe, including to the colonies in Africa.
In the end, slavery was abolished in Britain not due to idealism or humanitarianism, but through the resistance of Africans themselves and because, in the battle between the old Mercantile and new Industrialist classes, it was no longer profitable.
★★★★★
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