Sunday, May 04, 2025

"Cadáver Exqusito" de Agustina Bazterrica en GoodReads (Español)

Cadáver exquisitoCadáver exquisito by Agustina Bazterrica
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Este libro es brutal, espeluznante.

Se trata de un futuro distópico, donde una enfermedad deja a todos los animales incomibles y entonces se comen a la gente. Los imigrantes, los pobres, los que no podían defenderse.

El canibalismo es ley y ahora hay dos grupos de personas, los que comen y los son comidos.

Marco Tejo es el encargado de un frigorifico, su esposa lo ha dejado y de repente un día recibe de regalo una mujer criada para ser consumida. Marco tiene que decidir como actuar, hacer lo conveniente o lo que le pide su conciencia.

Para mi lo horrible no es solamente el canibalismo, si no como el lenguaje es utilizado para oprimir y para evitar que la gente piense en los que están haciendo. La autora quiere que el lector comprenda como el consumerismo hace que nos devoremos entro nosotros. La alegoría es sutil y brutal a mismo tiempo.

Uno de los libros mas aterrorizantes que he leído.

View all my reviews

My review of "Don't Believe Everything You Think" by Joseph Nguyen on GoodReads

Don't Believe Everything You ThinkDon't Believe Everything You Think by Joseph Nguyen
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I got a lot out of this book. I have been my own journey working on living life as a stoic. Putting my energy into the things I have power to control and letting go of the rest.
However, I got an insight reading this book. For me (YMMV) I tend to overthink everything and it's easy for me to get anxious. It's hard for me to let things go. The simple lesson here helped me out, Ill put it here for free. Thinking is Suffering. If you don't think, you don't suffer. Of course, this idea can be taken too far, and god knows that we need more thinking in our public discourse. But for me, a person who ruminates and thinks and overthinks and always in my head, this gave me a path to clarity. If I let go, I can find peace. The second insight, which could be considered a trite cliche, I know. Is that chasing fame, money, pleasure is a longing for something else, something that we already have: joy, love, fulfillment, inner-peace, we don't need external factors to get that, who we are and what we have is enough.
This helped people with my mindset and my personality, I'm always worried and anxious about something, about doing a good job at work, about being a good dad, good husband a good person. Worried that I'm not good enough if I don't make enough money, that I need people to like me and approve of me in order to feel good about myself. All that is in vain, you already have all the ingredients to have a life full of peace and free of suffering.
I am still a realist, an inquisitive skeptic, but this book helped me control my anxiety, because I understand that over-thinking is the root cause. After reading this book I have decided to choose inner peace, I have decided not to suffer for things that are not happening. Understanding that suffering is all in my head.
I liked this book and I recommend it to people who like me, worry a lot.

View all my reviews

My Review of "Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men" by Caroline Criado Pérez

Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for MenInvisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men by Caroline Criado Pérez
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book showed me how we are failing half the world population.
Women get ignored when they should be seen and they are harassed when they should be left alone.

A lot of the stuff in this book is not new to me, but I still managed to be surprised about the ways in which we leave out women when we are testing drugs, researching the human body, writing laws, designing products, using algorithms. In short, men have by design created systems that subjugate, exploit and objectify women.

The thing is, the patriarchy hurts everyone, not just women. Current events have me convinced that if women ruled the world, (presidents, Corporation CEO's) we wouldn't have the problems we have. Men are too emotional and brittle to run countries (look at Trump, Putin, Musk) Anyway, I digress.

This book is not a feel-good read, but it has given me more awareness. Unlike other social issues, I have hope that progress is inevitable, but we have to make it happen.

View all my reviews

My Review of "What is ChatGPT doing and Why Does It Work" by Stephen Wolfram

What Is ChatGPT Doing... and Why Does It Work?What Is ChatGPT Doing... and Why Does It Work? by Stephen Wolfram
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This books aims to provide a clear, plain English layman's terms explanation of how ChatGPT works.
I am not very sure how well it achieves its goal. I heard about neural nets when I was an undergraduate studying computer engineering in the early 2000's. Back then the term "AI" was not used in engineering research unless you wanted to not get funding. In Grad School "Pattern Recognition" was the name of the class that taught neural nets as an after thought right after liner regression, and SVM's (Support Vector Machines).
Anyway, I did enjoy reading this book, I learned a few insights, and I was able to get intuitions about why it's hard to explain. I studied "Machine Learning" at the University of Washington in 2015 and I was up to date until ChatGPT. As a person who has used ChatGPT at work (made a cool prototype in a hackathon) I didn't know how they made it work so well. This book offered a good explanation.
Stephen Wolfram is a tad pompous, and sometimes I got lost in the details, but overall this is a good book for anyone with enough curiosity.

View all my reviews

My Review of "AI Snake Oil: What Artificial Intelligence Can Do, What It Can't, and How to Tell the Difference" by Arvind Narayan

AI Snake Oil: What Artificial Intelligence Can Do, What It Can’t, and How to Tell the DifferenceAI Snake Oil: What Artificial Intelligence Can Do, What It Can’t, and How to Tell the Difference by Arvind Narayanan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book showed me how to be more critical of AI hype. (Snake Oil) People seem to think that the authors are against tech or AI in general, but that's not the case. The book is aimed at debunking myths about AI, and it is very critical of those who makes misleading claims about AI when they should know better.

This book is credible because the authors have the right credentials, a PhD student and professor of Computer Science from Princeton University teamed up to study all the ways in which AI fails to do what their marketers promised it could do.

The examples are compelling enough to make the reader see that if unregulated bad algorithms can literally cost people's lives. Just like the FDA doesn't let you sell items with misleading labels, there should be regulation aimed at protecting humans from computer algorithms.


View all my reviews

My Review of "The Island of Dr. Moreau" by H.G. Wells on GoodReads

The Island of Dr. MoreauThe Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book has aged surprisingly well. It's no wonder H.G. Wells is considered one of the "fathers" of science fiction (along with Jules Vernes, Mary Shelley should be given more credit for starting this genre, but I digress)

The setting: 1887, an island somewhere in Pacific Ocean. The main character, is a London-educated scientist named Edward Prendick. The boat he is in gets in a shipwrecked, he gets rescued and finds himself stuck in an island with Dr. Moreu, a mad scientist performing horrible experiments.

I just learned that there was a public outrage when this book came out in 1896. I am not surprised at all. You can see how the state of science in that era influenced the story. It brings up evolution, the role of humans in nature and culture. I'm ngl, there is some racist undertones, but it's subtle enough to ignore. This classic has inspired a bunch of movies and books, but I honestly had not really heard about this book until I learned about The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia so I wanted to get the background before reading that.

Good book, if you are a fan of sci-fi.

View all my reviews