Shepherd -My 10 favorite book lists for July!

 

 

I spent more than 10 years and 25,000 nautical miles voyaging as the captain of my sailboat, Swell.

My desires for life did not fit the common mold and context of where I grew up in Southern California– I sailed away wanting to understand the meaning of life, live simply and closer to nature, experience and learn from other cultures, be in solitude and ask life’s bigger questions. I chased my big, unlikely ocean dream and succeeded, but not without radical challenges, learning, and growth. 

- Captain Liz Clark

Editor: I am a sucker for sailing adventures, and Captain Liz picked some great ones. 

I became hooked into science fiction as a kid the day I read an illustrated book of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. From then on, science fiction became an important part of my reading repertoire.

Having wide-ranging interests, I enjoy military techno-thrillers, Anglo-French naval warfare, Greek/Egyptian/Roman mythology, most sciences, history of religions, with an occasional novel that strays from the norm and adds a sparkle to my reading. Mary Stewart’s The Crystal Cave and The Hollow Hills are very close to my heart. Just shows that I’m different. After all, I must do something when I am not writing my own novels! Although I have an extensive library of modern science fiction works, I am fond of many oldies.

- Stefan VuÄŤak

Editor: I love hard sci-fi, and Stefan's list includes several books that I'd never encountered!

I came to Hong Kong as a journalist in 1987, expecting to stay a few years and then move on to the next story. But the former British colony quickly got its teeth into me, not least because I was there during the tumultuous years of transition to Chinese rule.

I am always in the market to understand more about this wonderful place, which I left reluctantly in 2021 in fear that the fast-bellowing crackdown on freedom of speech was coming my way. Departure has, if anything, given me a greater appetite for reading more about Hong Kong and China. I hope these books will explain why this is so.

- Stephen Vines

Editor: A fantastic group of books that explores Hong Kong and China through big swaths of history and individual stories. 

I’ve spent more than a decade working on infrastructure, from my early days at LinkedIn, where we had to do a massive DevOps transformation to save the company, to co-founding Gruntwork, where I had the opportunity to work with hundreds of companies on their software delivery practices.

From all of this, I can say the following with certainty: the DevOps best practices that a handful of the top tech companies have figured out are not filtering down to the rest of the industry. This is making the entire software industry slower, less effective, and less secure—and I see it as my mission to fix that.

- Yevgeniy Brikman

Editor: DevOps picks from a pro in the field. 

I love books that whisk me away and keep me reading long into the night. There’s something so exciting about realizing you’ve been reading for so long that you have no idea what the time is or if it’s even the same day.

I’m also incredibly passionate about horror and what it can teach us about ourselves and our society. Being diagnosed with epilepsy at the age of 12 made me feel isolated and alone, but horror granted me a form of escapism and taught me to embrace what made me feel different, something each of these books does. I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I did!

- Claire Fitzpatrick

Editor: Check out book #3 if you love stories about witches and want something unique :). 

Starting at age ten, I loved everything about Superman. I loved his origin story—who wouldn’t root for an alien baby arriving on Earth with superpowers that are eventually used to fight evil?

Superman comics were a place for me to escape for entertainment and to dream about becoming something more…maybe something super. I hope kids today will dream about superheroes and, in the end, realize they have superpowers they can use to make their lives and the world a better place. This explains why I connect with the following five books.

- Sandy Grubbn

Editor: Some great summer reading for middle graders. 

I have been fascinated by “nature” since childhood, growing up on an island south of Iceland and spending summers on a farm. As a teenager, I would explore my island in the company of friends, often with a binocular and a camera at hand.

There was much to explore: a towering volcano above the local community, ancient lava flows, stormy seas – and an amazing variety of seabirds. I witnessed an island being born nearby during a stunning volcanic eruption. My life and career have been heavily informed by this experience, as an anthropologist and a writer I have always somehow engaged with connections between people and their environments.

- Gísli Pálsson

Editor: Check out GĂ­sli's book about the search for the Great Auk in 1858, a fascinating story about the discovery of extinction. 

 

The sci-fi/fantasy/crime genre is probably one I’ve known the least about, and I only really started to dive down the rabbit hole when I began writing my series. I’m glad I did. The world-building and lore that is woven into this genre truly sets it apart from the usual stuff.

On top of needing an intricate technological imagination that has some grounding in the real world, these kinds of books also need to have characters that are believable and a narrative that is not so futuristic that it strains credulity. It’s a tough mix to get right, but when I find a story that nails these aspects it really immerses me into the world and narrative like nothing else.   

- Kaeleb LD Appleby

Editor: This is one of my favorite genres! I also recommend you check out the book Titanium Noir, it is fantastic and I am finishing it tonight!

In my various professional roles, I help people prepare for a world that does not yet exist. I often talk with students, scholars, politicians, industry leaders, community advocates, and others about how emerging, digital technology changes the world. And yet, technology doesn’t come from nowhere—we make it! And use it! And misuse it!

We also sometimes forget that something as simple as fire can be understood as technology or that our imaginations and care for others are the most important technology. The books on this list encourage us to explore building a world that serves all of us—not just some of us. 

- Heather Suzanne Woods

Editor: Check out book #2 about technologies of the Gendered Body: Reading Cyborg Women! 

I'm an Englishman who fell in love with a 300-year-old former sausage curing hut on the side of a Slovenian mountain in 2007. After years of visits spent renovating the place, I moved to Slovenia, where I lived and worked for many years, exploring the country, customs, and culture, learning some of the language, and visiting its most beautiful places.

I continue to be enamored with Slovenia, and you will regularly find me at my cabin, making repairs and splitting firewood.

- Sam Baldwin

Editor: Sam is a great author and wrote a book I loved about his years in Japan. Slovenia is an amazing country, and check out his book "Dormice & Moonshine."

Three bookshelves that might interest you! 

What am I working on?

Personalized book recommendations based on your favorite authors, books, and genres. 

It is ready, but we are working on some accuracy issues that are affecting the quality of the matches. I will share it with you once we improve it.

After that?

  • We are working to switch the "favorite reads of 2024" to the new user system. This will make it easier for us to handle the big end-of-year burst and allow us to open the awards to readers. It will also be the first feature using our new Book DNA review format. 

  • Improving our book recommendation design/UX. We just want to tweak that a bit and show off the books in the list at the top of the page. 

Highlights from the build blog:

What am I reading?

I just finished...

  • Darkwire - A crazy nonfiction book about the FBI starting an encrypted phone service for criminals. Fascinating and depressing all at the same time. I read this as part of my book club with my dad and brother.

  • Laidlaw - A solid police series out of Scotland. If you love crime fiction, be sure to check it out!

  • Book 7 of Grimm’s War - This is a fun military sci-fi series. I am looking forward to book 8!

I am reading...

  • Nomads: The Wanderers Who Shaped Our World is a fascinating account of a group that is part of our DNA. Yet we know little about them because they left little physical evidence. 

  • Titanium Noir by Nick Harkaway. This is a fantastic cyberpunk book with a great premise so far.

What have I been up to?

I am utterly exhausted from all the moving and unpacking this week. I am looking forward to a week off next week to visit my brother and his family (and meet my new nephew for the first time!!!).

P.S. A picture from my bike ride last month. 

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