Friday, August 21, 2020
Summer Reading
Summer Reading In Mattâs latest post he says that MyMIT will be up August 19. This is good news! It means you still have time to get some summer reading in. This is one of the best parts of summer in my mind. Whether you actually get to the beach or not, donât miss out on the last few weeks of downtime before school and college application season begins. I donât know about you, but I love to be reading a few books at the same time, especially in summer. Here are my picks: In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan This is a quick read and I read it one day after complaining on facebook to a friend that I wasnât able to lose any weight. I think he was sick of my whining, because he shot back a link to this book title and said, âHey, this helped me. I didnât fully get the weight loss thing until I learned how to eat.â Hmm, it is a good book. But Iâm still eating cupcakes that I find left out for the taking on a table in lobby 10. Emperor of all Maladies by Siddhartha Mukherjee Ok, so I JUST bought this book after a very inspiring talk by Professor Neri Oxman in MITâs media lab. A bunch of us Admission Counselors had the pleasure of listening to her talk about her lab and her research. She said something like, âThis book should be required reading of all MIT students.â Prospective students take note! I went right out and bought it, and then I read the prologue when I was stopped in traffic on the Mass Pike. (I donât recommend this) But I do recommend the book so far. It is totally engrossing from page one. Just Kids by Patti Smith My partner and I have already read half of this out loud to each other while lounging under an umbrella on the beach. Janyce is a huge Patti Smith fan and Iâm a big Robert Mapplethorpe fan. Itâs a great read. Totally transports you to NYC in the late 60s. Awesome. A Widowers Tale by Julia Glass Iâm savoring this like I do with all of her novels. Yes, its really ok to read a novel once in awhile! So what books are in your beach bag? Iâd love to know. Happy Summer! Summer Reading (Preface: This post is essentially a tribute/continuation of Selamâs posts from past summers as she wrote, âsometimes MIT students like to do things other than science, technology, or engineeringâ, and I would like this yearâs cohort of students applying to MIT to know that as well! If you would much rather write a paper than do a problem set, youâre not alone here :) ) Before I had friends, I had books. For those of you who werenât shy and introverted as kids, this may sound really sad, but those of you who were will know what Iâm talking about. The universes within books were my worlds, and the characters within those universes were my partners in crime, my enemies, my friends. I had a wild imagination as a kid and spent hours daily daydreaming up new stories for the characters in my favorite books, which translated into a very extensive fanfiction writing phase in middle and high school. I eventually moved on to RPG video games as my preferred form of media, but I still enjoy the thrill of being absorbed into a world on paper. College has effectively eaten up the majority of my free time (as it does), and during the year, the time that I didnât spend slaving over psets was dedicated to getting up to all sorts of shenanigans with my friends. Fortunately, summer and my 9-5 work schedule have yielded a reasonable amount of free time for me to explore some of my interests and read books! Books I read this year: I read these for a class I took spring semester, CMS.840 (Literature and Film). I actually had signed up for another class, CMS.339 (Virtual Reality and Immersive Media Production), but it was lotteried and itâs difficult to get into some CMS classes without being a declared concentrator/minor/major, so I wound up not getting in. I spent a few days scrambling around for another HASS class to take and landed on CMS.840, which I initially didnât really have high expectations for but I ended up enjoying it quite a bit. No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy Iâve seen the movie before, and it turns out that the book was written as a screenplay for the movie, so they wound up being quite similar. The class itself was all about juxtaposing literature and their corresponding film adaptations, and I have to say, I enjoyed the film marginally better. The book is a bit dry, and IMO, the action is better represented through film. Double Indemnity by James M. Cain This is a novella, and was originally published in an 8-part serial. I might have remembered it better if I had read it as a serial, because I finished this story in about an hour, and honestly donât remember anything about it :P A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams I really enjoyed the written version of this play, even more so than the film adaptation (even young Marlon Brando couldnât convince me). Blancheâs struggle to separate her fantasies from her reality was tragic to read, and personally fascinating to me; Iâve spent a lot of time thinking about my own relationship with fantasy, and how that affects my actions in reality. Seriously, I wrote like three college essays on this. Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi This is one of those books that I sat down to read, couldnât stop reading until I finished, and then read it again for good measure because it was just that amazing. Persepolis is an autobiographical graphic novel that tells a story of the authors childhood spent in Islamic Revolution Iran. Even though I wouldnt normally think that a graphic novel could tell such a serious story, I thought that this was the perfect medium for telling this story. Books I re-read this year: The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand I actually really like this book; itâs good fiction, even if I definitely wouldnât want to be friends with Ayn Rand. I donât subscribe to Objectivism (the philosophy that Rand steeps all of her books in), but there are some character attributes that I really appreciate. Although Howard Roark (the protagonist) is realistically kind of an asshole, I try to live by his philosophy of adhering strictly to his personal standards of integrity. Donât do something just because it might look good to other people do it for yourself! Books I intended to read this year: On the Way to a Smile and The Kids are Alright Those of you who know me personally probably know of my Final Fantasy VII obsession. These two books are semi-canon in-universe novellas that expand on some of the side characters, and I would have read both books in three seconds flat if they werenât in Japanese, which makes things considerably more difficult! I read very quickly in English and very slowly in Japanese, and I wound up finishing about half of The Kids are Alright before I ran out of time to read at all, let alone in Japanese. Iâm determined to work up the motivation to get back into it, though! Killing Commendatore by Haruki Murakami I went through a Haruki Murakami phase over my gap semester in senior year, and that gap semester happened to be in Japan, so I bought a copy of his new book when it came out. Unfortunately, Murakamiâs books donât make much more sense in Japanese than they do in English. Also, I think an English version has been released by now, so maybe I should just read that instead Books Ive read this summer so far! His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman Thats why we needed our full life, Pan. We would have gone with Will and Kirjava, wouldnt we? Yes. Of course! And they would have come with us. But But then we wouldnt have been able to build it. No one could if they put themselves first. We have to be all those difficult things like cheerful and kind and curious and patient, and weve got to study and think and work hard, all of us, in all our different worlds, and then well build Her hands were resting on his glossy fur. Somewhere in the garden a nightingale was singing, and a little breeze touched her hair and stirred the leaves overhead. All the different bells of the city chimed, once each, this one high, that one low, some close by, others farther off, one cracked and peevish, another grave and sonorous, but agreeing in all their different voices on what the time was, even if some of them got to it a little more slowly than others. In that other Oxford where she and Will had kissed good-bye, the bells would be chiming, too, and a nightingale would be singing, and a little breeze would be stirring the leaves in the Botanic Garden. And then what? said her daemon sleepily. Build what? The Republic of Heaven, said Lyra. (cue tears) For whatever reason, I never got around to reading this series as a kid. Iâm actually really glad about that, because if I had, I might never have revisited it as an adult. Thereâs a lot of philosophy and commentary regarding organized religion that I probably wouldnât have picked up on as a child. Those of you who read the blogs semi-regularly will probably know that Petey loves His Dark Materials and has a sweet-ass tattoo of Lyra, and I think that quoting him here is appropriate: âThese books are about many things â" Christianity, and magic, and science, and love, and loss â" but ultimately they are about choice: the choices we make, and the choices we are kept from making. They are about the many worlds which at once overlap with and stand apart from each other.â (from this post) After reading His Dark Materials which I did in very quick succession, because once I started I couldnât stop I spent a long time lying awake at night thinking about many of the core ideas and themes from the books; in particular, the conscious mind. Humans havenât managed to figure out much about consciousness and what it is. There are two theories regarding consciousness that I know of materialism and and mind-body dualism. The former postulates that consciousness emanates from the firing of neurons in our brains, and the latter is an idea of the religious variety that our physical bodies and our âsoulsâ are separate. As far as I know, humanity knows close to nothing about either of these theories. They might both be right, or they both could be totally wrong. Nobody knows. His Dark Materials presents its own theory: that consciousness is composed of elementary particles both the characters in His Dark Materials and the residents of our universe know these particles as dark matter. The particles, called Dust in the books, bestow consciousness upon certain species, and are especially attracted to adults. The organization representing the Christian church in His Dark Materials believes that since Dust is less attracted to children than it is to adults, it must be a manifestation of Eveâs Original Sin. I think that Pullman is implying here that the Church is an enemy to human progress and tries to hinder the gain of worldly knowledge; I think this is a bit harsh, but only a bit. Organized religion as a whole has definitely netted negative over the last few millennia. That wasnât really the point of that line of thought, but Iâm not sure I wrote it with a point in mind. Anyways, you should read this series if you havenât already. The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot DÃaz âIts never the changes we want that change everything.â I read this book because its Junot DÃazs most famous work. Some of you might know that DÃaz, a Pulitzer Prize winning author and creative writing professor here at MIT, got accused of sexual misconduct a few months ago. After a lot of controversy, MIT said he hadnt violated any of their policies and allowed him to continue teaching. I was really disappointed about this whole scandal; last semester, when I was beginning to consider double majoring in CMS, I was really excited to take one of his classes, and now I probably wont end up doing so out of moral obligation. I enjoyed the book; DÃazs writing style is really unique. But sadly, that doesnt change the fact that Im not overly inclined to take any of his classes anymore. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley âBut I dont want comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want freedom, I want goodness. I want sin.â This book is WILD. Aldous Huxley was truly ahead of his time, and I think he acknowledged this himself; in Brave New World Revisited, he discusses how he believes that elements of the future he envisioned in Brave New World are manifesting themselves faster than he could have imagined. While I donât think our society will completely devolve into one with various classes of genetically engineered humans, I do think that this will happen to some extent. When genetic editing for fetuses becomes available and it will, almost certainly within my lifetime, only the rich will be able to afford it, at least at first. Getting into the upper echelons of socioeconomic success would become even more impossible than it already is, because the top 1% would be dominated by perfectly genetically engineered humans with ridiculously high IQs. Iâm not sure that it would be good if genetic engineering technology is democratized either, because then everybody would want their child to have an astron omical IQ and be ridiculously attractive, and society would lose a lot of its variety. Personally, I would draw the line for genetic engineering for fetuses at getting rid of crippling genetic diseases or defects. Weâll see where society will decide to draw the line, though. (Bonus thought: would you have to report genetic editing on your college applications? Affirmative action could have a field day with that.) The Godfather by Mario Puzo âYet, he thought, if I can die saying, Life is so beautiful, then nothing else is important. If i can believe in myself that much, nothing else matters.â I actually didnât know that The Godfather wasnât just a movie until recently, but itâs one of my favorite movies, and I couldnât not read the book. Reading the book made me realize how well the movie is done itâs very faithful to the book, which is my personal standard of how good an adaptation is. Iâm also really glad that the movie has sequels, because the book doesnât end on the brightest note. Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell âMy life amounts to no more than one drop in a limitless ocean. Yet what is any ocean, but a multitude of drops?â Cloud Atlas is one of those movie names that sort of float in and out of your list of movies to watch, but you never quite get around to it. Last weekend, I was alone at my house catsitting while my parents were away, and I stole this book from my sisterâs room because it seemed like a long read, but not too long. I got way more than I bargained for from this book. What an adventure. For those of you who havenât read it, Cloud Atlas is made up of six different stories told over five centuries, by characters who will never meet each other but are connected through time in various ways. It got me thinking about souls again. I might not believe in heaven or hell or any sort of afterlife, but Iâd like to think that like everything else in the universe, souls also obey the law of conservation and pass from one generation to the next as they do in Cloud Atlas. And thats it so far for me Im currently reading a post-apocalyptic novel called Station Eleven and I have an entire list of books that Im excited to read coming up. For the students reading this post: take some time out of your summer to read books! Post Tagged #books #CMS.840 #summer
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