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Monday, April 9, 2018

Book Review (Canon): Emergency Contact

Emergency Contact
Written by Mary H.K. Choi in 2018

The Raccoon: Choi’s debut novel brings us inside the heads of Penny, a college freshman and aspiring writer, and Sam, a college dropout saving up to become a filmmaker.  After Penny helps Sam through a panic attack, the two agree to become each other’s “emergency contact,” and their budding phone friendship sheds light on what it actually means to grow up.

UNMASKED: Emergency Contact is not the book that my generation deserves, but the one that it needs. The novel is a slow-burn romance which burns so slowly that there is time for actual plot and character development unrelated to Penny and Sam dating, but rather helping them reach the stage of their lives when they can have a real relationship. Moreover, the themes tackled in the novel are widely meaningful, rather than just meaning the world to the characters.

That being said, Emergency Contact is still a YA novel.  One cannot deny that the romance is predictable (including the additional male love interest), no character ever truly hits rock bottom, and one moment of honest communication completely solves a harsh, long-term problem.  What makes Choi’s work stand out is that she does not rely on these tropes to carry the story, and the novel stays compelling through a mix of humor and realistic, tough decisions.

Strengths:
  • The menu of options Penny creates in her head whenever she faces a stressful situation are consistently hilarious.
  • Penny and Sam are written very differently; it is possible to open to any random page and immediately know who is narrating.

Weaknesses:
  • With references to current phenomenons such as SoulCycle and Hamilton, Emergency Contact will likely not age well.

Rating: 18/20 outfits

Ideal Setting: Read this whenever you begin to worry that you are addicted to your phone.  I mean, you probably still are, but that doesn’t mean you should completely reject it as a way to open up to people.

Monday, April 2, 2018

Book Review (Rucksack): Sapiens

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
Written by Yuval Noah Harari in 2011


The Raccoon: As the title promises, Harari traces the history of homo sapiens from our earliest days alongside Neanderthals to developments in the next few decades that may change the definition of “human” again, all in under 500 pages.  Organized conceptually rather than chronologically, the book vastly increases one’s understanding of society as a whole. As long as you are willing to work through its dense pages, Sapiens is a must-read and undoubtedly the most useful and informative book of our time.


UNMASKED: The following quote is annoyingly long despite my removal of several internal sentences.  For better or worse, Harari cannot be quoted out of context; he deals in strong passages rather than stand-out phrases.  Moreover, I want to illustrate here how the author builds ideas, which he typically does over the course of several pages.


“...the human brain has been adapted to store and process only particular types of information. In order to survive, ancient hunter-gatherers had to remember the shapes, qualities and behaviour patterns of thousands of plant and animal species. …[they] also had to bear in mind the opinions and relations of several dozen band members…


“But when particularly complex societies began to appear… a completely new type of information became vital--numbers. Foragers were never obliged to handle large amounts of mathematical data… So human brains did not adapt to storing and processing numbers. Yet in order to maintain a large kingdom, mathematical data was vital. It was never enough to legislate laws and tell stories about guardian gods. One also had to collect taxes…


“This mental limitation severely constrained the size and complexity of human collectives. …For thousands of years after the Agricultural Revolution, human social networks remained relatively small and simple.


“The first to overcome the problem were the ancient Sumerians… some unknown Sumerian geniuses invented a system for storing and processing information outside their brains, one that was custom-built to handle large amounts of mathematical data…


“The data-processing system invented by the Sumerians is called ‘writing.’”


I remember learning in sixth grade that the early Sumerian civilization created the first writing system.  Yet, in all of the years following, I never thought to ask how or why this milestone was completed.  This, I believe, is what elevates Sapiens from a historical text to a mind-altering encyclopedia.  Harari truly begins from a blank slate, delineating every concept from the ground up. Even love and war are treated on par with the Internet; Harari outlines their evolution as emergent properties of human biology and practical necessity rather than assuming that they existed automatically.


To read Sapiens is to witness the rise of humanity in all its glory (and horror), to answer the questions you never knew to ask, and, finally, to see objectively where society is headed based on every cultural and demographic trend.  This is Us.


Strengths:
  • Every claim is well-cited; the list of sources makes up the last eighth of the book.
  • The author never suggests that Western, Eastern, or Native American civilization, nor any particular religion or ideology, is in any way better than its counterparts. Furthermore, he dives into the praises and criticisms of each one.
  • It is impossible to quote or reference Sapiens and not sound smart.


While Harari occasionally appears biased against humans, for acts of cruelty to other humans, other animals, and the planet, I cannot find anything wrong with this book.


Rating: 20/20 self-made gods


Ideal Setting: Drop everything and read this right now.  Kickstart a new Cognitive Revolution in your mind. And a new Agricultural Revolution, just for fun.