2025 Book List
Subtitled A Hot Startup, A Billion Dollar Fraud, A Fight for the Truth. The backstory to Wildcard - crazy stuff. There were so many red flags from this company but these were blurred by regulators, analysts and tech bros just really wanting the growth to be true and for Germany to have a true Tech company. I’ve read several of this genre, and while those at the center of the fraud are held accountable to some extent, it’s disappointing that the enablers usually get to walk away with little consequence. There was real damage done, particularly to the people trying to shine a light on the fraud and while the company directed the onslaught, regulators, lawyers, analysts and other white-collar professionals enabled, and profited from it.
- Author: Dan McCrum
- Nonfiction Business
Another recommended reading for those looking for a Reacher substitute. This one shows promise. The main character is interesting and competent while having a distinct backstory. This story has good twists and turns, offering some surprises while always moving forward. I’m just curious how the author will expand on this character as what made this adventure interesting should not occur again.
- Author: Brett Battles
- Fiction Crime
A novella featuring a secondary character from the Stormlight Archive. If you like that world, you’ll be pleased with this story that doesn’t have a direct impact on the main storyline, but takes place in the same world and provides some additional perspectives.
- Author: Brandon Sanderson
- Fiction Fantasy
I have a soft spot for Russian history given how much this country has, and continues to, fuck with world history. In this book, the author explores the advent of the Soviet Union as starting in 1891 as spurred by the continued repression of the tsar and his inability to make any changes that would’ve liberalized society and prevented the Bolsheviks from taking power. The Bolsheviks themselves had various plans for what society should look like post the revolution, but it became bastardized during Lenin’s last days. The book paints Lenin as a flexible ideologue, who understood power and repressed dissent to provide some flexibility to implement his version of communism. Unfortunately, his health gave out early, and Stalin stepped in to cement the party around a cult of personality, to Lenin and to Stalin himself. As opposed to other histories I’ve read, the Soviet economy was always a facade and had no hope of becoming a modern society after these initial decisions, although it could’ve certainly plodded on longer.
- Author: Orlando Figes
- Nonfiction History
Another novella from the Stormlight Archive, featuring the character Lift, who is fun character that takes little seriously. The first chapter is a recap from a chapter in the main book, which ends with some unanswered questions that are addressed in this book.
- Author: Brandon Sanderson
- Fiction Fantasy
Hat tip to Gonzalo. It was unclear what this book was about and halfway through, I was still trying to piece together the main narrative and direction. I’m hesitant to comment too much more on the book as I think the less you know about the book coming into it, the better the payoff.
- Author: Hernan Diaz
- Fiction Novels
I started watching the Apple series and became addicted. Understanding it was a 3 book series, I expected that the first book would maybe cover the first season and that I would need to read further to get past the 2 seasons I had already watched. However, the first book pretty much wraps up the TV series. I am generally one of those “the book is always better” people but while the book is solid, I like what they have done with the TV series. Overall, the TV series is very true to the book, particularly the first 1/3 of it, but where the book is very efficient in its story telling, the TV series spends much more time flushing out the characters and expanding on threads mentioned, but not explored, in the book. I’m excited to start the 2nd book in the series, which I understand jumps to a different time period.
- Author: Hugh Howey
- Fiction Apocalyptic
Great book. In the late 90s following Clinton’s welfare reform, the author takes on the challenge that the poor can work themselves out of poverty. She spends 1 month in 3 different parts of the US (Key West, Maine, Minneapolis) and in 3 different roles (Waitress, House Cleaner, Walmart clerk) and describes her experiences trying to make ends meet. In each role she works her hardest and tries to find the best job she can find as a recent housewife re-entering the workforce. Even with taking two jobs, she finds she can not make ends meet, sharing the experiences of colleagues who at the border of homelessness (living in hotels, cars, sharing trailers, etc). As a society, we should be ashamed.
- Author: Barbara Ehrenreich
- Nonfiction Economics
Another recommendation for that Reacher replacement. Good book, a real page turner and I will read more of this character. However, I laugh that this character is essentially a female Reacher. Former military cop? Check. Drifter? Check. Lives by her own code and willing to work in the grey for justice? Check. Pretty much unbeatable in a fight? Check. Loves Coffee? Check.
- Author: LT Ryan
- Fiction Crime
The author has studied tyrants from modern history and share his learnings about why it is so difficult for a tyrant to maintain power. Each chapter details the choices a tyrant needs to make to minimize threats to his reign, often engendering difficult decisions on who can be trusted and for how long. In these personalistic systems, it becomes nearly impossible to run a functioning country, with the tyrant running an internal patronage network that exploits either the people or resources of the country. A military is needed to keep order but is also an alternative power structure, so splitting the command and physically distancing the capital from the main forces are often required. Overall, few tyrants peacefully retire, so once you find yourself on the track, it’s a question of when, not if, you will meet your bloody end.
- Author: Marcel Dirsus
- Nonfiction History
Subtitled “Mapping the Collapse of Globalization. This book is classic Zeihan exposition - big swings, told in a casual manner based on deep insights into demography and history that discounts contemporary events. The big picture idea is demography is destiny, which follows from the geography is destiny synthesis of Jared Diamond. To belittle it for a bit, this view of history would almost say that Europe, then America leading the global order could have been predicted in 10,000 BC based on purely on mountains, navigable rivers and shipping access. The big swing in this book is that America has all the components to lead the next several decades and that most other countries (China, Western Europe save France, Japan, etc) are doomed by their demography.
- Author: Peter Zeihan
- Nonfiction Geopolitics
- Author: LT Ryan
- Fiction Crime
- Author: Peter Romer
- Fiction Crime