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Author: Lucky

The Orphan Tsunami of 1700 by Atwater and others

Posted on June 22, 2026June 22, 2026
Topics: History, World

Rating: 7.6/10. Book about the tsunami of 1700, the largest recorded one in the Cascadia region with a magnitude of about 9.0, focusing on written sources in Japan. Around the 1980s, the potential for earthquakes and tsunamis in the Pacific Northwest region was recognized using geological observations, eg, of trees that were suddenly submerged, creating…

The Dancing Girl of Izu by Yasunari Kawabata

Posted on June 16, 2026June 16, 2026
Topics: Classics

Rating: 7.4/10. Collection of short stories by a young Kawabata when he was writing some of his earliest works. The first one is the most famous about first love and romance, and the next few get quite bleak about death and mortality that the author experienced as a child and I gave up reading about…

The Innovator’s Dilemma by Clayton M. Christensen

Posted on June 12, 2026June 12, 2026
Topics: Business / Finance

Rating: 7.8/10. Business book that studies how established companies get disrupted by startups. It tends to happen due to a few structural reasons: the disruptive technology starts off underperforming in the mainstream segments that the large company values, performing well only in a niche segment with a small market. By the time the niche market…

Github Actions in Action by Kaufmann, Bos, de Vries

Posted on June 8, 2026June 8, 2026
Topics: Software Engineering

Rating: 7.8/10. Book focused on GitHub Actions and useful for developers and DevOps; some are obvious to a practicing SDE, but many advanced features like self-hosted runners, security, etc, are new to many developers. Chapter 1: The GitHub ecosystem has a variety of tools for developers, including editing, planning, and clients on all devices, including CLI,…

Bellevue: Its First 100 Years by Lucile McDonald

Posted on May 31, 2026May 31, 2026
Topics: History

Rating: 7.5/10. Local history book focused on Bellevue, beginning with the first settlers in the area in the 1870s: Mercer and Meydenbauer were the first pioneers, then by the 1890s, a variety of families had settled and built log cabins. The first school opened in 1883, and several more opened in the next few years,…

Turing’s Cathedral by George Dyson

Posted on May 26, 2026May 26, 2026
Topics: History

Rating: 6.5/10. Book about the early history of the computer focused on the Princeton group by George Dyson, the son of physicist Freeman Dyson. The book begins around 1953 when only a few computers were in existence, in the middle of a nuclear arms race with the Soviet Union, and von Neumann gets funding to…

Crystal Fire by Michael Riordan and Lillian Hoddeson

Posted on May 22, 2026May 22, 2026
Topics: History

Rating: 8.1/10. Book focused on the history and development of the transistor. It has some overlap with The Idea Factory, but is more focused on the transistor specifically, rather than Bell Labs. The transistor is a rather quiet invention: when Shockley, Bardeen, and Brattain first announced it in 1947, it presented as a more efficient…

Trustworthy Online Controlled Experiments by Kohavi, Tang, Xu

Posted on May 14, 2026May 14, 2026
Topics: Data Science / ML

Rating: 8.0/10. Book about AB testing best practices in a practical product setting, with many specific recommendations and examples from the authors’ experience in the industry. The image at the front is a HiPPO (highest paid person’s opinion), which is a common although ineffective way of making decisions in organizations that don’t do AB testing….

How to Hide an Empire by Daniel Immerwahr

Posted on May 3, 2026May 3, 2026
Topics: History

Rating: 8.3/10. Book about America’s hidden empire, and how it came to be like this rather than older colonial empires (like the British or French) which conquered large areas of land and populations. The US is now more of a “pointillist” empire that controls specific points of interest around the world, but it’s no less…

The Idea Factory by Jon Gertner

Posted on April 19, 2026April 19, 2026
Topics: History

Rating: 7.8/10. Book that describes the origin and eventual breakup of Bell Labs, a research division of AT&T. In the early 1900s, AT&T’s phone service was seen as unreliable and only operated locally; it was expensive with a lot of technical issues. Jewett was a manager who recruited several graduate students at Millikan’s lab who…

Founding Brothers by Joseph J. Ellis

Posted on April 8, 2026April 8, 2026
Topics: History

Rating: 7.7/10. Book split into six parts about various parts of the founding of America and the key personnel involved. Now, the American Revolution is extensively analyzed in retrospect, but at the time, the participants had no idea whether their movement would succeed or what it would become. Historians now disagree on whether to analyze…

Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

Posted on March 23, 2026March 23, 2026
Topics: Self-Help / Career

Rating: 7.6/10. Book published in 1990, being the first to conceptualize the concept of flow as the basis of meaning. It was hugely influential afterwards, with many of its concepts absorbed into productivity and self-help books like those by Cal Newport and Atomic Habits, and it influenced the design of video games. To a modern…

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