User Profile

Bithive

bithive@tomes.tchncs.de

Joined 1 year, 9 months ago

I like Sci-fi. I am also working on my personal hypertext inside my head and follow down trails of books.

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2024 Reading Goal

Success! Bithive has read 17 of 12 books.

Ayn Rand: The Fountainhead (Hardcover, 1979, MacMillan Publishing Company) 5 stars

The Fountainhead is a 1943 novel by Ayn Rand. It was Rand's first major literary …

I wanted to dislike it, but it changed my views

5 stars

Ayn Rand's "The Fountainhead" is undeniably one of her most influential works. It is a novel that demands attention - and often, introspection - from its readers. Ayn Rand, known for her philosophy of Objectivism, has been a controversial figure, and upon first approaching this book, I expected my disagreements with her philosophy to color my reading experience. However, I was pleasantly surprised.

Despite being a significant read length-wise, "The Fountainhead" presents a compelling case for Rand's philosophy, embodied in the determined, individualistic character of the protagonist, architect Howard Roark. Rand's commitment to her philosophical standpoint, reflecting in the complex themes and characters in her novel, is undeniable.

The narrative of the novel certainly has its drawbacks. From a modern perspective, the moral framework might seem quite antiquated; the characters often resemble archetypal heroes and villains, unyielding in their respective narratives. However, this stubborn extremity, almost Shakespearean in its magnitude, …

Kim Stanley Robinson: The Ministry for the Future (Paperback, 2021, Orbit) 4 stars

Established in 2025, the purpose of the new organization was simple: To advocate for the …

A cozy book about climate change

4 stars

Title: Review - "The Ministry of the Future"

Kim Stanley Robinson's, "The Ministry of the Future", is undeniably an ambitious novel. Esteemed for his brilliantly envisioned science fiction, Robinson seeks to offer a fresh lens to view climate change - and perhaps therein lies the book's greatest strength and its most glaring weakness.

The book takes us on a riveting journey that begins in 2025 with the establishment of an organization, ironically named the Ministry for the Future. Its mandate is simple yet profound; advocate for future beings and protect all life forms, present and forthcoming. A story recounting the trials of this new ministry, fraught with complications and challenges, unfurls into an engaging narrative that holds your attention from the start.

Robinson’s story shines in the careful crafting of climate change’s apparent reality. It's not a far-off apocalypse but a brewing storm just over the horizon that we might …