Right after I finished reading Pirate
Cinema, the United States Congress passed the six strikes law to take people off the internet. I guess they hadn't read the book.
I was looking for some reviews of the book because I wanted more context about the story. Good criticism is supposed to either explain
more fully or supply context.
I read one derogatory post about Cory
Doctorow’s books for children. Apparently that disappointed the
reviewer, who wasn’t as concerned about what Cory had written as
about what Cory should have written. That’s like taking a downwind
position in a urinary olympiad against Wikipedia.
That review reminded me of a derogatory
review about John
Varley’s Red Thunder a couple of years ago, where that
critic dismissively thought kids’ books were lightweight.
I remember Red Thunder as a
potboiler adventure story, full of true love and high adventure. I
also remember that the two kids had graduated high school in Florida
and found out they hadn’t been taught anything that would allow
them to make a living.
I remember they were cleaning hotel
rooms around Cape Canaveral to satisfy their food addiction, and had
built two laptops that would enable them to attend Internet
University.
That sounded like truth to me, since I
graduated high school and then college without learning much that was
valuable.
One of my classmates wrote, “When I
look back on all the crap I learned in high school, it’s a wonder I
can think
at all.”
I needed the reinforcement I read in
that book that two people learning together often work better than
one learning at IU. Jack
and I are constantly feeding what we learn to each other, and piles
of facts often lead to more
highly developed ideas. Apparently that had slipped past the
reviewer.
A third thing I liked about Red
Thunder was how a couple of fellow members of the IU student body
were blending life, high adventure, and education. Gave us a model
we have slavishly imitated.
If you’re going to get a grip on the
future, kids’ books like Cory Doctorow’s Pirate Cinema,
Little Brother, and John Varley’s Red Thunder, and
Orson
Scott Card’s Magic Street are instructive. Kids
are the ones inventing the future.
I remember when I started reading
Makers.
Some of the my fellow IU students, Seth Godin and John Battelle
recommended it. I started reading thinking, “Oh, this is a near
future business fantasy.”
I got 50 pages in and realized this
stuff was happening
right then! What was different was the author’s perspective
reporting the facts. Fantastical? Farfetched? No more than this
morning’s 6 am news.
Rainmakers
– Competitive advantage five minutes at a
time.
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