Categories
Review

“Deep Work”

Cal Newport

I’m of a thoroughly mixed opinion about this book. It’s a mix of good examples and aged-like-milk references, useful thought technologies and toxic productivity. Many of the best ideas are things I already do, and have been doing for quite a while—but I suspect they trace back to this book, as filtered through some of the podcasts I was listening to around the time the book came out.

To try to pull out the most useful pieces:

  • Deep work, intense uninterrupted focus, is the productive part of the knowledge worker’s day. Shallow work—checking email, going to meetings, responding to Slack messages—will expand to fill as much space as you let it, and is more about performing productivity than actually producing value.
  • Focusing on doing more deep work than shallow can improve your career, productivity, et cetera et cetera. Take as a given that that’s a goal; the book explains why, but many of the examples are where those “aged-like-milk references” come in.
  • A few techniques for doing this:
    • Embrace boredom and practice the skill of not picking up your phone/going online whenever you feel like it. This is “calisthenics for the mind.”
    • Have a fixed productivity schedule. Make a hard line that you’re done with work at (suggested time) 5:30pm, and don’t even touch your work computer/phone after that. Now, backsolve how you spend the rest of your work hours to make that possible.
    • Consider simply… not answering emails. If you do answer an email, don’t jot out a quick response, drop a tactical nuke of focused response—basically, try to accomplish a week’s worth of back-and-forth in a single, cringe-inducingly-over-written email. It’ll save you time in the long run.
    • Try block scheduling! At the start of the day, fill out every single minute of your calendar with things you’ll be doing. It’s okay if your estimates are wrong, and if you’re doing the Deep Work Thing, just ignore the block scheduled things, go back and rebuild the schedule once the Deep Work Thing naturally ends.1

I’m not going to pretend that this is a 100% complete summary of the book, but I do think I’ve hit the key points here. Even knowing—and doing—most of this already, I still found it useful to read: it made me focus on these thought technologies, and re-evaluate my use of some of them.2

One last fun thought I had while reading: he’s got a description of a hub-and-spokes model for office design. The hub is a common shared space, room for those Steve Jobs-ian ‘serendipitous moments’ of collaboration. The spokes are individual office, ideally soundproofed, to which one can retreat for focused deep work sessions. And I thought about that, and thought about the current3 vogue of combining hybrid in-office/remote work schedules and cubicle-farms, and wondered: have companies accidentally arrived at this hub-and-spokes model, on the scale of the week? The hub is the office, a cubicle or open-plan hellscape, and the spokes are the home office? That sure is a cost-efficient way to do it. Insidious.

Anyhow, I did wind up enjoying the read, and thought it was a useful consolidation of a bunch of helpful techniques, so I’m quite comfortable recommending it. Give it a read.4

  1. Protip: any given calendar software will let you have multiple calendars, and these can often be color-coded. My work calendar has the actual Scheduled Things I Must Do in red, and I do the block scheduling in blue, so I can see at a glance if that upcoming event is a thing I actually need to interrupt my flow to do, or if I can ignore it.
  2. I’ve got some thoughts about adjusting my email and Slack usage, for one. I may write myself a little utility to just quit out of both those apps outside of designated Communication Times. We’ll see.
  3. As of this writing – who knows, maybe by the time this scheduled post goes up, the style will have changed!
  4. This is a Bookshop affiliate link – if you buy it from here, I get a little bit of commission. It won’t hurt my feelings if you buy it elsewhere; honestly, I’d rather you check it out from your local library, or go to a local book store. I use Bookshop affiliate links instead of Amazon because they distribute a significant chunk of their profits to small, local book stores.
Categories
Review

“Paved Paradise”

Henry Grabar

Be still, my urbanist heart.

I loved this book. Being me, I probably still would’ve enjoyed it even if it was textbook-dry, dully reciting the history of parking policy in the United States, breaking for the occasional multi-page table of data. But that’s not what this book was. This was a wonderfully well-written piece, going through the surprisingly entertaining history of parking policy and arriving at the current state of affairs. (In retrospect, it should’ve been obvious that parking lots were ripe for corruption — in the same way that the number of gym memberships sold has very little correlation with the occupancy of the gym, nobody knows the actual occupancy rate of a parking lot, so if it’s operating on cash… who’s to know that you pocketed half the day’s receipts?)

I’d actually listened to two different podcast episodes about this book before picking it up to read, so I was already filled in on the key points, but I don’t think the book lost anything for that. It was the details that really captivated me—little mentions of things like “UPS got a $6 million discount on their New York City parking tickets by agreeing to pay them in bulk instead of individually disputing each one,” which by the omission really emphasizes exactly how many parking citations UPS picks up in NYC in a given year.

And I actually came out of this one feeling particularly optimistic. Not only do I live in one of the places that’s making a fair amount of the right sorts of moves to undo all that historic damage, but I’m also at the right time. We just came out of the pandemic, and boy was that ever a time for people to learn that… we can be doing better things with all that space? Outdoor seating at restaurants is great! Pedestrianized streets are awesome!

So hey, go read this one, it was super interesting. Absolutely worth the read.1

  1. This is a Bookshop affiliate link – if you buy it from here, I get a little bit of commission. It won’t hurt my feelings if you buy it elsewhere; honestly, I’d rather you check it out from your local library, or go to a local book store. I use Bookshop affiliate links instead of Amazon because they distribute a significant chunk of their profits to small, local book stores.
Categories
Review

“How to Invent Everything”

Ryan North

It’s a popular science book! We’ve got some overviews of lots of technologies, presented from a very fun conceit—this is the repair manual for a time machine, which opens with “step 1: accept that the time machine cannot be repaired. step 2: rebuild civilization from scratch.” The tone throughout is educational, though written by an under-paid employee of the time machine rental company, with just enough “for which Chronotix cannot be held legally liable”s thrown in to really hit that “this is a corporate material” vibe.

And here’s the thing: it works super well. It’s answering an exact thought I have had many times: if I had a time machine, exactly how well would I do at surviving and then improving the past? The answer was, of course, “not great.” After reading the book, I’d say it has improved somewhat… but really, I’d want to keep the book with me. Preferably a few copies. Laminated. Maybe a set of the printing plates, too, since they’re tougher than paper. Belt and braces, over here.

So, all in all, I absolutely loved this book. It set out to do a specific thing, and did it incredibly well. Check it out.1

  1. This is a Bookshop affiliate link – if you buy it from here, I get a little bit of commission. It won’t hurt my feelings if you buy it elsewhere; honestly, I’d rather you check it out from your local library, or go to a local book store. I use Bookshop affiliate links instead of Amazon because they distribute a significant chunk of their profits to small, local book stores.
Categories
Review

“Hex Americana”

Bree D. Wolf

This is a fun setting – vaguely modern American, but with the addition of a massive variety of magic and magical creatures from folklore. Honestly, I think we should call that kind of thing ‘hex Americana’ in general, it really fits the vibe. The protagonists are a yokai and a ghost, and there’s also appearances by what look to be a wolf man, a Medusa, a cyclops, a mummy, and Baba Yaga. It’s a fun mix!

The actual story I mostly enjoyed – it’s a bit more “high schooler making bad choices” than I tend to prefer, to the point that my reading had a month-long break, but I did enjoy piecing together all the backstory. Definitely worth the read, and hey, I get to support a local author, too! Check it out.1

  1. This is a Bookshop affiliate link – if you buy it from here, I get a little bit of commission. It won’t hurt my feelings if you buy it elsewhere; honestly, I’d rather you check it out from your local library, or go to a local book store. I use Bookshop affiliate links instead of Amazon because they distribute a significant chunk of their profits to small, local book stores.
Categories
Playlist

Playlist of the Month: May 2025

At one point I did some data visualization of my playlists; it’d be interesting to do that again at the end of this year, because I’m sure there’ll be some Trends visible there. As per the new norm, you can listen to the whole playlist here.

Oklahoma Smokeshow – Zach Bryan on Summertime Blues – EP

Towers – Zach Bryan on The Great American Bar Scene

Hotel Bible – Max McNown on Night Diving

i Am A Mountain – Coldplay on Moon Music (Full Moon Edition)

Medusa – Cameron Whitcomb on Medusa – Single

Drunk Again – Aidan Canfield on Rivertown – EP

Blue Jean Baby – Zach Bryan on Blue Jean Baby – Single

Heartbreaker – Hayden Blount on Heartbreaker – Single

Sagittarius – TROY on Sagittarius – Single

Rattlesnake – Jack Van Cleaf & Zach Bryan on JVC

Domini Lost – IcoS on Domini Lost – Single

Alien Cowboy – Gordi on Like Plasticine

to the wilder (from “DEATH STRANDING 2 : ON THE BEACH” Soundtrack) – Woodkid on to the wilder (from “DEATH STRANDING 2 : ON THE BEACH” Soundtrack) – Single

Options – Cameron Whitcomb on Clean Country 2025

Everything Is Peaceful Love – Bon Iver on SABLE, fABLE

Well, Me 2 – Pardyalone on FUHLK MUSIC VOL. 1 – Single

GFU – Landon Smith on GFU – Single

93 – flora cash on i’m not okay – Single

Azalea Place – Max McNown on Night Diving

DELUSIONAL. – Kesha on .

There’s A Rhythmn – Bon Iver on SABLE, fABLE

Canadian – Billy Raffoul on Canadian – Single

YIPPEE-KI-YAY. – Kesha on .

Since I Fell – Aidan Canfield on Since I Fell – Single

St. Helens Alpenglow – Max McNown on St. Helens Alpenglow – Single

If Only I Could Wait (feat. Danielle Haim) – Bon Iver on SABLE, fABLE

Alright Now – Hayden Calnin on Alright Now – Single

No Idol (ruff cut) – N4MESM on No Idol (ruff cut)1

Hexie Mountains – Orville Peck on Bronco

Virgo – TROY on Virgo – Single

From – Bon Iver on SABLE, fABLE

Breeze – Lonely in the Rain on Breeze – Single

Waterfall – Elderbrook & Ahmed Spins on Waterfall – Single

Flicker – Yoste on Flicker – Single

High Dive – Emmit Fenn on High Dive – Single

When We Was – MÒZÂMBÎQÚE & Vertefeuille on When We Was

Maze – Donbor on Solace – EP

Slave Shift (demo) – N4MESM on Slave Shift (demo)2

Something Beautiful and Bright – SYML on Nobody Lives Here

I’ll Be There – Bon Iver on SABLE, fABLE

CONTAR – JC Reyes & Ozuna on CONTAR – Single

Stars Fading In Constellation – HurricaneTurtle on Stars In Constellation – Single3

Follows You – Michael Marcagi on Midwest Kid – EP

Sincerely, Your Son – Waylon Wyatt on Sincerely, Your Son – Single4

Angel – Kai Bosch on Angel – Single

Heat Ignited – Tep No on Heat Ignited – Single

Remember Me – Duce on Remember Me – Single

Take Me Away (Stripped) – Noah Brigden on Take Me Away (Stripped) – Single

Sweet Fruit – Erin LeCount on I Am Digital, I Am Divine – EP

Silence Underneath – Luke Beling on This Parlor Trick Life

Northern Thunder – Zach Bryan on The Great American Bar Scene

  1. I need to update the artist name here, he’s changed it again.
  2. M’s really validating my instinct to have local copies of things.
  3. I’m used to HurricaneTurtle being instrumental/synthwave type stuff, so hearing singing really caught me off guard at first.
  4. filed under “oof, ouch, my bones”