The 2023 Reads List

The 2023 Reads List

Posted Date

2023 was another great year in reading. I’m pretty sure I added at least a couple new books to my reading list every week, so much so that I’m beginning to wonder if I’d ever be able to complete the TBR list before I die. Weird thought, but these are weird times. And I’m not getting any younger.

Anyway. I managed to finish 32 books this year. Well down from the 2018 high of 54 books, but I’ll admit I’ve managed to get more out of each book I’ve read as I’ve read less. That’s a trend that’ll continue in 2024 as I seek to take about a dozen books and do a much slower and deliberate read through them.

So, this isn’t really a “Top Anything” books I’ve read this year. But this is what I enjoyed most.

Kindred by Octavia Butler

The Rules of Civility by Amor Towles

Ducks by Kate Beaton

The Wild Trilogy by Linda Negata

Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel

Wayward by Chuck Wendig

There are a couple books that I figured I’d have an easier time with, top amongst them was Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy. I really struggled to get through it, having started it while on vacation in Chicago and not finishing it until a couple months later. It finally hit its stride for me about halfway through, but I nearly shelved it a couple times. Piranesi by Susannah Clarke was another that I thought I’d appreciate more. I’d be happy to suggest it as a good read, to be sure, but given all the hype around that book, I was a bit disappointed.

Also, if you’re looking for a Goodreads alternative (and really, we all should be), I’ve been using the StoryGraph for the better part of the last couple years, and I’ve quite enjoyed it as a tool to keep track of books to read and my reading progress. And really, given how shitty most comments and “reviews” are on Goodreads these days, the way StoryGraph has you leave a review is a lot more friendly and intuitive. 

What else is of note? I think I read just as much on ebook as I did in print. It was interesting to see Glynn Stewart’s Exile trilogy by made available on a non-Kindle platform. So it was good to finally get to finish that series. My partner worked with his mom at one point awhile back, and she was gifted the first book in the series, which I read a couple years ago. 

Looking forward to a couple books I’ve recently acquired. I’ve started reading Philip Norman’s George Harrison: The Reluctant Beatle, which I’ve found engaging over the first 60 pages. I’ve come to appreciate George a lot more since watching the Get Back documentary that came out last year. This felt like a great way to close the year out. I’ve also recently grabbed Waubgeshig Rice’s Moon of the Turning Leaves, his follow up to the great Moon of the Crusted Snow which I really liked. And then in April, there’s a new Amor Towles book on the way, and he has easily become one of my favourite authors over the last couple years. Big recommendation to any of his works.

Happy reading in 2024!

Fun with AI Art – Fantasy Story Concept Art?

MidJourney AI-generated art of a concept of the map for the fantasy story

Fun with AI Art - Fantasy Story Concept Art?

Friday, September 23, 2022

It’s been fun using Midjourney to play around with, but I’ve found it really interesting to use it to try to flesh out some things visually for a fantasy story I’ve had bouncing around my head for a few months. It’s a story of two girls searching for their mother after their father is killed by members of a dark force cult in a fantasy world. The story is still in its infant stages in my head, but the exploration has helped me to get a feel for the grit and world building potential with the story. It’s also interesting to visualize what things will look like as the story progresses, how the characters will look, that kind of thing. 

One reason I know concept artists shouldn’t feel threatened by AI art right now, at least from MidJourney? There’s only so much it can do with people. Results are often more cartoony than realistic. So, I guess it depends on what kind of concept art you’re dealing with, but it still feels a very long way off. Plus, you’re totally at the mercy of the AI interpreting your prompt correctly. You wind up with more “happy accidents” than purposefully specific artwork. At least, that’s been my experience.

Working in the Deep End

An image of the darkest part of the ocean with waves and foam. Photo by Ivan Bandura at Unsplash

Working in the Deep End

Thursday, September 22, 2022

There’s something I’ve seen in so many UX/UI/Product job postings over the last few weeks: X years experience in UX/UI in a Y environment working on Z products. And it’s a little unnerving for someone looking to make a lateral move in design.

And it’s forcing me to look back at my life and think “Am I nuts for even applying for these things?”

The answer is no, but not because of all of the LinkedIn posts that say you should apply anyway. With the last few jobs I’ve had, I’ve realized I’m most successful working in the deep end.

Here’s what I mean.

When I started at Rebox in 2014, the company was made up of a Creative Director, a President that also served as Account Director and Business Development person and a bookkeeper/office manager. Seemed like an ideal situation, I could get my feet wet with a small team, learn under a creative director with 20 years of experience, make some connections and gain some experience. Six weeks later, I was the only designer in the company. The creative director and the president split their partnership, and I was left to figure out how to do my job more or less on the fly.

Within six months, I’ve designed a sock and sourced a sock manufacturer in South Carolina for a Movember promotion; I’ve started design work on an enormous 30+ SKU CPG packaging project  requiring calls to printers in Winnipeg to understand everything I need to know about flexographic printing; and establishing my voice on a team that didn’t always understand the importance of design in our business. Stressful? Sure. Doable? Definitely.

Here’s another example I’ve needed to remind myself of. In 2010 I started a job as the manager of Air Canada’s Ground Support Equipment parts facility in Calgary. The revolving door of managers in the previous six months had left a mess on several fronts and meant that Air Canada was ready to fire my (new)  employer for not doing it’s job in managing inventory. It took six months, but with a bit of support I was able to turn it around, clean up all the outstanding billing and inventory issues and make Air Canada happy. And my employer. So much so that they flew me out for the launch of a new branch in Detroit before offering me the job managing the (much) larger brand in Vancouver.

This isn’t an exercise in back-patting, (I hope) I’m more humble than that. But these are good and necessary personal reminders that no matter what comes down the pipe, I got this. I’m going to be successful at this. I’ve done it before and I’m going to do it again. And again. And again. My curiosity is my superpower, but my desire and stubbornness to get good at something I’m interested in, even if I don’t know every part of the job, has always paid off.

So I need to reassure myself: why would this new adventure and growth into UX/UI/Product Design be any different?

Photo above by Ivan Bandura on Unsplash

My Curiosity is My Superpower

Photo of a very curious peering at the camera with mountain background

My Curiosity is My Superpower

Wednesday, September 21, 2022

When I sat down for the tenth time to begin working on this website, I asked myself a number of questions: What work should I show? What fonts should I use? Why does my head look so big in that picture? Does that shade of green really represent who I am as a person? 

When I got all of the “designer” questions out of the way, I was left with this: Why Me? It’s a question that came up all the time at my last job. Why do people engage you to buy stuff? What is it about you that’s special, that no one else has? It’s a great question to ask, and SUPER HARD to answer, as it turns out. But it has to be answered.

I eventually settled on the idea that I’m a “multi-disciplinary designer with a broad range of experience” (jack-of-all-trades has sat on my LinkedIn profile for forever, but it didn’t feel right anymore). I’ve always thought titles were borderline pointless because they mean different things at different companies, especially when you try to take into account “Junior” “Intermediate” and/or “Senior” in a title.  What’s intermediate at one place might be VERY senior elsewhere.

Unfortunately, it’s only taken a pretty cursory search through LinkedIn over the past week to discover that a lot of people have branded themselves as “Multi-disciplinary designers.” It hasn’t caused an existential crisis or anything, but it’s made me start thinking about what else makes me “special.” 

I sat down for coffee with a friend of mine, noted Wolf Kicker and recent Governor General’s Medal of Bravery recipient Russ Fee. We had a VERY interesting discussion about a lot of these things. Russ is in the same boat as I am career-wise. After listening to me complain that my broad range of interests and curiosities was causing a lot of personal frustration (because not every thing you needs to be monetized), Russ asked a really poignant question: Do you think that’s your superpower, having this broad range of interests? And I was kind of struck silent. 

And looking back on the last 25 years of my life, I realized that it might be. Near the top of my personal philosophies is the pursuit of Life Long Learning. I’ve cultivated what I think is a really broad range of interests: the art and craft of filmmaking, fiction writing, history, military & political science, geopolitics, design, photography, music making, songwriting, front end coding, city building and urban planning, the legal system, healthcare, climate and climate change, hiking, camping, backpacking, baking, beer brewing, cooking, gardening, architecture, astronomy, and on and on and on. 

Some of these areas go a little deeper, some are pretty surface. Part of it feels like a survival mechanism, trying to understand the way the world works in all of its forms. It usually involves a lot of reading. As I’ve gotten older, I’ve learned to shut up more and listen. Process. Ask questions. Synthesize new information and how it fits. THAT part has been an interesting personal observation.

That curiosity—and the desire to pursue that curiosity—has led to a number of changes. On a couple occasions, I’ve quit a job I was REALLY good at to go back to school, once to finish a degree, the other to become a designer. I’m constantly on the lookout for courses and workshops. Staying curious and open to new information has found me in conferences about how healthcare is delivered and how cities are designed. It’s opened my eyes to injustices that are systemic in our society and how those things can be overcome. I’ve started to learn about how I can contribute my knowledge and experience to maybe making a very small part of the world a little bit better. 

Sometimes that curiosity leads to terrifying realizations: potential collapse of our climate and our civilization; circular patterns in history that indicate dark periods on the horizon; technology moving faster than our systems are able to keep up, opening the door for a lot of people to get left behind, or worse. But those things that are terrifying spark the desire to do more to prevent them.

Working in design has been an incredible conduit to feed it. Every day you’re learning something: a client’s business and products/services; new tools and skills; new ways of thinking about a problem; new challenges to solve. I love it.

So yeah. Maybe that broad interest base, that curiosity is my superpower. Now it’s time to go out there and keep using it. (Thanks Russ!)

 

Photo by Eli Allan on Unsplash

Playing With AI Art

An AI art image of an astronaut looking over a Martian plateau at sunrise

Playing With AI Art

Saturday, September 10, 2022

Back in July I started noticing that Olaf Blomerus, someone I followed on Instagram, had started posting new images created from Midjourney. After marvelling at the images he was posting, I wanted to check it out. It’s an interesting experiment, to be sure. There are a lot of legal and ethical issues that are tied to AI art generation, all of which are complicated and nuanced. And like most things tied to technology over the last 20 or 30 years, the speed at which this is moving is far faster than our institutions are able to keep up with. On a personal note, I don’t think I can picture any instance in my past work where I would have benefitted from having this tool. 

I don’t think it’s going to replace anyone working in the creative concept art fields. I had a recent conversation with my Aunt who’s a fine artist and photographer, and she was blown away by what the technology is capable of. But I don’t think it’s a replacement for the art that she and other artists create. Some of the images created from my prompts have been useful in helping me personally visualize something on my writing projects, but I can’t ever imagine using anything I’ve created from a prompt being used professionally. I’d rather pay someone for their expertise. Happily I’m not the only one that feels that way. Is it possible that that would change in the future? Sure. Is it inevitable? Not at all.

Anyway, below are some examples that I’ve created since the start of August. It’s been fun to experiment, and also fun to see what other people create in the Discord channels.

I’m pretty sure this is something I’ll keep playing with every month, at least for a little bit. I’ll post more that are interesting and worth looking at as they come up. In the mean time, I’ve started keeping some of these and using them as writing prompts and explorations on a new Instagram account. Feel free to follow there.

I read 53 books in 2018. Here’s What I Learned.

image of stacks of books in a ilbrary
image of stacks of books in a ilbrary

I Read 53 Books in 2018. Here's What I Learned.

January 1, 2019

Awhile back I’d decided that I wasn’t reading enough. I had done the 2017 Reading Challenge feature in Goodreads, and I overshot my goal of 12. It kind of made me think “gee, why don’t we set a really big target and see what happens?”

So I did.

I picked 50 books because that seemed likely a reasonably impressive number. I figured if each book I read averaged out to 300 pages, I’d need to read 50 pages a day, which seemed a manageable number (somehow forgetting l had a toddler and another baby on the way). This translated to about a book per week for the year, with a little bit of a cushion if I needed a break. As the calendar closed on December 2017, I geared up or a year’s worth of reading.

Criteria

There weren’t any hard and fast rules about what would and wouldn’t count. Novels, short story collections, non-fiction, pulp—all would have been acceptable. Graphic novels wouldn’t be, nor would coffee table books of just images. Magazines wouldn’t count (obviously, but I have a large stack of them in our apartment which becomes problematic). The only specific rule was that I had to start reading the new book on January 1—I wouldn’t be allowed to carry over from December 2017.

image showing all the book covers I read in 2018

The covers of all 53 books I read in 2018. Click the image to go to the Goodreads list.

The Big Picture Takeaways: My observations and what I learned about my reading habits

I started with Invisible Men: Life in Baseball’s Negro Leagues by Donn Rogosin on Kindle. I’d had the book downloaded for a while, had even started reading the first chapter until I got sidetracked. I restarted it and away I went.

Reading 50 pages a day was easy at the start. I was having little trouble matching the pace I figured I would need. It didn’t feel like a chore. It felt kind of refreshing, honestly. I did the majority of my reading in the evening after my daughter went to bed and before I feel asleep.

That 50 page need became a problem somewhere around March. We had some traumatic life stuff happen that month, and making time to read was challenging. From then on, the number of pages I’d read in a day probably averaged out to about 50 pages, which is good, but that was usually buoyed by bigger reading sessions or ‘easier’ material which allowed me to race through a read.

Reading to Reach a Number

By September I was really starting to burn out on reading which is a little odd—it’s one of the more passive things you can do: move your eyes over the page. But it felt like I wasn’t absorbing a lot of what I was reading. The books were generally very good and interesting (I’d only had a couple that were difficult to get through) but after a time it felt like I was reading books to hit a number. Get to 38. Then 39. 40. While I was still committed to reading the 50 books, I can’t recall in detail a lot of what I actually read. The nuances of what I was reading were lost on me as I attempted to run down pages. And while there were a number of books that I read that I marked to re-read later, the fact that I had to do so is disappointing.

I know that I wasn’t expecting an academic level of depth in my reading, especially while maintaining an active home life, but I’ve realized that the lack of depth meant I likely missed the bigger picture of some of the books. That said, I’m happy I’ve kept track of what I would like to re-read, that may be a project for the rest of 2019.

(Mostly) Voices Of One Kind

September was also the month where I began to realize how truly monochromatic my author selection had been. White men dominated my list in 2018, no matter what the subject or genre. Even after having that realization in September, my choices didn’t really change. This wasn’t a deliberate action. I was aware of this fact throughout the rest of the year. But it does speak to a certain bias that I was unaware of previously in what I was choosing to read, one that I am looking to correct in 2019.
Of the 53 books I finished, ten were from women authors, and by my count, they were all white. In fact, just about every single book I read was by a white author (I’ll get to my specific reflection later). Being able to reflect on all of this  has been an interesting wake up call.

You’ll Always Find More Books To Read

The fun surprise this year was the reminder that the world is still incredibly full of books. My Want To Read list tripled over the year. There wasn’t a week that went by where I didn’t add at least three books to my list. Most of the time I’d get at least another book to read out of the one I was currently reading. Twitter was a surprisingly good resource, despite the fact I needed an 8 week break from it over the course of the summer. The other great part was that people were more than happy to share their suggestions. And there wasn’t a bad suggestion that I got. I can’t say that I read a truly bad book the whole year.

My Circle of People Has Solid Taste

Whether it was a suggestion from Nathan Elson to check out Let’s Pretend This Never Happened (backed up by my wife), Into the Silence by my friend Peter or A History of Canada in Ten Maps recommended by Jeremy Fokkens, the small circle of people I have around me have what I consider to be pretty solid taste in books. And those were just some of the ones I actually managed to read. (As an aside, if you have a book you’d like to share, let me know.)

Consumption Over Creation

Honestly, the biggest downside was that because I was spending an enormous amount of time reading, I found that I was sacrificing the time that I might have spent creating. The caveat there is the ‘might.’ I found that I didn’t have the mental capacity to play both sides of it with the limited time I had during the day. That’s not to say that I didn’t have ideas. I started carrying a small notebook to keep track of the ideas that I knew I’d want to follow up on later.

The other side of the consumption coin was in how I was going to actually obtain all of the books I wanted to read. Adding 50+ books to the very small amount of available space we have in our apartment was going to result in my death at the hands of my wife, not to mention the actual cost of purchasing that many books. Doing a bit of shopping at Fair’s Fair here in Calgary was one way of mitigating that, as was the used and discount section at Pages in Kensington. The best solution was the Calgary Public Library, where I picked up a total of 13 books over the year. And with the New Central Library having opened its doors this past November, I can see me making a LOT more use of it.

Learning to Love the Library Again

I was asked early in elementary school what I wanted to be when I grew up. With no hesitation, I replied “the driver of the book mobile.” Yeah, that was a thing once. It still is. I found myself learning to love the library once more. I’ve gotten a better understanding of the role the library plays in the bigger picture of a city. You can’t walk into a location expecting just to see books anymore. They’re hubs for communities and centres of gathering and learning. Walk into the New Central Library and tell me you’re not impressed with what a 21st century library is like. We took our daughter for the first time the other day and she absolutely loved it. She didn’t have a lot of interest in the books but in all of the other things they have for kids to see and do. It’s brilliant. And it was a great reminder of how important libraries are to our society.

Great Reads

This wouldn’t be much of a recap if I didn’t make some effort to note some of the highlights from everything I read. In no particular order:

Most Terrifying Book I’ve Ever Read

The Doomsday Machine by Daniel Ellsberg. Ever have your belief in something so shaken that it scared the hell out of you? How about finding out that the people in charge of the worst weapons humanity’s ever created have very little idea about what it is they could have unleashed? Or how close we probably are at any given moment to annihilating all life on this planet? Not a fun read, but an important one.

The Why-Didn’t-I-Read-This-Sooner book goes to…

Call of the Wild and White Fang by Jack London. I never read these growing up and I can’t tell you why. Very much enjoyed both and wish I’d picked them up sooner. As part of the AmazonClassics series on Kindle, they didn’t cost a dime either.

The Most Interesting Book About Canada I’ve Read in A Long Time

A History of Canada in Ten Maps by Adam Shoalts. A great read recommended by my friend Jeremy, this is a book I wish we’d had to read in high school. It provides a lot more context around how we’ve come to view this country of ours and the people that settled it.

Good Books for Business

Brutally Honest by Emily Ruth Cohen and Let My People Go Surfing by Yvon Chouinard. Brutally Honest is a great starting place if you work in, or are thinking about starting, a creative business. ESPECIALLY if you’re not business minded. There are a lot of really good points on how to structure your business to increase your chances of success.

Yvon Chouinard is the founder of Patagonia, and his philosophy on business and the Patagonia brand are communicated in a really pure way in this book. Want to understand how a brand can change the world for its people? Start here. I’ve been a Patagonia convert ever since.

Climbing and Mountaineering Books NOT by Jon Krakauer

Into the Silence by Wade Davis and The Push by Tommy Caldwell. Loved both for different reasons. Davis does a deep dive on the history of the Mallory expeditions to Everest following World War I and the mindset of the men who made those trips. You know the result, but while reading it, you can’t help but want to see them succeed following all the shit they’d been through in the War.

Caldwell’s book is a much more intimate look into the life of a world-class climber, at least from his perspective. Awash with vulnerability and honesty, I had a really hard time putting it down. While The Dawn Wall is a great film that tells the same story, the book does go into a much more detail on specific events, like how shattered he was following his experience in Kyrgyzstan.

The Longest Read that Scared Me and Gave Me Hope at the Same Time

This Changes Everything by Naomi Klein. I want to re-read this and highlight all the businesses that could be started to begin walking back man made climate change. Yes, she has a bias, but she doesn’t hide it, nor do I think she’s wrong to do so. Climate change is going to drastically change how we live our lives, and our society just doesn’t seem to care. It should be more of a wake up call to people, and she addresses why it isn’t (spoiler: follow the money). Given all that’s happening in Alberta now and in the past few years, it should have gotten more of a look from the public than I believe it did. That said, there is hope. There are people out there that have committed to changing their lives and are raising their voices to affect change.

What’s up next for 2019

Looking back over my list, there were some pretty easy trends to spot as far as my interests went. Climbing, Baseball and Star Wars were three big areas throughout my year of reading. While I love all of those, it’s important in my mind to broaden that base.

More diversity, more voices, a richer understanding

This year, I’m reading books from a wider demographic base. That means more women authors, more books from people of colour, different viewpoints than my own from people who’ve had much different experiences in their lives than I’ve had in my own. If I want to get a better understanding of the people of this world, I need to pay attention to the diversity this world has to offer.

Slow down, learn something

Like I said, it felt like I was trying to just hit a number. That means that reading had taken on a near-mechanical level of activity. Going through the motions, if you will. This year, it’s time to slow down and try to understand the details in the writing. This might mean reading a book or two more than once while trying to wring as much out of them as possible. Not quite to that academic level, but certainly a lot deeper than last year. I’m not setting a number-of-books-to-read goal this year, I’m going to be a lot more flexible with it.

Creation > Consumption

Learn when to put the book down and go do something creative. That book of ideas I kept? I’ll be getting into that quite a bit. I’d like to write more, both blog posts and creatively, so maybe stay tuned. I’ve had the idea of doing something in a serial version, like what Andy Weir did with The Martian before being made into a book. I’ve a couple ideas that could work well in that sort of format that would also allow me to stretch and learn more about the writing process.

Maybe design a book cover or four. Who knows. The idea is to enjoy the process and not focus on the end result quite as much. This year, creatively, is going to be one of growth and learning. Of doing, instead of consuming. I look forward to sharing it with you.

Cheers,
Kevin M.
– January 2019

Cover image Credit: Glen Noble, Unsplah