Review – I Could Murder Her

Posted November 14, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – I Could Murder Her

I Could Murder Her

by E.C.R. Lorac

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 191
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Muriel Farrington is a domineering woman who, unfortunately for them, has her entire family living with her in her stately home. She tries, often successfully, to run the lives of her children, her stepchildren, her in-laws, and her husband, and she seems to be despised by all except her husband and one son.

When she is found dead one morning in her bed, the family doctor, who is old, ill, and hasn’t been very able for years, is unable to attend and bestow a certificate, which he would have done without investigation or thought.

A younger, more able and perceptive doctor has to be called in, to the shock of whoever the murderer was, and he does not find the death natural...

I Could Murder Her features E.C.R. Lorac’s series detective, Inspector Macdonald, digging once more into a tense net of family relationships and rivalries in order to discover who murdered their (rather awful) matriarch, who was a bit of a strangling vine. There are a couple of very likeable characters — straightforward, capable, earnest — of the type Lorac’s so good at writing, people with good hearts, and I didn’t guess the murderer this time at all.

It’s possible I should’ve seen it coming, because Macdonald and his subordinate seem to have had their eyes on it the whole time, but I suppose I didn’t really want it to be that character. For all that each book features an almost completely new cast, I can’t help but end up caring about Lorac’s characters, and feeling strongly about some of them.

Whiiiich means that at the end of this book I ended up feeling decidedly uncosy and unhappy, because I didn’t want that person to be the murderer and the effects on all the other characters would be awful as a result. It’s still a good mystery, and a good example of Lorac’s writing; personally it didn’t entirely work because I didn’t want it to end like that, but that tells you something about Lorac’s ability to make a reader care. Even though most of her books stand alone, each one gets me fully invested.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – The Vampyre

Posted November 14, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The Vampyre

The Vampyre

by John William Polidori

Genres: Classics, Fantasy
Pages: 54
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

Lord Ruthven is a mysterious newcomer among England’s social elite. A young gentleman named Aubrey is fascinated by the suave stranger and is intrigued by his often curious behaviour. While travelling in Europe amid rumours of vampire killings, the pair are attacked, leaving Ruthven on his death bed. As he draws his last breaths, he pleads with Aubrey to keep his death a secret for just over a year. When Ruthven reappears in London alive and well, Aubrey realises that his friend might be hiding dark and horrifying truths behind his seductive fabrication.

The Vampyre was written during the ‘Lost Summer of 1816’, when John William Polidori was among the group of friends who accompanied Lord Byron to the Villa Diodati on Lake Geneva. This short, stormy stay in the mansion led to a horror story writing competition in which famous tales such as Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein were first produced.

Decadent, sinister, and macabre The Vampyre started the enduring fascination with bloodsucking monsters that produced stories such as Bram Stoker’s Dracula. This chilling tale is not to be missed by lovers of fantasy and horror fiction.

I basically read John William Polidori’s ‘The Vampyre’ because Lord Ruthven (the vampire of the title) is a major character in Vivian Shaw’s Greta Helsing books, which I adore. To be fair, the character would hate that anyone read this, but… sorry, got curious! Especially since Polidori certainly had an influence on later portrayals of vampires.

Often viewed as a diss of Byron, it’s definitely readable as such, and it’s definitely at least heavily linked with Byron, given Caroline Lamb’s previous use of the name for a thinly-disguised Byron. It’s pretty fun to read it as a diss, though poking around a bit there’s some criticism of that reading, which also seems reasonable (it would hardly be the declaration of independence from Byron that some people think it is if it’s also centering a triumphant Byron stand-in). There’s that whole vampire-typical loathing/fascination thing going on…
And hey, a rare seasonally appropriate read for me! Spoopy season, that is; I finished this in October.
Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Review – The Genius Myth

Posted November 13, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 Comments

Review – The Genius Myth

The Genius Myth: The Dangerous Allure of Rebels, Monsters and Rule-Breakers

by Helen Lewis

Genres: Non-fiction
Pages: 352
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Everything you think you know about genius is wrong.

Most discoveries don't come in a flash of inspiration. Most high achievers aren't obsessive loners with high IQs. Most 'geniuses' have collaborators and well-developed support networks. What is a genius? Very often, it's the person who takes the credit.

Helen Lewis takes aim at the myth of the solitary genius, exploring historical and contemporary examples to show how a set of stories influence our idea of the word.

This mythology would not matter so much if it didn't have a human cost. The Genius Myth lays bare the invisible support enjoyed by our most celebrated individuals: their collaborators, their teams, their wives and parents and family wealth and connection, all quietly tidied from the historical record.

By understanding the past and current models for genius, The Genius Myth works towards a possible future of a more egalitarian meritocracy.

The premise of Helen Lewis’ The Genius Myth is basically that when we moved from saying “this person has a genius for X” into “this person is a genius”, we created a mythology that serves us ill, with examples including Elon Musk and Roman Polanski. The genius label helps people get away with bad behaviour, encourages us to worship them, and causes people to think they’re going to be great at running a major social media network just because their company successfully delivered astronauts to the space station. You know, just as an example.

(As a note, Lewis gives Elon Musk more credit than I do, seeing him as very good in his field. I have questions about this, but that’s irrelevant to the main argument.)

I think Helen Lewis has a point, and this book is a good complement to Claire Dederer’s Monsters (which it mentions) because it deals with some of the same issues from a slightly different angle. It did feel like it dragged on a bit, though; I could’ve used a couple fewer case studies and some tighter prose.

Still, some interesting points, and also examples of how the genius myth covers even for people who aren’t as highly placed as Musk, using an example of a now-disgraced playwright who was also a paedophile.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Review – Audition for the Fox

Posted November 12, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 Comments

Review – Audition for the Fox

Audition for the Fox

by Martin Cahill

Genres: Fantasy
Pages: 128
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Nesi is desperate to earn the patronage of one of the Ninety-Nine Pillars of Heaven. As a child with godly blood in her, if she cannot earn a divine chaperone, she will never be allowed to leave her temple home. But with ninety-six failed auditions and few options left, Nesi makes a risky prayer to T’sidaan, the Fox of Tricks.

In folk tales, the Fox is a loveable prankster. But despite their humor and charm, T’sidaan, and their audition, is no joke. They throw Nesi back in time three hundred years, when her homeland is occupied by the brutal Wolfhounds of Zemin.

Now, Nesi must ally with her besieged people and learn a trickster’s guile to snatch a fortress from the disgraced and exiled 100th Pillar: The Wolf of the Hunt.

Martin Cahill’s Audition for the Fox was a pretty random find, about which I knew very little other than that it was a novella that had just released. It turned out to be set in a fantasy world with many gods and many stories, and it felt very much like a single person’s story within a broader and richer world, which is something I always appreciate.

It’s a coming of age story for the main character, Nesi, who gets scent back in time by the fox god as part of her test for whether she can become an acolyte — and as with many coming of age stories, Nesi starts out a bit sheltered and spoiled, wanting to just call the Fox to help her and get out of the situation. Eventually she settles down and understands that she needs to work within the time period she’s been sent to and get the Fox’s work done, and she begins to understand what the trickster does exactly.

T’sidaan, the trickster, is one of the loveable trickster types: they’ll take a sibling down a peg when they need to, and sometimes the laugh’s on them. The conflict they bring Nesi to is darker than that, though, a fierce rivalry between T’sidaan and the wolf god — and Nesi comes to understand both why T’sidaan finds this particular conflict so important, and also why T’sidaan won’t descend to the wolf god’s level, always contending with him on their own terms. It’s a very effective illustration of being careful not to become the thing you’re fighting, and the scene where it’s all revealed is good.

I liked the world, and Nesi’s allies, and there’s a genuine wrenching when Nesi’s test is over and she returns to her own time, which I also liked. It’s not a bloodless story, even though T’sidaan and Nesi are acting as tricksters, destabilising through meddling rather than outright war: it has teeth.

So overall, really enjoyable, especially the sense that there are so many other stories, a whole world that’s been thought out (or could be thought out) in order to play in.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted November 12, 2025 by Nicky in General / 0 Comments

Cover of Eat Me by Bill SchuttWhat have you recently finished reading?

I skimmed and ditched Shahidha Bari’s Dressed: The Secret Life of Clothes because it was pretentious as fuck, gender essentialist to the max, and misgendered a (fictional) trans girl constantly in a discussion about her clothing. So that was kind of a bust.

Before that I read Eat Me: A Natural and Unnatural History of Cannibalism, by Bill Schutt, that occasionally veered into a bit of sensationalism (e.g. says the author tries out cannibalism in the blurb: he eats a piece of someone else’s placenta, to be clear) but had some interesting stuff and sent me on a deep dive into how prion diseases work that contradicted what I learned during my degrees (or rather, suggested that it’s more theoretical and less proven than I thought).

Cover of Strangers and Intimates by Tiffany JenkinsWhat are you currently reading?

I’ve been keeping my “currently reading” list surprisingly clear for a few weeks, but I started a few at once in the last few days searching for something that would properly grab my interest. I’m in the mood to steamroller through a book, but apparently it has to be the right book.

One of the books I started is Strangers and Intimates: The Rise and Fall of Public Life, by Tiffany Jenkins. This is the one I’m probably closest to just sitting down and steamrollering through, to be honest, but it’s a little harder to just do that because it’s a several-hour read sort of book. I’m finding it very interesting so far.

I also started C.M. Waggoner’s The Village Library Demon-Hunting Society, which is starting out very self-consciously small-town-mystery, and there’s obviously (very obviously) some kind of supernatural influence forcing events to mimic a cosy mystery with a Miss Marple-ish detective. I’m a little curious how it’s going to turn out, but I’d like it to start getting somewhere soon.

Aaand finally I started volume two of MXTX’s Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation. I’m having a little bit of a rough time keeping track of names and clans, which isn’t helping my enthusiasm, even if I have tried-and-true methods of getting to grips with all that as I read. I’m reminding myself firmly that I couldn’t keep track of Mu Qing, Feng Xin, Nan Feng and Fu Yao at first, and it all fell into place easily enough. Still, might not be in quite the right mood for this, especially with that 184-page opening chapter (even if it is broken into parts).

Cover of The Beauty's Blade by Feng Ren Zuo ShiWhat will you be reading next?

Feng Ren Zuo Shu’s The Beauty’s Blade is out, and I need to read that post-haste to see if I want to get it for my sister for Christmas. (Uhhh, look away, if you’re reading this, Squirtle!)

Other than that, I’m still eyeing Kaite Welsh’s The Wages of Sin, especially since it’s on my Book Spin Bingo board, and also the idea of getting back to my reread of the Greta Helsing books so I can read the new one (meaning it’d be time for Grave Importance).

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Review – Solo Leveling, vol 7

Posted November 11, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Solo Leveling, vol 7

Solo Leveling

by Dubu, Chugong

Genres: Fantasy, Manga
Pages: 304
Series: Solo Leveling #7
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

The joint expedition between South Korea and Japan to the ant-infested Jeju Island is well underway, and the Korean team has successfully located the queen. Taking her out should finally spell the long-awaited closing of the S-rank gate. But little do they know that wings aren't the only mutation the latest generation of ants has gone through— and having made short work of the Japanese hunters, the queen’s strongest soldier is now headed straight for them!

Volume 7 of the Solo Leveling manhwa features Jinwoo being more overpowered than ever, with him finally jumping into the action at Jeju Island, along with some aftermath stuff that makes it increasingly obvious how different he is to other hunters. There’s a reference again to the earlier reappearance of his father, though I’m impatient for that to get somewhere so we can find out more about where he’s been, whether it really is him, etc, etc.

The tension doesn’t come from wondering whether/how Jinwoo will win, at this point: it’s obvious that he will, that he’s constantly leveling up, and can outmatch anything thrown at him. Instead, it’s about what the System is, what certain mysterious characters/conversations mean, and so on. I’m getting really curious about what it’s building up to, and when we’ll finally see something that really tests Jinwoo.

I wish there’d been a tad more about his mother and sister, given the development in the last book, as well.

Anyway, looking forward to reading more, though not sure what exactly is next after Jeju Island!

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Top Ten Tuesday: Outside the Comfort Zone

Posted November 11, 2025 by Nicky in General / 14 Comments

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday theme is about books you’ve read (or want to read) that are outside your comfort zone. I read so widely/apparently randomly that it’s kinda hard to define what my comfort zone looks like, especially since each book holds the potential to expand it, but let’s see what I can come up with!

Cover of Feed by Mira Grant Cover of Eat Me by Bill Schutt Cover of Shades of Milk and Honey by Mary Robinette Kowal Cover of The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System by MĂČ Xiāng TĂłng XiĂč Cover of What Moves The Dead, by T. Kingfisher

  1. Feed, by Mira Grant. Granted, I adore this one now, but I didn’t always. When I first read it, it made me feel reaaaally on edge and uncomfortable, because horror isn’t my thing and the idea of everyone being infected with a cocktail of viruses that could turn them into zombies at any time was… yeah, definitely dancing around on my anxieties.
  2. Eat Me: A Natural and Unnatural History of Cannibalism, by Bill Schutt. I just finished this one, but I think it counts; it’s not really a topic I’m interested in per se, definitely not for prurient interest, but I decided to give it a go because it wasn’t a subject I’m very familiar with, and new knowledge is always of interest to me. I need to write up my review of this one, because I just finished it last night!
  3. Shades of Milk and Honey, by Mary Robinette Kowal. By heavy contrast to the previous two, ahaha, this is a Regency-ish Austenesque fantasy. It is actually pretty squarely in my comfort zone now, but when I read it I tended to be allergic to anything that smacked of Jane Austen, wasn’t a romance fan, and in general wasn’t best positioned to enjoy it. I didn’t rate it very highly the first time, but I revisited and enjoyed it more, and particularly started enjoying Glamour in Glass, the second book.
  4. The Scum Villain’s Self-Saving System, by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu. This was my first danmei, and I really wasn’t sure whether I was going to like it. I remember reading it in a hotel room in Bath during a long weekend getaway with my wife, and just constantly making WTF noises at it — all I’d really understood going into the story was that the two main characters were canonically terrible at sex, and that some people really really loved the books. I don’t know why I picked them over Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation or Heaven Official’s Blessing, which might’ve been less weird introductions to danmei… but hey, it ultimately worked. I finished the first book and decided that I did really need to know where it went. That said, the series still kinda sits on the edge of my comfort zone for a couple of reasons: the student/teacher relationship (which I feel is carefully managed and balanced in context, but is still on edge of what I’m okay with) and the fact that it’s a satire of a genre I don’t really know (the cultivation novel).
  5. What Moves The Dead, by T. Kingfisher. I am a wimp about horror. I’ve read a surprising amount of it for someone who isn’t a horror fan, one way or another, but it’s still not my comfy genre. What Moves The Dead was pretty brilliant, but it also freaked me out, dancing around the edge of my anxieties about contamination and disease.
  6. Spillover, by David Quammen. I hardly need to write an explanation of this anymore for regulars here, who won’t be surprised to see it in the list! Back when I read Spillover, I was deliberately forcing myself to be curious about something that terrified me: infectious disease. A popular science book seemed like a reasonably controlled way to do it. It wasn’t comfy reading for me, though it helped that spillover events don’t generally happen in UK back gardens, and that Quammen is very measured and careful in assessing risks. Now, of course, I have an MSc in infectious diseases (or I will once my graduation ceremony is held); Quammen really started something for me. It was also part of my initial attempts to read more non-fiction (which now constitutes about 30% of what I read), so, yeah, a great success all round.
  7. Crypt of the Moon Spider, by Nathan Ballingrud. This was an impulse read from the library, one I knew wouldn’t be a comfortable one for me given the premise. It ultimately turned out more uncomfortable for me than I’d expected with some vivid imagery (let’s just say it’s not one for the arachnophobic, and leave it there), and I didn’t love it.
  8. Yellowface, by Rebecca F. Kuang. This ended up being a five-star read for me, but I tend toward genre reads rather than this more literary sort of choice, so I really wasn’t sure how I’d find it. It felt like watching a trainwreck, with a main character both despicable and pitiable, and it was fascinating.
  9. The Gabriel Hounds, by Mary Stewart. I remember reading this as one of the first Mary Stewart books I read — I can’t remember if it was the first, that might’ve been Touch Not The Cat, but I definitely wasn’t sure whether it was going to be my thing. It was definitely before I started reading romance in general, at any rate. And I had a lot of fun!
  10. Solo Leveling (manhwa adaptation), by Dubu. I wasn’t sure whether Solo Leveling would be my thing: it sounded a bit dark, and very battle focused. Honestly, I’m not sure why I did give it a shot — but I ended up really sucked in, and quickly acquired the whole series. Now I definitely wouldn’t say no to trying the light novel, too.

Cover of Spillover by David Quamnem Cover of Crypt of the Moon Spider by Nathan Ballingrud Cover of Yellowface by Rebecca F. Kuang Cover of The Gabriel Hounds by Mary Stewart Cover of Solo Levelling (manhwa) vol 1, by Chugong, Debu

So there we go, I did manage to come up with ten! Very curious to see what others’ picks are.

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Review – Mockingbird Court

Posted November 10, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Mockingbird Court

Mockingbird Court

by Juneau Black

Genres: Crime, Fantasy, Mystery
Pages: 249
Series: Shady Hollow #6
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

In the latest installment in the beloved Shady Hollow series, everyone’s favorite vulpine investigator Vera Vixen must contend with a cold-hearted killer—and the ghost of her own past.

It’s a crisp, cool autumn in Shady Hollow, and preparations are underway for the annual Harvest Festival. Creatures have flocked from far and wide to partake in the seasonal festivities, from pumpkin carving to pie tasting to soup throwing. With all these new faces around town, it’s the perfect time for someone to slip in unnoticed.

Unless that someone is Bradley Marvel, the most famous author—and most noticeable personality—in any woodland warren. It seems the wolf is on the lam. Back in the city, a body was found in his penthouse apartment at Mockingbird Court, and Marvel skipped town before the questioning could commence.

Marvel claims to be innocent, and it’s up to Vera and her friends to piece together what might have happened that fateful night so many miles away in the beating heart of the big city. But things get complicated when Vera learns that she also knows the victim 
 and might even be implicated herself.

I snagged Juneau Black’s Mockingbird Court as soon as I could lay hands on it, of course — I love the Shady Hollow series, and this installment takes us back to the town and to the usual cast, after Summer’s End took us to another town. This time Vera’s in trouble, with Bradley Marvel showing up again, and skeletons from her past — barely hinted at in previous books — tumble out of the closet.

I did find the book a bit frustrating in that it felt like Vera’s relationship with Orville has barely progressed, with Orville coming off all righteous and cross, Vera failing to communicate, etc, etc. It wouldn’t have hurt to have Orville actually come after Vera for an explanation, for instance, or for Vera to stay and explain things rather than running away.

Still, it’s cute how the town come together to try to protect Vera, and it’s also nice to start to understand her backstory and how she came to Shady Hollow. I will say that I worked out the culprit quite a bit before she does, and I was a liiiittle worried by the dramatic confrontation scene — that could have been majorly frustrating! But the way it worked out wasn’t so bad.

Not my favourite of the series, I’d say, but some nice autumnal vibes, good character moments, and a reasonable if not super-exciting mystery.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Review – Proto

Posted November 10, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Proto

Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global

by Laura Spinney

Genres: History, Non-fiction, Science
Pages: 336
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

One ancient language transformed our world. This is its story.

As the planet emerged from the last ice age, a language was born between Europe and Asia. This ancient tongue, which we call Proto-Indo-European, soon exploded out of its cradle, changing and fragmenting as it went, until its offspring were spoken from Scotland to China. Today those descendants constitute the world's largest language family, the thread that connects disparate cultures: Dante's Inferno to the Rig Veda, The Lord of the Rings to the love poetry of Rumi. Indo-European languages are spoken by nearly half of humanity. How did this happen?

Laura Spinney set out to answer that question, retracing the Indo-European odyssey across continents and millennia. With her we travel the length of the steppe, navigating the Caucasus, the silk roads and the Hindu Kush. We follow in the footsteps of nomads and monks, Amazon warriors and lion kings - the ancient peoples who spread these languages far and wide. In the present, Spinney meets the scientists on a thrilling mission to retrieve those lost languages: the linguists, archaeologists and geneticists who have reconstructed this ancient diaspora. What they have learned has vital implications for our modern world, as people and their languages are on the move again. Proto is a revelatory portrait of world history in its own words.

Laura Spinney’s Proto is the story of Proto-Indo-European, the ancestor language of many modern languages. She tries to trace its origins and branching points based on various evidence: linguistic evidence, of course, but also archaeology and genetics, attempting to unpick not just the words that were spoken but the people who spoke them, and why. I really loved Spinney’s book on the 1918 flu pandemic, Pale Rider, so I was eager for this one.

I did find it an interesting read, though at times a bit difficult to follow because in the end there are a lot of possibilities, and for each branch of the whole chain Spinney discusses the various different theories. For that reason, perhaps, I liked it a bit less than Pale Rider; I guess it felt a bit less focused, more or less of necessity because of the material. It’s hard to pick your way between all the theories, and at times I felt like I needed diagrams to represent all the possibilities.

I did find at first that it wasn’t very focused on the linguistic side of things, lingering on the archaeological evidence of the Yamnaya and what we can extrapolate about them, but it does get more into the technical details (like the “ruki” rule, and satemisation), which was more what I’d expected and hoped for.

There are numbered references, an extensive bibliography and an index, which are all good signs, too!

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Review – The Genetic Lottery

Posted November 9, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The Genetic Lottery

The Genetic Lottery

by Kathryn Paige Harden

Genres: Non-fiction, Science
Pages: 312
Rating: one-star
Synopsis:

A provocative and timely case for how the science of genetics can help create a more just and equal society

In recent years, scientists like Kathryn Paige Harden have shown that DNA makes us different, in our personalities and in our health—and in ways that matter for educational and economic success in our current society.

In The Genetic Lottery, Harden introduces readers to the latest genetic science, dismantling dangerous ideas about racial superiority and challenging us to grapple with what equality really means in a world where people are born different. Weaving together personal stories with scientific evidence, Harden shows why our refusal to recognize the power of DNA perpetuates the myth of meritocracy, and argues that we must acknowledge the role of genetic luck if we are ever to create a fair society.

Reclaiming genetic science from the legacy of eugenics, this groundbreaking book offers a bold new vision of society where everyone thrives, regardless of how one fares in the genetic lottery.

Kathryn Paige Harden means very well in The Genetic Lottery. I do think she genuinely intends to both demonstrate that there’s a genetic component to intelligence, and to suggest ways by which this can be taken into account to make society more equal.

However, I found her writing style highly tedious, and sometimes just pointless: the whole analogy of restaurants and ingredients for explaining genome-wide association studies was just silly. She could’ve explained GWAS better by just… explaining GWAS. There were whole sections that just made my eyes glaze over, and she was very uneven about how she chose to explain things.

Overall, I did think she managed to demonstrate that intelligence has a heritable component, but I didn’t feel convinced that she had good suggestions for how to make society more equal using that information. It’s a shame because she’s not wrong that we could do more to help create a more equitable society — a lot more — but… this ain’t it.

Rating: 1/5 (“didn’t like it”)

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