
by Nir Eyal
Rating: ★★½
Publication Date: August 6, 2019
Genre: non-fiction
Pages: 290
ReRead?: No
You sit down at your desk to work on an important project, but a notification on your phone interrupts your morning. Later, as you're about to get back to work, a colleague taps you on the shoulder to chat. At home, screens get in the way of quality time with your family. Another day goes by, and once again, your most important personal and professional goals are put on hold.
What would be possible if you followed through on your best intentions? What could you accomplish if you could stay focused and overcome distractions? What if you had the power to become "indistractable"?
International best-selling author, former Stanford lecturer, and behavioral design expert, Nir Eyal, wrote Silicon Valley's handbook for making technology habit-forming. Five years after publishing Hooked, Eyal reveals distraction's Achilles' heel in his groundbreaking new book.
In Indistractable, Eyal reveals the hidden psychology driving us to distraction. He describes why solving the problem is not as simple as swearing off our devices: Abstinence is impractical and often makes us want more.
Eyal lays bare the secret of finally doing what you say you will do with a four-step, research-backed model. Indistractable reveals the key to getting the best out of technology, without letting it get the best of us.
Inside, Eyal overturns conventional wisdom and reveals:
Why distraction at work is a symptom of a dysfunctional company culture - and how to fix it
What really drives human behavior and why "time management is pain management"
Why your relationships (and your sex life) depend on you becoming indistractable
How to raise indistractable children in an increasingly distracting world
Empowering and optimistic, Indistractable provides practical, novel techniques to control your time and attention - helping you live the life you really want.
My first book of 2024 was a bit of a disappointment, really.
For the last couple of years, I have become increasingly concerned about my decreasing attention span. This year, I’ve decided to stop worrying idly, and try to do something about it. I’ve removed all social media from my phone, I’ve decided to cut both Instagram and Facebook out completely, and I’m limiting myself to no more than 30 minutes a day on Twitter. I’m hoping, over time, to eliminate that one as well, but for now, I follow enough bookish people there that I am holding onto it. I find blogs – both writing my own and reading other people’s – and Goodreads to add value to my life, so I will be keeping them.
I checked out Indistractable to see if it would have any useful ideas for me. It really didn’t tell me anything new. It’s not particularly a bad book, but I found both Deep Work, by Cal Newport, and Stolen Focus by Johann Hari to be superior. And, actually, I listened to this week’s Ezra Klein podcast, with Gloria Marks, and found it to be at least as useful as this book.

by Johann Hari
Rating: ★★★★½
Publication Date: January 25, 2022
Genre: non-fiction
Pages: 357
Our ability to pay attention is collapsing. From the New York Times bestselling author of Chasing the Scream and Lost Connections comes a groundbreaking examination of why this is happening--and how to get our attention back.
In the United States, teenagers can focus on one task for only sixty-five seconds at a time, and office workers average only three minutes. Like so many of us, Johann Hari was finding that constantly switching from device to device and tab to tab was a diminishing and depressing way to live. He tried all sorts of self-help solutions--even abandoning his phone for three months--but nothing seemed to work. So Hari went on an epic journey across the world to interview the leading experts on human attention--and he discovered that everything we think we know about this crisis is wrong.
We think our inability to focus is a personal failure to exert enough willpower over our devices. The truth is even more disturbing: our focus has been stolen by powerful external forces that have left us uniquely vulnerable to corporations determined to raid our attention for profit. Hari found that there are twelve deep causes of this crisis, from the decline of mind-wandering to rising pollution, all of which have robbed some of our attention. In Stolen Focus, he introduces readers to Silicon Valley dissidents who learned to hack human attention, and veterinarians who diagnose dogs with ADHD. He explores a favela in Rio de Janeiro where everyone lost their attention in a particularly surreal way, and an office in New Zealand that discovered a remarkable technique to restore workers' productivity.
Even though I just read this one in June, since Indistractable was a disappointment, I decided to revisit it.

by Dorothy Sayers
Rating: ★★★★★
Series: Lord Peter Wimsey #10
Publication Date: January 1, 1935
Genre: mystery: golden age (1920-1949)
Pages: 528
ReRead?: Yes
Project: 2024 read my hoard
When Harriet Vane attends her Oxford reunion, known as the Gaudy, the prim academic setting is haunted by a rash of bizarre pranks: scrawled obscenities, burnt effigies, and poison-pen letters, including one that says, "Ask your boyfriend with the title if he likes arsenic in his soup." Some of the notes threaten murder; all are perfectly ghastly; yet in spite of their scurrilous nature, all are perfectly worded. And Harriet finds herself ensnared in a nightmare of romance and terror, with only the tiniest shreds of clues to challenge her powers of detection, and those of her paramour, Lord Peter Wimsey.
Gaudy Night is a rare and wonderful book – I have read it before, and I will read it again. It claims to be a mystery, but it is so, so much more. It is the kind of book that holds out the promise of something new every time it is read.
What it really is is Dorothy Sayers’s manifesto, which holds that educating women is valuable, that women can be scholars, that work is work whether it is done by men or women, that intellectual work is valuable in it’s own right, and that women should have agency to do the work that they feel they are best suited to do, whether that work involves marriage or children or not.
The mystery is engaging, but it’s Oxford, and intellect and the sisterhood of academia (sometimes backbiting and nasty, like all sisterhoods can be) that makes a home for an odd set of women who have turned their backs on the traditional sphere of womanhood that is the heart and soul of this book.
Anyway, I loved this book. I love Harriet Vane. Peter Wimsey is fine, but it’s Harriet that I love. And Miss Lydgate, who knows everything and, as Peter said:
“Miss Lydgate is a very great and a very rare person.” Sort of like Dorothy Sayers.

by Peter Robinson
Rating: ★★
Series: Inspector Banks #19
Publication Date: August 24, 2010
Genre: mystery: modern (1980-present)
Pages: 352
ReRead?: No
A distraught woman arrives at the Eastvale police station desperate to speak to Detective Chief Inspector Alan Banks. But Banks is abroad, and the woman’s revelation of a loaded gun hidden in her daughter Erin’s bedroom leads to a shocking fatality when a police armed-response team breaks into her house. The fallout will have dark consequences for Banks and his partner, DI Annie Cabbot. It turns out that Erin’s best friend is Banks’ own daughter, Tracy . . . who was last seen in the company of the weapon’s actual owner, a very bad boy indeed.
Now that his child is on the run with a psychopath, Banks finds himself caught in a bloody tangle of betrayal and murder. But the rogue DCI is a bit of a bad boy himself, and he’ll freely risk his life and career in the cause of love—and vengeance.
An imminently skippable installment with a lot of characters acting like unredeemable idiots.

by James Benn
Rating: ★★★
Series: Billy Boyle #1
Publication Date: September 1, 2006
Genre: historical mystery
Pages: 294
ReRead?: No
Project: 2024 read my hoard
Billy Boyle, a young Irish-American cop from Boston has just made detective - with a little help from his cop relatives and friends - when World War II breaks out.
His rabidly anti-English family calls on his mother's distant cousin, Mamie, married to a general, to wangle a staff job for him far from the fighting. But instead of a "safe, cushy" stateside assignment, he is ordered to London, still undergoing the Blitz.
His "Uncle Ike" is Dwight D. Eisenhower, plucked from obscurity to command Army forces in Europe, and he wants Billy to be his personal investigator.
Billy, who had never left Boston before he enlisted and was sent to Officer Candidate School, is not sure how good a detective he really is. But when Eisenhower asks Billy to undertake this task, he dutifully sets off for Beardsley Hall, where the Norwegian government in exile, led by King Haakon, is in residence.
Accompanied by an aristocratic Polish officer in exile and a beautiful British WREN, his mission is to catch a spy who may have been planted there.
A theft and two murders test Billy's investigative powers, as he comes to grips with the deadly demands of a war he never wanted any part of. To his own surprise - and that of others - Billy proves to be a better detective than any one expected.
My main book project for 2024 is what I’ve decided to call the “2024 Read My Hoard” book challenge. Like a dragon, collecting jewels and glittery bits to lay upon, I have stored up hundreds of books – both print and digital – which are on my shelves, unread. I do not have a count of how many books this is. It is surely more than 500. The goal is to reduce the number by reading more than I buy.
So, Billy Boyle. A book that ended up on my shelves sometime in the last 5 years – I remember that it was on a shelf of Soho Crime books at one of my local used book stores, and I bought it along with a few others. I think I have read the others, but this one lingered. Until I decided that I would read it.
It’s OK – I generally enjoy books set during WWII, but I found myself unconvinced by Billy. I may give the series another shot, but probably not this year.
Stolen Focus was definitely interesting!
I thought that Hari got out over his skis a bit at the end, and didn’t have quite as much support for his ideas as he should have, but overall, I found it to be a pretty good book.