The Books I Read in January 2025

I only got to read two full books this month. The first was a short novel by Matt Haig with the ti­tle The Midnight Library.

It reads like and feels like a ther­apy ses­sion. I quite en­joyed it, but I’m not sure it is for every­one.

The sec­ond book (and the one I got the most value from) was Working in Public: the Making and Maintenance of Open Source Software by Nadia Eghbal. Until now, I’ve largely or­ga­nized Harper in ways in­spired by pro­jects like Vite and Rust that I in­ter­act with on a daily ba­sis.

Eghbal gives a more holis­tic view than mine, writ­ten for an ex­ter­nal ob­server. This book was es­pe­cially in­ter­est­ing due to the com­pre­hen­sive cov­er­age of open” pro­jects with no code at all. She seems to be­lieve the OSS soft­ware man­age­ment prob­lem is one of so­cial com­plex­ity, not tech­ni­cal com­plex­ity.

Furthermore, Nadia makes the case that syn­chro­nous com­mu­ni­ca­tion, while of­ten a bur­den on main­tainer at­ten­tion, is usu­ally nec­es­sary.