July in Books

This was an unusual month for me. I got caught up in a the series about Frieda Klein, read all 8 books from the series and as an added bonus, completed House of Correction by the same authors. Nicci Gerrard and Sean French write together under the name Nicci French.

I feel it’s mostly pointless order these books from best to worst, especially when read like that one after the other, they all felt very similar.

Blue Monday, Tuesday’s Gone, and Waiting for Wednesday felt long for my taste but were otherwise great books. House of Corrections (the only one that was not from a series) was a slow start and the settings were static by design, which likely makes it the worst of the 9. Apart from that, all 9 books were solid 4/5 or 5/5, and if there was a 9th book about Frieda Klein, I’d buy it without thinking.

I own one more book by Nicci French but decided to switch back to Fantasy and Sci-Fi for August. I am currently reading a very long and famous book.

The Day of the Dead by Nicci French

Frieda Klein is a great detective despite not being a detective. She’s like The Mentalist, and this final chapter of her series is her clash with Dean Reeve, the Red Jon of the series.

I think I liked this series more than The Mentalist. Frieda has no superpowers, other than maybe her ability to last for days with little to no sleep. The main antagonist is well-known, it’s clear who he is, how he hides, and so on. Doesn’t have the aura of mystical superhumanity that Red John has.

Book 8 of the series is calm and relatively short compared to the other books. The fall is coming, and people would be just like leaves. Except some of them who have the will to last.

5*/5, I liked the whole series very much. I regret that it ends after only 8 books.

Frieda Klein

I’m reading the series about Frieda Klein by Nicci French.

It’s a series of 8 books, 7 named after days of week, and one final. Frieda is a psychologist with a medical degree who always has a murder case to solve. She has the persistence of Harry Bosch and uses intuition and advanced questioning to untangle the ball of lies in each book.

The only downside of the series is that it has main antagonists who remain untouched over the series, like some kind of comic book supervillains.

I already finished the first 6 books of the series, having 2 left, and a few more with other protagonists. I gave 5*/5 to 5 of the 6 books and 4*/5 to one, which is pretty high for a series like that.

Best Books I Read in June

My strategy for June was to read books from the piles of unread books I gathered over the last months. Six out of the eight books below were there, collecting dust.

This approach had mixed results.

Best

  1. Captain Blood – the only fiction book I truly enjoyed last month. Pirates, sea battles, honor, and love – I felt 15 again
  2. The Engineering Leader by Cate Huston – I wrote a post about it called Energy Management. It was a great learning experience about certain areas of leadership
  3. Shift by Hugh Howey – even though this book was not as good as the first part of Silo, it grows on you, and the ideas are very cool. Also, the main main character Juliette is badass. I rated it 4/5 but I think it gained a star over the weeks since I completed it and no longer feels like a 4.

Worst

  1. I read a gamebook about the Tsaritchina mystery – a very promising subject. However, I could not find the mystery. It’s large, takes a lot of space, and I kind of wish I didn’t buy it
  2. The fall of Koli by M.R. Carey – I rated it 4/5 but the whole series is now waiting on the shelve to be donated, not sure how I managed to complete it. It lost a star since I finished it and it now feels like a 3.

The other 3 books were fine, solid 4s, and I’ll read the continuations.

Energy Management

I recently read The Engineering Leader by Cate Huston, a former senior lead at Automattic. The book covers many aspects of engineering leadership and highlights that being a lead means doing most of those things—like holding 1-on-1s, knowing what to discuss in them, hiring well, and onboarding people effectively so they integrate into the team instead of heading straight for the exit, but also providing feedback, managing performance and so on.

There’s one idea in the book that especially resonated with me, and I think it’s worth exploring further: the recognition that doing both lead work and programming work isn’t just about time management. It’s about energy management.

Take programming, for example. I might get a task like: rework this flow so it now handles five new behaviors. That kind of work flows roughly like this: I check the code, break the work into five tasks plus another five hidden requirements, estimate the total effort, and start closing the issues one by one. We end up completing 12 things, dropping a couple of the original five, and calling the project done. This is mostly a function of time spent, with just a few moments requiring deeper mental effort—typically at the beginning (when figuring out where to start or syncing with stakeholders) and the end (when shipping and hoping nothing breaks).

But then there’s another kind of work: writing a post-mortem for something I broke. Giving feedback to a direct report. Auditing a past project and writing up the results. Clarifying project requirements with external stakeholders. These tasks aren’t necessarily time-consuming, but they’re mentally expensive. They’re ambiguous, emotionally uncomfortable, and often easy to avoid. Stack three of them in a single day and you might get nothing else done—or feel like you can’t do anything at all. And if you don’t do them, the next day will be the same.

Cate Huston puts a name to this: mental energy. For me, just acknowledging that this is a major constraint in leadership work is the biggest takeaway from the book.

Looking back, I had already developed some coping strategies without realizing I was solving an energy problem:

  • I schedule draining tasks directly into my calendar. This includes not just work tasks, but things like dentist appointments—or even just scheduling the dentist.
  • I’ve learned which personal conversation topics tend to drain me, and I try not to explore those too deeply.
  • Quick but draining tasks get done first thing in the morning.
  • A task that’s so unpleasant it puts me “in the red” gets prioritized—because while I’m in that state, I can’t reasonably do much of anything else.
  • I break difficult tasks into smaller, more approachable chunks, and just tackle one at a time.

However, now that I know this is actually science, I can explore it further and see where can this get me.

Cate Huston raises plenty of other interesting topics in the book, and overall, I think it’s a worthwhile read.