clq
Written on Jan 12, 2016
You may be wondering why on earth anyone would ever read this book, which is a fair point. To enjoy this book you will probably need to have, or have had, a certain kind of job. If your job involves or involved a bit of coding, a bit of deployment of code, a bit of firefighting (the kind without actual flames), and the juggling of priorities in terms of fixing stuff now, vs. rolling out new stuff, vs. making sure stuff doesn't break in the future, vs. making stuff easier to fix in the future, and so on, and so forth, you will enjoy this book. You will relate to the situations, the characters, the scenarios, the problems, and hopefully also the solutions. If none of what you just read in this review applies to you, this will probably be a very boring book.
Oh, and if you are a coder, and are not involved in the deployment of your own code, you definitely need to give this a read. While I have a hard time believing that any coder works in complete isolation from deployment any more (for reasons which are made painfully clear in this story), anyone who actually finds themselves in that situation really, really, has to read this book.