"Write once, run anywhere," they promised. What they didn't say was: debug everywhere, depend on monstrous frameworks, and drown in boilerplate forever.
Java Is Awful is not a rant. It's a technically grounded, brutally honest critique of one of the most overhyped languages in the history of programming.
Written by veteran engineer Juan Franchino, who has over 50 years of experience - from punched cards to cloud-native systems - this book walks through the rise and fall of Java from a pragmatic, developer-first perspective.
Inside, you'll find:
Why Java's syntax became an obstacle, not a tool
The cult of complexity created by frameworks like Spring
How Android development became a bureaucratic nightmare
Why NullPointerException still haunts millions of apps
Comparisons with Go, Rust, Kotlin, and modern tools
A roadmap to move on - without hate, but with clarity
For developers, teachers, and tech leads, this is the book to read before choosing Java as a "safe" default.
Stop embalming code. Start programming again.