Sunday, April 28, 2013
Review: The End of Food
The End of Food by Paul Roberts
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is another indictment of CAPO meat assembly lines, processed food, and the unsustainability of current or "green"/"organic" methods. From reading Pollan, etc. I am used to this depressing stateof affairs. What I like about Roberts is the focus on the economic angle (people have to go from the expectation of cheap food to a historical hefty part of the house budget) and especially the cultural angle. What have we lost in the togetherness of lnegthy, communal food preparation and dining times?
View all my reviews
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Review: The Mincing Mockingbird Guide to Troubled Birds
The Mincing Mockingbird Guide to Troubled Birds by Matt Adrian
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Adrian is the Anne Taintor of the avian world; but only darker. Mostly a morbid fascination with the wet work of raptors and jays is here with occasional forays into window collision deaths, feeder-induced obseity and, yes, owl-initiaded necrophilia. The Taintor-styled captioned painting nicely decorate the slim volume of shockingly direct and graphic paragraphs. Colorful, adult language runs the gamut with the F-word inexplicably obscured.
View all my reviews
Review: Detroit City Is the Place to Be: The Afterlife of an American Metropolis
Detroit City Is the Place to Be: The Afterlife of an American Metropolis by Mark Binelli
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The title sure seems ironic, maybe a bitter irony. The Italian-American returned Detroiter offers a litany of the Motor City's worst moments from decades past, the terretorial throes, and a cavalcade of crime, corruption, and failure leading into the Bing administration. The most hopeful remarks are of white hipster gentrification and repurposing, mostly gathered in the epilogue.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Review: In Cold Blood
In Cold Blood by Truman Capote
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Re-reading this book now, I find that extracurricular reading on the case and the recent Truman Capote biopics had clouded my memory. "In Cold Blood" had become for me more about the ingratiating Tru as killer-groupie and minor if salacious sub details on the case and life on death row had clouded my memory. The book I appreciate more as it is simpler, direct and well-wrought package from crime to execution. This is no gonzo journalism, but Tru does cast a detail-oriented eye on the killers, their psychological make-up, motivations and handling of their crime. I don't know if Capote was one of the first to humanize the perpetrators in this way, but it feels like this book was pioneering in that way.
View all my reviews
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Review: Simba: A Collection of Personal and Political Writings from the Nineties Hardcore Scene
Simba: A Collection of Personal and Political Writings from the Nineties Hardcore Scene by Vique Martin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Here compiled in book form is personal, even confessional, writing along with some interviews from Vique Martin's Simba subitlted "A Collection of Personal and Political Writings from the '90s Hardcore Scene". "Personal" for sure, but the "political" is as in sexual politics and such life-style choices as vegetarainism, etc. that arises in the interviews with 90s hardcore bands and scenesters, such as Positive Kim. But, as I guess as Shane Bugbee tried to convince me in his 2013 interview on Outsight Radio Hours, everything is politics.
Apparently chronological, the main thrust of the writing is as Vique's diary on life, sexual exploration, dealing wit love and loss, and identity. Her writing gets increasingly overt as she sets aside metaphor for over even explicit depictions and revelations. In probing her own world view and identity she let's out some real insight as in this quote: "...I donb't believe that talent is directly related to [the] creative drive in the slightest. It often seems to be the most medicore people who push themselves the hardest. The ones with talents are often people who place other priorities over their art and then turn around and write a book or paint a picture or write a record that someone else could have spent fifteen years trying to achieve with no comparable results... This dramatic notion, of a musician with all this music just inside of them, with this need to fulfill their destiny, does not ring true to me. It is a different drive that makes people want to create. Not one related to talent...]
View all my reviews
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Review: Extra Virginity: The Sublime and Scandalous World of Olive Oil
Extra Virginity: The Sublime and Scandalous World of Olive Oil by Tom Mueller
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A fascinating book about the olive oil world, a place as murky as a balsamic vinaigrette.
It is fascinating and disheartening that the, apparently, most regulated food product in the world has the most rampant corruption and false-labeling issues. Issues that have been documented in Roman times and earlier cuneiform tablets. The American market appears both particularly rife with this potentially dangerous issue. However, the size and vibrancy of the same market offers the hope of redemption in the same way wine was: quality-conscious buying and legally verified/validated labelling.
The fact that quality food needs to be sought recalls to me [b:In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto|315425|In Defense of Food An Eater's Manifesto|Michael Pollan|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1347559078s/315425.jpg|3100234] and the economic angle, cheap olive oil begets adulterated and falsely labeled products, recalls the motivations that led inexecrably to factory farms as laid out in [b:Eating Animals|6604712|Eating Animals|Jonathan Safran Foer|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1327877480s/6604712.jpg|3149322].
At the end there is a lengthy and detailed glossary and resource listing of Web sites and blogs. Probably a great addition to the physical copies, this doesn't make for compelling listening on an audiobook.
View all my reviews
Monday, April 15, 2013
Review: Houdini
Houdini by Milbourne Christopher
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I have an immense respect for Houdini; the closest thing we have had to a superman. His acumen, astounding physical ability, showmanship, and relentless crusade against superstitions of his time (profiterring spirituralist mediums) all add to that. Consequently, I seem to gravitate to a Houdini biography every few years. This well researched one was a real joy. Things that jumped out to me in this take on Houdini's life: the successful (and longer) career of his brother Theo, the unfortunate fact that his ill and confused widow was tricked into temporarily validating a message "from the other side", Houdini's financially disastrous motion picture career (I'd like to see some films!), his role as pioneer aviator in Europe and Australia, and his turning on his formerly admired namesake Houdin.
View all my reviews
Review: The Great Gatsby
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I decided to re-read this via this audiobook edition in order to prep for the upcoming Baz "Moulin Rouge" Luhrmann movie treatment. I enjoyed its mystery and tension as thoroughly as the first time, aided by an excellent narrator here. I was very glad to recognize the very lines of dialogue teased in the film's trailed, offering hope of a purist approach on that level. Further, I am still vaguely disgusted by Nick Carraway's latenly elitest aloofness andd imperturbability. I look forward to seeing the Tobey Maguire-Luhrmann interpretation of the stoically blase' narrator.
Certainly an American classic, and a classic of literature, worth returning to again and again.
View all my reviews
Sunday, April 14, 2013
Review: The Mummy Congress: Science, Obsession, And the Everlasting Dead
The Mummy Congress: Science, Obsession, And the Everlasting Dead by Heather Pringle
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I really appreciate my colleague Tony thinking to loan me this book. I love detailed accounts of obsessive subcultures and the insular, scientific world of mummy specialists qualifies. This was a thought-provoking work. One of the controversies in the field is whether to do destructive autopsies on mummies. I had hoped for a middle ground: at most use the accurate, tiny tools of laparoscopic surgery and digital laparoscopes. However, a close look at the work of an avid dissector convinced me: tools for mushy bodies don't work in dessicated corpses hardened to resin. Not fully exploiting some corpses misses unique discoveries like the example of an entire workman's shirt hidden in the wrappings. Other myth's exploded: Twain probably made up mummies as locomotive fuel (I had thought as much) and there never was paper made from mummy linens. This despite its inclusion in multiple histories of paper making.
I never watched the TV documentary on "cocaine mummies", but the discovery of THC and cocaine traces in the hair of Peruvian and Egyptian mummies made me want to believe partying elite were sending brickes of coke and bales of marijuana to each other across the southern Atlantic. But, apparently such trips were not possible at the time and such assaying only tells us how littel we know about the chemical processes involved.
The title refers to a regular meeting of mummy experts and the author, a report for a magazine, attended and following the "threads" from one year to track down those active in the "fields" of bogs, Valley of the Kings, Incan repositories and more. A chapter near the end on the ruthless, police state tactics South American missionaires took to destroy Incan mummy culture, a culturally important form of ancestor worship, was among the most repulsive material of a work that goes for the visceral.
Finally, the chapter on Lenin's embalming and that of the other Communist world corpses it inspired it self inspired me to read more on these "Mausoleummists".
View all my reviews
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Review: The Mummy Congress: Science, Obsession, And the Everlasting Dead
The Mummy Congress: Science, Obsession, And the Everlasting Dead by Heather Pringle
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I really appreciate my colleague Tony thinking to loan me this book. I love detailed accounts of obsessive subcultures and the insular, scientific world of mummy specialists qualifies. This was a thought-provoking work. One of the controversies in the field is whether to do destructive autopsies on mummies. I had hoped for a middle ground: at most use the accurate, tiny tools of laparoscopic surgery and digital laparoscopes. However, a close look at the work of an avid dissector convinced me: tools for mushy bodies don't work in dessicated corpses hardened to resin. Not fully exploiting some corpses misses unique discoveries like the example of an entire workman's shirt hidden in the wrappings. Other myth's exploded: Twain probably made up mummies as locomotive fuel (I had thought as much) and there never was paper made from mummy linens. This despite its inclusion in multiple histories of paper making.
I never watched the TV documentary on "cocaine mummies", but the discovery of THC and cocaine traces in the hair of Peruvian and Egyptian mummies made me want to believe partying elite were sending brickes of coke and bales of marijuana to each other across the southern Atlantic. But, apparently such trips were not possible at the time and such assaying only tells us how littel we know about the chemical processes involved.
The title refers to a regular meeting of mummy experts and the author, a report for a magazine, attended and following the "threads" from one year to track down those active in the "fields" of bogs, Valley of the Kings, Incan repositories and more. A chapter near the end on the ruthless, police state tactics South American missionaires took to destroy Incan mummy culture, a culturally important form of ancestor worship, was among the most repulsive material of a work that goes for the visceral.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Review: The Outhouse Revisited
The Outhouse Revisited by Sherman Hines
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
90 pages, many full color of whimsical, deteriorating, decorated outhouses. The focus is on the photography. Each picture, from Canada's Sherman Hines, has a wry and witty caoption from stand-up comedian Don Harron.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Review: All The Pretty Horses
All The Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
My wife encouraged me to read this, since I read and enjoy so much other McCarthy stuff: [b:Child of God|293625|Child of God|Cormac McCarthy|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1320509467s/293625.jpg|389945], [b:Blood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West|394535|Blood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West|Cormac McCarthy|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1335231647s/394535.jpg|1065465], and of course [b:No Country for Old Men|12497|No Country for Old Men|Cormac McCarthy|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1327927085s/12497.jpg|2996445]. The last being the natural analog here including some of the same language: "jackpot", "the gettin' place", etc. I can't help but compare, seeing the Western writer in both. The walking evil in No Country is a formless, wandering juggernaut wearing down the hero with its harsh visitations. The story held me when the two travellers meet Blevins and adventure together as an ill-matched trip, but the love story with Alejandra seemed to sudden, strong, and unbelievable. A key step in the story of the star-crossed lovers is a long monologue by the manipulating aunt (or is it grandmother?) which loses its impact in this audiobook where the narrator puts no effort into effecting a feminine voice. The escape, return, quest to return to the horst in the final act salvages the tale for me. I don't know that I want to continue on into the Border Trilogy, but I am glad I went this far "south of the border".
View all my reviews
Saturday, April 6, 2013
Review: The A-Z of Error-Free Research
The A-Z of Error-Free Research by Philip Good
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
“A-Z” suggests a breadth of completeness probably not possible in roughly 240 pages. The subtitle on the back is both more detailed and more accurate for this ABCs (and R) of applied statistics in research: “A Practical Guide with Step-by-Step Explanations, Numerous Worked Examples, and R Code”. R is a free programming language and environment for statistical computing. The R language is widely used among statisticians. R's popularity has increased substantially in recent years. This book follows a similar trend: R content increases exponentially as the page numbers rise. Final material includes an R primer and function index. Being conversant in R, and probably planning to use R in research, is a prerequisite to maximizing usage of this book. Understanding and embracing R is implicit and basically taken for granted throughout, although there are pointers.
(See my full review on MathDL: MAA Reviews.)
View all my reviews
Friday, April 5, 2013
Review: The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon
My rating: 0 of 5 stars
This is the second time in my life reading this abridged edition - the same copy. This one still has page numbers in my childish hand on the inside front cover and my nonsensical highlights throughout.
Gibbons' facility of language and subjective enthusiasm for his task means this is a work that can be revisited in life. I hope to tackle the complete work this time.
Among the many charms, Gibbons can take us into the retirement of Diocletion to here is wisdom on governing from a lofty place: “How often, was he accustomed to say, is it the interest of four or five ministers to combine together to deceive their sovereign! Secluded from mankind by his exalted dignity, the truth is concealed from his knowledge; he can see only with their eyes, he hears nothing but their misrepresentations. He confers the most important offices upon vice and weakness, and disgraces the most virtuous and deserving among his subjects. By such infamous arts, added Diocletian, the best and wisest princes are sold to the venal corruption of their courtiers”. So says Sir Edward Gibbon in History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, and who am I to say Diocletian didn't say it!
...it also seems rather funny to read this a scant two days after the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI, oh it we only had Gibbons around to comment on the current affairs of The Eternal City...
I can't make any sense of the noted page numbers and curious highlights I made when reading this as a teen, but I really enjoyed the focus in this abridged version on the Western Empire's demise. Gibbon places this squarely at the foot of the Christians: as lpersecuted as they were, they really led the pagans have it when in charge. However, he susses out the details of the obscure doctrinal difference of the Arian "heresy" that was embraced and supported by Roman aristocrats, to the great displeasure of out of temporal power Christian bishop leadership.
From reading Gibbon I more had the impression that as Xtians became part of the Roman beauracracy they found it a more practical policy to sublimate pagan recognized dates and locales rather than try for a wholesale conversion. It was more of a compromise approach. Actually, I think Constantine's role in Christianizing the Romam Empire is overrated and is largely fixed in the popular imagination due to the forged "Donation of Constantine". Personally, from my own reading, I think Constantine was someting in betweeen a fairweather Christian and a disengenuous manipulator of public opinion. It is quite possible he was a closent pagan and maybe even closet Christian at various times his motiviation for either may not have been wholly spiritual.
Think about this: just about 60 years after Constantine, the Romans used a pagan military command to attacked Alaric's barbarians while they were celebrating Easter Sunday to highlight that Christianity was rife inside and outside the Roman empire, there was no clear cut difference after Constantine, and Rome hardly was Christian or even concerened with respecting Christianity after Constantine. I read of this, by chance, on Easter Sunday 2013.
The final chapters of the book rush over the decline of the Eastern Empire hitting the highlights of the rise of Mohammed, the riotous blues and greens in the time of Justinian as well as his Theodora. We also get a ring-side seat to the siege by Mohammed II that finally crushed Constantinople.
View all my reviews
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Review: The Great Gatsby
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I decided to re-read this via this audiobook edition in order to prep for the upcoming Baz "Moulin Rouge" Luhrmann movie treatment. I enjoyed its mystery and tension as thoroughly as the first time, aided by an excellent narrator here. I was very glad to recognize the very lines of dialogue teased in the film's trailed, offering hope of a purist approach on that level. Further, I am still vaguely disgusted by Nick Carraway's latenly elitest aloofness andd imperturbability. I look forward to seeing the Tobey Maguire-Luhrmann interpretation of the stoically blase' narrator.
Certainly an American classic, and a classic of literature, worth returning to again and again.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Review: Escape from Camp 14: One Man's Remarkable Odyssey from North Korea to Freedom in the West
Escape from Camp 14: One Man's Remarkable Odyssey from North Korea to Freedom in the West by Blaine Harden
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A remarkable story about only know escape fromm North Korea of someone born inside a no-release labor camp. This unique defender lethally snitched out his own mother, crawled out over the roasting body of a comrade and wandered China pilfering and begging his way to ultimately Shanghai and then the West Cost of America.
The impact of this amazing story in this edition is somewhat lessened by uneven narration. The author is the narrator, which is rarely a good idea ([a:Ayaan Hirsi Ali|46245|Ayaan Hirsi Ali|http://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1222672586p2/46245.jpg] is a notable exception) and this one seemed to need dub in regular corrections which is distracting.
This was something I enjoyed reading as counterpoint to bratty man-child "Supreme Commander" Kim Jong Un precipitous sabre-rattling tantrums.
View all my reviews
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Review: The Joy of x: A Guided Tour of Math from One to Infinity
The Joy of x: A Guided Tour of Math from One to Infinity by Steven H. Strogatz My rating: 3 of 5 stars ...
-
Blacklisted by History: The Untold Story of Senator Joe McCarthy and His Fight Against America by M. Stanton Evans My ...
-
1920: The Year of the Six Presidents by David Pietrusza My rating: 3 of 5 stars The presidential electio...
-
Seeking Hearts: Love, Lust and the Secrets in the Ashes by Ryan Green My rating: 4 of 5 stars ...