Friday, May 31, 2013

Review: The Elements of Style


The Elements of Style
The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr.

My rating: 5 of 5 stars



Every speaker/writer of the English language should read this peerless and seminal work on grammar and usage. I'll forever remember its advice (don't be breezy!) and striking imagery (nouns
"pressed into service" as verbs ala "gifted").

I recently saw this work name-check in [b:The Software Project Manager's Handbook|4943549|The Software Project Manager's Handbook|Dwayne Phillips|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1267044498s/4943549.jpg|3186853], kudos for that [a:Dwayne Phillips|1270209|Dwayne Phillips|http://www.goodreads.com/assets/nophoto/nophoto-U-50x66-251a730d696018971ef4a443cdeaae05.jpg]!



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Review: The Brothers Bulger


The Brothers Bulger
The Brothers Bulger by Howie Carr

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



It is really sickening the way James "Whitey" Bulger's role as an FBI informant gave him an implicit U.S. government umbrella of protection to his life of villainous, murderous crime through tip-offs of recording devices, etc. This book covers that sordid tale and brother William Bulger's rise as a corrupt Massachusetts/Boston politico. The context of a weak and disorganized Mafia (La Cosa Nostra; "LCN" here) that allowed Bulger and the Winterhill gang to flourish is interesting. There also cameos by Donnie Brasco, Mitt Romeny, Barney Frank, and Dukakis, as well as a Bush family member. For instance, it was the weakness and disorganization of the mafia that allowed their initiation ceremony to be recorded in Medford, MA as recounted here and published in an unabridged fashion in [b:The Ceremony|2103846|The Ceremony|David Fischer|/assets/nocover/60x80.png|2109229].

While this book is updated with a where-are-they-now epilogue it ends with a septuagenarian Whitey still on the lam.

The tale of gangster and elected official as siblings with their successes, such as selling booze to the FBI for parties and making a boondoggle out of The Hynes Convention Center, is really almost too amazing to believe. Oh yeah, and on top of that, Whitey participated in gov't LSD experiments while in prison. Wow.



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Review: The Software Project Manager's Handbook


The Software Project Manager's Handbook
The Software Project Manager's Handbook by Dwayne Phillips

My rating: 0 of 5 stars



• "Visibility and communication are more important than [choice of technology]"
• "[Handle] maintenance projects so that no one feels like a second-class citizen"
• One of my favorites: "Choose the best people, keep the team small, minimize distractions, train them, meet together as a team regularly, know them, and set an example"
• Cherry-picked from 1.3.2 Best Practices “a best practices list compiled from the best practices lists of many well-known authors:
o Reviews, inspections, and walkthroughs
o Binary quality decision gates
o Milestones
o Visibility of plans and progress
o Defect tracking
o Testing early and often
o Fewer, better people
o Opposition of featuritis and creeping requirements
o Documentation for everything
o Change management
o Reusable items
o Project tracking
o Users - understanding them
o Buy in and ownership of the project by all participants
o Requirements
• “Avoid having team members work in isolation”
• “Keep…notes of everything you learn”
• “use standards judiciously”
• “You cannot build a more difficult product without increasing capability”




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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Review: On the Origin of Species


On the Origin of Species
On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin

My rating: 0 of 5 stars



Do youself a favor and review or print out the Divergence of Taxa diagram. to know what Darwin is explaining

This particular narrator of the 2nd (1859) British edition has some unusual pronunciation mannerisms: "pupae" sound like excreta in the eye, "inference" has furry accent on an indentified second syllable, and "protean" is a homonym to "protein". Who knew!



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Review: Young Man Luther: A Study in Psychoanalysis and History


Young Man Luther: A Study in Psychoanalysis and History
Young Man Luther: A Study in Psychoanalysis and History by Erik H. Erikson

My rating: 0 of 5 stars



Among the most intriguing material in this book is when the author references his insights gathered from anthorpological assessment of Native Americans, such as:

"It is well to remember that the majority of men have never invented the device of beating children into submission. Some of the American Plains Indian tribes were (as I had an opportunity to relate and to discuss twenty years ago [b:Childhood and Society|763806|Childhood and Society|Erik H. Erikson|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1361744736s/763806.jpg|54594]) deeply shocked when they first saw white people beat their children. In their bewilderment they could only explain such behavior as part of an over-all missionary scheme an explanation also supported by the white people's method of letting their babies cry themselves blue in the face. It all must mean, so they thought, a well-calculated wish to impress white children with the idea that this world is not a good place to linger in, and that it is better to look to the other world where perfect happiness is to be had at the price of having sacrificed this world. This is an ideological interpretation, and a shrewd one: it interprets a single typical act not on the basis of its being a possible cause of a limited effect, but as part of a world view. And indeed, we now beat our children less, but we are still harrying them through this imperfect world, not so much to get them to the next one as to make them hurry from one good moment to better ones, to climb, improve, advance, progress."

Along with that, I have been avoiding psychoanalytical biographies considering such things as [b:Moses and Monotheism|97743|Moses and Monotheism|Sigmund Freud|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1355687578s/97743.jpg|2914719] as bordering on hubris. Getting into this work, I had no idea we could know so much in detail about an early 16th Century personage. Luther's annotated writings, early biographies, financial records, first person accounts and other primary sources complete a picture of the life of this important figure largely from his abruptly redirected university career to leading an out of control reactionary reform movement with a fully violent insurgency.

Admittedly, when I came across a phrase like "transfer neurosis" I let my eyes drop down to the next paragraph seeking more details on Luther's life and times. However, with Luther's confessed and documented obsession with diabolical derrieres, his own disordered bowel movements, and a mind or times given to anal metaphors it does appear subjecting his life to Freudian interpretation was bound to happen and I commend the author in his restraint in this direction.



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Monday, May 27, 2013

Review: The Rise of the West: A History of the Human Community


The Rise of the West: A History of the Human Community
The Rise of the West: A History of the Human Community by William Hardy McNeill

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



In The Outline of History, H. G. Wells observed, "The natural political map of the world insists upon itself. It heaves and frets beneath the artificial political map like some misfitted giant."

McNeill's panoramic view of history is cut from the same cloth: cultural in continuous clash with political and societal priorities often at odds with pressure building up like a tectonic fault. McNeill sees the interactions and tensions of intermixed peoples pouring out of the steppes for centuries and jostling anxiously against each in the inhabitable regions of Europe.

I love McNeill's uses of the word "ecumene" to describe the civilized mass fretting beneath the political map. There are ample plates of pictures and ampler footnotes as McNeill consulted libraries of information and summarizes it all with an obvious love for history and the drama of the human story and he isn't afraid to say when there are things he doesn't understand and seem missing from the published expertise.



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Review: The Brothers Bulger


The Brothers Bulger
The Brothers Bulger by Howie Carr

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



It is really sickening the way James "Whitey" Bulger's role as an FBI informant gave him an implicit U.S. government umbrella of protection to his life of villainous, murderous crime through tip-offs of recording devices, etc. This book covers that sordid tale and brother William Bulger's rise as a corrupt Massachusetts/Boston politico. The context of a weak and disorganized Mafia (La Cosa Nostra; "LCN" here) that allowed Bulger and the Winterhill gang to flourish is interesting. There also cameos by Donnie Brasco, Mitt Romeny, Barney Frank, and Dukakis, as well as a Bush family member. For instance, it was the weakness and disorganization of the mafia that allowed their initiation ceremony to be recorded in Medford, MA as recounted here and published in an unabridged fashion in [b:The Ceremony|2103846|The Ceremony|David Fischer|/assets/nocover/60x80.png|2109229].

While this book is updated with a where-are-they-now epilogue it ends with a septuagenarian Whitey still on the lam.

The tale of gangster and elected official as siblings with their successes, such as selling booze to the FBI for parties and making a boondoggle out of The Hynes Convention Center, is really almost too amazing to believe.



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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Review: Lost At Sea: The Jon Ronson Mysteries


Lost At Sea: The Jon Ronson Mysteries
Lost At Sea: The Jon Ronson Mysteries by Jon Ronson

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



This is a great, entertaining and amazing collection of Ronson explorations into fringe groups. Apparently, this is largely collectied from published articles. I recall only reading one before: the fascinating look into the flotsam of Kubrick's obsessive reclusion.

Jon Ronson writes about the obsessive, extreme and hard to understand sides of humanity with clarity, understanding, and humor. Like unblinking Error Morris documentaries this audiobook, ably read by Ronson himself, covers a Pygmalion-like dreamer makerof from lifelike robots programmed for loving personalities to "Indigo children" (New Age children who are believed to possess special, unusual and sometimes supernatural traits or abilities), Insane Clown Posse’s juggalo fans confused by ICP's supposed hyper-Christianity. This work includes pop singer Robbie Williamson’s greatest passion (aliens), and the SETI scientist planning how to greet those aliens when they arrive. Ronson throws himself gonzo-style into the stories such as faking multiple Ronsons (Happy, Paul, and Titch, among others) to get to the bottom of credit card companies’ predatory tactics. Frustrated, amateur nuclear physicists, creepy possibly homicidal assisted-suicide practitioners, the town of North Pole, Alaska’s Christmas-induced high school mass-murder plot, and patrols with RLHS (Real Life Super Heroes) are here.

The title refers to his investigation of the apparent epidemic of people falling off cruise ships and one of the most unique pieces, Ronson interviews representative samples of economic strate from the poor to the mega-rich. Possibly the most repulsive is the "Jesus Christians" who enter organ donation like juggernauts and and make sick farce out of Christian charity.



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Review: Lost At Sea: The Jon Ronson Mysteries


Lost At Sea: The Jon Ronson Mysteries
Lost At Sea: The Jon Ronson Mysteries by Jon Ronson

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



This is a great, entertaining and amazing collection of Ronson explorations into fringe groups. Apparently, this is largely collectied from published articles. I recall only reading one before: the fascinating look into the flotsam of Kubrick's obsessive reclusion.

Jon Ronson writes about the obsessive, extreme and hard to understand sides of humanity with clarity, understanding, and humor. Like unblinking Error Morris documentaries this audiobook, ably read by Ronson himself, covers a Pygmalion-like dreamer makerof from lifelike robots programmed for loving personalities to "Indigo children" (New Age children who are believed to possess special, unusual and sometimes supernatural traits or abilities), Insane Clown Posse’s juggalo fans confused by ICP's supposed hyper-Christianity. This work includes pop singer Robbie Williamson’s greatest passion (aliens), and the SETI scientist planning how to greet those aliens when they arrive. Ronson throws himself gonzo-style into the stories such as faking multiple Ronsons (Happy, Paul, and Titch, among others) to get to the bottom of credit card companies’ predatory tactics. Frustrated, amateur nuclear physicists, creepy possibly homicidal assisted-suicide practitioners, the town of North Pole, Alaska’s Christmas-induced high school mass-murder plot, and patrols with RLHS (Real Life Super Heroes) are here.

The title refers to his investigation of the apparent epidemic of people falling off cruise ships and one of the most unique pieces, Ronson interviews representative samples of economic strate from the poor to the mega-rich.



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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Review: Honey Badger Don't Care: Randall's Guide to Crazy, Nastyass Animals


Honey Badger Don't Care: Randall's Guide to Crazy, Nastyass Animals
Honey Badger Don't Care: Randall's Guide to Crazy, Nastyass Animals by Randall

My rating: 2 of 5 stars



Reading this one can hear the voice of the author; narrator of the famous honey badger Youtube video. This compendium is on a few vicious animals, such as the Tasmanian devil and wombat. Others are less fierce, or even cute, such as the pink fairy armadillo, sloth, bullfrog, and more. Randall has fun expounding on their way and some of the pictures have cigarettes and hair curlers added to the creatures. To me the funniest part is on the inside front cover: a contact number for bulk sales to schools!



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Friday, May 17, 2013

Review: Young Man Luther: A Study in Psychoanalysis and History


Young Man Luther: A Study in Psychoanalysis and History
Young Man Luther: A Study in Psychoanalysis and History by Erik H. Erikson

My rating: 0 of 5 stars



"It is well to remember that the majority of men have never invented the device of beating children into submission. Some of the American Plains Indian tribes were (as I had an opportunity to relate and to discuss twenty years ago [in [book:Childhood and Society|763806]]) deeply shocked when they first saw white people beat their children. In their bewilderment they could only explain such behavior as part of an over-all missionary scheme an explanation also supported by the white people's method of letting their babies cry themselves blue in the face. It all must mean, so they thought, a well-calculated wish to impress white children with the idea that this world is not a good place to linger in, and that it is better to look to the other world where perfect happiness is to be had at the price of having sacrificed this world. This is an ideological interpretation, and a shrewd one: it interprets a single typical act not on the basis of its being a possible cause of a limited effect, but as part of a world view. And indeed, we now beat our children less, but we are still harrying them through this imperfect world, not so much to get them to the next one as to make them hurry from one good moment to better ones, to climb, improve, advance, progress."



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Review: Unzipped


Unzipped
Unzipped by Suzi Quatro

My rating: 2 of 5 stars



I remember Suzi as Leather Tuscadero and, for some reason, never got into her music, even though I am an avid music fan. Well, at least I thought I hadn't I alwasy loved the Pleasure Seekers stuff, but part of my thought Suzi was too young for that, and that was her older sisters. This autobiogaphy permanently disabused me of that notion and contains the entire Pleasure Seekers story, which is a plus. On the minus side, there is a cutesy style of "Little Susie from Detroit" interjecting herself through italics into the story "Suzi" tells. This goes along with a girlis, new age, spiritual side she reveals. Who knew in those skin-tight leather jump suits was the spirit-sensing Doris Day of rock-n-roll? Well, so there isn't much of the sex and drugs part of rock-b-roll here, but this does help me see the place Quatro has in rock history - by taking the leather apparel from Elvis' '68 Comeback and touring the world becoming an acknowledged role model for Joan Jett she linked 50's rock with 60's-70's rock as a template for a bold woman that rocks hard. On the personal side, she goes into great detail on being a mother on the road, the collapse of her marraige to Len, and the death of her mother as well as family squabbles. I wasn't aware of her stage carreer ('Annie Get Your Gun', 'Tallulah Who') and that is here as well has her cameo entry into the world of "sound healing" (I told you, new age-y).



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Thursday, May 16, 2013

Review: Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq War


Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq War
Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq War by Michael Isikoff

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



At times I would like to think malfeasance from high office might only be incompetence, but with Bush, "Scooter" Libby, and the gossip-y Dick Armitage it sures looks like incompetent malfeasance: attacks on Ambassador Wilson, faking claims of Iraqi bio-weapon trucks and Hussein yellow cake purchases were hopeless endeavors that that succeeded inspite of themselves. (The Nigerian documents, sold by a wanna-be freelance spy more dishonest than Curveball was so inaccurate it was akin to producing one stating Ronald Reagan, C-I-C of the CSA piped twleve billion gallons of nerve gas to terrorists in 2001.) Ah, if only it were a novel, than I couldn't believe it.



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Sunday, May 12, 2013

Review: Shadow Divers


Shadow Divers
Shadow Divers by Robert Kurson

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



Gripping and exciting!

The larger-than-life characters with their honor, thrill-seeking and history discoveries make the tale of finding this the wreck of a WWII submarine a fascinating account. The world of wreck diving gets illuminated, and i love highly obsessive subcultures. Narration by Michael Prichard very good.

This tale of acting on a tip from a local fisherman and discovering a sunken German U-boat not too far off the New Jersey coastand the hunt for clues all the way to Germany make this one of the best non-fiction reads of recent years.



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Review: Ambush at Fort Bragg


Ambush at Fort Bragg
Ambush at Fort Bragg by Tom Wolfe

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



This is a nice bit of Wolfe, an audio novella about the slice of American society shunted off for military duty. An imagining of the counter-culture that creates is explored with excellent narration by actor Ed Norton.




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Review: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: The Tertiary Phase


The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: The Tertiary Phase
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: The Tertiary Phase by Douglas Adams

My rating: 2 of 5 stars



This audiobook is a compendium of a BBC series of a re-telling/remagings in compressed and suitably zany and insane form of the Hitchhikers's trilogy. Here with Richard Griffiths as Slartibartfast it is a fun and quick romp across the universe with Arthur Dent, Prefect Ford, Trillian, and the rest. With the goofiness turned up to "eleven", this one telegraphs a childish enjoyment.



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Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Review: Judy Garland


Judy Garland
Judy Garland by Anne Edwards

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



Before reading this biography I read a smattering of reviews and was surprised at a consistent theme that the author was too forgiving of Garland. I don't see that. She calls Judy a naïve addict, gullible and usine self-abuse and attempted suicide as attention-getting schemes. This is hardly flattering. Garland is responsible for her actions as an adult, but what responsible does a child vaudevillian have for early habits of go- and no-go pills? Judy was obviously surrounded by sycophants and handlers that profited from her exertions enabled by chemical dependency. The second visitation of ex-husband Luft as an instigator of transforming her career into indentured servitude with a contract containg hair-trigger harsh penalties is particularly galling.



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Monday, May 6, 2013

Review: The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering


The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering
The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering by Frederick P. Brooks Jr.

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



This book remains a timeless classic of sound advice for software engineering. I really respect how specific references to technology 40 years old remains in this anniverary edition. It helps to highlight how the foundational truths have stood the the test of time. File it next to [b:Programming Pearls|52084|Programming Pearls|Jon Bentley|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1348758499s/52084.jpg|50819] and be a better software engineer for having read both, which together have more sagely advice of practical use than, say, a thicker [a:Steve McConnell|3307|Steve McConnell|/assets/nophoto/nophoto-M-50x66-e07624dc012f2cce49c7d9aa6500c6c0.jpg] tome ([b:Code Complete|4845|Code Complete|Steve McConnell|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1328830405s/4845.jpg|8419]) and I like his books!



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Sunday, May 5, 2013

Review: Mathematics Of Choice: Or, How To Count Without Counting


Mathematics Of Choice: Or, How To Count Without Counting
Mathematics Of Choice: Or, How To Count Without Counting by Ivan Morton Niven

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



This text is an engaging, even addictive, introduction to basic combinatorics. Written in a fun and inviting manner, reader interest is amplified by the author’s infectious enthusiasm. This is an excellent introduce to combinations and permutations. First published in 1975, before computers and calculators were assumed to be at the ready, the exercises in this book can all easily be done by hand on paper. Students finishing High School or in their first year of college will find this work an excellent adjunct to textbooks and lectures.

The work is arranged in a logical progression beginning with the definitions and motivations for factorials, combinations, and permutations. From there the reader moves to binomial coefficients, power sets, and Fibonacci numbers. The effect of repetitions on combinations makes a natural prelude in Chapter Four to the Inclusion-Exclusion Principle and the groundwork for basic probability. From partitions of integers the author moves into a brief and basic, yet cogent and enlightening, explanation of generating functions and some applications for them. The book also includes Pigeonhole Principle, induction, recursion, and allied topics.

Tom Schulte teaches mathematics at Oakland Community College in Michigan.


The William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition: Problems and Solutions 1965–1984 (MAA Problem Book Series)
Review by Tom Schulte

Unlike the rigorous and detailed prelude William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition Problems and Solutions: 1938-1964, this work covers a roughly similar time span in one-fifth the space. The competition problems are displayed in a straightforward presentation, chronologically in the first section. The second section is the solutions, roughly three to five per page taking up the last four-fifths of the book.

Students participating in competition mathematics will benefit from these actual species of problem, seen “in the field.” However, anyone interested in problem solving at the advanced collegiate level will find the quality and diversity of the problems presented here both challenging and fun. Having the official solution safely several pages away allows one to solve first and compare later.

Winning teams and students from 1965 through 1984 are listed in an appendix. An index of problems by type, ranging from abstract algebra to Wallis product, allows the work to serve as a reference for challenging student questions on many topics. This compendium is a problem solver’s delight and the unadorned presentation compared to the previous volume in no way distracts from the historical interest and value of this potpourri of mathematics.



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Review: Music: A Mathematical Offering


Music: A Mathematical Offering
Music: A Mathematical Offering by Dave Benson

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



The cover art of this book is the striking visual of the normal modes of a vibrating drum head made visible by sand coalescing into patterns on a kettledrum head. Known as Chladni patterns after their 18th Century discoverer, these same images caught my imagination as an undergraduate on the cover of the Third Edition of Boundary Value Problems (David L. Powers). From that time until know, I have always felt modeling music is a particularly enlightening way to understand ODEs, Fourier analysis, the wave equation, and … music.

This book does not necessarily require greater mathematical knowledge than that imparted by something like the Powers textbook and no real close understanding of music is required, either. But, with a fundamental knowledge of the wave equation and solving ODEs along with at least a passing interest in music, this text will raise the avid reader’s knowledge and appreciation of subjects both mathematical and musical.

The material in this book sprung from the author’s fascination with the early purchase of a second-hand synthesizer which developed into an undergraduate mathematics course taught over the period of a few years. It is then natural for this book to start as it does from very basic concepts of defining sound, sound mechanics in the human ear, trigonometry basics, damped harmonic motion, and resonance. Fourier theory is introduced and built up to Bessel functions, the Hilbert transform and related topics. These preliminaries are complete in the first two chapters and are there if required, or a prepared reader can dive right into the encyclopedic third chapter, “A Mathematician’s Guide to the Orchestra”.
The third chapter is the first of seven that overview a musical topic in a methodical, organized approach. Each such chapter breaks its subject up into classifications make this work both a guided tour and a reference work on mathematics and music. Chapter 3 starts from the wave equation for strings to mathematically modeling and determining the vibration modes for stings, wind instruments, drums, horns, xylophones and more. Each section on a class of instruments includes suggestions for further reading. An additional chapter considers consonance and dissonance, including a fascinating section on musical paradoxes where consideration is made of ways to trick the ear.

Two chapters take on the idea of scales from the basic notion of the Pythagorean scale and the cycle of fifths to such alternative scales as those of Harry Partch and Wendy Carlos. This has at its heart an examination of and application of continued fractions. An additional two chapters consider digital music starting from the basics of digital signals and dithering and includes a granular overview of the MP3 and WAV file formats. Fourier transforms are brought in for analyzing synthesis of sounds and practical application is made through examples in the CSOUND programming language.

A final fascinating chapter is “Symmetry in Music”. Through modular arithmetic and some group theory (Cayley, Burnside, etc.) basic concepts of symmetry in music are made clear. Like the other chapter and related chapter groups, “Symmetry in Music” can stand alone both on the musical topic and as an example of an application of group theory.

This work is fully indexed and includes several pages of bibliography and reference works. There is also an “octave” of eight appendices that cover Bessel functions, scales, MIDI charts, a table of intervals referenced back into the text, music theory, and a lengthy list of recommended recordings. (Many sections of the work have context-specific recommended recordings.)

Cambridge University Press allows the author to keep a free online version of this text at http://www.maths.abdn.ac.uk/~bensondj/html/maths-music.html.



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Review: Cat's Cradle


Cat's Cradle
Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



I read the Vonnegut titles voraciously over two decades ago as a much younger man. Now, slowly after Vonnegut's passing, I have been revisiting the titles slower and with more experience. Cat's Cardle is an especially rich title for me: ice-nine, granfalloons (where are you Ernie Douglas?), Bokononism, ...

The indictements of religion, war, weapons of mass destruction and the stoic "and so it goes" acceptances is classic Vonnegut. I will read this one, again.



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Saturday, May 4, 2013

Review: The Family Portrait: Four Short Stories about Domestic Life


The Family Portrait: Four Short Stories about Domestic Life
The Family Portrait: Four Short Stories about Domestic Life by Jon Ronson

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Short but sweet; this brief audiobook is a look into the family life of autor Jone Ronson. I came to read Ronson after intriged to read [b:The Men Who Stare at Goats|1824|The Men Who Stare at Goats|Jon Ronson|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1347374150s/1824.jpg|819599] after enjoying the movie it inspired. Now, from this work I learn Ronson has home tales to tell as interesting as those of [a:David Sedaris|2849|David Sedaris|http://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1213737698p2/2849.jpg] or [a:Augusten Burroughs|3058|Augusten Burroughs|http://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1337222509p2/3058.jpg]. Well, "limone", tell us more!



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Friday, May 3, 2013

Review: Dennis Hopper: The Wild Ride of a Hollywood Rebel


Dennis Hopper: The Wild Ride of a Hollywood Rebel
Dennis Hopper: The Wild Ride of a Hollywood Rebel by Peter L. Winkler

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



A great wild and revealing portrait of (self-)tortured actor, frustrated director, successful art collector and self-important renegade Dennis Hopper. The tangled tales of who write the script to Easy Rider, why Hopper did so many crappy movies, and just what led to the notoriety-through-obscurity of "The Last Movie" make this a cineophile's goldmine.



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Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Review: Loopy Logic Problems and Other Puzzles


Loopy Logic Problems and Other Puzzles
Loopy Logic Problems and Other Puzzles by Ivan Moscovich

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



One of the most interesting things about this collection of logic puzzles is the focus on mechanical problems. Intricate representation of gears and models of pendulums lie alongside islands of dichotomous honesty, a handful of Frank Odd’s spirolaterals, and family members of guessable ages. Largely, there is no math required for these; just ascertain the final motion or next position. As such, these puzzles are often visually as well as intellectually stimulating. Such challenges make for good material to project as a lecture aid, or private musing. The target audience seems to be those looking to sharpen the mind without often being required to sharpen a pencil.

Look for my full review on MAA DL Reviews.



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Review: King Lear

King Lear by William Shakespeare My rating: 4 of 5 stars View all my reviews