Saturday, December 27, 2014

Review: Daddy Was a Punk Rocker


Daddy Was a Punk Rocker
Daddy Was a Punk Rocker by Adam Sharp

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



I was drawn to read this to learn about the post-punk life of Colin Sharp, briefly of Durutti Column. Of course, that was long past by and during the author's life. It was even further removed as Adam was so distant from both parents, at times in the antipodal sense, that he refers to both by their first names. That is part of his father's life he cannot access or participate in, except in his imagination. Globe-trotting and constantly re-creating himself, the plucky Adam Sharp proves a survivor, his own worst enemy, ringside spectator to world class family dysfunction, and, after all, an adept writer. He strings together his book's sections with pot boiler cliffhangers.

Good job, Adam!



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Review: Mathematics for Physicists and Engineers: Fundamentals and Interactive Study Guide


Mathematics for Physicists and Engineers: Fundamentals and Interactive Study Guide
Mathematics for Physicists and Engineers: Fundamentals and Interactive Study Guide by Klaus Weltner

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



[Look for my full review at MAA Reviews]

...What makes this work stand out for me among fundamentals texts is the pedagogical motive. It is plain that the authors are drawing on lecture experience for a student-friendly presentation. The material additions, especially the “screen version” of the Adobe PDF additions, brings this much closer to being an excellent study guide for the undergraduate. I say “study guide” because it would really take about a thousand pages of material, probably spread over three or four volumes, to be suitable to the ambitious scope. I feel the authors will truly succeed by refining their scope and not in adding any more material. While they still lack calculus of variations, complex variables (especially in the context of electrical engineering), adequate coverage of PDEs, any student not guided by frequent lecture contact or tutor support will soon be at sea with the thinness of each topic. Since any semester-long course will only cover only a portion of the gamut here, focus in content will improve this work while in its present form purchasers should consider it a helpful and even compact reference as well as adjunct text for the bulk of their undergraduate academic courses.



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Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Review: The Science of Discworld: A Novel


The Science of Discworld: A Novel
The Science of Discworld: A Novel by Terry Pratchett

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Various "Science of..." books for fantasy settings strive to explain impossible technology by interpreting the possible, this one does none of that. Pratchett alternates basic science of evolution, ecosystems (rainforests are basically oxygen neutral when you consider rotting vegetation), cosmogony, space travel, and more. The "novel" part is a story of wizards of Unseen University building our world in a Discworld lab and watching life and geology unfold. The story goes to possible post-Earth plans for the human race. Apparently, there is a Part 2 and I would like to read that, too.



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Sunday, December 21, 2014

Review: Aku-Aku: The Secret of Easter Island


Aku-Aku: The Secret of Easter Island
Aku-Aku: The Secret of Easter Island by Thor Heyerdahl

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



Thor strikes me as the closest thing we have had to an Indiana Jones adventurer-scholar, like Harry Houdini strikes me as the closest thing to a superhero. These chronicles of exploring the truth behind mysterious Easter Island, or Rapa Nui meaning 'Great Rapa,' read as much like adventure as they do scholarship. Secret caves, superstition, and wizardry read with as much drama and tension as there is in enlightenment coming from the archaeology, rongo-rong, and top knots and burial spaces of the long-faced statues. As tantalizing and unfortunate in its brevity is the cursory treatment given to stops at Pitcairn Island and Rapa Iti. Plenty of color pictures and maps help out this book.



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Saturday, December 20, 2014

Review: Ice Bound: A Doctor's Incredible Battle for Survival at the South Pole


Ice Bound: A Doctor's Incredible Battle for Survival at the  South Pole
Ice Bound: A Doctor's Incredible Battle for Survival at the South Pole by Jerri Nielsen

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



I think most that remember recall the success of the off-season rescue (just a few weeks early, really) of this intrepid doctor from the South Pole. That actual event and the events after are all the last several pages, maybe a half-dozen. Most of the book, and what was really interesting, was what led Dr. Nielsen to "winterover", the community of "polies" and their culture, challenges, and daily life, and how they respond and react to this threat to one of their own. In many ways, this is an epistolary telling formed with commentary around reprinted e-mail communications which works much better than I would have thought.



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Friday, December 19, 2014

Review: Does My Suicide Vest Make Me Look Fat?: A Soldier's Year in Iraq


Does My Suicide Vest Make Me Look Fat?: A Soldier's Year in Iraq
Does My Suicide Vest Make Me Look Fat?: A Soldier's Year in Iraq by John Ready

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Ready was held a major's rank in the Army's Civil Affairs organization and so has a unique insight on post-Saddam Iraq. Much of it was spent spending Saddam's ill-gotten riches on hearts-and-finds projects around Baghdad International Airport. Ready's recollections come in short vignettes rich in wit, cynicism, and harsh reality. I don't know why he feels a need to go on for paragraphs in italics, but overall this is a good, modern military memoir.



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Thursday, December 18, 2014

Review: The Velvet Underground - 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition


The Velvet Underground - 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition
The Velvet Underground - 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition by David Fricke

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



The extensive liner notes from [a:David Fricke|135081|David Fricke|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/u_50x66-ccc56e79bcc2db9e6cdcd450a4940d46.png] in this beautiful, hardbound book accompanying the 45 year release of this seminal album tells the story from the ousting of [a:John Cale|179525|John Cale|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/u_50x66-ccc56e79bcc2db9e6cdcd450a4940d46.png] and the conditions of writing, recording and touring the material. One of the only two living survivors of this ensemble, Doug Yule, is often quoted and appears to be the main source for subject recollections here. There are three mixes, additional material not released on the album and two live CDs. In text, the first two mixes are compared and the scene that was Marty Balin's club The Matrix where there the live recordings were made is also explored. As much of the book is promotional litter of the time (ticket stubs, ads, rag reviews, etc.) and promotional photos.



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Review: Look Homeward, Angel


Look Homeward, Angel
Look Homeward, Angel by Thomas Wolfe

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



Why is it that so much great American literature post-Civil War ([b:Tobacco Road|59091|Tobacco Road|Erskine Caldwell|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1369852920s/59091.jpg|1238780], [a:William Faulkner|3535|William Faulkner|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1373572902p2/3535.jpg], etc.) arises from the desperate depths of imagined Southern depravity and hopelessness?

I love the flights into unnecessary detail, like [a:Herman Melville|1624|Herman Melville|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1361337904p2/1624.jpg] takes in [b:Moby-Dick; or, The Whale|153747|Moby-Dick; or, The Whale|Herman Melville|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1327940656s/153747.jpg|2409320], into the battle art of an encyclopedia, and more,

I specially savored this baby Eugnene's point of view, crib-bound and precociously philosophic: "Lying darkly in his crib, washed, powdered, and fed, he thought quietly of many things before he dropped off to sleep?the interminable sleep that obliterated time for him, and that gave him a sense of having missed forever a day of sparkling life.  At these moments, he was heartsick with weary horror as he thought of the discomfort, weakness, dumbness, the infinite misunderstanding he would have to endure before he gained even physical freedom.  He grew sick as he thought of the weary distance before him, the lack of co-ordination of the centres of control, the undisciplined and rowdy bladder, the helpless exhibition he was forced to give in the company of his sniggering, pawing brothers and sisters, dried, cleaned, revolved before them.

...He had not even names for the objects around him: he probably defined them for himself by some jargon, reinforced by some mangling of the speech that roared about him, to which he listened intently day after day, realizing that his first escape must come through language.  He indicated as quickly as he could his ravenous hunger for pictures and print: sometimes they brought him great books profusely illustrated, and he bribed them desperately by cooing, shrieking with delight, making extravagant faces, and doing all the other things they understood in him.  He wondered savagely how they would feel if they knew what he really thought: at other times he had to laugh at them and at their whole preposterous comedy of errors as they pranced around for his amusement, waggled their heads at him, tickled him roughly, making him squeal violently against his will.  The situation was at once profoundly annoying and comic...

He saw that the great figures that came and went about him, the huge leering heads that bent hideously into his crib, the great voices that rolled incoherently above him, had for one another not much greater understanding than they had for him: that even their speech, their entire fluidity and ease of movement were but meagre communicants of their thought or feeling, and served often not to promote understanding, but to deepen and widen strife, bitterness, and prejudice. His brain went black with terror.  He saw himself an inarticulate stranger, an amusing little clown, to be dandled and nursed by these enormous and remote figures.  He had been sent from one mystery into another..."

Then, there are passages of prose so poetic I think they must be a quote only to find them original an experience I have only also had with [a:Garrison Keillor|2014|Garrison Keillor|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1259697704p2/2014.jpg]:

"The Spring comes back.  I see the sheep upon the hill.  The belled cows come along the road in wreaths of dust, and the wagons creak home below the pale ghost of the moon.  But what stirs within the buried heart?  Where are the lost words?  And who has seen his shadow in the Square?"

I love that the life of the semi-autobiographical hero who finds life and purpose in literature, a classic education sought by Eugene and having a transformative and redemptive effect on him, points out some of the pieces worth exploring to us:

often Marc Antony's funeral oration, Hamlet's soliloquy, the banquet scene in Macbeth, and the scene between Desdemona and Othello before he strangles her.  Or, he would recite or read poetry, for which he had a capacious and retentive memory.  His favorites were:  "O why should the spirit of mortal be proud" ("Lincoln's favorite poem," he was fond of saying); "'We are lost,' the captain shouted, As he staggered down the stairs"; "I remember, I remember, the house where I was born"; "Ninety and nine with their captain, Rode on the enemy's track, Rode in the gray light of morning, Nine of the ninety came back"; "The boy stood on the burning deck"; and "Half a league, half a league, half a league onward."

I was really disappointed in the end, though. This hallucinatory choreography of moving angel statues and conversations with his deceased brother Ben was very anti-climactic and weak, to me.



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Friday, December 5, 2014

Review: We'll Be Here For the Rest of Our Lives: A Swingin' Showbiz Saga


We'll Be Here For the Rest of Our Lives: A Swingin' Showbiz Saga
We'll Be Here For the Rest of Our Lives: A Swingin' Showbiz Saga by Paul Shaffer

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



This audio book narrated by Shaffer himself was a real joy to read. He does all the voices like Dylan and Letterman, and it is great. Also, he comes across a true fan, a music enthusiast and in awe of his idols. This translates into a delightfully giddy series of recollections about The Blues Brothers, Phil Spector, Eric Clapton, Harry Shearer/Spinal Tap, and more.



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Review: Charlatan: America's Most Dangerous Huckster, the Man Who Pursued Him, and the Age of Flimflam


Charlatan: America's Most Dangerous Huckster, the Man Who Pursued Him, and the Age of Flimflam
Charlatan: America's Most Dangerous Huckster, the Man Who Pursued Him, and the Age of Flimflam by Pope Brock

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



This was an amazing chapter of history told in a brisk and entertaining manner. Fraudulent surgeon "Doctor" John Brinkley made a fortune, millions in Depression years when true specialists made thousands by inserting goats' testes into impotent American men and becoming a media demagogue. His nemesis was Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, took him fifteen years to destroy Brinkley in a dramatic courtroom showdown marking the culmination of an epic struggle worth of an opera. As interesting is reading of his pioneering use of radio that not only kick-started hillbilly/country music as a national force in America but paved the way for rock-n-roll border blasters (he is immortalized in ZZ Top's "Heard it on the X") and DJs like Wolfman Jack.

This is one of the best history works I have read in a while.



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Review: King Lear

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