Saturday, August 29, 2015

Review: BLOW: How a Small-Town Boy Made $100 Million with the Medellin Cocaine Cartel And Lost It All

BLOW: How a Small-Town Boy Made $100 Million with the Medellin Cocaine Cartel And Lost It All BLOW: How a Small-Town Boy Made $100 Million with the Medellin Cocaine Cartel And Lost It All by Bruce Porter
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I read a lot of true crime just for it being in that genre. This one, specifically, I thought to read while doing a re-watch of the Depp movie. Of course, more goes on in the book and more than could have been in the movie. The extremity of Jung's drug use and the kinkiness of sex life could have been more underscored, both for drama and humor. Interestingly, Barile of the Tonsorial Parlor does not come across as colorful as the Reubens portrayal so I wonder how much there was to that, maybe just script and/or improv. (Reubens did need to show what he could do as an actor at that time.)

This is fast-paced and a good read, really amazing to what heights Jung went to as the American rep for the Medellín Cartel generally and Pablo Escobar specifically.

The excess and success of Carlos Lehder is as intertwined with the rise and downfall of Jung here as in the movie and it would seem a movie or book length treatment of that mad criminal's own arc is worth doing.

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Friday, August 28, 2015

Review: Great Calculations: A Surprising Look Behind 50 Scientific Inquiries

Great Calculations: A Surprising Look Behind 50 Scientific Inquiries Great Calculations: A Surprising Look Behind 50 Scientific Inquiries by Colin Pask
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

...Can such a list be compiled without criticism for some oversight? Probably not. I encourage you to read it yourself and come up with your own necessary additions. What would you part with to keep it to fifty? For me, in a list that includes (rightly so), Archimedes’ insightful approximation of π must find room for Euler’s number e. I would even say this could replace the entry for Euler solving the Basel Problem, since that, essentially, could be a footnote to the exploration of π. Or, let it replace the valuation of annuities as calculated by Halley, better known for predicting his eponymous comet. This is the class of thoughts the book will raise with any reader, and rightly it should. The author directly tackles the subject of necessary omissions, both generally and at the conclusion of the topical chapters. The end of Chapter 8 “About Us” suggests there could have been more on DNA, modeling nervous system signal transmission and Turing’s “mathematically elegant work on pattern formation”. Of course, there are many surprising and appealing entries, such as World War II D-Day tide calculations based on work done by Lord Kelvin seven decades previous...

[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews

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Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Review: Madoff with the Money

Madoff with the Money Madoff with the Money by Jerry Oppenheimer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This surprised me that Madoff seemed to have so many signs of mendacity going all the way back to his college years ... but maybe that should not have. His extreme OCD was unknown to me and the way he even took advantage so completely of this friends and Elie Wiesel shocked me like the first time I heard it. The details about the run-up to the collapse of the Ponzi scheme - both the long years and the final months - make a convincing case for complicity among several of his close family members (but not all), including his wife Ruth.

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Monday, August 24, 2015

Review: The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature

The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature by Steven Pinker
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is an impressive, lengthy support for an out-sized contributions of inheritable characteristics to human behavior. It is quite humbling to think so much of what makes each of us unique was encoded into our genome before we were born. Pinker takes apart support for any appreciable nurturing/environmental role block by block, but I am sure it does not settle this debate. Hinting that some of the worst human behaviors may be inherent will raise many hackles, and indeed all that will read a work of this breadth will be offended by something. I was offended by the casual remarks on inhumane animal experiments: rewiring ferret brains for synæsthesia and paralyzing animal fetuses in the womb to study join development disturbed me. When I see such broad environments as North Korea's hermit kingdom, chronically impoverished communities and such incident as coin flips picking guards and prisons in the Stanford Prison Experiment I feel he underplays the role of environment, while his arguments are strong, reasoned and supported.

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Friday, August 21, 2015

Review: Interpreting Literature: Preliminaries to Literary Judgment

Interpreting Literature: Preliminaries to Literary Judgment Interpreting Literature: Preliminaries to Literary Judgment by Kenneth Leslie Knickerbocker
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This college lit textbook contains fiction, poetry, drama, lyrics, essays and more. It sat unread and idle on my father's bookshelf, a once required course item, until I picked it up. Poetry of Frost, Crane, Shakespeare, and Poe and also treating the Paul Simon lyric to "Sound of Silence" as poetry made of me a lifelong fan of this language art. Short stories like "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" container here still seem like the best of the art. The classic, The Glass Menagerie was here introduced to me here and I still love plays and theater as a result. I enjoyed the entire text initially published by Professor Knickerbocker together with Professor Willard Reninger back in 1969 by Holt. The fact that this book has stood the test of time and is still available should be testimony enough to the endurance and appeal of this lengthy introduction to the pleasures of literature.I recommend it for any one who is interested in what joys literature may hold.

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Monday, August 17, 2015

Review: Robert Altman: The Oral Biography

Robert Altman: The Oral Biography Robert Altman: The Oral Biography by Mitchell Zuckoff
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This "Oral Biography" features narrated quotes by Altman, his family, collaborators, and co-workers. Altman's own words are largely drawn from interviews done close to the end of his life and are not read by himself, as is the case with other quotes it sounds like. Some distinctive voices speaking their own words stand out, among them actors Tim Robbins and Bob Balaban. This book makes me want to see many Altman films I missed (Fool For Love, Thieves Like Us, Brewster McCloud, etc.) and re-see ones I already knew (Popeye, MASH, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Nashville, etc.) The book strongly underscores that adoration actors had for him and this seemed to arise from the freedom he allowed them, encouraging improvisation. Going off the script purposefully like that damaged his relationship with studios and backers. Hard drinking and obsessive work habits damaged his relationship with family and friends.

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Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Review: When China Rules the World: The End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order

When China Rules the World: The End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order When China Rules the World: The End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order by Martin Jacques
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is very dry, and textbook like and necessarily dated, published as it was in late 2009. Still, it is informative, even enlightening, and much wider in scope than the forecasting title suggests. There is much history here and much about east Asian in general outside of China. Broadly this goes back to 19th Century history to plot the decline of China when confronted with the West, the rise of Japan as an ersatz Western nation through the same interaction through a final act of China coming up to eclipse Japan and perhaps the West.

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Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Review: House of Leaves

House of Leaves House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

House of Leaves, especially as a debut novel from Mark Z. Danielewski, is quite an achievement.

I was told that the unconventional format and structure (unusual page layout, numerous footnotes including footnotes on footnotes, and style) make this a daunting challenge an example of the imposing "ergodic" literature genre where "nontrivial effort is required to allow the reader to traverse the text" (Cybertext: Perspectives on Ergodic Literature).

I found it more an entertaining haunted house story and complexity was really well managed in presentation: there's an index, the basic three narrators have dedicated typeface and layout of the copious footnotes, including references to fictional books, films or articles, is well-planned and leads to little unnecessary page turning.

Of the multiple narrators, who interact with each other in layers of commentary, are really not so bad: the documentary and its subjects being analyzed, the recently deceased Zampanò (first author), first-person narrator Johnny Truant delivering and interrupting Zampanò, and, finally, the editor-publishers. Like I said, all that is easy to separate and even sensible, yet I feel Truant the most obnoxious voice and the one that adds the least and takes away the most from the narrative. The musings of the rootless, irresponsible Los Angeles tattoo parlor employee could have been left on the editors' floor resulting in a shorter book no less imaginative and interesting, IMHO.

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Review: The Last Three Miles: Politics, Murder, and the Construction of America's First Superhighway

The Last Three Miles: Politics, Murder, and the Construction of America's First Superhighway The Last Three Miles: Politics, Murder, and the Construction of America's First Superhighway by Steven Hart
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Good, crisp narration. However, this book did not wholly win me over. I think someone from the area and a commuter over the Pulaski Skyway and Holland Tunnel would be much more interested. Also, labor politics, union organization (such as the fitful birth of the CIO),and Mayor of Jersey City Frank Hague's political machine of corruption and bossism all figure highly in here. These are very interesting sociological dimensions and recent history of the 1930s, but I was hoping for more engineering challenges.

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Monday, August 3, 2015

Review: The Little Prince

The Little Prince The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

For years, my employer posted for the benefit of me and my fellow software engineers a DB design poster with the quote “Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.” This irrefutable and concise wisdom from Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's Airman's Odyssey made me want to know about that thinker. Learning he also penned this classic of child literature and then the year it appears disappeared in flight over occupied France at a time when his selfless acts were not required by his country ... well, I had to read the book.

I am glad I did. It is a delicate, perceptive and exquisite work, like tiny jeweled music box. Get a copy with beautifully displayed illustrations for the child in your life, or inside yourself.


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Review: The Beatles

The Beatles The Beatles by Hunter Davies
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Originally out in the 70s, this book was an authorized biography of the group from the rise of Beatlemania to its height the to end of the touring Beatles, making a complete mandala of this epic pop group. It is quite insightful and peering and this audio edition has updates and additional material from the 1985 edition (after Lennon's death and the definitive end of the group without hope of reunion) and 1996 looking back on solo careers and forward to a second generation. Any serious Beatles fan or historian should or has read this book.

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Saturday, August 1, 2015

Review: Manson's Right-Hand Man Speaks Out

Manson's Right-Hand Man Speaks Out Manson's Right-Hand Man Speaks Out by Charles "Tex" Watson
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

As effective leader of murderous Family squads once they left Manson and Spahn Ranch, the only thing interesting about Tex, now, is to what extent he is willing to be forthcoming on the complex and confusing mass murders he has confessed to and is convicted for. In this volume, this is Tex' summation of motivation: "Manson thought he had to take things into his own hands when he saw that his prophetic philosophy, Helter Skelter, wasn't happening on its own. He needed money to finance
Helter Skelter, you know, for guns, knives, dune buggies and the like. He tried to get money
from musician Gary Hinman, but ended up having him killed instead.

When one of the family members, Bobby Beausoleil, was arrested for the murder, I was shocked! Then, a few days later, when Helter Skelter still wasn't “coming down,” Manson thought a copycat murder would spring Bobby, and bring down Helter Skelter at the same time.

He had built the Helter Skelter philosophy, and when it didn't happen, the copycat murder idea just gave him an excuse to start it. And at the same time, he thought the police would think the
real killers of Hinman were still free to commit the Tate-LaBianca murders. Therefore, they would let Bobby go..."

It all seems too convenient that the truth is the Vincent Bugliosi conspiracy theory: race war and spring a bro from the pokey. I would think Tex could, now, offer insight and confession on the facts that came out in a trial covering his crimes but for which he was separate off in Texas. Having it fall on Manson and fit Bugliosi's theory seems a protective, not forthcoming, admission.

Since this book was published in 2003 and revised in 2012, we not only have Tex (between sermonizing and quoting scripture) touching on early Manson Family Scientology ties, but reflecting on such events as the Heaven's Gate mass suicide, the Harry Potter books ("The material used in the Potter books results from years of research of occult history and
practices."), the 2012 Aurora shooting, etc. While proclaiming personal responsibility, Tex's avowed Xtianity gives him a
presumptive causal link of evil music to evil acts:

"In July, 2012, a gunman shot and massacred dozens of people in a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado. The gunman was reported to a have been listening to violent hard rock music for months prior to the shootings. He even left the stereo at his apartment set to turn on with the volume set on high at the time of the shootings, in an attempt to lure police into setting off booby traps he had left. The music that was set to play on the stereo was violent, alternative rock.

In August, 2012, a gunman committed mass killings at a Sikh Temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin. This gunman was described in the August 7, 2012 edition of USA Today as a “neo-Nazi musician.” Mark Potok, a senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Alabama stated, “The lyrics to the songs these bands sing could not be printed in any newspaper in this country. They are incredibly vile. They call for the murder of all Jews and all black people. When we say it is hate music, we’re not kidding.”

Going back to the Manson Murders, Tex was the man on the scene and in charge as much or more than Charlie, but Tex goes right for the "just following orders defense":

Q: Would the crimes have happened without Manson's order?

Definitely not! Bugliosi, the prosecuting attorney, agrees that Manson was the catalyst. We would never have gone out on our own and killed people.

Reading about the forgiveness support from Rosemary Labianca's daughter Suzan LaBerge and her support for his (failed) parole attempt led me to do some research which uncovered the theory they knew each other even before the Labianca murders and maybe this, somehow, led to the selection of the Waverly house.

In her book Restless Souls: The Sharon Tate Family's Account of Stardom, the Manson Murders, and a Crusade for Justice, Alisa Statman alludes to a plot between Tex Watson and Suzan LaBerge.

Apparently, they even lived 200' apart at one point, possibly an amazing coincidence:

"Suzan and Tex lived an estimated 200 feet apart in nearby apartments in Los Angeles for six months prior to Watson’s move into Manson’s home base, Spahn Ranch. Suzan’s then-boyfriend was a member of the motorcycle gang Straight Satans that often frequented Spahn Ranch.

“There’s lot of speculation that they knew each other. And take that where you will — you can only imagine what that might mean,” Statman said."




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Review: King Lear

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