Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Short chapters are one factor that makes this medical memoir a fast read. That is the only thing easy about the trip into Anti-NMDA Receptor Autoimmune Encephalitis. For the author, it is a complex and terrifying abrupt journey into the madness that arises from this this rare disorder. The bizarre psychiatric symptoms that lead to catatonia, paranoia, hallucination, and language lapses can lead death, may spring from teratoma and is often misdiagnosed. Exorcism is tried on some sufferers finding no release through traditional treatment going after some other disorder they do not have. The veteran reporter presents her storied, fragmented by lack of memory and polluted with hallucination, with a mixture of reportage and autobiography.
Cahalan shares not only personal experience, but what she learned about neuroscience in general and this specific illness. As she quotes from Apprentices of Wonder: Inside the Neural Network Revolution: "The brain is a monstrous, wonderful mess." This is one story of that messes coming apart, and getting put back together.
View all my reviews
Saturday, November 28, 2015
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Review: The LSD Story:The Drug That Expands The Mind
The LSD Story:The Drug That Expands The Mind by John Cashman
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
New York reporter John Cashman compiled in 1966 a history of LSD from ergot to Hoffman and explored its cultural impact. He pays special attention to the acid evangelism of Cary Grant and the Leary-Alpert team ousted from Harvard. There is a lot of first-hand accounts from test subjects, as well as Cashman's own experiences under the hallucinogen. Overall, this is a sober, balanced assessment of what was know at that time and and offer the facts without proclaiming for any particular side.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
New York reporter John Cashman compiled in 1966 a history of LSD from ergot to Hoffman and explored its cultural impact. He pays special attention to the acid evangelism of Cary Grant and the Leary-Alpert team ousted from Harvard. There is a lot of first-hand accounts from test subjects, as well as Cashman's own experiences under the hallucinogen. Overall, this is a sober, balanced assessment of what was know at that time and and offer the facts without proclaiming for any particular side.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Review: Population: 485: Meeting Your Neighbors One Siren at a Time
Population: 485: Meeting Your Neighbors One Siren at a Time by Michael Perry
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Michael Perry writes for the magazines and in this collection of related essays considers his small town life as a writer and volunteer fireman. He talks rankly of corpse-handling, death, traumatic injury, and other brutal truths encountered in the more mundane calls for house and barn fires. This is well-written, entertaining and engaging and an easy read.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Michael Perry writes for the magazines and in this collection of related essays considers his small town life as a writer and volunteer fireman. He talks rankly of corpse-handling, death, traumatic injury, and other brutal truths encountered in the more mundane calls for house and barn fires. This is well-written, entertaining and engaging and an easy read.
View all my reviews
Review: Ruthless: A Memoir
Ruthless: A Memoir by Jerry Heller
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Apparently buoyed by the 2015 film "Straight Outta Compton" I saw even paperback editions of this book were over $300 on Amazon. I picked this up for $3 at Big Lots and it felt like time to take it off the shelf and then turn it around for a quick profit. Now that I have it done I see hardcover copies of this edition can be had as low as $65, but I am keeping it - this is a good and entertaining history.
The point i the 1988 a groundbreaking new group N.W.A. that revolutionized music and pop culture, changing and influencing hip-hop forever and label Ruthless Records. Veteran manager Jerry Heller tells his story about discovering this movement happening in a crowded Macola LP pressing plant while at a low point of hi career when he was directionless. The way he tells it, he befriended Eric "Easy-E" Wright and won his respect while having a fun and exciting time at the center of a new youth movement and tipping point in popular music. There are extensive tangents into Heller's past with remembrances of Lee Michaels, The Whiskey A Go-Go, John Fogerty, etc. For someone approaching this book as mere gangsta rap hagiography, the tone and side treks may be disappointing. As a document about a popular culture period and cultural shift, it all works.
Heller comes across as a real, admiring fan of this music. In admiring Ice Cube's lyrics he reprints much of them. So, now I can settle that it is not "pull your car" in "Boyz-N-The-Hood", but "we'll pull your card" While respecting Ice Cube as a wordsmith, he has no respect for him personally. I would like to hear Ice Cube's side of this in a longer, considered form than "No Vaseline", but it appears Heller was correct in his aspersions on Suge Knight.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Apparently buoyed by the 2015 film "Straight Outta Compton" I saw even paperback editions of this book were over $300 on Amazon. I picked this up for $3 at Big Lots and it felt like time to take it off the shelf and then turn it around for a quick profit. Now that I have it done I see hardcover copies of this edition can be had as low as $65, but I am keeping it - this is a good and entertaining history.
The point i the 1988 a groundbreaking new group N.W.A. that revolutionized music and pop culture, changing and influencing hip-hop forever and label Ruthless Records. Veteran manager Jerry Heller tells his story about discovering this movement happening in a crowded Macola LP pressing plant while at a low point of hi career when he was directionless. The way he tells it, he befriended Eric "Easy-E" Wright and won his respect while having a fun and exciting time at the center of a new youth movement and tipping point in popular music. There are extensive tangents into Heller's past with remembrances of Lee Michaels, The Whiskey A Go-Go, John Fogerty, etc. For someone approaching this book as mere gangsta rap hagiography, the tone and side treks may be disappointing. As a document about a popular culture period and cultural shift, it all works.
Heller comes across as a real, admiring fan of this music. In admiring Ice Cube's lyrics he reprints much of them. So, now I can settle that it is not "pull your car" in "Boyz-N-The-Hood", but "we'll pull your card" While respecting Ice Cube as a wordsmith, he has no respect for him personally. I would like to hear Ice Cube's side of this in a longer, considered form than "No Vaseline", but it appears Heller was correct in his aspersions on Suge Knight.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Review: Bach, Casals and The Six Suites For Cello Solo - Volume 3: Pablo Casals and the Six Suites for ‘Cello Solo
Bach, Casals and The Six Suites For Cello Solo - Volume 3: Pablo Casals and the Six Suites for ‘Cello Solo by Steve Hancoff
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Bach’s Six Suites for Solo ‘Cello may be the most performed and recognized compositions ever created for unaccompanied cello. If you close your eyes and think back to a time that you enjoyed more than a few minutes of solo cello, it was probably authored by Bach. You owe it to yourself to also enjoy deeply these guitar transcriptions sublimely delivered by Steven Hancoff and draw from them your future memories. Timbre is the unique quality of an instrument’s sound profile distinct from its pitch and intensity. It is how we recognize the same note from trumpet as that from a piano, yet feel the different source. Soul, I dare say, is a good word for how we know that note is from Miles Davis or Thelonious Monk. The timbre of the guitar brightens the intensity of these melodies and the guitarist’s techniques of harmony and syncopation, so natural to that instrument, amplifies a sonic bouquet of colors within that light like a prism or kaleidoscope does sunshine. The Hancoff soul, where the intelligent, poignant, and transcendent grace of these pieces has been internalized and artfully expressed, makes this the triumph of one man who reached through three centuries to telegraph to us Bach’s soul. I can have almost any music play while I read in my library. My default has been a Steffen Basho-Junghans album for over a year. That has now been replaced by this mentally invigorating three-CD opus.
After discovering an edition in a Barcelona thrift shop in, Spain, a thirteen-year-old Pablo Casals began studying these cello solos until in 1936, at the age of sixty he became the first to record all six suites giving them a holistic rebirth on a recording still respected today: Bach, J. S. The 6 Cello Suites, Pablo Casals. EMI Classics 66215 1997. For those fortunate to discover this interpretation, crafted by Hancoff also at sixty years of age, it too will be respected into the future. Without a Bach manuscript surviving, many interpretations of the suites exist with no authoritative version. Among the scholarship that inevitably followed to fill that knowledge gap, Hancoff has gone far from the idea of mere liner notes to a four-volume, immersive iBook series on Bach and his solo suites: Bach, Casals & The Six Suites for 'Cello Solo in volumes 1 through 4. This is my first experience with iBooks and Hancoff has so embraced the possibilities of the format that I suggest they be enjoyed on a platform like a Mac that can properly present all the dimensions involved here. These books feature images, links to pop up more details, and embedded video and audio.
Volume 1: The Life of J. Sebastian Bach is the biography of a man that knew more than his fair share of pain and like trummerflora in the wasteland of the Thirty Years War went from orphaned seed to organ master. He was a well paid and celebrated organmeister (tester, performer, if unrecognized composer) and settling into a life of serial patronage and a wife in second cousin Maria Barbara Bach. The biography starting in Thuringia and from penury to well-paid position jumps to life with the varied content including etchings, commemorating plaques and statues, impressionistic paintings, side treks into “quodlibets” and “intermezzos”, music theory, and mini-biographies of key persons. It is fascinating that in Weimar, a locus of the German Enlightenment and home of writers Goethe and Schiller, Bach found not only a home but imprisonment. Notably, he was for long not commemorated there he way other key places of his life had done. This is one of the chapters of Bach’s formation that make for interesting reading in Volume 1 as well as explanation of the Bach’s technical advancement innovating well-tempered tuning so that a composer might write in any key, and a musician might play in any key. One of the fascinating intermezzo side treks shows how this well-tempered approach to tones was applied to visual hues by Jakob Weder in his Organ of Color and Farbsymphonien (“Color Symphonies”). The entertaining diversions to appendices are actually spot on for relevance and generally overtly germane to Bach’s life. One “amazing story” (as some of the addenda are called) is that of Adolph Busch, refugee from Nazi Germany, and the humble story of the creation, loss, and recovery of the Brandenburg Concertos. (As a child, hearing the theme music of “Firing Line” on PBS, Brandenburg Concerto No. 2, Third Movement, was the first Bach masterpiece that I came to adore.) Incarceration was not the only misfortune suffered by Bach; multiple of his children also died in infancy. Also, his wife passed. Afterward, Bach authored the cantata Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis in meinem Herzen (I Had Great Distress in My Heart). For his second wife, Anna Magdalena, he compiled famous clavier pieces as explored here. Volume 1 makes and supports the case of Bach’s deserved acclaim and presents a life with travails and professional success leaving a body of work that is proof of a genius that may have few equals, if any.
Volume II focuses on the accomplished, adult Bach: a grandfather even. Special, detailed interludes add depth. One explores the many portraits of Bach and what they tell us about posture and a possible late-life stroke. However, the numerology of button-counting seems a bit much for me. Another interlude delves into the art of Bach The Younger, many pieces he did being copies of musicians for his grandfather’s collection. Besides lineage there is more in the generations here. Generations of transcriptionists, performers including Casals and such history as revival performances and stunning visuals of inspired painting and sculpture. Hancoff places himself in here and explores his own interpretation:
“…the bow of the cello must be in contact with the string for the string to sound, so that sustain and swell are idiomatically inherent; whereas when a guitar string is plucked, and therefore unless the note is artificially stopped, it will ring and decay, most loud at the first moment of impact, and then progressively softer. Just as important, the guitar will always be an octave higher than a cello. This shift alone generates a different vibratory frequency and, therefore, a different quality of aesthetic and emotional impact. For me, the gorgeous sonority of the cello vibrates more in my belly, that of the guitar more in my chest.”
And later with great humility,
“I hope that I have made a worthy contribution, but confess that my deepest motivation for adapting Bach’s music to my acoustic guitar is the immense pleasure and great good that I derive from prolonged, challenging and creative immersion in the sublime. The Bach Cello Suites are simply too wondrous not to explore. In the end, as I developed my own sensibilities practicing, living with, meditating on, and playing this music, I concluded that it best served the profundity of Bach’s music to let it lead me where it will, and my own nature to follow as best I can. ”
This book takes us to Bach’s death with extensive details on his ophthalmological ailments and the failed eye surgery (and the surgeon) that led to his demise.
Vol. 3 opens with Hancoff’s narration and guitar transcription. Then we are brought into the life of Pablo Casals, a true virtuoso with an immense appetite for life and art. His fortuitous discovery, preservation, and performance of the six cello pieces is integral to their story, now. Near worshipfully, Casals lived with and internalized the pieces as a career. Hancoff observes, “Pablo Casals lived intimately with the Six Suites for Cello Solo for 35 years, practicing them daily. But it was not until he was 59 years old, in the autumn of 1936, that he consented to record them.” This is the story of coming into and becoming these pieces, finally recorded in the late ‘30s on the tumultuous eve of WWII with the fall of Spain to the Fascist forces.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Bach’s Six Suites for Solo ‘Cello may be the most performed and recognized compositions ever created for unaccompanied cello. If you close your eyes and think back to a time that you enjoyed more than a few minutes of solo cello, it was probably authored by Bach. You owe it to yourself to also enjoy deeply these guitar transcriptions sublimely delivered by Steven Hancoff and draw from them your future memories. Timbre is the unique quality of an instrument’s sound profile distinct from its pitch and intensity. It is how we recognize the same note from trumpet as that from a piano, yet feel the different source. Soul, I dare say, is a good word for how we know that note is from Miles Davis or Thelonious Monk. The timbre of the guitar brightens the intensity of these melodies and the guitarist’s techniques of harmony and syncopation, so natural to that instrument, amplifies a sonic bouquet of colors within that light like a prism or kaleidoscope does sunshine. The Hancoff soul, where the intelligent, poignant, and transcendent grace of these pieces has been internalized and artfully expressed, makes this the triumph of one man who reached through three centuries to telegraph to us Bach’s soul. I can have almost any music play while I read in my library. My default has been a Steffen Basho-Junghans album for over a year. That has now been replaced by this mentally invigorating three-CD opus.
After discovering an edition in a Barcelona thrift shop in, Spain, a thirteen-year-old Pablo Casals began studying these cello solos until in 1936, at the age of sixty he became the first to record all six suites giving them a holistic rebirth on a recording still respected today: Bach, J. S. The 6 Cello Suites, Pablo Casals. EMI Classics 66215 1997. For those fortunate to discover this interpretation, crafted by Hancoff also at sixty years of age, it too will be respected into the future. Without a Bach manuscript surviving, many interpretations of the suites exist with no authoritative version. Among the scholarship that inevitably followed to fill that knowledge gap, Hancoff has gone far from the idea of mere liner notes to a four-volume, immersive iBook series on Bach and his solo suites: Bach, Casals & The Six Suites for 'Cello Solo in volumes 1 through 4. This is my first experience with iBooks and Hancoff has so embraced the possibilities of the format that I suggest they be enjoyed on a platform like a Mac that can properly present all the dimensions involved here. These books feature images, links to pop up more details, and embedded video and audio.
Volume 1: The Life of J. Sebastian Bach is the biography of a man that knew more than his fair share of pain and like trummerflora in the wasteland of the Thirty Years War went from orphaned seed to organ master. He was a well paid and celebrated organmeister (tester, performer, if unrecognized composer) and settling into a life of serial patronage and a wife in second cousin Maria Barbara Bach. The biography starting in Thuringia and from penury to well-paid position jumps to life with the varied content including etchings, commemorating plaques and statues, impressionistic paintings, side treks into “quodlibets” and “intermezzos”, music theory, and mini-biographies of key persons. It is fascinating that in Weimar, a locus of the German Enlightenment and home of writers Goethe and Schiller, Bach found not only a home but imprisonment. Notably, he was for long not commemorated there he way other key places of his life had done. This is one of the chapters of Bach’s formation that make for interesting reading in Volume 1 as well as explanation of the Bach’s technical advancement innovating well-tempered tuning so that a composer might write in any key, and a musician might play in any key. One of the fascinating intermezzo side treks shows how this well-tempered approach to tones was applied to visual hues by Jakob Weder in his Organ of Color and Farbsymphonien (“Color Symphonies”). The entertaining diversions to appendices are actually spot on for relevance and generally overtly germane to Bach’s life. One “amazing story” (as some of the addenda are called) is that of Adolph Busch, refugee from Nazi Germany, and the humble story of the creation, loss, and recovery of the Brandenburg Concertos. (As a child, hearing the theme music of “Firing Line” on PBS, Brandenburg Concerto No. 2, Third Movement, was the first Bach masterpiece that I came to adore.) Incarceration was not the only misfortune suffered by Bach; multiple of his children also died in infancy. Also, his wife passed. Afterward, Bach authored the cantata Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis in meinem Herzen (I Had Great Distress in My Heart). For his second wife, Anna Magdalena, he compiled famous clavier pieces as explored here. Volume 1 makes and supports the case of Bach’s deserved acclaim and presents a life with travails and professional success leaving a body of work that is proof of a genius that may have few equals, if any.
Volume II focuses on the accomplished, adult Bach: a grandfather even. Special, detailed interludes add depth. One explores the many portraits of Bach and what they tell us about posture and a possible late-life stroke. However, the numerology of button-counting seems a bit much for me. Another interlude delves into the art of Bach The Younger, many pieces he did being copies of musicians for his grandfather’s collection. Besides lineage there is more in the generations here. Generations of transcriptionists, performers including Casals and such history as revival performances and stunning visuals of inspired painting and sculpture. Hancoff places himself in here and explores his own interpretation:
“…the bow of the cello must be in contact with the string for the string to sound, so that sustain and swell are idiomatically inherent; whereas when a guitar string is plucked, and therefore unless the note is artificially stopped, it will ring and decay, most loud at the first moment of impact, and then progressively softer. Just as important, the guitar will always be an octave higher than a cello. This shift alone generates a different vibratory frequency and, therefore, a different quality of aesthetic and emotional impact. For me, the gorgeous sonority of the cello vibrates more in my belly, that of the guitar more in my chest.”
And later with great humility,
“I hope that I have made a worthy contribution, but confess that my deepest motivation for adapting Bach’s music to my acoustic guitar is the immense pleasure and great good that I derive from prolonged, challenging and creative immersion in the sublime. The Bach Cello Suites are simply too wondrous not to explore. In the end, as I developed my own sensibilities practicing, living with, meditating on, and playing this music, I concluded that it best served the profundity of Bach’s music to let it lead me where it will, and my own nature to follow as best I can. ”
This book takes us to Bach’s death with extensive details on his ophthalmological ailments and the failed eye surgery (and the surgeon) that led to his demise.
Vol. 3 opens with Hancoff’s narration and guitar transcription. Then we are brought into the life of Pablo Casals, a true virtuoso with an immense appetite for life and art. His fortuitous discovery, preservation, and performance of the six cello pieces is integral to their story, now. Near worshipfully, Casals lived with and internalized the pieces as a career. Hancoff observes, “Pablo Casals lived intimately with the Six Suites for Cello Solo for 35 years, practicing them daily. But it was not until he was 59 years old, in the autumn of 1936, that he consented to record them.” This is the story of coming into and becoming these pieces, finally recorded in the late ‘30s on the tumultuous eve of WWII with the fall of Spain to the Fascist forces.
View all my reviews
Review: Bach, Casals and The Six Suites For Cello Solo - Volume 2: The Legacy of J Sebastian Bach
Bach, Casals and The Six Suites For Cello Solo - Volume 2: The Legacy of J Sebastian Bach by Steve Hancoff
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Bach’s Six Suites for Solo ‘Cello may be the most performed and recognized compositions ever created for unaccompanied cello. If you close your eyes and think back to a time that you enjoyed more than a few minutes of solo cello, it was probably authored by Bach. You owe it to yourself to also enjoy deeply these guitar transcriptions sublimely delivered by Steven Hancoff and draw from them your future memories. Timbre is the unique quality of an instrument’s sound profile distinct from its pitch and intensity. It is how we recognize the same note from trumpet as that from a piano, yet feel the different source. Soul, I dare say, is a good word for how we know that note is from Miles Davis or Thelonious Monk. The timbre of the guitar brightens the intensity of these melodies and the guitarist’s techniques of harmony and syncopation, so natural to that instrument, amplifies a sonic bouquet of colors within that light like a prism or kaleidoscope does sunshine. The Hancoff soul, where the intelligent, poignant, and transcendent grace of these pieces has been internalized and artfully expressed, makes this the triumph of one man who reached through three centuries to telegraph to us Bach’s soul. I can have almost any music play while I read in my library. My default has been a Steffen Basho-Junghans album for over a year. That has now been replaced by this mentally invigorating three-CD opus.
After discovering an edition in a Barcelona thrift shop in, Spain, a thirteen-year-old Pablo Casals began studying these cello solos until in 1936, at the age of sixty he became the first to record all six suites giving them a holistic rebirth on a recording still respected today: Bach, J. S. The 6 Cello Suites, Pablo Casals. EMI Classics 66215 1997. For those fortunate to discover this interpretation, crafted by Hancoff also at sixty years of age, it too will be respected into the future. Without a Bach manuscript surviving, many interpretations of the suites exist with no authoritative version. Among the scholarship that inevitably followed to fill that knowledge gap, Hancoff has gone far from the idea of mere liner notes to a four-volume, immersive iBook series on Bach and his solo suites: Bach, Casals & The Six Suites for 'Cello Solo in volumes 1 through 4. This is my first experience with iBooks and Hancoff has so embraced the possibilities of the format that I suggest they be enjoyed on a platform like a Mac that can properly present all the dimensions involved here. These books feature images, links to pop up more details, and embedded video and audio.
Volume 1: The Life of J. Sebastian Bach is the biography of a man that knew more than his fair share of pain and like trummerflora in the wasteland of the Thirty Years War went from orphaned seed to organ master. He was a well paid and celebrated organmeister (tester, performer, if unrecognized composer) and settling into a life of serial patronage and a wife in second cousin Maria Barbara Bach. The biography starting in Thuringia and from penury to well-paid position jumps to life with the varied content including etchings, commemorating plaques and statues, impressionistic paintings, side treks into “quodlibets” and “intermezzos”, music theory, and mini-biographies of key persons. It is fascinating that in Weimar, a locus of the German Enlightenment and home of writers Goethe and Schiller, Bach found not only a home but imprisonment. Notably, he was for long not commemorated there he way other key places of his life had done. This is one of the chapters of Bach’s formation that make for interesting reading in Volume 1 as well as explanation of the Bach’s technical advancement innovating well-tempered tuning so that a composer might write in any key, and a musician might play in any key. One of the fascinating intermezzo side treks shows how this well-tempered approach to tones was applied to visual hues by Jakob Weder in his Organ of Color and Farbsymphonien (“Color Symphonies”). The entertaining diversions to appendices are actually spot on for relevance and generally overtly germane to Bach’s life. One “amazing story” (as some of the addenda are called) is that of Adolph Busch, refugee from Nazi Germany, and the humble story of the creation, loss, and recovery of the Brandenburg Concertos. (As a child, hearing the theme music of “Firing Line” on PBS, Brandenburg Concerto No. 2, Third Movement, was the first Bach masterpiece that I came to adore.) Incarceration was not the only misfortune suffered by Bach; multiple of his children also died in infancy. Also, his wife passed. Afterward, Bach authored the cantata Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis in meinem Herzen (I Had Great Distress in My Heart). For his second wife, Anna Magdalena, he compiled famous clavier pieces as explored here. Volume 1 makes and supports the case of Bach’s deserved acclaim and presents a life with travails and professional success leaving a body of work that is proof of a genius that may have few equals, if any.
Volume II focuses on the accomplished, adult Bach: a grandfather even. Special, detailed interludes add depth. One explores the many portraits of Bach and what they tell us about posture and a possible late-life stroke. However, the numerology of button-counting seems a bit much for me. Another interlude delves into the art of Bach The Younger, many pieces he did being copies of musicians for his grandfather’s collection. Besides lineage there is more in the generations here. Generations of transcriptionists, performers including Casals and such history as revival performances and stunning visuals of inspired painting and sculpture. Hancoff places himself in here and explores his own interpretation:
“…the bow of the cello must be in contact with the string for the string to sound, so that sustain and swell are idiomatically inherent; whereas when a guitar string is plucked, and therefore unless the note is artificially stopped, it will ring and decay, most loud at the first moment of impact, and then progressively softer. Just as important, the guitar will always be an octave higher than a cello. This shift alone generates a different vibratory frequency and, therefore, a different quality of aesthetic and emotional impact. For me, the gorgeous sonority of the cello vibrates more in my belly, that of the guitar more in my chest.”
And later with great humility,
“I hope that I have made a worthy contribution, but confess that my deepest motivation for adapting Bach’s music to my acoustic guitar is the immense pleasure and great good that I derive from prolonged, challenging and creative immersion in the sublime. The Bach Cello Suites are simply too wondrous not to explore. In the end, as I developed my own sensibilities practicing, living with, meditating on, and playing this music, I concluded that it best served the profundity of Bach’s music to let it lead me where it will, and my own nature to follow as best I can. ”
This book takes us to Bach’s death with extensive details on his ophthalmological ailments and the failed eye surgery (and the surgeon) that led to his demise.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Bach’s Six Suites for Solo ‘Cello may be the most performed and recognized compositions ever created for unaccompanied cello. If you close your eyes and think back to a time that you enjoyed more than a few minutes of solo cello, it was probably authored by Bach. You owe it to yourself to also enjoy deeply these guitar transcriptions sublimely delivered by Steven Hancoff and draw from them your future memories. Timbre is the unique quality of an instrument’s sound profile distinct from its pitch and intensity. It is how we recognize the same note from trumpet as that from a piano, yet feel the different source. Soul, I dare say, is a good word for how we know that note is from Miles Davis or Thelonious Monk. The timbre of the guitar brightens the intensity of these melodies and the guitarist’s techniques of harmony and syncopation, so natural to that instrument, amplifies a sonic bouquet of colors within that light like a prism or kaleidoscope does sunshine. The Hancoff soul, where the intelligent, poignant, and transcendent grace of these pieces has been internalized and artfully expressed, makes this the triumph of one man who reached through three centuries to telegraph to us Bach’s soul. I can have almost any music play while I read in my library. My default has been a Steffen Basho-Junghans album for over a year. That has now been replaced by this mentally invigorating three-CD opus.
After discovering an edition in a Barcelona thrift shop in, Spain, a thirteen-year-old Pablo Casals began studying these cello solos until in 1936, at the age of sixty he became the first to record all six suites giving them a holistic rebirth on a recording still respected today: Bach, J. S. The 6 Cello Suites, Pablo Casals. EMI Classics 66215 1997. For those fortunate to discover this interpretation, crafted by Hancoff also at sixty years of age, it too will be respected into the future. Without a Bach manuscript surviving, many interpretations of the suites exist with no authoritative version. Among the scholarship that inevitably followed to fill that knowledge gap, Hancoff has gone far from the idea of mere liner notes to a four-volume, immersive iBook series on Bach and his solo suites: Bach, Casals & The Six Suites for 'Cello Solo in volumes 1 through 4. This is my first experience with iBooks and Hancoff has so embraced the possibilities of the format that I suggest they be enjoyed on a platform like a Mac that can properly present all the dimensions involved here. These books feature images, links to pop up more details, and embedded video and audio.
Volume 1: The Life of J. Sebastian Bach is the biography of a man that knew more than his fair share of pain and like trummerflora in the wasteland of the Thirty Years War went from orphaned seed to organ master. He was a well paid and celebrated organmeister (tester, performer, if unrecognized composer) and settling into a life of serial patronage and a wife in second cousin Maria Barbara Bach. The biography starting in Thuringia and from penury to well-paid position jumps to life with the varied content including etchings, commemorating plaques and statues, impressionistic paintings, side treks into “quodlibets” and “intermezzos”, music theory, and mini-biographies of key persons. It is fascinating that in Weimar, a locus of the German Enlightenment and home of writers Goethe and Schiller, Bach found not only a home but imprisonment. Notably, he was for long not commemorated there he way other key places of his life had done. This is one of the chapters of Bach’s formation that make for interesting reading in Volume 1 as well as explanation of the Bach’s technical advancement innovating well-tempered tuning so that a composer might write in any key, and a musician might play in any key. One of the fascinating intermezzo side treks shows how this well-tempered approach to tones was applied to visual hues by Jakob Weder in his Organ of Color and Farbsymphonien (“Color Symphonies”). The entertaining diversions to appendices are actually spot on for relevance and generally overtly germane to Bach’s life. One “amazing story” (as some of the addenda are called) is that of Adolph Busch, refugee from Nazi Germany, and the humble story of the creation, loss, and recovery of the Brandenburg Concertos. (As a child, hearing the theme music of “Firing Line” on PBS, Brandenburg Concerto No. 2, Third Movement, was the first Bach masterpiece that I came to adore.) Incarceration was not the only misfortune suffered by Bach; multiple of his children also died in infancy. Also, his wife passed. Afterward, Bach authored the cantata Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis in meinem Herzen (I Had Great Distress in My Heart). For his second wife, Anna Magdalena, he compiled famous clavier pieces as explored here. Volume 1 makes and supports the case of Bach’s deserved acclaim and presents a life with travails and professional success leaving a body of work that is proof of a genius that may have few equals, if any.
Volume II focuses on the accomplished, adult Bach: a grandfather even. Special, detailed interludes add depth. One explores the many portraits of Bach and what they tell us about posture and a possible late-life stroke. However, the numerology of button-counting seems a bit much for me. Another interlude delves into the art of Bach The Younger, many pieces he did being copies of musicians for his grandfather’s collection. Besides lineage there is more in the generations here. Generations of transcriptionists, performers including Casals and such history as revival performances and stunning visuals of inspired painting and sculpture. Hancoff places himself in here and explores his own interpretation:
“…the bow of the cello must be in contact with the string for the string to sound, so that sustain and swell are idiomatically inherent; whereas when a guitar string is plucked, and therefore unless the note is artificially stopped, it will ring and decay, most loud at the first moment of impact, and then progressively softer. Just as important, the guitar will always be an octave higher than a cello. This shift alone generates a different vibratory frequency and, therefore, a different quality of aesthetic and emotional impact. For me, the gorgeous sonority of the cello vibrates more in my belly, that of the guitar more in my chest.”
And later with great humility,
“I hope that I have made a worthy contribution, but confess that my deepest motivation for adapting Bach’s music to my acoustic guitar is the immense pleasure and great good that I derive from prolonged, challenging and creative immersion in the sublime. The Bach Cello Suites are simply too wondrous not to explore. In the end, as I developed my own sensibilities practicing, living with, meditating on, and playing this music, I concluded that it best served the profundity of Bach’s music to let it lead me where it will, and my own nature to follow as best I can. ”
This book takes us to Bach’s death with extensive details on his ophthalmological ailments and the failed eye surgery (and the surgeon) that led to his demise.
View all my reviews
Monday, November 23, 2015
Review: The Devil & Sherlock Holmes: Tales of Murder, Madness & Obsession
The Devil & Sherlock Holmes: Tales of Murder, Madness & Obsession by David Grann
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
The Devil and Sherlock Holmes: Tales of Murder, Madness, and Obsession (2010) is a collection of 12 essays by American journalist David Grann previously published between 2000 and 2009 in The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, The New Republic and The Atlantic. The stories are about real-life mysteries, a "mosaic of ambition, deception, passion, and folly." These are largely criminal, not so much diabolical and Sherlock Holmes quotes help string the potpourri together. It rivals Jon Ronson IMHO for bringing together a readable exploration of the extreme limits of modern human experience.
"Mysterious Circumstances" is a riveting tale of obsession in Sherlock Holmes scholars and a staged garroting. "The Chameleon" is about serial imposter Frédéric Bourdin who goes in over his head and capabilities with a mysterious American family. "The Squid Hunter" is about Steve O'Shea and his quarry, the giant squid (genus Architeuthis) - perhaps my favorite creature of mystery.
< img src="http://ocean.si.edu/sites/default/fil...
"City of Water" on subterranean sandhogs and the crumbling water infrastructure of New York City is fascinating and scary. "The Old Man and the Gun" about lifelong criminal, imposter and septuagenerian bank robber Forrest Tucker is fascinating and I look forward to the film by Identity Films. I am now sports fan, but I found "Stealing Time" on obsessed die hard Rickey Henderson fascinating. "The Brand" on the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang is the most in-depth history I have read and a fascinating overview of an organization larger and more impactful than I had realized. Also firmly in the true crime genre is "Crimetown, U.S.A." on the downfall of congressman James Traficant and the legacy of the Mafia in Youngstown. The concluding "Giving the 'Devil' His Due" on Haitian thug Toto Constant feels rather weak compared to the other material. This is just a bloodthirsty demagogue with CIA connections living in Queens, after all.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
The Devil and Sherlock Holmes: Tales of Murder, Madness, and Obsession (2010) is a collection of 12 essays by American journalist David Grann previously published between 2000 and 2009 in The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, The New Republic and The Atlantic. The stories are about real-life mysteries, a "mosaic of ambition, deception, passion, and folly." These are largely criminal, not so much diabolical and Sherlock Holmes quotes help string the potpourri together. It rivals Jon Ronson IMHO for bringing together a readable exploration of the extreme limits of modern human experience.
"Mysterious Circumstances" is a riveting tale of obsession in Sherlock Holmes scholars and a staged garroting. "The Chameleon" is about serial imposter Frédéric Bourdin who goes in over his head and capabilities with a mysterious American family. "The Squid Hunter" is about Steve O'Shea and his quarry, the giant squid (genus Architeuthis) - perhaps my favorite creature of mystery.
< img src="http://ocean.si.edu/sites/default/fil...
"City of Water" on subterranean sandhogs and the crumbling water infrastructure of New York City is fascinating and scary. "The Old Man and the Gun" about lifelong criminal, imposter and septuagenerian bank robber Forrest Tucker is fascinating and I look forward to the film by Identity Films. I am now sports fan, but I found "Stealing Time" on obsessed die hard Rickey Henderson fascinating. "The Brand" on the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang is the most in-depth history I have read and a fascinating overview of an organization larger and more impactful than I had realized. Also firmly in the true crime genre is "Crimetown, U.S.A." on the downfall of congressman James Traficant and the legacy of the Mafia in Youngstown. The concluding "Giving the 'Devil' His Due" on Haitian thug Toto Constant feels rather weak compared to the other material. This is just a bloodthirsty demagogue with CIA connections living in Queens, after all.
View all my reviews
Review: Head First Statistics
Head First Statistics by Dawn Griffiths
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a broad introduction to statistics from the taxonomy of averages to various distributions to hypothesis testing, etc. The author has a spirited, whimsical approach that is engaging and entertaining. In-chapter quizzes and questions help the reader stay on track. A good adjunct for say a first-year college statistics text.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a broad introduction to statistics from the taxonomy of averages to various distributions to hypothesis testing, etc. The author has a spirited, whimsical approach that is engaging and entertaining. In-chapter quizzes and questions help the reader stay on track. A good adjunct for say a first-year college statistics text.
View all my reviews
Sunday, November 22, 2015
Review: A Rendezvous with Destiny: The Roosevelts of the White House
A Rendezvous with Destiny: The Roosevelts of the White House by Elliott Roosevelt
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
FDR's son is frustrated by other books highlighting his "parent's" peccadilloes and New Deal. He aims to amplify details, correct falsities (mostly in the medical area), and shade with nuance. The result is greatly detailed and even scholarly. This makes for a rather dry read even when covering the loved fishing ventures or yuletide gatherings. Still, an important work from an eyewitness to history. Some of the things that jumped out to me from his privileged view was how Finland alone persevered in WWI payments to the U.S. during the turmoil early in WWII and how the invasion and subjugation of Holland summoned in the Dutch-American FDR the desire to go for a 3rd term and be in the driver's seat to end nazi aggression.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
FDR's son is frustrated by other books highlighting his "parent's" peccadilloes and New Deal. He aims to amplify details, correct falsities (mostly in the medical area), and shade with nuance. The result is greatly detailed and even scholarly. This makes for a rather dry read even when covering the loved fishing ventures or yuletide gatherings. Still, an important work from an eyewitness to history. Some of the things that jumped out to me from his privileged view was how Finland alone persevered in WWI payments to the U.S. during the turmoil early in WWII and how the invasion and subjugation of Holland summoned in the Dutch-American FDR the desire to go for a 3rd term and be in the driver's seat to end nazi aggression.
View all my reviews
Friday, November 20, 2015
Review: Bach, Casals and The Six Suites For Cello Solo - Volume 2: The Legacy of J Sebastian Bach
Bach, Casals and The Six Suites For Cello Solo - Volume 2: The Legacy of J Sebastian Bach by Steve Hancoff
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Bach’s Six Suites for Solo ‘Cello may be the most performed and recognized compositions ever created for unaccompanied cello. If you close your eyes and think back to a time that you enjoyed more than a few minutes of solo cello, it was probably authored by Bach. You owe it to yourself to also enjoy deeply these guitar transcriptions sublimely delivered by Steven Hancoff and draw from them your future memories. Timbre is the unique quality of an instrument’s sound profile distinct from its pitch and intensity. It is how we recognize the same note from trumpet as that from a piano, yet feel the different source. Soul, I dare say, is a good word for how we know that note is from Miles Davis or Thelonious Monk. The timbre of the guitar brightens the intensity of these melodies and the guitarist’s techniques of harmony and syncopation, so natural to that instrument, amplifies a sonic bouquet of colors within that light like a prism or kaleidoscope does sunshine. The Hancoff soul, where the intelligent, poignant, and transcendent grace of these pieces has been internalized and artfully expressed, makes this the triumph of one man who reached through three centuries to telegraph to us Bach’s soul. I can have almost any music play while I read in my library. My default has been a Steffen Basho-Junghans album for over a year. That has now been replaced by this mentally invigorating three-CD opus.
After discovering an edition in a Barcelona thrift shop in, Spain, a thirteen-year-old Pablo Casals began studying these cello solos until in 1936, at the age of sixty he became the first to record all six suites giving them a holistic rebirth on a recording still respected today: Bach, J. S. The 6 Cello Suites, Pablo Casals. EMI Classics 66215 1997. For those fortunate to discover this interpretation, crafted by Hancoff also at sixty years of age, it too will be respected into the future. Without a Bach manuscript surviving, many interpretations of the suites exist with no authoritative version. Among the scholarship that inevitably followed to fill that knowledge gap, Hancoff has gone far from the idea of mere liner notes to a four-volume, immersive iBook series on Bach and his solo suites: Bach, Casals & The Six Suites for 'Cello Solo in volumes 1 through 4. This is my first experience with iBooks and Hancoff has so embraced the possibilities of the format that I suggest they be enjoyed on a platform like a Mac that can properly present all the dimensions involved here. These books feature images, links to pop up more details, and embedded video and audio.
Volume 1: The Life of J. Sebastian Bach is the biography of a man that knew more than his fair share of pain and like trummerflora in the wasteland of the Thirty Years War went from orphaned seed to organ master. He was a well paid and celebrated organmeister (tester, performer, if unrecognized composer) and settling into a life of serial patronage and a wife in second cousin Maria Barbara Bach. The biography starting in Thuringia and from penury to well-paid position jumps to life with the varied content including etchings, commemorating plaques and statues, impressionistic paintings, side treks into “quodlibets” and “intermezzos”, music theory, and mini-biographies of key persons. It is fascinating that in Weimar, a locus of the German Enlightenment and home of writers Goethe and Schiller, Bach found not only a home but imprisonment. Notably, he was for long not commemorated there he way other key places of his life had done. This is one of the chapters of Bach’s formation that make for interesting reading in Volume 1 as well as explanation of the Bach’s technical advancement innovating well-tempered tuning so that a composer might write in any key, and a musician might play in any key. One of the fascinating intermezzo side treks shows how this well-tempered approach to tones was applied to visual hues by Jakob Weder in his Organ of Color and Farbsymphonien (“Color Symphonies”). The entertaining diversions to appendices are actually spot on for relevance and generally overtly germane to Bach’s life. One “amazing story” (as some of the addenda are called) is that of Adolph Busch, refugee from Nazi Germany, and the humble story of the creation, loss, and recovery of the Brandenburg Concertos. (As a child, hearing the theme music of “Firing Line” on PBS, Brandenburg Concerto No. 2, Third Movement, was the first Bach masterpiece that I came to adore.) Incarceration was not the only misfortune suffered by Bach; multiple of his children also died in infancy. Also, his wife passed. Afterward, Bach authored the cantata Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis in meinem Herzen (I Had Great Distress in My Heart). For his second wife, Anna Magdalena, he compiled famous clavier pieces as explored here. Volume 1 makes and supports the case of Bach’s deserved acclaim and presents a life with travails and professional success leaving a body of work that is proof of a genius that may have few equals, if any.
Volume II focuses on the accomplished, adult Bach: a grandfather even. Special, detailed interludes add depth. One explores the many portraits of Bach and what they tell us about posture and a possible late-life stroke. However, the numerology of button-counting seems a bit much for me. Another interlude delves into the art of Bach The Younger, many pieces he did being copies of musicians for his grandfather’s collection. Besides lineage there is more in the generations here. Generations of transcriptionists, performers including Casals and such history as revival performances and stunning visuals of inspired painting and sculpture. Hancoff places himself in here and explores his own interpretation:
“…the bow of the cello must be in contact with the string for the string to sound, so that sustain and swell are idiomatically inherent; whereas when a guitar string is plucked, and therefore unless the note is artificially stopped, it will ring and decay, most loud at the first moment of impact, and then progressively softer. Just as important, the guitar will always be an octave higher than a cello. This shift alone generates a different vibratory frequency and, therefore, a different quality of aesthetic and emotional impact. For me, the gorgeous sonority of the cello vibrates more in my belly, that of the guitar more in my chest.”
And later with great humility,
“I hope that I have made a worthy contribution, but confess that my deepest motivation for adapting Bach’s music to my acoustic guitar is the immense pleasure and great good that I derive from prolonged, challenging and creative immersion in the sublime. The Bach Cello Suites are simply too wondrous not to explore. In the end, as I developed my own sensibilities practicing, living with, meditating on, and playing this music, I concluded that it best served the profundity of Bach’s music to let it lead me where it will, and my own nature to follow as best I can. ”
This book takes us to Bach’s death with extensive details on his ophthalmological ailments and the failed eye surgery (and the surgeon) that led to his demise.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Bach’s Six Suites for Solo ‘Cello may be the most performed and recognized compositions ever created for unaccompanied cello. If you close your eyes and think back to a time that you enjoyed more than a few minutes of solo cello, it was probably authored by Bach. You owe it to yourself to also enjoy deeply these guitar transcriptions sublimely delivered by Steven Hancoff and draw from them your future memories. Timbre is the unique quality of an instrument’s sound profile distinct from its pitch and intensity. It is how we recognize the same note from trumpet as that from a piano, yet feel the different source. Soul, I dare say, is a good word for how we know that note is from Miles Davis or Thelonious Monk. The timbre of the guitar brightens the intensity of these melodies and the guitarist’s techniques of harmony and syncopation, so natural to that instrument, amplifies a sonic bouquet of colors within that light like a prism or kaleidoscope does sunshine. The Hancoff soul, where the intelligent, poignant, and transcendent grace of these pieces has been internalized and artfully expressed, makes this the triumph of one man who reached through three centuries to telegraph to us Bach’s soul. I can have almost any music play while I read in my library. My default has been a Steffen Basho-Junghans album for over a year. That has now been replaced by this mentally invigorating three-CD opus.
After discovering an edition in a Barcelona thrift shop in, Spain, a thirteen-year-old Pablo Casals began studying these cello solos until in 1936, at the age of sixty he became the first to record all six suites giving them a holistic rebirth on a recording still respected today: Bach, J. S. The 6 Cello Suites, Pablo Casals. EMI Classics 66215 1997. For those fortunate to discover this interpretation, crafted by Hancoff also at sixty years of age, it too will be respected into the future. Without a Bach manuscript surviving, many interpretations of the suites exist with no authoritative version. Among the scholarship that inevitably followed to fill that knowledge gap, Hancoff has gone far from the idea of mere liner notes to a four-volume, immersive iBook series on Bach and his solo suites: Bach, Casals & The Six Suites for 'Cello Solo in volumes 1 through 4. This is my first experience with iBooks and Hancoff has so embraced the possibilities of the format that I suggest they be enjoyed on a platform like a Mac that can properly present all the dimensions involved here. These books feature images, links to pop up more details, and embedded video and audio.
Volume 1: The Life of J. Sebastian Bach is the biography of a man that knew more than his fair share of pain and like trummerflora in the wasteland of the Thirty Years War went from orphaned seed to organ master. He was a well paid and celebrated organmeister (tester, performer, if unrecognized composer) and settling into a life of serial patronage and a wife in second cousin Maria Barbara Bach. The biography starting in Thuringia and from penury to well-paid position jumps to life with the varied content including etchings, commemorating plaques and statues, impressionistic paintings, side treks into “quodlibets” and “intermezzos”, music theory, and mini-biographies of key persons. It is fascinating that in Weimar, a locus of the German Enlightenment and home of writers Goethe and Schiller, Bach found not only a home but imprisonment. Notably, he was for long not commemorated there he way other key places of his life had done. This is one of the chapters of Bach’s formation that make for interesting reading in Volume 1 as well as explanation of the Bach’s technical advancement innovating well-tempered tuning so that a composer might write in any key, and a musician might play in any key. One of the fascinating intermezzo side treks shows how this well-tempered approach to tones was applied to visual hues by Jakob Weder in his Organ of Color and Farbsymphonien (“Color Symphonies”). The entertaining diversions to appendices are actually spot on for relevance and generally overtly germane to Bach’s life. One “amazing story” (as some of the addenda are called) is that of Adolph Busch, refugee from Nazi Germany, and the humble story of the creation, loss, and recovery of the Brandenburg Concertos. (As a child, hearing the theme music of “Firing Line” on PBS, Brandenburg Concerto No. 2, Third Movement, was the first Bach masterpiece that I came to adore.) Incarceration was not the only misfortune suffered by Bach; multiple of his children also died in infancy. Also, his wife passed. Afterward, Bach authored the cantata Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis in meinem Herzen (I Had Great Distress in My Heart). For his second wife, Anna Magdalena, he compiled famous clavier pieces as explored here. Volume 1 makes and supports the case of Bach’s deserved acclaim and presents a life with travails and professional success leaving a body of work that is proof of a genius that may have few equals, if any.
Volume II focuses on the accomplished, adult Bach: a grandfather even. Special, detailed interludes add depth. One explores the many portraits of Bach and what they tell us about posture and a possible late-life stroke. However, the numerology of button-counting seems a bit much for me. Another interlude delves into the art of Bach The Younger, many pieces he did being copies of musicians for his grandfather’s collection. Besides lineage there is more in the generations here. Generations of transcriptionists, performers including Casals and such history as revival performances and stunning visuals of inspired painting and sculpture. Hancoff places himself in here and explores his own interpretation:
“…the bow of the cello must be in contact with the string for the string to sound, so that sustain and swell are idiomatically inherent; whereas when a guitar string is plucked, and therefore unless the note is artificially stopped, it will ring and decay, most loud at the first moment of impact, and then progressively softer. Just as important, the guitar will always be an octave higher than a cello. This shift alone generates a different vibratory frequency and, therefore, a different quality of aesthetic and emotional impact. For me, the gorgeous sonority of the cello vibrates more in my belly, that of the guitar more in my chest.”
And later with great humility,
“I hope that I have made a worthy contribution, but confess that my deepest motivation for adapting Bach’s music to my acoustic guitar is the immense pleasure and great good that I derive from prolonged, challenging and creative immersion in the sublime. The Bach Cello Suites are simply too wondrous not to explore. In the end, as I developed my own sensibilities practicing, living with, meditating on, and playing this music, I concluded that it best served the profundity of Bach’s music to let it lead me where it will, and my own nature to follow as best I can. ”
This book takes us to Bach’s death with extensive details on his ophthalmological ailments and the failed eye surgery (and the surgeon) that led to his demise.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Review: The Magic of Math: Solving for x and Figuring Out Why
The Magic of Math: Solving for x and Figuring Out Why by Arthur Benjamin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
In 2010, I was intrigued and entertained by this author’s appearance and display of calculation gymnastics on The Colbert Report. In more recent years, I found his Joy of Mathematics course, a series of twenty-four half-hour lectures, rich source material for my lectures to first-year college students. I was immensely please to learn that elements of that course along with tricks of the stage used by this “mathemagician” (a title previously held by Benjamin’s inspiration Martin Gardner) were compiled into a book. The book delivers on all the promise of those two aspect of Benjamin’s talent: teacher and performer. Like Gardner, Benjamin telegraphs a joy of surprising mathematical stunts, like accurate estimates of e from one’s own phone number and the manifold discoveries waiting in Pascal’s Triangle...
[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
In 2010, I was intrigued and entertained by this author’s appearance and display of calculation gymnastics on The Colbert Report. In more recent years, I found his Joy of Mathematics course, a series of twenty-four half-hour lectures, rich source material for my lectures to first-year college students. I was immensely please to learn that elements of that course along with tricks of the stage used by this “mathemagician” (a title previously held by Benjamin’s inspiration Martin Gardner) were compiled into a book. The book delivers on all the promise of those two aspect of Benjamin’s talent: teacher and performer. Like Gardner, Benjamin telegraphs a joy of surprising mathematical stunts, like accurate estimates of e from one’s own phone number and the manifold discoveries waiting in Pascal’s Triangle...
[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]
View all my reviews
Review: Get Capone: The Secret Plot That Captured America's Most Wanted Gangster
Get Capone: The Secret Plot That Captured America's Most Wanted Gangster by Jonathan Eig
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is more than the story of bringing down Capone, but a full biography of his professional life from panderer to syphilis-tormented Miami Beach resident. New scholarship sheds light on the St. Valentine's Day Massacre (looks like at least in part a cop-involved vendetta for the slaying of a cop's son) and more. Ness and The Untouchables get taken down a few notches as being largely ineffective and unimportant. Philadelphia for actually imprisoning Capone and U. S. Attorney George E. Q. Johnson for successfully getting a tax evasion case and more to sent Scarface to The Rock are the real nemeses here. Lots of facts on The Outfit associates like Nitti and brother Ralph as well as facts on what happened post-Capone and to the gangsters' children. The book also makes the case that Capone was flashy like Gotti but possibly not as high up on the org chart as may be assumed.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is more than the story of bringing down Capone, but a full biography of his professional life from panderer to syphilis-tormented Miami Beach resident. New scholarship sheds light on the St. Valentine's Day Massacre (looks like at least in part a cop-involved vendetta for the slaying of a cop's son) and more. Ness and The Untouchables get taken down a few notches as being largely ineffective and unimportant. Philadelphia for actually imprisoning Capone and U. S. Attorney George E. Q. Johnson for successfully getting a tax evasion case and more to sent Scarface to The Rock are the real nemeses here. Lots of facts on The Outfit associates like Nitti and brother Ralph as well as facts on what happened post-Capone and to the gangsters' children. The book also makes the case that Capone was flashy like Gotti but possibly not as high up on the org chart as may be assumed.
View all my reviews
Monday, November 16, 2015
Review: The Magic of Math: Solving for x and Figuring Out Why
The Magic of Math: Solving for x and Figuring Out Why by Arthur Benjamin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
In 2010, I was intrigued and entertained by this author’s appearance and display of calculation gymnastics on The Colbert Report. In more recent years, I found his Joy of Mathematics course, a series of twenty-four half-hour lectures, rich source material for my lectures to first-year college students. I was immensely please to learn that elements of that course along with tricks of the stage used by this “mathemagician” (a title previously held by Benjamin’s inspiration Martin Gardner) were compiled into a book. The book delivers on all the promise of those two aspect of Benjamin’s talent: teacher and performer. Like Gardner, Benjamin telegraphs a joy of surprising mathematical stunts, like accurate estimates of e from one’s own phone number and the manifold discoveries waiting in Pascal’s Triangle...
[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
In 2010, I was intrigued and entertained by this author’s appearance and display of calculation gymnastics on The Colbert Report. In more recent years, I found his Joy of Mathematics course, a series of twenty-four half-hour lectures, rich source material for my lectures to first-year college students. I was immensely please to learn that elements of that course along with tricks of the stage used by this “mathemagician” (a title previously held by Benjamin’s inspiration Martin Gardner) were compiled into a book. The book delivers on all the promise of those two aspect of Benjamin’s talent: teacher and performer. Like Gardner, Benjamin telegraphs a joy of surprising mathematical stunts, like accurate estimates of e from one’s own phone number and the manifold discoveries waiting in Pascal’s Triangle...
[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]
View all my reviews
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Review: Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman: Adventures of a Curious Character
Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman: Adventures of a Curious Character by Richard Feynman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Narrator Raymond Todd really launches into this classic work with gusto, making it my favorite edition of this oft-published work. Combined with these stories appearing in his lectures and other anthologies, many of these tales are like old friends. I delight in hearing of his pranksterism and insight and anti-establishment behavior. From Los Alamos a-bomb research to university academia to the Nobel prize, there is a lot of arc to the professional side of his life. From his wife's death in the 40s to bar girls and bathroom bar fights, there is a lot of not-much-held-back personal life, too. Some of my favorite parts are his exploration of his potential in percussion and drawing as well as taking an objective, scientific approach to picking up bar girls and understanding the ways of a professional gambler. Also high on my list is his experiments in John C. Lilly's sensory deprivation tank. Something that still rings true is his rant against "Cargo Cult Science", even if there are doubts his quoted rat experiment medical research and even softer sciences like psychology.
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Narrator Raymond Todd really launches into this classic work with gusto, making it my favorite edition of this oft-published work. Combined with these stories appearing in his lectures and other anthologies, many of these tales are like old friends. I delight in hearing of his pranksterism and insight and anti-establishment behavior. From Los Alamos a-bomb research to university academia to the Nobel prize, there is a lot of arc to the professional side of his life. From his wife's death in the 40s to bar girls and bathroom bar fights, there is a lot of not-much-held-back personal life, too. Some of my favorite parts are his exploration of his potential in percussion and drawing as well as taking an objective, scientific approach to picking up bar girls and understanding the ways of a professional gambler. Also high on my list is his experiments in John C. Lilly's sensory deprivation tank. Something that still rings true is his rant against "Cargo Cult Science", even if there are doubts his quoted rat experiment medical research and even softer sciences like psychology.
View all my reviews
Thursday, November 5, 2015
Review: A Walk in the Woods
A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
They may have not done the whole trail, but the wit and misadventure of every step had me in stitches. This was a very entertaining read and I am glad bear expert Dr. Michael R. Pelton suggested I read this as we traipsed a portion of the trails in the Smoky Mountains looking for bearsign.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
They may have not done the whole trail, but the wit and misadventure of every step had me in stitches. This was a very entertaining read and I am glad bear expert Dr. Michael R. Pelton suggested I read this as we traipsed a portion of the trails in the Smoky Mountains looking for bearsign.
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Review: The Lost Continent: Travels in Small Town America
The Lost Continent: Travels in Small Town America by Bill Bryson
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
First off, lively and versatile narrator is worth the price of admission for his performance here and that should not go unmentioned. After that, why Bryson can gave travel most of the continental United States and find mostly a bilious reaction and heaps of disparaging remarks to offer escapes me. I am glad this is not the first Bryon book I have read and am also glad I have never been at the receiving end of his cynical and cruel wit.
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My rating: 2 of 5 stars
First off, lively and versatile narrator is worth the price of admission for his performance here and that should not go unmentioned. After that, why Bryson can gave travel most of the continental United States and find mostly a bilious reaction and heaps of disparaging remarks to offer escapes me. I am glad this is not the first Bryon book I have read and am also glad I have never been at the receiving end of his cynical and cruel wit.
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Review: They Showed the Way: Forty American Negro Leaders
They Showed the Way: Forty American Negro Leaders by Charlemae Hill Rollins
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
I think this Top 40 of "American Negro Leaders" is aimed at high school students, hence its brevity and embrace of the exclamation point. The order is alphabetical to imply no ranking, but Du Bois does get more pages than, say, sculptor Edmona Lewis. I would like a pic of Lewis' work and maybe the "Shoe-lasting machine" of Jan Ernest Matzeliger, but there are no images in this compendium. Perhaps an update edition would be nice. Some representatives post-WWII like Paul Robeson and Flip Wilson, maybe even something as edgy as Pryor would liven things up. Still, in a work that seems to celebrate the post-Slavery black American, list forty pioneers and leave out Sojourner Truth?
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My rating: 2 of 5 stars
I think this Top 40 of "American Negro Leaders" is aimed at high school students, hence its brevity and embrace of the exclamation point. The order is alphabetical to imply no ranking, but Du Bois does get more pages than, say, sculptor Edmona Lewis. I would like a pic of Lewis' work and maybe the "Shoe-lasting machine" of Jan Ernest Matzeliger, but there are no images in this compendium. Perhaps an update edition would be nice. Some representatives post-WWII like Paul Robeson and Flip Wilson, maybe even something as edgy as Pryor would liven things up. Still, in a work that seems to celebrate the post-Slavery black American, list forty pioneers and leave out Sojourner Truth?
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Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Review: If I Made It, So Can You
If I Made It, So Can You by Virginia Graham
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
A fast and easy read from a woman who still sounds ebullient and energetic. She recounts beings a cosmetics spokesperson to radio personality ("Betty Baker") to stage actress and eventually pioneering female talk show host with Girl Talk and her own hour-long show. She drops tidbits we wish she would recall more on: Alice Cooper as a most interesting guest, Agnes Moorehead's Xmas paryy, etc.
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My rating: 2 of 5 stars
A fast and easy read from a woman who still sounds ebullient and energetic. She recounts beings a cosmetics spokesperson to radio personality ("Betty Baker") to stage actress and eventually pioneering female talk show host with Girl Talk and her own hour-long show. She drops tidbits we wish she would recall more on: Alice Cooper as a most interesting guest, Agnes Moorehead's Xmas paryy, etc.
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Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Review: Fighter Squadron at Guadalcanal
Fighter Squadron at Guadalcanal by Max Brand
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Introductions make a big deal of the racism in this text begun in 1943 and published near 40 years after the author's death. I counted many "Japs" and one "Nip", hardly extreme considering the blatant racism o WWII. I find the racism in "Gran Turino" disturbing, but that language of these veterans strikes me as rather tame, even reserved. This is 1st-person narratives of survivors of 212 stationed at Guadacanal and valiantly stopping the "Japs" from retaking Henderson field. Stories of a pilot's first kill in a dog fight stand out, as well as interacting with natives in tracking down a survivor and a pilot who rammed into a Zero later finding the pilot bobbing in the sea. Stern stuff.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Introductions make a big deal of the racism in this text begun in 1943 and published near 40 years after the author's death. I counted many "Japs" and one "Nip", hardly extreme considering the blatant racism o WWII. I find the racism in "Gran Turino" disturbing, but that language of these veterans strikes me as rather tame, even reserved. This is 1st-person narratives of survivors of 212 stationed at Guadacanal and valiantly stopping the "Japs" from retaking Henderson field. Stories of a pilot's first kill in a dog fight stand out, as well as interacting with natives in tracking down a survivor and a pilot who rammed into a Zero later finding the pilot bobbing in the sea. Stern stuff.
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Review: Color
Color by Donald Pavey
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A coffee table book from Architectural Digest. The focus is much more on science of color (optics, pigments) and cultural expressions and interpretations of color (red in advertising for would-be winners, black associated with death and thus rarely used in cigarette packs, etc.) rather than much focused on architecture. The last half of the book or so given over to sections for each major color blue, orange, etc.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A coffee table book from Architectural Digest. The focus is much more on science of color (optics, pigments) and cultural expressions and interpretations of color (red in advertising for would-be winners, black associated with death and thus rarely used in cigarette packs, etc.) rather than much focused on architecture. The last half of the book or so given over to sections for each major color blue, orange, etc.
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Monday, November 2, 2015
Review: Levittown: Two Extraordinary Families, One Ruthless Tycoon, and the Fight for the American Dream
Levittown: Two Extraordinary Families, One Ruthless Tycoon, and the Fight for the American Dream by David Kushner
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I knew so little about Levittown; there were many such towns, founder Bill Levitt was a racist assuring covenants no longer valid in the United States... This book is the story of a brave family that broke the Levittown color barrier, their supporters, and the enemies that fomented a race riot to unsuccessfully move them out.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I knew so little about Levittown; there were many such towns, founder Bill Levitt was a racist assuring covenants no longer valid in the United States... This book is the story of a brave family that broke the Levittown color barrier, their supporters, and the enemies that fomented a race riot to unsuccessfully move them out.
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Review: Fighter Squadron at Guadalcanal
Fighter Squadron at Guadalcanal by Max Brand
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Introductions make a big deal of the racism in this text begun in 1943 and published near 40 years after the author's death. I counted many "Japs" and one "Nip", hardly extreme considering the blatant racism o WWII. This is 1st-person narratives of survivors of 212 stationed at Guadacanal and valiantly stopping the "Japs" from retaking Henderson field. Stories of a pilot's first kill in a dog fight stand out, as well as interacting with natives in tracking down a survivor and a pilot who rammed into a Zero later finding the pilot bobbing in the sea. Stern stuff.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Introductions make a big deal of the racism in this text begun in 1943 and published near 40 years after the author's death. I counted many "Japs" and one "Nip", hardly extreme considering the blatant racism o WWII. This is 1st-person narratives of survivors of 212 stationed at Guadacanal and valiantly stopping the "Japs" from retaking Henderson field. Stories of a pilot's first kill in a dog fight stand out, as well as interacting with natives in tracking down a survivor and a pilot who rammed into a Zero later finding the pilot bobbing in the sea. Stern stuff.
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