Holding Back the Sea: The Struggle for America's Natural Legacy on the Gulf Coast by Christopher Hallowell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Hurricane Katrina was the eleventh named storm and fifth hurricane of the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season. It was the costliest natural disaster, as well as one of the five deadliest hurricanes, in the history of the United States. This book came out four years before that but warned of such a behemoth and the damage to be wrought on ineffectual levees and in the absence of shock absorbing marshes. Removing marshes for oil development and shipping traffic and ending up increasing the hurricane threat to southern Louisiana is only one of the revealing and cruel ironies in this book. One is the "TED" turtle excluder device net gaps forced on fishermen which apparently is more effective at reducing their effectiveness and thus income than in saving turtles, as also covered in Caught in the Net: The Conflict between Shrimpers and Conservationists. Also examined is how spray painting fur coats helped led to mass starvation and suffering of over-populated nutria: "Protestors may not have fully considered the effect of their actions. Not only did they weaken the fabric of the marsh; the protests and a sympathetic media and public exposed the animals to more suffering than leghold traps ever could. So prolific are nutria that their population explosions can end in either mass starvation or mass disease. That is what happened as a result of anti-fur efforts. Few sights are more pathetic that that of mud-bedraggled nutria-all skin and bones, and fur falling off in clumps-staggering to a certain death...the result of kind but misdirected hearts." PETA would also not be bullish on the Tabasco scion, author of The Alligator's Life History, who thought nothing of forcing an alligator puncture his own skull with own teeth biting into thick steel. Edward A. McIlhenny also was instrumental in spreading the marsh-destroying nutria, once a storm freed his breeding population.
A fascinating book on environmental degradation through mis-ordered priorities, neglect, and a lack of accountability and cogent vision.
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Monday, December 21, 2015
Friday, December 18, 2015
Review: Colder Than Hell: A Marine Rifle Company at Chosin Reservoir
Colder Than Hell: A Marine Rifle Company at Chosin Reservoir by Joseph R. Owen
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A crisp telling of the author's time against North Korean and Chinese troops in the bitter, below zero weather of the Korean conflict. The author recounts examples where grit and resolve and care for one's foxhold buddy overcame lack of prepartion, overwhelming odds and all too frequent dud explosives.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A crisp telling of the author's time against North Korean and Chinese troops in the bitter, below zero weather of the Korean conflict. The author recounts examples where grit and resolve and care for one's foxhold buddy overcame lack of prepartion, overwhelming odds and all too frequent dud explosives.
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Monday, December 14, 2015
Review: The Last Canadian
The Last Canadian by William C. Heine
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Born out of the Cold War and in tune with modern lit/film that sees the world wiped out by mysterious plagues. Like the "The Last Man on Earth" TV series, the supposed last man finds other rather quickly. This quickly spirals from wary encounters to surviving multiple nuclear attacks from Soviets who seek to capitalize on having wiped-out the population of the Americas with a designer plague. Main character Eugene Arnprior, an American engineer living in Montreal only just having acquired Canadian citizenship, is like a character out of a Jules Verne novel putting together random technology and resources to find solutions. The book was an easy and interesting read. It was released in the U.S. as Death Wind. With all its connections to current culture and a resurgent Soviet-like Russia, this book is ripe for a revival and maybe even truer film presentation than the 1998 movie "The Patriot".
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Born out of the Cold War and in tune with modern lit/film that sees the world wiped out by mysterious plagues. Like the "The Last Man on Earth" TV series, the supposed last man finds other rather quickly. This quickly spirals from wary encounters to surviving multiple nuclear attacks from Soviets who seek to capitalize on having wiped-out the population of the Americas with a designer plague. Main character Eugene Arnprior, an American engineer living in Montreal only just having acquired Canadian citizenship, is like a character out of a Jules Verne novel putting together random technology and resources to find solutions. The book was an easy and interesting read. It was released in the U.S. as Death Wind. With all its connections to current culture and a resurgent Soviet-like Russia, this book is ripe for a revival and maybe even truer film presentation than the 1998 movie "The Patriot".
View all my reviews
Review: Go Set a Watchman
Go Set a Watchman by Harper Lee
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Is it an abandoned first draft of To Kill a Mockingbird, or Harper Lee's long-desired sequel? Or is it a secret spirited away from a dim, elderly woman without protectors? There is much controversy on the publication of this novel. More controversy is made by readers seeing a beloved Atticus Finch because apparently he was co-opted by his own creator and transmogrified into a racist fiend. Reading some of those reviews, I wonder if some are more remembering the Gregory Peck silver screen depiction in a screenplay that amplified Atticus over the story of the children. Indeed, this was Scout's story, in narration and recollection, as is this work. Young Scout was misinformed, hard-headed, and self-assured in her precocious judgement. The adult Jean Louise has those aspects of her character and demands simple truths from old men confronted with a changing world as they seek to slow what they see as radical change afoot. The work is still about racism in America, like its sister volume, and still about Jean Louse. Since this adult Scout also splits her time with Maycomb and NYC it makes me feel the author's experience living in those two worlds. Crowded by internal monologues and rows with her father and uncle, there is less scope and plot here whch makes it feel like a lesser work, but still a very good read.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Is it an abandoned first draft of To Kill a Mockingbird, or Harper Lee's long-desired sequel? Or is it a secret spirited away from a dim, elderly woman without protectors? There is much controversy on the publication of this novel. More controversy is made by readers seeing a beloved Atticus Finch because apparently he was co-opted by his own creator and transmogrified into a racist fiend. Reading some of those reviews, I wonder if some are more remembering the Gregory Peck silver screen depiction in a screenplay that amplified Atticus over the story of the children. Indeed, this was Scout's story, in narration and recollection, as is this work. Young Scout was misinformed, hard-headed, and self-assured in her precocious judgement. The adult Jean Louise has those aspects of her character and demands simple truths from old men confronted with a changing world as they seek to slow what they see as radical change afoot. The work is still about racism in America, like its sister volume, and still about Jean Louse. Since this adult Scout also splits her time with Maycomb and NYC it makes me feel the author's experience living in those two worlds. Crowded by internal monologues and rows with her father and uncle, there is less scope and plot here whch makes it feel like a lesser work, but still a very good read.
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Review: Food Rules: An Eater's Manual
Food Rules: An Eater's Manual by Michael Pollan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is an excellent Pollan reference, or if you don't want to dive into one of his longer works you get a summary of his recommendations. Each page is a pithy directive like "don't eat any food passed to you through a window", "eat less, mostly plants", "don't eat any cereal that change the color of milk", and "don't eat any food that is named the same in every language" (like Big Mac). After the rule, there is a paragraph or so of supporting details.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is an excellent Pollan reference, or if you don't want to dive into one of his longer works you get a summary of his recommendations. Each page is a pithy directive like "don't eat any food passed to you through a window", "eat less, mostly plants", "don't eat any cereal that change the color of milk", and "don't eat any food that is named the same in every language" (like Big Mac). After the rule, there is a paragraph or so of supporting details.
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Sunday, December 13, 2015
Review: Black Earth: The Holocaust as History and Warning
Black Earth: The Holocaust as History and Warning by Timothy Snyder
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a fascinating approach to The Holocaust, as it is a political history more than a military one. The eventual recounting of moving fronts - not really the detail of individual battles - is focused on the Eastern Front and is the last third of the book. The morbid, if necessary and eye-opening, recounting of Holocaust atrocities individual and mass atrocities is in the last quarter, or so. If anything is less covered in content, it is the warning Snyder sees. This is a mere conclusion chapter conflating Lebensraum and stateless anarchy with issues of climate change, limited resources, and failed states from today's headlines.
What makes this work unique to those on the topic that I have read, its the deep and comparative analysis of the policy motivations of Germany, Poland, and Stalin's Russia. Germany sought to re-colonize by deportation, destruction, and destabilization of Europe's nations. "The epoch of statehood has come to an end", proclaimed German legal theorist Carl Schmitt. Poland, recovering from WWI sought a post-colonial world and thus the safety of being on in a community of nations under the rule of Law. Stalin was intra-colonial or self-colonial, redistributing the population of a greater, Soviet Russia about its vast landscape (p. 53). For Jews, only Poland had a positive impact. As part of exporting nationalism by supporting an independent Ukraine, etc. Poland actively supported such Zionist causes as The Irgun, a Zionist paramilitary organization that operated in Mandate Palestine between 1931 and 1948. Their arms were largely purchased from a willing Poland. In 1943 the Polish II Corps, release of many thousands of Poles from the Soviet Gulags, following the signing of the Polish-Russian Military Agreement on August 14, 1941, allowed for the creation of a Polish Army on Soviet soil, arrived in Palestine from Iraq. The British insisted that no Jewish units of the army be created. Eventually, many of the soldiers of Jewish origin that arrived with the army were released and allowed to stay in Palestine. One of them was Menachem Begin, whose arrival in Palestine created new-found expectations within the Irgun and the similar Betar. Begin had served as head of the Betar movement in Poland, thus Poland impetus was behind the impetus for Israel from its earliest conception as a post-Mandate reality.
Snyder also does much to explain how the memory and extremity of the Auschwitz distracts from the understanding the breadth and development of the extermination practices ("The Auschwitz Paradox"). That death camp was the third, final stage of a development from the open pit shootings in Lithuania and other mostly Eastern locales to asphyxiation from carbon monoxide fumes in trucks and fixed locations to finally Zyklon B and cremation.
It
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a fascinating approach to The Holocaust, as it is a political history more than a military one. The eventual recounting of moving fronts - not really the detail of individual battles - is focused on the Eastern Front and is the last third of the book. The morbid, if necessary and eye-opening, recounting of Holocaust atrocities individual and mass atrocities is in the last quarter, or so. If anything is less covered in content, it is the warning Snyder sees. This is a mere conclusion chapter conflating Lebensraum and stateless anarchy with issues of climate change, limited resources, and failed states from today's headlines.
What makes this work unique to those on the topic that I have read, its the deep and comparative analysis of the policy motivations of Germany, Poland, and Stalin's Russia. Germany sought to re-colonize by deportation, destruction, and destabilization of Europe's nations. "The epoch of statehood has come to an end", proclaimed German legal theorist Carl Schmitt. Poland, recovering from WWI sought a post-colonial world and thus the safety of being on in a community of nations under the rule of Law. Stalin was intra-colonial or self-colonial, redistributing the population of a greater, Soviet Russia about its vast landscape (p. 53). For Jews, only Poland had a positive impact. As part of exporting nationalism by supporting an independent Ukraine, etc. Poland actively supported such Zionist causes as The Irgun, a Zionist paramilitary organization that operated in Mandate Palestine between 1931 and 1948. Their arms were largely purchased from a willing Poland. In 1943 the Polish II Corps, release of many thousands of Poles from the Soviet Gulags, following the signing of the Polish-Russian Military Agreement on August 14, 1941, allowed for the creation of a Polish Army on Soviet soil, arrived in Palestine from Iraq. The British insisted that no Jewish units of the army be created. Eventually, many of the soldiers of Jewish origin that arrived with the army were released and allowed to stay in Palestine. One of them was Menachem Begin, whose arrival in Palestine created new-found expectations within the Irgun and the similar Betar. Begin had served as head of the Betar movement in Poland, thus Poland impetus was behind the impetus for Israel from its earliest conception as a post-Mandate reality.
Snyder also does much to explain how the memory and extremity of the Auschwitz distracts from the understanding the breadth and development of the extermination practices ("The Auschwitz Paradox"). That death camp was the third, final stage of a development from the open pit shootings in Lithuania and other mostly Eastern locales to asphyxiation from carbon monoxide fumes in trucks and fixed locations to finally Zyklon B and cremation.
It
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Wednesday, December 9, 2015
Review: Bat Chain Puller: Rock and Roll in the Age of Celebrity
Bat Chain Puller: Rock and Roll in the Age of Celebrity by Kurt Loder
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I want to not like this collection, just because part of me resent my teenage fixation on MTV. (Loder joined MTV in 1987 as the host of their flagship music news program, The Week in Rock. It was later expanded and renamed to MTV News in which he was an anchor and correspondent.) In these essays and interviews, most of which were originally published in Rolling Stone, MTV commentator Loder takes a look at popular culture in the 1980s, focusing on the celebrity industry and how various members of the rock culture have dealt with it. The gamut is those looking back on greater heights: Mick Jagger, Tina Turner, Cynda Lauper, Deborah Harry, and others. What I really like about this is his cogent praises on unsung heroes that deserved fame avoided, including Iggy Pop, Frank Zappa, Captain Beefheart (hence the collection's title), and more. It's not just music icons here, Loder also covers artist Andy Warhol, actor Sean Connery, performance artist Laurie Anderson and even the fanzines and fans of grade-Z slasher movies. Loder defendes the purity of Bob Dylan and (against Republican co-option) Bruce Springsteen. Tina Turner then coming into mega stardom comes across with a gleam while Don Johnson still seems out of place, despite Loder's efforts. The post-fame medical woes of Ronnie Lane and the culmination of ZZ Top nicely fit in this compendium, which I have now been drawn to read twice.
Veteran and able narrators Stefan Rudnicki and Stephen Hoye take the role of interviewer and subject bringing life to the interview pieces as actual conversations.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I want to not like this collection, just because part of me resent my teenage fixation on MTV. (Loder joined MTV in 1987 as the host of their flagship music news program, The Week in Rock. It was later expanded and renamed to MTV News in which he was an anchor and correspondent.) In these essays and interviews, most of which were originally published in Rolling Stone, MTV commentator Loder takes a look at popular culture in the 1980s, focusing on the celebrity industry and how various members of the rock culture have dealt with it. The gamut is those looking back on greater heights: Mick Jagger, Tina Turner, Cynda Lauper, Deborah Harry, and others. What I really like about this is his cogent praises on unsung heroes that deserved fame avoided, including Iggy Pop, Frank Zappa, Captain Beefheart (hence the collection's title), and more. It's not just music icons here, Loder also covers artist Andy Warhol, actor Sean Connery, performance artist Laurie Anderson and even the fanzines and fans of grade-Z slasher movies. Loder defendes the purity of Bob Dylan and (against Republican co-option) Bruce Springsteen. Tina Turner then coming into mega stardom comes across with a gleam while Don Johnson still seems out of place, despite Loder's efforts. The post-fame medical woes of Ronnie Lane and the culmination of ZZ Top nicely fit in this compendium, which I have now been drawn to read twice.
Veteran and able narrators Stefan Rudnicki and Stephen Hoye take the role of interviewer and subject bringing life to the interview pieces as actual conversations.
View all my reviews
Review: Bat Chain Puller: Rock and Roll in the Age of Celebrity
Bat Chain Puller: Rock and Roll in the Age of Celebrity by Kurt Loder
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I want to not like this collection, just because part of me resent my teenage fixation on MTV. (Loder joined MTV in 1987 as the host of their flagship music news program, The Week in Rock. It was later expanded and renamed to MTV News in which he was an anchor and correspondent.) In these essays and interviews, most of which were originally published in Rolling Stone, MTV commentator Loder takes a look at popular culture in the 1980s, focusing on the celebrity industry and how various members of the rock culture have dealt with it. The gamut is those looking back on greater heights: Mick Jagger, Tina Turner, Cynda Lauper, Deborah Harry, and others. What I really like about this is his cogent praises on unsung heroes that deserved fame avoided, including Iggy Pop, Frank Zappa, Captain Beefheart (hence the collection's title), and more. It's not just music icons here, Loder also covers artist Andy Warhol, actor Sean Connery, performance artist Laurie Anderson and even the fanzines and fans of grade-Z slasher movies. Loder defendes the purity of Bob Dylan and (against Republican co-option) Bruce Springsteen. Tina Turner then coming into mega stardom comes across with a gleam while Don Johnson still seems out of place, despite Loder's efforts. The post-fame medical woes of Ronnie Lane and the culmination of ZZ Top nicely fit in this compendium, which I have now been drawn to read twice.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I want to not like this collection, just because part of me resent my teenage fixation on MTV. (Loder joined MTV in 1987 as the host of their flagship music news program, The Week in Rock. It was later expanded and renamed to MTV News in which he was an anchor and correspondent.) In these essays and interviews, most of which were originally published in Rolling Stone, MTV commentator Loder takes a look at popular culture in the 1980s, focusing on the celebrity industry and how various members of the rock culture have dealt with it. The gamut is those looking back on greater heights: Mick Jagger, Tina Turner, Cynda Lauper, Deborah Harry, and others. What I really like about this is his cogent praises on unsung heroes that deserved fame avoided, including Iggy Pop, Frank Zappa, Captain Beefheart (hence the collection's title), and more. It's not just music icons here, Loder also covers artist Andy Warhol, actor Sean Connery, performance artist Laurie Anderson and even the fanzines and fans of grade-Z slasher movies. Loder defendes the purity of Bob Dylan and (against Republican co-option) Bruce Springsteen. Tina Turner then coming into mega stardom comes across with a gleam while Don Johnson still seems out of place, despite Loder's efforts. The post-fame medical woes of Ronnie Lane and the culmination of ZZ Top nicely fit in this compendium, which I have now been drawn to read twice.
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Tuesday, December 8, 2015
Review: What Coleridge Thought
What Coleridge Thought by Owen Barfield
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Apparently, this was written while the philosophical works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge were coming out in new volumes. Who knew the author of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner/the Hunting of the Snark was a philosopher, too! Apparently, a noted and productive one. So, we get the philosopher's subtlety and the poets metaphor: "“It is a dull and obtuse mind, that must divide in order to distinguish; but it is a still worse that distinguishes in order to divide.” (Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Aids to Reflection)
Coleridge sallies forth to distinguish from the directly perceptible world of natura naturata to explore the "supersensuous" realm of the natura naturans. From these musings he developed a polar logic, apparently refined from the writings of Giordano Bruno and Nicholas of Cusa from the idea of coincidence of opposites. Ultimately, we find Coleridge has affirmed a Christian mysticism that is his worldview. Regardless, of how we take the culmination, the journey sparkles with such observations as, "The want of adverbs in the Iliad is very characteristic. With more adverbs there would have been some subjectivity, or subjectivity would have made them." (Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge: And the Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Christabel)
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Apparently, this was written while the philosophical works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge were coming out in new volumes. Who knew the author of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner/the Hunting of the Snark was a philosopher, too! Apparently, a noted and productive one. So, we get the philosopher's subtlety and the poets metaphor: "“It is a dull and obtuse mind, that must divide in order to distinguish; but it is a still worse that distinguishes in order to divide.” (Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Aids to Reflection)
Coleridge sallies forth to distinguish from the directly perceptible world of natura naturata to explore the "supersensuous" realm of the natura naturans. From these musings he developed a polar logic, apparently refined from the writings of Giordano Bruno and Nicholas of Cusa from the idea of coincidence of opposites. Ultimately, we find Coleridge has affirmed a Christian mysticism that is his worldview. Regardless, of how we take the culmination, the journey sparkles with such observations as, "The want of adverbs in the Iliad is very characteristic. With more adverbs there would have been some subjectivity, or subjectivity would have made them." (Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge: And the Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Christabel)
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Sunday, December 6, 2015
Review: I am Scout: The Biography of Harper Lee
I am Scout: The Biography of Harper Lee by Charles J. Shields
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a good biography of the then reclusive Harper Lee. It plots her early life up to To Kill a Mockingbird, dropping out of school and splitting her time between Monroeville and a humble NYC apartment. Interesting to me is how this work explores the real people used as bases for characters in the book, including her father for Atticus, herself for Scout, and Truman Capote for Dill, etc. This also explores the extensive researched and uncredited writing she apparently did for In Cold Blood, making it possibly the closest thing to a second novel during her lifetime. There are tantalizing suggestions of her working on what became Go Set a Watchman, although it is never mentioned by name or clearly identified.
This book also goes to task disputing claims in Capote, including that Harper was abused by her mother.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a good biography of the then reclusive Harper Lee. It plots her early life up to To Kill a Mockingbird, dropping out of school and splitting her time between Monroeville and a humble NYC apartment. Interesting to me is how this work explores the real people used as bases for characters in the book, including her father for Atticus, herself for Scout, and Truman Capote for Dill, etc. This also explores the extensive researched and uncredited writing she apparently did for In Cold Blood, making it possibly the closest thing to a second novel during her lifetime. There are tantalizing suggestions of her working on what became Go Set a Watchman, although it is never mentioned by name or clearly identified.
This book also goes to task disputing claims in Capote, including that Harper was abused by her mother.
View all my reviews
Review: I am Scout: The Biography of Harper Lee
I am Scout: The Biography of Harper Lee by Charles J. Shields
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a good biography of the then reclusive Harper Lee. It plots her early life up to To Kill a Mockingbird, dropping out of school and splitting her time between Monroeville and a humble NYC apartment. Interesting to me is how this work explores the real people used as bases for characters in the book, including her father for Atticus, herself for Scout, and Truman Capote for Dill, etc. This also explores the extensive researched and uncredited writing she apparently did for In Cold Blood, making it possibly the closest thing to a second novel during her lifetime. There are tantalizing suggestions of her working on what became Go Set a Watchman, although it is never mentioned by name or clearly identified.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a good biography of the then reclusive Harper Lee. It plots her early life up to To Kill a Mockingbird, dropping out of school and splitting her time between Monroeville and a humble NYC apartment. Interesting to me is how this work explores the real people used as bases for characters in the book, including her father for Atticus, herself for Scout, and Truman Capote for Dill, etc. This also explores the extensive researched and uncredited writing she apparently did for In Cold Blood, making it possibly the closest thing to a second novel during her lifetime. There are tantalizing suggestions of her working on what became Go Set a Watchman, although it is never mentioned by name or clearly identified.
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Thursday, December 3, 2015
Review: To Kill a Mockingbird
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is something like the third time I have read this classic, and is still lively and moving from Atticus's wit and wisdom to Scout's tomboy determination and the lurking threats of Boo Radley (revealed to be not a threat) and ingrained racism (revealed to be a real corruption). Full of vivid characters and a taut story, this will never be out of print. I recommend reading with or for it I am Scout: The Biography of Harper Lee.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is something like the third time I have read this classic, and is still lively and moving from Atticus's wit and wisdom to Scout's tomboy determination and the lurking threats of Boo Radley (revealed to be not a threat) and ingrained racism (revealed to be a real corruption). Full of vivid characters and a taut story, this will never be out of print. I recommend reading with or for it I am Scout: The Biography of Harper Lee.
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Review: The Colony: The Harrowing True Story of the Exiles of Molokai
The Colony: The Harrowing True Story of the Exiles of Molokai by John Tayman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a detailed an expansive history of the leper colony at Molokai covering over a century from the late 19th Century to the early 1990s. I had read about and had a clear idea of the sainted Fa. Damien whose selfless support of the inmates and deathbed photo brought international attention.
This also covers the pre-Damien days when the rude colony had patients and provisions thrown into the pier-less sea, suffered privation and the cruel supervision on an island nation with more than its share of leprosy and trying to shake the stigma of it. (The supposition that it was a haven for the fear inducing condition was a roadblock to integration into the United States.) Later, famous visitors like Robert Louis Stevenson, Jack London and more were appalled and inspired. With homemade masks, the inmates made a parade of "horribles" for London as he drew in the inspiration that would lead to reportage and fiction.
When Hansen's Disease was made manageable and the reasons for quarantine undercut, the closing and removal of the persons interred there was a cruel, heartless, and sudden as the establishment of that cruel institution. Detailed stories of key persons like Joseph Dutton, Catholic missionary who worked with Father Damien and took over for him after leaving the Trappists, and William Ragsdale, popular Hawaiian attorney and politician, who served as superintendent at Kalaupapa for four years (1874-1878), greatly personalize this history. Some memoirists are covered in detail like the too-typical stolen child and author of "Olivia: My Life of Exile in Kalaupapa:, Olivia R. Breitha.
Compelling stuff about man's inhumanity to man in the absence of science following a vaguely Biblical prescription.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a detailed an expansive history of the leper colony at Molokai covering over a century from the late 19th Century to the early 1990s. I had read about and had a clear idea of the sainted Fa. Damien whose selfless support of the inmates and deathbed photo brought international attention.
This also covers the pre-Damien days when the rude colony had patients and provisions thrown into the pier-less sea, suffered privation and the cruel supervision on an island nation with more than its share of leprosy and trying to shake the stigma of it. (The supposition that it was a haven for the fear inducing condition was a roadblock to integration into the United States.) Later, famous visitors like Robert Louis Stevenson, Jack London and more were appalled and inspired. With homemade masks, the inmates made a parade of "horribles" for London as he drew in the inspiration that would lead to reportage and fiction.
When Hansen's Disease was made manageable and the reasons for quarantine undercut, the closing and removal of the persons interred there was a cruel, heartless, and sudden as the establishment of that cruel institution. Detailed stories of key persons like Joseph Dutton, Catholic missionary who worked with Father Damien and took over for him after leaving the Trappists, and William Ragsdale, popular Hawaiian attorney and politician, who served as superintendent at Kalaupapa for four years (1874-1878), greatly personalize this history. Some memoirists are covered in detail like the too-typical stolen child and author of "Olivia: My Life of Exile in Kalaupapa:, Olivia R. Breitha.
Compelling stuff about man's inhumanity to man in the absence of science following a vaguely Biblical prescription.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Review: Pro ASP.NET Web API Security: Securing ASP.NET Web API
Pro ASP.NET Web API Security: Securing ASP.NET Web API by Badrinarayanan Lakshmiraghavan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a good, broad, fairly complete reference. I came to this reference for the OAuth material. The language for all the code written in this book is C#, which is what I was looking for. "Chapter 15: Security Vulnerabilities" with its explicit examples of CSRF, XSS is especially illustrative.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a good, broad, fairly complete reference. I came to this reference for the OAuth material. The language for all the code written in this book is C#, which is what I was looking for. "Chapter 15: Security Vulnerabilities" with its explicit examples of CSRF, XSS is especially illustrative.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
Review: Bach, Casals and The Six Suites For Cello Solo - Volume 4: From Tragedy to Transcendence
Bach, Casals and The Six Suites For Cello Solo - Volume 4: From Tragedy to Transcendence by Steve Hancoff
My rating: 5 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.
Volume 4 largely explores the depiction of Bach and his art in the visual arts, especially modernist paintings. Wassily Kandinsky, often acknowledged as “The Father of Modern Art,” leads the pack with Fugue, “his seminal expressionist work inspired by the music of Bach”. This volume explores each suite with a video for each featuring the music performed by Steven Hancoff and exploring a theme, such as for V “Discovery & Catharsis” with slideshows of art while the music plays. Each of the many (hundreds?) of images can be popped up to fill the page for a closer look. This is the majority of content for the 1st 48 pages. Longer text then enters the mix with an exploration of the pentagram with its angles of 108° while the Sarabande of Suite V contains exactly 108 notes. From here, the Golden Ratio, Fibonacci, etc. comes up in a delightfully mathematical side trek. It seems significant portions of the other text is from earlier volumes, giving this volume often a retrospective feel.
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 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.
Volume 4 largely explores the depiction of Bach and his art in the visual arts, especially modernist paintings. Wassily Kandinsky, often acknowledged as “The Father of Modern Art,” leads the pack with Fugue, “his seminal expressionist work inspired by the music of Bach”. This volume explores each suite with a video for each featuring the music performed by Steven Hancoff and exploring a theme, such as for V “Discovery & Catharsis” with slideshows of art while the music plays. Each of the many (hundreds?) of images can be popped up to fill the page for a closer look. This is the majority of content for the 1st 48 pages. Longer text then enters the mix with an exploration of the pentagram with its angles of 108° while the Sarabande of Suite V contains exactly 108 notes. From here, the Golden Ratio, Fibonacci, etc. comes up in a delightfully mathematical side trek. It seems significant portions of the other text is from earlier volumes, giving this volume often a retrospective feel.
View all my reviews
Review: The Child's Picture Book
The Child's Picture Book by Anonymous
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A fine, very short collection of drawings and poetry. The poetry is really a long, single poem finding morality in nature (flowers tell us to be quiet and humble) leading to a culmination in thanking the creator-God.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A fine, very short collection of drawings and poetry. The poetry is really a long, single poem finding morality in nature (flowers tell us to be quiet and humble) leading to a culmination in thanking the creator-God.
View all my reviews
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