Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH by Robert C. O'Brien
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I got interested in the author when reading Z for Zachariah in prep for the recent movie version, which I thought was a better film than it seems most critics thought. (Good job, Margot Robbie!) Now, I want to re-live the classic animated film having (finally) read this clever and engaging tail a plucky Mrs. Frisby mouse and her involvement with the supernatural "divergents" from NIMH seeking a path to freedom. Quite an effective morality tale and I am sure thought-provoking for the YA reader.
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Friday, September 30, 2016
Review: How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big: Kind of the Story of My Life
How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big: Kind of the Story of My Life by Scott Adams
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Of course, I first came to follow Scott Adams through his Dilbert cartoon, but since I have followed his blog and looked for him when speaking as a pundit on various issues. His engineer's brain shines through on this methodical and entertaining approach to achieving success by tweaking outlook, fitness, diet, appropriate basic skill set (public speaking, crisp business writing, etc.), and more.
There is also significant autobiographical content here covering the author's triumph over spasmodic dysphonia to right up to the iminent lauch of https://www.calendartree.com/ one of the entrepeneur's ventures.
This is very well narrated by Patrick Lawlor.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Of course, I first came to follow Scott Adams through his Dilbert cartoon, but since I have followed his blog and looked for him when speaking as a pundit on various issues. His engineer's brain shines through on this methodical and entertaining approach to achieving success by tweaking outlook, fitness, diet, appropriate basic skill set (public speaking, crisp business writing, etc.), and more.
There is also significant autobiographical content here covering the author's triumph over spasmodic dysphonia to right up to the iminent lauch of https://www.calendartree.com/ one of the entrepeneur's ventures.
This is very well narrated by Patrick Lawlor.
View all my reviews
Monday, September 26, 2016
Review: Nemesis: One Man and the Battle for Rio
Nemesis: One Man and the Battle for Rio by Misha Glenny
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I came to this book interested in the favela-born criminal underworld of Rio. However, the scope is much more accurate to the subtitle (“One World”) than I had been looking for. This is an affecting tale of one man’s choice to leave the legitimate economy for the drug economy driven by the high cost of his daughter’s health care for a rare disorder.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I came to this book interested in the favela-born criminal underworld of Rio. However, the scope is much more accurate to the subtitle (“One World”) than I had been looking for. This is an affecting tale of one man’s choice to leave the legitimate economy for the drug economy driven by the high cost of his daughter’s health care for a rare disorder.
View all my reviews
Review: The Oak and the Calf: A Memoir
The Oak and the Calf: A Memoir by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
This is my second reading of this memoir by Solzhenitsyn. I enjoyed it much less than my recollection of my first reading. His path through a censored press to publish his only work in the Soviet Union, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, in the periodical Novy Mir ends up being a bitchy recollection of how he outsmarted, out-willed, and largely stayed one step ahead of dimension-less bureaucrats. Although we have here a gifted novelist, he seems unable to get past his own crowing to explore contradictory motivations and nuances in the thought processes of his adversaries. This book tells us how his manipulations allowed him to publish in the West Cancer Ward (1968), August 1914 (1971), and The Gulag Archipelago 1918-1956 (1973). Solzhenitsyn was awarded the 1970 Nobel Prize in Literature "for the ethical force with which he has pursued the indispensable traditions of Russian literature".[ This book covers how Solzhenitsyn maximized the PR benefit for him while not going Stockholm to receive his award for fear that he would not be allowed to reenter. He was eventually “expatriated” suddenly from the Soviet Union to Frankfurt, West Germany and stripped of his Soviet citizenship.in 1974. That mysterious plane trip is the most dramatic part of the work here, but still he can’t help but showing off one-upping his minders, such as to peremptorily go to the restroom.
I was hoping to get more about life in the Soviet era and particularly the effects of the state police apparatus. This is covered mostly in their organized phone harassment, but I feel I had a better picture drawn for me in the novels [book:We the Living|668], Darkness at Noon, and even the fanciful 1984.
View all my reviews
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
This is my second reading of this memoir by Solzhenitsyn. I enjoyed it much less than my recollection of my first reading. His path through a censored press to publish his only work in the Soviet Union, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, in the periodical Novy Mir ends up being a bitchy recollection of how he outsmarted, out-willed, and largely stayed one step ahead of dimension-less bureaucrats. Although we have here a gifted novelist, he seems unable to get past his own crowing to explore contradictory motivations and nuances in the thought processes of his adversaries. This book tells us how his manipulations allowed him to publish in the West Cancer Ward (1968), August 1914 (1971), and The Gulag Archipelago 1918-1956 (1973). Solzhenitsyn was awarded the 1970 Nobel Prize in Literature "for the ethical force with which he has pursued the indispensable traditions of Russian literature".[ This book covers how Solzhenitsyn maximized the PR benefit for him while not going Stockholm to receive his award for fear that he would not be allowed to reenter. He was eventually “expatriated” suddenly from the Soviet Union to Frankfurt, West Germany and stripped of his Soviet citizenship.in 1974. That mysterious plane trip is the most dramatic part of the work here, but still he can’t help but showing off one-upping his minders, such as to peremptorily go to the restroom.
I was hoping to get more about life in the Soviet era and particularly the effects of the state police apparatus. This is covered mostly in their organized phone harassment, but I feel I had a better picture drawn for me in the novels [book:We the Living|668], Darkness at Noon, and even the fanciful 1984.
View all my reviews
Saturday, September 24, 2016
Review: Death Be Not Proud
Death Be Not Proud by John Gunther
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is my second time reading this moving, truly sad memoir of the death of the author's son from a glioma tumor. It appears the 17-year-old was a truly remarkable young man with a hopeful, positive outlook and talents including the gifts of a future, experimental chemist and scholastic ability to get him admitted to Harvard. One of his other passions was chess and I know recall I still try and apply his eleven precepts to the game (p 83 of my edition). In the long and ultimately futile course of treatment, detail are shared on mustard gas injections and Gerson Therapy, a dietary-based alternative cancer treatment. The chronology concludes with excerpts from a Johnny's journal and reflections in a chapter from each parent.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is my second time reading this moving, truly sad memoir of the death of the author's son from a glioma tumor. It appears the 17-year-old was a truly remarkable young man with a hopeful, positive outlook and talents including the gifts of a future, experimental chemist and scholastic ability to get him admitted to Harvard. One of his other passions was chess and I know recall I still try and apply his eleven precepts to the game (p 83 of my edition). In the long and ultimately futile course of treatment, detail are shared on mustard gas injections and Gerson Therapy, a dietary-based alternative cancer treatment. The chronology concludes with excerpts from a Johnny's journal and reflections in a chapter from each parent.
View all my reviews
Review: Googled: The End of the World as We Know It
Googled: The End of the World as We Know It by Ken Auletta
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a nice follow-up to The Search: How Google and Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business and Transformed Our Culture as this has a lot of detail on how Google has used its position and immense resources after dominating Internet searching. This includes a lot of failures (Orkut, print & radio ad sales) and, at least at the time, questionable advances (book scanning, Youtube). It does seem to make a strong case that Google reaped an outside bonus for mapping the Internet and has not followed up with creating anything new, truly valuable.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a nice follow-up to The Search: How Google and Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business and Transformed Our Culture as this has a lot of detail on how Google has used its position and immense resources after dominating Internet searching. This includes a lot of failures (Orkut, print & radio ad sales) and, at least at the time, questionable advances (book scanning, Youtube). It does seem to make a strong case that Google reaped an outside bonus for mapping the Internet and has not followed up with creating anything new, truly valuable.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
Review: Winesburg, Ohio; a group of tales of Ohio small town life
Winesburg, Ohio; a group of tales of Ohio small town life by Sherwood Anderson
My rating: 0 of 5 stars
Jean Arp said, “Art is about a secret, primal meaning slumbering beneath the world of appearances.” Her Sherwood Anderson in his story cycle, possibly the only thing essential from him it seems, reminds me of how early "modern art" came into plays with its focused exploration of dark corners in the human condition. Anderson throws light into those corners with his "grotesques", damaged persons living in the town he modeled on Clyde, OH: a pederast, voyeur, stress-induced streaker, and more in this 1919 short story cycle which reads in a strikingly modern feel, as if it were published today. The George Willard character listening/reporting and even participating in many of the stories even presages gonzo, in a sense.
View all my reviews
My rating: 0 of 5 stars
Jean Arp said, “Art is about a secret, primal meaning slumbering beneath the world of appearances.” Her Sherwood Anderson in his story cycle, possibly the only thing essential from him it seems, reminds me of how early "modern art" came into plays with its focused exploration of dark corners in the human condition. Anderson throws light into those corners with his "grotesques", damaged persons living in the town he modeled on Clyde, OH: a pederast, voyeur, stress-induced streaker, and more in this 1919 short story cycle which reads in a strikingly modern feel, as if it were published today. The George Willard character listening/reporting and even participating in many of the stories even presages gonzo, in a sense.
View all my reviews
Monday, September 19, 2016
Review: The Strange Last Voyage of Donald Crowhurst
The Strange Last Voyage of Donald Crowhurst by Nicholas Tomalin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
What an excellent unravelling of an ocean mystery. A yachtsmen in a global race decides to hoax his success and the very success of that could contribute to the death of the rightful winner and catapulte the hoaxer to an uncomfortable first where his log books would be examined too closely. This all in the 1968 Sunday Times Golden Globe Race, the first round the world yacht race. Crowhurst's own log books reveal his trickery and philosophies and rantings that apparently led to his suicide after which is custom, experimental yacht was found ghosting the Atlantica as unmanned as his "computer" was incomplete.
On 14 June 1968 Robin Knox-Johnston left Falmouth in his 32-foot (9.8-metre) boat Suhaili, one of the smallest boats to enter the Sunday Times Golden Globe Race. Despite losing his self-steering gear off Australia, he rounded Cape Horn on 17 January 1969, 20 days before his closest competitor the mercurial Bernard Moitessier. Moitessier had sailed from Plymouth more than two months after Knox-Johnson, but he subsequently abandoned the race and instead sailed on to Tahiti. (In the book, it just says he started sailing around the world again in order to further dearly rejoining a modern world he despised. On on 18 March, Moitessier fired a slingshot message in a can onto a ship near the shore of Cape Town, announcing his new plans to a stunned world: "My intention is to continue the voyage, still nonstop, toward the Pacific Islands, where there is plenty of sun and more peace than in Europe. Please do not think I am trying to break a record. 'Record' is a very stupid word at sea. I am continuing nonstop because I am happy at sea, and perhaps because I want to save my soul.") The other seven competitors dropped out at various stages, leaving Knox-Johnston to win the race and become officially the first man to circumnavigate the globe non-stop and single-handed on 22 April 1969, the day he returned to Falmouth. Knox-Johnston donated his prize money for fastest competitor to the family of Donald Crowhurst.
Crowhurst's scheme left Tetley and Crowhurst apparently fighting for the £5,000 prize for fastest time. However, Tetley knew that he was pushing his boat too hard. On 20 May he ran into a storm near the Azores and began to worry about the boat's severely weakened state. Hoping that the storm would soon blow over, he lowered all sail and went to sleep with the boat lying ahull. In the early hours of the next day he was awoken by the sounds of tearing wood. Fearing that the bow of the port hull might have broken off, he went on deck to cut it loose, only to discover that in breaking away it had made a large hole in the main hull, from which Victress was now taking on water too rapidly to stop. He sent a Mayday, and luckily got an almost immediate reply. He abandoned ship just before Victress (upon whose design Crowhurst designed his own trimaran.) finally sank and was rescued from his liferaft that evening, having come to within 1,100 nautical miles of finishing what would have been the most significant voyage ever made in a multi-hulled boat. He may have just won if not for Crowhurst.
The tale of Crowhurst makes compelling reading and a book length treatment including Tetley, Knox-Johnston and Moitessier would be great, too, I think. Appendices cover much nautical tech.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
What an excellent unravelling of an ocean mystery. A yachtsmen in a global race decides to hoax his success and the very success of that could contribute to the death of the rightful winner and catapulte the hoaxer to an uncomfortable first where his log books would be examined too closely. This all in the 1968 Sunday Times Golden Globe Race, the first round the world yacht race. Crowhurst's own log books reveal his trickery and philosophies and rantings that apparently led to his suicide after which is custom, experimental yacht was found ghosting the Atlantica as unmanned as his "computer" was incomplete.
On 14 June 1968 Robin Knox-Johnston left Falmouth in his 32-foot (9.8-metre) boat Suhaili, one of the smallest boats to enter the Sunday Times Golden Globe Race. Despite losing his self-steering gear off Australia, he rounded Cape Horn on 17 January 1969, 20 days before his closest competitor the mercurial Bernard Moitessier. Moitessier had sailed from Plymouth more than two months after Knox-Johnson, but he subsequently abandoned the race and instead sailed on to Tahiti. (In the book, it just says he started sailing around the world again in order to further dearly rejoining a modern world he despised. On on 18 March, Moitessier fired a slingshot message in a can onto a ship near the shore of Cape Town, announcing his new plans to a stunned world: "My intention is to continue the voyage, still nonstop, toward the Pacific Islands, where there is plenty of sun and more peace than in Europe. Please do not think I am trying to break a record. 'Record' is a very stupid word at sea. I am continuing nonstop because I am happy at sea, and perhaps because I want to save my soul.") The other seven competitors dropped out at various stages, leaving Knox-Johnston to win the race and become officially the first man to circumnavigate the globe non-stop and single-handed on 22 April 1969, the day he returned to Falmouth. Knox-Johnston donated his prize money for fastest competitor to the family of Donald Crowhurst.
Crowhurst's scheme left Tetley and Crowhurst apparently fighting for the £5,000 prize for fastest time. However, Tetley knew that he was pushing his boat too hard. On 20 May he ran into a storm near the Azores and began to worry about the boat's severely weakened state. Hoping that the storm would soon blow over, he lowered all sail and went to sleep with the boat lying ahull. In the early hours of the next day he was awoken by the sounds of tearing wood. Fearing that the bow of the port hull might have broken off, he went on deck to cut it loose, only to discover that in breaking away it had made a large hole in the main hull, from which Victress was now taking on water too rapidly to stop. He sent a Mayday, and luckily got an almost immediate reply. He abandoned ship just before Victress (upon whose design Crowhurst designed his own trimaran.) finally sank and was rescued from his liferaft that evening, having come to within 1,100 nautical miles of finishing what would have been the most significant voyage ever made in a multi-hulled boat. He may have just won if not for Crowhurst.
The tale of Crowhurst makes compelling reading and a book length treatment including Tetley, Knox-Johnston and Moitessier would be great, too, I think. Appendices cover much nautical tech.
View all my reviews
Review: House of Horrors: The Shocking True Story of Anthony Sowell, The Cleveland Strangler
House of Horrors: The Shocking True Story of Anthony Sowell, The Cleveland Strangler by Robert Sberna
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The crimes of this disgusting serial killer - living among the rotting corpses of his victims and the attracted insects - are deeply described and researched. This ends up being an exemplar of the killer that plies his trade over years because his victims are already ostracized by society: largely transient black women addicted to crack. The book goes all the way to Sowell's conviction and imprisonment.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The crimes of this disgusting serial killer - living among the rotting corpses of his victims and the attracted insects - are deeply described and researched. This ends up being an exemplar of the killer that plies his trade over years because his victims are already ostracized by society: largely transient black women addicted to crack. The book goes all the way to Sowell's conviction and imprisonment.
View all my reviews
Friday, September 16, 2016
Review: John Adams
John Adams by David McCullough
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is at least my second time enjoying this found father's biography. It is such an amazing arc of life to go from Declaration signer, to ambassador, to president, to seeing his son elected president and thus putting a formal close the Founding Fathers' era, and the finally to expire on the jubilee Independence Day. That is also the day of Jefferson's death who Adams reached out to and repaired their friendship also thereby gifting us with that glittering correspondence.
On this reading, much of life of that era stood out to me, like Adams' daughter Nabby enduring a 25-minute mastectomy in the family home "in that day before anesthetics".
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is at least my second time enjoying this found father's biography. It is such an amazing arc of life to go from Declaration signer, to ambassador, to president, to seeing his son elected president and thus putting a formal close the Founding Fathers' era, and the finally to expire on the jubilee Independence Day. That is also the day of Jefferson's death who Adams reached out to and repaired their friendship also thereby gifting us with that glittering correspondence.
On this reading, much of life of that era stood out to me, like Adams' daughter Nabby enduring a 25-minute mastectomy in the family home "in that day before anesthetics".
View all my reviews
Thursday, September 15, 2016
Review: Man and His Symbols
Man and His Symbols by C.G. Jung
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is not really a book by Jung, but one edited by him with his personal contribution being the first chapter. Released posthumously, this became him passing the baton to the analysts he trained as a first generation of post-Freudian psychiatrists. Written for a popular audience, this is also an excellent introduction to Jung's views of the unconscious. As for this "collective unconscious", it is like with ET-piloted, "I want to believe", but thinking it through it is hard for me to commit to more than a shared, collective, species experience. Still, as with all Jungian works I find this compelling, enlightening, and educational. Joseph L. Henderson explores "Ancient Myths and Modern Man" in a survey not unlike something like Joseph Campbell. There is a chapter and conclusion from Swiss Jungian Marie-Louise von Franz. I found most compelling the final two chapters. The penultimate one "Symbolism in the Visual Arts" by Aniela Jaffé bringing up modern artists and their views, like Jean Arp: “Art is about a secret, primal meaning slumbering beneath the world of appearances" and more. This is the chapter of the "profusely illustrated" book that I wish was in color. A very suitable final chapter from Jolande Jacobi applies this to dream interpretation (I prefer the approach as a personal lexicon to Freud's universal symbology) of a specific case from start of analysis to conclusion.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is not really a book by Jung, but one edited by him with his personal contribution being the first chapter. Released posthumously, this became him passing the baton to the analysts he trained as a first generation of post-Freudian psychiatrists. Written for a popular audience, this is also an excellent introduction to Jung's views of the unconscious. As for this "collective unconscious", it is like with ET-piloted, "I want to believe", but thinking it through it is hard for me to commit to more than a shared, collective, species experience. Still, as with all Jungian works I find this compelling, enlightening, and educational. Joseph L. Henderson explores "Ancient Myths and Modern Man" in a survey not unlike something like Joseph Campbell. There is a chapter and conclusion from Swiss Jungian Marie-Louise von Franz. I found most compelling the final two chapters. The penultimate one "Symbolism in the Visual Arts" by Aniela Jaffé bringing up modern artists and their views, like Jean Arp: “Art is about a secret, primal meaning slumbering beneath the world of appearances" and more. This is the chapter of the "profusely illustrated" book that I wish was in color. A very suitable final chapter from Jolande Jacobi applies this to dream interpretation (I prefer the approach as a personal lexicon to Freud's universal symbology) of a specific case from start of analysis to conclusion.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, September 14, 2016
Review: Gabby: A Story of Courage and Hope
Gabby: A Story of Courage and Hope by Gabrielle Giffords
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Written largely in the voice of Mike Kelly, with the help of co-author Jeffrey Zaslow, this is not a book by Giffords, per se, who was largely in recovery while it was being written. She does contribute a final, page-long afterword. Mostly, this book covers their courtship and the long (but interesting) aftermath and recovery of the shooting. All this while Kelly was preparing and carrying out captaining the Endeavour on its final mission, STS-134, to the International Space Station (ISS) in May 2011. (After the conclusion of STS-134, Endeavour was formally decommissioned.) From the outside seemed like a movie starring Bruce Willis as the astronaut married to a plucky, ebullient congresswoman played by Sandara Bullock. This memoir makes it no less ... American - and tragic. I had no idea how long and arduous was the recovery for Gabrielle Giffords's recovery, and much is in here that will explain to anyone what that sort of rehab is like. (She prefers not the diminutive "Gabby" for her professional persona.)
Two interesting surprises for me here:
1. NASA maintains remote private residences on the Florida "Space Coast" that Kelly and Giffords had some quiet time at and could have been used for furtive assignations in the more unruly 70s.
2. Giffords kept a bullet-damaged part of her skull in the freezer to share with visitors.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Written largely in the voice of Mike Kelly, with the help of co-author Jeffrey Zaslow, this is not a book by Giffords, per se, who was largely in recovery while it was being written. She does contribute a final, page-long afterword. Mostly, this book covers their courtship and the long (but interesting) aftermath and recovery of the shooting. All this while Kelly was preparing and carrying out captaining the Endeavour on its final mission, STS-134, to the International Space Station (ISS) in May 2011. (After the conclusion of STS-134, Endeavour was formally decommissioned.) From the outside seemed like a movie starring Bruce Willis as the astronaut married to a plucky, ebullient congresswoman played by Sandara Bullock. This memoir makes it no less ... American - and tragic. I had no idea how long and arduous was the recovery for Gabrielle Giffords's recovery, and much is in here that will explain to anyone what that sort of rehab is like. (She prefers not the diminutive "Gabby" for her professional persona.)
Two interesting surprises for me here:
1. NASA maintains remote private residences on the Florida "Space Coast" that Kelly and Giffords had some quiet time at and could have been used for furtive assignations in the more unruly 70s.
2. Giffords kept a bullet-damaged part of her skull in the freezer to share with visitors.
View all my reviews
Monday, September 12, 2016
Review: A Journal of the Plague Year
A Journal of the Plague Year by Daniel Defoe
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I don't care that this is "documentary novel", although I nearly only read nonfiction. Defoe seems so successful at putting me in London in 1665 that this was worth a second read. Reading of the "bring out your dead" cart-borne travails of Londoners of this time, I wonder how well a modern city would fair under the same circumstances. Considering Katrina, for instance, I doubt we would bear up as well as the Londoners and how they did bear up (in-home confinement, watchmen, open pit graves) is all laid out here with the quack nostrums of the time.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I don't care that this is "documentary novel", although I nearly only read nonfiction. Defoe seems so successful at putting me in London in 1665 that this was worth a second read. Reading of the "bring out your dead" cart-borne travails of Londoners of this time, I wonder how well a modern city would fair under the same circumstances. Considering Katrina, for instance, I doubt we would bear up as well as the Londoners and how they did bear up (in-home confinement, watchmen, open pit graves) is all laid out here with the quack nostrums of the time.
View all my reviews
Saturday, September 10, 2016
Review: The Subjectivity of Scientists and the Bayesian Approach
The Subjectivity of Scientists and the Bayesian Approach by S. James Press
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
In his book Clinical vs. Statistical Prediction: A Theoretical Analysis and a Review of the Evidence (University of Minnesota, 1954), psychoanalyst Paul Meehl gave evidence that statistical models almost always yield better predictions and diagnoses than trained professionals. The authors here examine the cases of selected pioneers in science and how bias-driven subjectivity played a significant role in directing their advancements. That role of subjectivity is the main thrust of this book. The formal application of Bayesian inference in deriving the posterior probability based on prior probability and a likelihood function derived from a statistical model for the observed data is not examined as deeply as the title may suggest. This is really a history of science via chapter-length biographies for the layman with a Bayesian introduction for the nonmathematician as almost an appendix.
...
[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
In his book Clinical vs. Statistical Prediction: A Theoretical Analysis and a Review of the Evidence (University of Minnesota, 1954), psychoanalyst Paul Meehl gave evidence that statistical models almost always yield better predictions and diagnoses than trained professionals. The authors here examine the cases of selected pioneers in science and how bias-driven subjectivity played a significant role in directing their advancements. That role of subjectivity is the main thrust of this book. The formal application of Bayesian inference in deriving the posterior probability based on prior probability and a likelihood function derived from a statistical model for the observed data is not examined as deeply as the title may suggest. This is really a history of science via chapter-length biographies for the layman with a Bayesian introduction for the nonmathematician as almost an appendix.
...
[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]
View all my reviews
Friday, September 9, 2016
Review: Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions - Volume 3
Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions - Volume 3 by Charles Mackay
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Overall, this is my least favorite of the three volumes of Mackay's epic investigation, although it is worth reading with an end that balances the beginning. This volume covers alchemists, fortune-tellers, and animal magnetism. The alchemists are treated with a series of quick, paragraph biographies like reading something from Tebbo (publisher of a number of "What You Need to Know..." books repackaging Wikipedia content). Fortune-tellers is a bit better, but Mackay does not get into his usual stride until he deals with the "mummery" of the quack science of animal magnetism. The dissection of this combination of (self-?)hypnosis, feigning, and hysteria is fascinating with the introduction of blind and even double-blind tests to show the pseudoscience for what it is. Overall, this book made me again see the 19th Century as a fascinating time of science pushing light into the dark corners and how long the history is of baseless beliefs that lead people to even now read horoscopes and pay good money to converse with a "psychic".
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Overall, this is my least favorite of the three volumes of Mackay's epic investigation, although it is worth reading with an end that balances the beginning. This volume covers alchemists, fortune-tellers, and animal magnetism. The alchemists are treated with a series of quick, paragraph biographies like reading something from Tebbo (publisher of a number of "What You Need to Know..." books repackaging Wikipedia content). Fortune-tellers is a bit better, but Mackay does not get into his usual stride until he deals with the "mummery" of the quack science of animal magnetism. The dissection of this combination of (self-?)hypnosis, feigning, and hysteria is fascinating with the introduction of blind and even double-blind tests to show the pseudoscience for what it is. Overall, this book made me again see the 19th Century as a fascinating time of science pushing light into the dark corners and how long the history is of baseless beliefs that lead people to even now read horoscopes and pay good money to converse with a "psychic".
View all my reviews
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Review: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The brilliant and funny Adams could do no wrong! It is a real delight to hear his voice on this audiobook edition. Apparently, this is an abridgement of the first unabridged audiobook version he did. Also, I decided I actually like the conclusion, even final act to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (2005) better than the book! Gasp!
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The brilliant and funny Adams could do no wrong! It is a real delight to hear his voice on this audiobook edition. Apparently, this is an abridgement of the first unabridged audiobook version he did. Also, I decided I actually like the conclusion, even final act to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (2005) better than the book! Gasp!
View all my reviews
Monday, September 5, 2016
Review: An American Melodrama: The Presidential Campaign of 1968
An American Melodrama: The Presidential Campaign of 1968 by Lewis Chester
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
While this book has one author, it is actually the work of three English journalists covering the election. The "Melodrama" in the title plays on their structure of "XII" "acts" and a coda. I think they would have been better dropping that idea, but the depth of coverage makes this a revealing look at presidential politics from primaries to election. It is also interesting how much has changed. Primaries were not universal, yet, and two-party politics more so with George Wallace & Curtis LeMay
nabbing an electoral vote of 46 for the American Independent party and a vocal advocacy for racial segregation in public schools and a viable option for the hawks.
The Republican nominee, former Vice President Richard Nixon, won the election over the Democratic nominee, incumbent Vice President Hubert Humphrey. This made a winner out of Nixon the loser and showed Humphrey could not get out of Johnson's shadow.
The bulk of this book is on the primaries which is where the drama was, despite the October surprise of Paris peace talks shenanigans around Johnson and Nixon.
On the Democratic side, those primaries had the late entry of Senator Robert F. Kennedy, assassinated June 6, 1968 on the night of a California victory. Many of his follower threw in with Eugene McCarthy
as an anti-war candidate with others flocking to Senator George McGovern for his outspoken opposition to the growing U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. These two became much more viable without RFK and with President Lyndon B. Johnson withdrawing Mar 31, 1968. This all came to a head at the 1968 Chicago convention and its hippy-bashing police riot.
On the Republican side we had primary contestants Governor Ronald Reagan of California, when that state was basically Republican and Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York trying to defeat his own image as plutocrat and Governor George Romney of Michigan on the scene until he withdrew Feb 28, 1968.
It makes me think our election year is even less about hawks and doves and spawning less violence and protests and, in a sense, less present and fierce.
Like Alexis de Tocqueville, these European correspondents over in their reportage much that was true then and rings true now, like
"...personal influence is probable the most effective means of persuading people who are uncertain about voting at all that they should vote. And voters of low motivation, once brought to the polls, are more likely than not to be Democrats. Similarly, the more people vote, the better for the Democrats, since there are more of them."
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
While this book has one author, it is actually the work of three English journalists covering the election. The "Melodrama" in the title plays on their structure of "XII" "acts" and a coda. I think they would have been better dropping that idea, but the depth of coverage makes this a revealing look at presidential politics from primaries to election. It is also interesting how much has changed. Primaries were not universal, yet, and two-party politics more so with George Wallace & Curtis LeMay
nabbing an electoral vote of 46 for the American Independent party and a vocal advocacy for racial segregation in public schools and a viable option for the hawks.
The Republican nominee, former Vice President Richard Nixon, won the election over the Democratic nominee, incumbent Vice President Hubert Humphrey. This made a winner out of Nixon the loser and showed Humphrey could not get out of Johnson's shadow.
The bulk of this book is on the primaries which is where the drama was, despite the October surprise of Paris peace talks shenanigans around Johnson and Nixon.
On the Democratic side, those primaries had the late entry of Senator Robert F. Kennedy, assassinated June 6, 1968 on the night of a California victory. Many of his follower threw in with Eugene McCarthy
as an anti-war candidate with others flocking to Senator George McGovern for his outspoken opposition to the growing U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. These two became much more viable without RFK and with President Lyndon B. Johnson withdrawing Mar 31, 1968. This all came to a head at the 1968 Chicago convention and its hippy-bashing police riot.
On the Republican side we had primary contestants Governor Ronald Reagan of California, when that state was basically Republican and Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York trying to defeat his own image as plutocrat and Governor George Romney of Michigan on the scene until he withdrew Feb 28, 1968.
It makes me think our election year is even less about hawks and doves and spawning less violence and protests and, in a sense, less present and fierce.
Like Alexis de Tocqueville, these European correspondents over in their reportage much that was true then and rings true now, like
"...personal influence is probable the most effective means of persuading people who are uncertain about voting at all that they should vote. And voters of low motivation, once brought to the polls, are more likely than not to be Democrats. Similarly, the more people vote, the better for the Democrats, since there are more of them."
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Review: From Dawn to Decadence: Part 2
From Dawn to Decadence: Part 2 by Jacques Baryun
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is my second time reading this and I can read it at least two more times and still only scratch the surface of the learning obtainable here. This second of 2 parts goes from the 1600s to the dawn of the Internet Age and I like how the author reels off books embedded in the text to follow-up with and which are to read or just leaf through, specifically to translations. Translations are important as key novels are big feature here. The book covers two broad paths of the modern era: art largely through literature and technology largely through the stunning advancements of the two-decade stretch 1885 - 1905.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is my second time reading this and I can read it at least two more times and still only scratch the surface of the learning obtainable here. This second of 2 parts goes from the 1600s to the dawn of the Internet Age and I like how the author reels off books embedded in the text to follow-up with and which are to read or just leaf through, specifically to translations. Translations are important as key novels are big feature here. The book covers two broad paths of the modern era: art largely through literature and technology largely through the stunning advancements of the two-decade stretch 1885 - 1905.
View all my reviews
Saturday, September 3, 2016
Review: Ashanti to Zulu: African Traditions
Ashanti to Zulu: African Traditions by Margaret Musgrove
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A beautiful, little thirty-odd page magazine-sized book giving one African (basically, Sub-Saharan) tribe for each letter of the alphabet. Aimed at children and beautifully illustrated, this is a warmly loving sub-anthropological depiction featuring stylized art worth framing.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A beautiful, little thirty-odd page magazine-sized book giving one African (basically, Sub-Saharan) tribe for each letter of the alphabet. Aimed at children and beautifully illustrated, this is a warmly loving sub-anthropological depiction featuring stylized art worth framing.
View all my reviews
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