The Rise and Fall of Adolf Hitler by William Schirer
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I've read the huge work of history that this Scholastic Book Services edition abridges ostensibly for YA readers: The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany. After that hefty tome's success, William Shirer was commissioned to write this for a young adult audience. However, this account loses none of the immediacy of The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany due to the inclusion of captured source documents, stenographer notes, and other first-person accounts including those of Shirer. The story of Hitler's rise from obscurity, the horror of Nazi Germany's mass killings, the peak of military success before turning on Russia, and the paranoia and insanity that marked Hitler's downfall in a claustrophobic bunker all read well with nothing apparently held back of simplified unnecessarily. This book is by no means simplified-and is sure to appeal to adults as well and compact at less than two hundred pages tells the Hitler arc with a brisk pace making for possibly a more engaging read than larger works.
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Friday, June 29, 2018
Tuesday, June 26, 2018
Review: West Cork
West Cork by Sam Bungey
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Really a podcast combined into a book, I think this really points to the type of success an audiobook is capable of as the format develops into something like an audio documentary/radio play/performance beyond mere narration. This work has background music, field recordings, interviews, etc. to tell of the remote and mysterious Sophie Toscan du Plantier murder along with evolving relationship of the crime to outspoken and mildly eccentric poet journalist Ian Bailey. I hope Audible will continue to pioneer content like this and further remove it from its podcast roots (remove recaps, repeated introductions, etc.)
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Really a podcast combined into a book, I think this really points to the type of success an audiobook is capable of as the format develops into something like an audio documentary/radio play/performance beyond mere narration. This work has background music, field recordings, interviews, etc. to tell of the remote and mysterious Sophie Toscan du Plantier murder along with evolving relationship of the crime to outspoken and mildly eccentric poet journalist Ian Bailey. I hope Audible will continue to pioneer content like this and further remove it from its podcast roots (remove recaps, repeated introductions, etc.)
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Saturday, June 23, 2018
Review: With Rommel In The Desert
With Rommel In The Desert by Heinz Werner Schmidt
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I found this just as riveting and enjoyable as when I read it decades ago, so maybe I should give this 5 stars. What holds me back is the plentiful unit and commander detail that, I think, introduces an unnecessary granularity more distracting than helpful; to wit frequent footnotes and long lists of proper nouns.
Surviving supporting Italian allies in Eritrea, the author walked into a position as Rommel's aide and transitioned from there to commanding a combat unit during the Axis North African Campaign.
Thus, he was a first-hand witness to the hard struggle to brief supremacy over the British-led Allies with the 1942 defeating of the Allies at Gazala in June and the capture of Tobruk. From here there was a long, bitter decline for the Axis. Ever under-manned and under-supplied (Rommel responded with fake tanks and urgent attacks), the added weight caused the Axis powers to succumb. Although Rommel was back in Europe by then and out of the picture on the ground, the author was still there and recollects here. Fortunately, there is a wedding at the end...
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I found this just as riveting and enjoyable as when I read it decades ago, so maybe I should give this 5 stars. What holds me back is the plentiful unit and commander detail that, I think, introduces an unnecessary granularity more distracting than helpful; to wit frequent footnotes and long lists of proper nouns.
Surviving supporting Italian allies in Eritrea, the author walked into a position as Rommel's aide and transitioned from there to commanding a combat unit during the Axis North African Campaign.
Thus, he was a first-hand witness to the hard struggle to brief supremacy over the British-led Allies with the 1942 defeating of the Allies at Gazala in June and the capture of Tobruk. From here there was a long, bitter decline for the Axis. Ever under-manned and under-supplied (Rommel responded with fake tanks and urgent attacks), the added weight caused the Axis powers to succumb. Although Rommel was back in Europe by then and out of the picture on the ground, the author was still there and recollects here. Fortunately, there is a wedding at the end...
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Friday, June 22, 2018
Review: Black Market Billions: How Organized Retail Crime Funds Global Terrorists
Black Market Billions: How Organized Retail Crime Funds Global Terrorists by Hitha Prabhakar
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I have never been the victim of serious identify theft or online crime. I have had credit and debit cards used by thieves, but I have never suffered financial loss, only inconvenience. I have had people tell me about similar crimes they have had perpetrated on them. My general reaction was to say, "Well, I'd rather have this sterile interaction with thieves rather than, say, be mugged at knifepoint." After reading Gomorrah: A Personal Journey Into the Violent International Empire of Naples' Organized Crime System I came to understand even something seemingly innocuous as imitation goods can have organized crime connections. This book goes further to connect organized retail crime (ORC) around shoplifting, fraud, and counterfeiting to MS13 and militant Arab as well as Islamist terrorist organizations. It casts a very dark hue on "purse parties", sticky fingered mall rats, and more. This is a sobering and concerning work of investigative journalism where MS13, etc. American agents steal and counterfeit to send money back to Mexico and Central America to fund bribes and fake identity mills that are purchased by passport-wanting Al Qaeda agents, etc.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I have never been the victim of serious identify theft or online crime. I have had credit and debit cards used by thieves, but I have never suffered financial loss, only inconvenience. I have had people tell me about similar crimes they have had perpetrated on them. My general reaction was to say, "Well, I'd rather have this sterile interaction with thieves rather than, say, be mugged at knifepoint." After reading Gomorrah: A Personal Journey Into the Violent International Empire of Naples' Organized Crime System I came to understand even something seemingly innocuous as imitation goods can have organized crime connections. This book goes further to connect organized retail crime (ORC) around shoplifting, fraud, and counterfeiting to MS13 and militant Arab as well as Islamist terrorist organizations. It casts a very dark hue on "purse parties", sticky fingered mall rats, and more. This is a sobering and concerning work of investigative journalism where MS13, etc. American agents steal and counterfeit to send money back to Mexico and Central America to fund bribes and fake identity mills that are purchased by passport-wanting Al Qaeda agents, etc.
View all my reviews
Thursday, June 21, 2018
Review: Star Wormwood
Star Wormwood by Curtis Bok
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Wow, I am surprised this is not a true crime classic revered like The Boston Strangler. I was unable to fund anything on it online outside of period newspaper/newsletter reviews of the first publication. In it, a judge review the horrid Depression-era crime of starved and friendless Roger Haike (not his real name) and the aftermath and execution. He uses this post-Leopold and Loeb case as an indictment of capital punishment in general. It reads in a very modern, unrestrained voice. I would love to read a modern investigation of the facts, context, and aftermath of this case. (Bok did not preside at the case he reviews.)
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Wow, I am surprised this is not a true crime classic revered like The Boston Strangler. I was unable to fund anything on it online outside of period newspaper/newsletter reviews of the first publication. In it, a judge review the horrid Depression-era crime of starved and friendless Roger Haike (not his real name) and the aftermath and execution. He uses this post-Leopold and Loeb case as an indictment of capital punishment in general. It reads in a very modern, unrestrained voice. I would love to read a modern investigation of the facts, context, and aftermath of this case. (Bok did not preside at the case he reviews.)
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Tuesday, June 19, 2018
Review: Inside WikiLeaks: My Time with Julian Assange at the World's Most Dangerous Website
Inside WikiLeaks: My Time with Julian Assange at the World's Most Dangerous Website by Daniel Domscheit-Berg
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I don't know Julian Assange, but what I have seen of him talking in the media and his actions made me think he was an; at least no one I would want for a roommate. This insider view from would-be OpenLeaks founder Domscheit-Berg further supports that. Aside from that character study of a selfish, egoistic, and manipulative Assange, this is the story of how some obvious issues with the supposed WikiLeaks philosophy became problematic: wanting info to be free but trying to keep operational details and leakers secret; Assange and his organization appearing hypocritical in their actions; leaking information more harmful than helpful such as identifiers of vulnerable people, etc. Aside from the philosophical issues, most interesting to me was the insider's view of several key WikiLeaks episodes, including:
* the 2008–2012 Icelandic financial crisis providing a peculiar and unsteady fertile ground for Assange et al in the island nation including working w/Iceland MP Birgitta Jónsdóttir toward a free-media zone there
* The Iraq War documents leak allegedly provided to them by United States Army Private Chelsea Manning (then known as Bradley). (The author goes to pains to avoid naming the leaker) and two Reuters employees being fired at as well as the "Collateral Murder" video, with its implications of crafting news rather than leaking facts
* 92,000 documents related to the war in Afghanistan between 2004 and the end of 2009 and a growing relationship with Der Spiegel. The avalanche documents overwhelmed efforts in reviewing the documents, including some of the sources of the information. WikiLeaks began to error in some releases, hold back material it could not edit, and begun thus choosing what to release and back away from its purist approach of releasing in order without preference.
* The United States diplomatic cables leak which seemed to mark a point where the leak itself and WikiLeaks became more of a focus than the content of the leak.
Also interesting was the leaks of Scientology works (I didn't know they did that), and various fraternity ceremonies with the resultant heat from those.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I don't know Julian Assange, but what I have seen of him talking in the media and his actions made me think he was an; at least no one I would want for a roommate. This insider view from would-be OpenLeaks founder Domscheit-Berg further supports that. Aside from that character study of a selfish, egoistic, and manipulative Assange, this is the story of how some obvious issues with the supposed WikiLeaks philosophy became problematic: wanting info to be free but trying to keep operational details and leakers secret; Assange and his organization appearing hypocritical in their actions; leaking information more harmful than helpful such as identifiers of vulnerable people, etc. Aside from the philosophical issues, most interesting to me was the insider's view of several key WikiLeaks episodes, including:
* the 2008–2012 Icelandic financial crisis providing a peculiar and unsteady fertile ground for Assange et al in the island nation including working w/Iceland MP Birgitta Jónsdóttir toward a free-media zone there
* The Iraq War documents leak allegedly provided to them by United States Army Private Chelsea Manning (then known as Bradley). (The author goes to pains to avoid naming the leaker) and two Reuters employees being fired at as well as the "Collateral Murder" video, with its implications of crafting news rather than leaking facts
* 92,000 documents related to the war in Afghanistan between 2004 and the end of 2009 and a growing relationship with Der Spiegel. The avalanche documents overwhelmed efforts in reviewing the documents, including some of the sources of the information. WikiLeaks began to error in some releases, hold back material it could not edit, and begun thus choosing what to release and back away from its purist approach of releasing in order without preference.
* The United States diplomatic cables leak which seemed to mark a point where the leak itself and WikiLeaks became more of a focus than the content of the leak.
Also interesting was the leaks of Scientology works (I didn't know they did that), and various fraternity ceremonies with the resultant heat from those.
View all my reviews
Saturday, June 16, 2018
Review: Culture, Language and Personality: Selected Essays
Culture, Language and Personality: Selected Essays by Edward Sapir
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I gave this three stars for how it struck me, but it probably deserves four or more. While Sapir never puts forward a conclusion or deep insight that wows me, he assays into deep and meaningful topics like Montaigne. Probably the nine essays here would bear up on repeated readings; maybe even years later. They are very well organized and build from one to the other, starting with a long essay on language, his principal field of study. Not really an illuminating exploration, he does telegraph an awe and wonder of this hard to define and categorized subject that is universal in the human experience. Mixing in with the wonder is some linguistic science, such as a classification of languages:
This helps to explain why Chinese can be seen as so old (along with its many exports to other languages) and how we can see a taxon in Algonquin and other Native American languages that fit so much into a single word. This flows nicely into "The Function of an International Auxiliary Language", but comes to now conclusion. Sapir puts forward English as the example of promoting an existing language, and Esperanto for a manufactured one without opting for either or neither. But, no discussion of which previously identified type would be best.
Similarly, "The Meaning of Religion" is a courageous undertaking, but the cleverest observation was not even his own:
Maybe this floundering in essays like "Cultural Anthropology and Psychiatry," and "The Statue of Linguistics as a Science" is from the great mind admitting ideas as disparate as the "human spirit" and the taxonomy of languages and ending up not knowing whether he wants to philosophize or analyze.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I gave this three stars for how it struck me, but it probably deserves four or more. While Sapir never puts forward a conclusion or deep insight that wows me, he assays into deep and meaningful topics like Montaigne. Probably the nine essays here would bear up on repeated readings; maybe even years later. They are very well organized and build from one to the other, starting with a long essay on language, his principal field of study. Not really an illuminating exploration, he does telegraph an awe and wonder of this hard to define and categorized subject that is universal in the human experience. Mixing in with the wonder is some linguistic science, such as a classification of languages:
Four stages of synthesis may be conveniently recognized; the isolating type, the weakly synthetic type, the fully synthetic type and the polysynthetic type.
This helps to explain why Chinese can be seen as so old (along with its many exports to other languages) and how we can see a taxon in Algonquin and other Native American languages that fit so much into a single word. This flows nicely into "The Function of an International Auxiliary Language", but comes to now conclusion. Sapir puts forward English as the example of promoting an existing language, and Esperanto for a manufactured one without opting for either or neither. But, no discussion of which previously identified type would be best.
Similarly, "The Meaning of Religion" is a courageous undertaking, but the cleverest observation was not even his own:
Tylor believed that the series: soul, ghost, spirit, god, was a necessary genetic chain. "God" would be no more than the individualized totality of all spirits, ...
Maybe this floundering in essays like "Cultural Anthropology and Psychiatry," and "The Statue of Linguistics as a Science" is from the great mind admitting ideas as disparate as the "human spirit" and the taxonomy of languages and ending up not knowing whether he wants to philosophize or analyze.
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Review: News Dissector: Passions, Pieces and Polemics, 1960-2000
News Dissector: Passions, Pieces and Polemics, 1960-2000 by Danny Schechter
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
My interview with the author is archived as selection 299 at archive.org.
Here is from the transcript:
DS: Well, first of all, I'm a television producer as well as a writer. My book News Dissector is my third book or fourth book really, recently Trying to write about my own experiences and also some of the issues of journalism that I'm involved with. Our company, Global Vision globalvision.org on the web produces lots of films. I'm working on a film right now about Florida and about the untold story of what happened in the election there. That's going to have to wait a little while now because of this current situation.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
My interview with the author is archived as selection 299 at archive.org.
Here is from the transcript:
DS: Well, first of all, I'm a television producer as well as a writer. My book News Dissector is my third book or fourth book really, recently Trying to write about my own experiences and also some of the issues of journalism that I'm involved with. Our company, Global Vision globalvision.org on the web produces lots of films. I'm working on a film right now about Florida and about the untold story of what happened in the election there. That's going to have to wait a little while now because of this current situation.
View all my reviews
Review: An American Princess: The Many Lives of Allene Tew
An American Princess: The Many Lives of Allene Tew by Annejet van der Zijl
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Allene Tew was an American socialite during the Gilded Age who became a European aristocrat by marriage. She was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, apparently based on an imagined ancestor. Such ploys moved her up the social ladder to rather a dizzying height considering her humble beginnings. Beside successful social climbing, what did she do to make her worthy of such an in-depth and far-reaching biography? I am not clear on that part.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Allene Tew was an American socialite during the Gilded Age who became a European aristocrat by marriage. She was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, apparently based on an imagined ancestor. Such ploys moved her up the social ladder to rather a dizzying height considering her humble beginnings. Beside successful social climbing, what did she do to make her worthy of such an in-depth and far-reaching biography? I am not clear on that part.
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Friday, June 15, 2018
Review: The Little Book of Lykke: The Danish Search for the World's Happiest People
The Little Book of Lykke: The Danish Search for the World's Happiest People by Meik Wiking
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A nice guide to finding joy ranging from cute to practical to deep observations. The author is a professional happiness researcher and brings in interesting studies like which communities are more likely to help a stranger and how we are apparently wire to identify negative criticism with intelligence. Some of the advice resonated with me as I am bringing them more into my life: stewarding a sharing library and bicycling. Based in a very trusting society such as Denmark, some of the suggestions seem completely unworkable to me in, say, America: having an apartment complex open a community tool area of drills and hammers and expect these not to all go missing shortly. Ah, such is the value of having true trust amongst strangers.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A nice guide to finding joy ranging from cute to practical to deep observations. The author is a professional happiness researcher and brings in interesting studies like which communities are more likely to help a stranger and how we are apparently wire to identify negative criticism with intelligence. Some of the advice resonated with me as I am bringing them more into my life: stewarding a sharing library and bicycling. Based in a very trusting society such as Denmark, some of the suggestions seem completely unworkable to me in, say, America: having an apartment complex open a community tool area of drills and hammers and expect these not to all go missing shortly. Ah, such is the value of having true trust amongst strangers.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Review: The King's Speech: How One Man Saved the British Monarchy
The King's Speech: How One Man Saved the British Monarchy by Mark Logue
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This prompted me to enjoy again the muted yet expressive performance of Geoffrey Rush as Lionel Logue in the film, so maybe the enjoyment of one is pushing up my rating of this. Still, well narrated and featuring archival audio of King George VI this is an excellent audiobook to enjoy. It is not what the film is based on. Both the film and this book draw on the author's grandfather's diaries, but this work was completed after the film was started. It goes where the film does not: The autodidactic Logue's Australian beginnings as a speech therapist and the long years of friendship between Logue and the monarch after the events of the film.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This prompted me to enjoy again the muted yet expressive performance of Geoffrey Rush as Lionel Logue in the film, so maybe the enjoyment of one is pushing up my rating of this. Still, well narrated and featuring archival audio of King George VI this is an excellent audiobook to enjoy. It is not what the film is based on. Both the film and this book draw on the author's grandfather's diaries, but this work was completed after the film was started. It goes where the film does not: The autodidactic Logue's Australian beginnings as a speech therapist and the long years of friendship between Logue and the monarch after the events of the film.
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Tuesday, June 12, 2018
Review: How to Think Ahead in Chess
How to Think Ahead in Chess by I.A. Horowitz
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
I am rating this as it strikes me now; I would have rated it higher (3 stars?) back the first time I wrote is some decades ago. Basically, I think it has not stood the test of time. Still, hoping that some day I can move my own chess play out of the novice level, I can see reason to recommend this work to other novices. This book often references specific pages in Winning Chess: How To See Three Moves Ahead, also co-written with Fred Reinfeld, so consider reading that first or at least having it on hand especially if you are especially new to chess. (the references are for pins, revealed checks, forks, and other strategic arrangements mentioned without explicit definition.)
Now, why I feel it is dated. First, this is a book celebrating the queen pawn opening and the Stonewall Attack. At the time I first read this I was playing often with newer chess software and computer devices. At the time, it seemed such machines could be easily fooled from such an opening. Now, I think modern ones are onto it. Those older chess computers had been vulnerable to the Stonewall because the positions are usually without clear tactical lines. White simply prepares for an assault by bringing pieces to aggressive posts, without making immediate tactical threats. By the time the computer realizes that its king is under attack, it is often too late. This, however, is not the case with newer chess computers. Even in the early '90s when I began to play others online at a site called Achess, others started to explicitly point out the inherent problems of leading with the queen pawn. The downsides to the Stonewall, specifically, are the hole on e4, and the fact that the dark-squared bishop on c1 is completely blocked by its own pawns. If Black defends correctly against White's attack, these strategic deficiencies can become quite serious. Because of this, the Stonewall Attack is almost never seen in master-level chess any more, let alone my own playing.
Still, study of the techniques here are valuable in advancing strategic thinking. For me, I think this has helped me incorporate a fianchetto generally or even "dragon" bishop in my play, this being a necessary response to the Stonewall walling in its own dark-squared bishop.
Another dating of this text is the use of "English" descriptive notation whereas I think anyone reading more modern texts will expect Algebraic chess notation, being more compact than descriptive chess notation and the most widely used method.
Stil being a product of its time and looking back, master-level games are used throughout a chapter for illustration, including some by Morphy (buried not far from my home) and Alexander Alekhine.
Interestingly, the author here places the work at a time when King pawn openings were being eclipsed by the then crafty Queen pawn ones:
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My rating: 2 of 5 stars
I am rating this as it strikes me now; I would have rated it higher (3 stars?) back the first time I wrote is some decades ago. Basically, I think it has not stood the test of time. Still, hoping that some day I can move my own chess play out of the novice level, I can see reason to recommend this work to other novices. This book often references specific pages in Winning Chess: How To See Three Moves Ahead, also co-written with Fred Reinfeld, so consider reading that first or at least having it on hand especially if you are especially new to chess. (the references are for pins, revealed checks, forks, and other strategic arrangements mentioned without explicit definition.)
Now, why I feel it is dated. First, this is a book celebrating the queen pawn opening and the Stonewall Attack. At the time I first read this I was playing often with newer chess software and computer devices. At the time, it seemed such machines could be easily fooled from such an opening. Now, I think modern ones are onto it. Those older chess computers had been vulnerable to the Stonewall because the positions are usually without clear tactical lines. White simply prepares for an assault by bringing pieces to aggressive posts, without making immediate tactical threats. By the time the computer realizes that its king is under attack, it is often too late. This, however, is not the case with newer chess computers. Even in the early '90s when I began to play others online at a site called Achess, others started to explicitly point out the inherent problems of leading with the queen pawn. The downsides to the Stonewall, specifically, are the hole on e4, and the fact that the dark-squared bishop on c1 is completely blocked by its own pawns. If Black defends correctly against White's attack, these strategic deficiencies can become quite serious. Because of this, the Stonewall Attack is almost never seen in master-level chess any more, let alone my own playing.
Still, study of the techniques here are valuable in advancing strategic thinking. For me, I think this has helped me incorporate a fianchetto generally or even "dragon" bishop in my play, this being a necessary response to the Stonewall walling in its own dark-squared bishop.
Another dating of this text is the use of "English" descriptive notation whereas I think anyone reading more modern texts will expect Algebraic chess notation, being more compact than descriptive chess notation and the most widely used method.
Stil being a product of its time and looking back, master-level games are used throughout a chapter for illustration, including some by Morphy (buried not far from my home) and Alexander Alekhine.
Interestingly, the author here places the work at a time when King pawn openings were being eclipsed by the then crafty Queen pawn ones:
In 1927, when Frank Marshall was preparing to sail for London to play in an international master tournament, he approached friends with the half-comic, half-plaintive query: "What defense shall I play against 1 P--Q4 ... ?" If one of the greatest players in the history of this game felt this way after thirty years, what are we mortals to say?
The fact is that finding a defense against 1 P--Q4 is no laughing matter! Most of us have been brought up on 1 P--K4, and we find something uncongenial in the lines of play which eveolve from 1 P--Q4.
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Sunday, June 10, 2018
Review: Falun Gong's Challenge to China: Spiritual Practice or Evil Cult?
Falun Gong's Challenge to China: Spiritual Practice or Evil Cult? by Danny Schechter
My rating: 0 of 5 stars
From my interview with the author archived as selection 298 at archive.org.
[…] I wanna say excellent job on the book Falun Gong's Challenge to China .
Danny Schechter: Thank you
I really enjoyed reading it and its sort of opened up a whole new world to me because I hadn't really noticed the issue a lot beforehand, but then after that, I started seeing it in newspaper headlines and stuff. It maybe was there all along, but this is where it made it stick in my mind.
DS: Well you know, we live in a world where news and information, particularly from other countries, often doesn't register with people because it's very hard to connect to and to relate to it, to really have any sense of background or context to who these people are, and what they're doing. In this case, we’re talking about as many as a hundred million people, starting in China, who basically took up what is called qi gong exercises, and a whole belief system called Falun Gong. This thing started 8 years ago. It was the most rapidly growing, fastest growing, spiritual practice in all of China. It got practically no press attention in America whatsoever, until 10,000 of these people surrounded the Chinese Communist Party leadership compound one day to challenge the Communist party's repression of police actions that were arresting and harassing their people. They're basically saying, "Look, leave us alone. We’d like to be legalized and we'd like to go on with our spiritual practice. We're not against the government. We're not political." At first this happened in April of '99 the Chinese government didn't say anything, and [was] kind of shocked by what happened. It made headlines around the world and then it sort of disappeared again. Then in July, China decided to crack down on this group, on the Falun Gong, and to ban it. Not only did they ban it, but they basically prohibited any discussion of it. They burned over a million books, and they began arresting practitioners, the people who were practicing this Falun Gong spiritual practice, which is really deeply rooted in Chinese traditions. It's kind of a fusion of Taoism and Buddhism. It's kind of a system of how you self-improvement. We might even consider it something like New Age spiritual practices. But in China, this was perceived by the government as a threat to the government. Since then, 53 people have died, 50,000 people have been detained, hundreds of people are in labor camps, and are in mental hospitals and being treated really badly, which has led to the denunciation of China by the US government, other governments, for the deterioration of human rights. But because the United States wants to do business with China, trade with China, American companies got this new trade bill through. Nobody's doing anything about it. They're really not talking about it very much, and so, people read about it, like you, but they don't really connect to it. This doesn't sort of makes sense to them: “Who are these people? What is this about?” As a consequence, one of the biggest stories of our time is being missed, and that's why I ended up writing this book, Falun Gong's Challenge to China which is just out from Akashic books, because I think it's really important for people to know more about this. This is a very big force, and we've just seen what happened in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, where people non-violently challenged the government, basically overthrew a decision by the government to not recognize the elections. Well, in China, you have a situation where there are no elections whatsoever. There's no democracy, yet you have a movement with a hundred million people, which is immense. Not only is it in China, but it is in 40 countries now, including the United States.
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My rating: 0 of 5 stars
From my interview with the author archived as selection 298 at archive.org.
[…] I wanna say excellent job on the book Falun Gong's Challenge to China .
Danny Schechter: Thank you
I really enjoyed reading it and its sort of opened up a whole new world to me because I hadn't really noticed the issue a lot beforehand, but then after that, I started seeing it in newspaper headlines and stuff. It maybe was there all along, but this is where it made it stick in my mind.
DS: Well you know, we live in a world where news and information, particularly from other countries, often doesn't register with people because it's very hard to connect to and to relate to it, to really have any sense of background or context to who these people are, and what they're doing. In this case, we’re talking about as many as a hundred million people, starting in China, who basically took up what is called qi gong exercises, and a whole belief system called Falun Gong. This thing started 8 years ago. It was the most rapidly growing, fastest growing, spiritual practice in all of China. It got practically no press attention in America whatsoever, until 10,000 of these people surrounded the Chinese Communist Party leadership compound one day to challenge the Communist party's repression of police actions that were arresting and harassing their people. They're basically saying, "Look, leave us alone. We’d like to be legalized and we'd like to go on with our spiritual practice. We're not against the government. We're not political." At first this happened in April of '99 the Chinese government didn't say anything, and [was] kind of shocked by what happened. It made headlines around the world and then it sort of disappeared again. Then in July, China decided to crack down on this group, on the Falun Gong, and to ban it. Not only did they ban it, but they basically prohibited any discussion of it. They burned over a million books, and they began arresting practitioners, the people who were practicing this Falun Gong spiritual practice, which is really deeply rooted in Chinese traditions. It's kind of a fusion of Taoism and Buddhism. It's kind of a system of how you self-improvement. We might even consider it something like New Age spiritual practices. But in China, this was perceived by the government as a threat to the government. Since then, 53 people have died, 50,000 people have been detained, hundreds of people are in labor camps, and are in mental hospitals and being treated really badly, which has led to the denunciation of China by the US government, other governments, for the deterioration of human rights. But because the United States wants to do business with China, trade with China, American companies got this new trade bill through. Nobody's doing anything about it. They're really not talking about it very much, and so, people read about it, like you, but they don't really connect to it. This doesn't sort of makes sense to them: “Who are these people? What is this about?” As a consequence, one of the biggest stories of our time is being missed, and that's why I ended up writing this book, Falun Gong's Challenge to China which is just out from Akashic books, because I think it's really important for people to know more about this. This is a very big force, and we've just seen what happened in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, where people non-violently challenged the government, basically overthrew a decision by the government to not recognize the elections. Well, in China, you have a situation where there are no elections whatsoever. There's no democracy, yet you have a movement with a hundred million people, which is immense. Not only is it in China, but it is in 40 countries now, including the United States.
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Review: The Clockwork Universe: Isaac Newton, the Royal Society, and the Birth of the Modern World
The Clockwork Universe: Isaac Newton, the Royal Society, and the Birth of the Modern World by Edward Dolnick
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I really enjoyed this overview of the painful transition into the modern world Newton helped usher in with Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (great) and bitter, year-slong disputes with Leibniz, Robert Hooke, etc. (not so great). At times, the august Royal Society seems like Stupid Redneck Tricks on YouTube for their attraction to explosions and suffocations. Still, this all came together to give us calculus, Newton's Laws, the Theory of Gravity, etc. and this was good enough for the industrial age and getting to the moon. The author does very well to explain the technical aspects in layman's terms.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I really enjoyed this overview of the painful transition into the modern world Newton helped usher in with Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (great) and bitter, year-slong disputes with Leibniz, Robert Hooke, etc. (not so great). At times, the august Royal Society seems like Stupid Redneck Tricks on YouTube for their attraction to explosions and suffocations. Still, this all came together to give us calculus, Newton's Laws, the Theory of Gravity, etc. and this was good enough for the industrial age and getting to the moon. The author does very well to explain the technical aspects in layman's terms.
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Review: The Apocrypha: An American Translation
The Apocrypha: An American Translation by Edgar J. Goodspeed
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a very readable, modern-feeling translation of the Apocrypha even today. Each work has a a preface summarizing the text and giving context. The work's introduction by Moses Hadas feels insightful on the inter-testament works as a whole as trying to make sense of the Chosen People understanding why they suffered so much. Generally, these works do much to set the scene and give exposition to the New Testament events.
Aside from purported history, there's a lot of sound wisdom here, as in Sirach:
Sirach 11:8-10 New Revised Standard Version, Anglicised (aka NRSVA, can't find Goodspeed's readable translation online, so I am lazily pasting in quotes from other modern translations)
The Book of the All-Virtuous Wisdom of Yeshua ben Sira, commonly called the Wisdom of Sirach or simply Sirach, and also known as the Book of Ecclesiasticus or Ben Sira, is a work of ethical teachings and I learned from the preface here that it is believed by some Jesus of Nazareth was named after this "Jesus the son of Sirach of Jerusalem", as may have been commonly done in that time and place. Maybe it even meant as much as to say my name "Thomas" derives from the Disciple Thomas.
Generally, Sirach (which stuck with me about evenly with the bloody battles of Maccabees and the apocalyptic pieces derivative of Daniel), seems like a crotchety old man leery of anything smacking of risk:
Also from Chapter 9, Sirach warns about hookers and the bad parts of town!
Yet the crotchety Sirach knows about staying up late when a daughter is out:
Finally, the rich lode of Ch. 9 ends with advice I can follow as someone who often regrets speaking inappropriately: "A man full of words is a dread to his city, but one who speaks rashly will be hated for his word."
Lots of material here showing a Wisdom personified as a woman, practicaly as a co-deity. The Wisdom of Solomon or Book of Wisdom is included in the canon of Deuterocanonical books by the Roman Catholic Church and the anagignoskomenona (meaning "that which is to be read") of the Eastern Orthodox Church. Such religions seems to have co-opted much that could be considered idolatry, so it has a tinge of hypocrisy to me to see the canonize a work that includes such observations:
(Chapter 13)
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a very readable, modern-feeling translation of the Apocrypha even today. Each work has a a preface summarizing the text and giving context. The work's introduction by Moses Hadas feels insightful on the inter-testament works as a whole as trying to make sense of the Chosen People understanding why they suffered so much. Generally, these works do much to set the scene and give exposition to the New Testament events.
Aside from purported history, there's a lot of sound wisdom here, as in Sirach:
Sirach 11:8-10 New Revised Standard Version, Anglicised (aka NRSVA, can't find Goodspeed's readable translation online, so I am lazily pasting in quotes from other modern translations)
8 Do not answer before you listen,
and do not interrupt when another is speaking.
9 Do not argue about a matter that does not concern you,
and do not sit with sinners when they judge a case.
10 My child, do not busy yourself with many matters;
if you multiply activities, you will not be held blameless.
If you pursue, you will not overtake,
and by fleeing you will not escape.
The Book of the All-Virtuous Wisdom of Yeshua ben Sira, commonly called the Wisdom of Sirach or simply Sirach, and also known as the Book of Ecclesiasticus or Ben Sira, is a work of ethical teachings and I learned from the preface here that it is believed by some Jesus of Nazareth was named after this "Jesus the son of Sirach of Jerusalem", as may have been commonly done in that time and place. Maybe it even meant as much as to say my name "Thomas" derives from the Disciple Thomas.
Generally, Sirach (which stuck with me about evenly with the bloody battles of Maccabees and the apocalyptic pieces derivative of Daniel), seems like a crotchety old man leery of anything smacking of risk:
2 Do not put yourself in a woman's hands
or she may come to dominate you completely.
3 Do not keep company with a prostitute,
in case you get entangled in her snares.
4 Do not dally with a singing girl,
in case you get caught by her wiles.
Also from Chapter 9, Sirach warns about hookers and the bad parts of town!
6 Do not give your heart to whores,
or you will ruin your inheritance.
7 Keep your eyes to yourself in the streets of a town,
do not prowl about its unfrequented quarters.
Yet the crotchety Sirach knows about staying up late when a daughter is out:
9 Unknown to her, a daughter keeps her father awake,
the worry she gives him drives away his sleep: in her youth,
in case she never marries, married, in case she should be disliked,
10 as a virgin, in case she should be defiled and found with child in her father's house,
having a husband, in case she goes astray, married, in case she should be sterile!
11 Your daughter is headstrong?
Keep a sharp look-out that she does not make you the laughing-stock of your enemies,
the talk of the town, the object of common gossip, and put you to public shame.
Finally, the rich lode of Ch. 9 ends with advice I can follow as someone who often regrets speaking inappropriately: "A man full of words is a dread to his city, but one who speaks rashly will be hated for his word."
Lots of material here showing a Wisdom personified as a woman, practicaly as a co-deity. The Wisdom of Solomon or Book of Wisdom is included in the canon of Deuterocanonical books by the Roman Catholic Church and the anagignoskomenona (meaning "that which is to be read") of the Eastern Orthodox Church. Such religions seems to have co-opted much that could be considered idolatry, so it has a tinge of hypocrisy to me to see the canonize a work that includes such observations:
11 Take a woodcutter.
He fells a suitable tree, neatly strips off the bark all over
and then with admirable skill works the wood into an object useful in daily life.
12 The bits left over from his work he uses for cooking his food, then eats his fill.
13 There is still a good-for-nothing bit left over, a gnarled and knotted billet:
he takes it and whittles it with the concentration of his leisure hours,
he shapes it with the skill of experience, he gives it a human shape
14 or perhaps he makes it into some vile animal, smears it with ochre,
paints its surface red, coats over all its blemishes.
15 He next makes a worthy home for it, lets it into the wall, fixes it with an iron clamp.
16 Thus he makes sure that it will not fall down --
being well aware that it cannot help itself,
since it is only an image, and needs to be helped.
17 And yet, if he wishes to pray for his goods, for his marriage, for his children,
he does not blush to harangue this lifeless thing --
for health, he invokes what is weak,
18 for life, he pleads with what is dead, for help,
he goes begging to total inexperience,
for a journey, what cannot even use its feet,
19 for profit, an undertaking, and success in pursuing his craft,
he asks skill from something whose hands have no skill whatever.
(Chapter 13)
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Saturday, June 9, 2018
Review: Twinkie, Deconstructed: My Journey to Discover How the Ingredients Found in Processed Foods Are Grown, Mined (Yes, Mined), and Manipulated into What America Eats
Twinkie, Deconstructed: My Journey to Discover How the Ingredients Found in Processed Foods Are Grown, Mined (Yes, Mined), and Manipulated into What America Eats by Steve Ettlinger
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
In this detailed and often fascinating investigation, the author offers a chapter on each Twinkie ingredient from Polysorbate 60 to artificial coloring, etc. Finding no butter or eggs, he travels to where each item is made (tasting where he can), typically a factory and often a petrochemical facility. It is fascinating if discouraging how many of the ingredients here - and they are used in many processed foods - come from petroleum like benzene, etc. Also, many of the facilities could not be toured due to security concerns, including the risk of explosion. Also, I had no idea gypsum was such a common food additive.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
In this detailed and often fascinating investigation, the author offers a chapter on each Twinkie ingredient from Polysorbate 60 to artificial coloring, etc. Finding no butter or eggs, he travels to where each item is made (tasting where he can), typically a factory and often a petrochemical facility. It is fascinating if discouraging how many of the ingredients here - and they are used in many processed foods - come from petroleum like benzene, etc. Also, many of the facilities could not be toured due to security concerns, including the risk of explosion. Also, I had no idea gypsum was such a common food additive.
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Review: Dust and Shadow: An Account of the Ripper Killings by Dr. John H. Watson
Dust and Shadow: An Account of the Ripper Killings by Dr. John H. Watson by Lyndsay Faye
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a Sherlock Holmes "pastiche" novel by Lyndsay Faye which pits Sherlock Holmes against Jack the Ripper. I was actually in the mood for a nonfiction treatment and got this by mistake. While the book is Faye's first novel, it has the blessing of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's heirs so I gave it a try. I was very well pleased. I am know Holmes fanatic or amateur ripperologies, so I am sure puritans in either camp may have nits to pick. I found it a well-narrated (Simon Vance Narrator). The text itself is from Watson's P.O.V. narrating as Holmes' "biographer" and I picture the Law-Downey pairing from the Guy Ritchie movies. The story has goods twists and turns with Holmes getting closer to the investigation then he wants - as a suspect, as a casualty and all too close on the trail. In an alternate reality, this historical novel brings key elements known as the extracted organs, , a leather apron, the quick work uncovered by a patrolling constable ( see here) and more all pointing to an inside job by the police in this imagined resolution.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a Sherlock Holmes "pastiche" novel by Lyndsay Faye which pits Sherlock Holmes against Jack the Ripper. I was actually in the mood for a nonfiction treatment and got this by mistake. While the book is Faye's first novel, it has the blessing of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's heirs so I gave it a try. I was very well pleased. I am know Holmes fanatic or amateur ripperologies, so I am sure puritans in either camp may have nits to pick. I found it a well-narrated (Simon Vance Narrator). The text itself is from Watson's P.O.V. narrating as Holmes' "biographer" and I picture the Law-Downey pairing from the Guy Ritchie movies. The story has goods twists and turns with Holmes getting closer to the investigation then he wants - as a suspect, as a casualty and all too close on the trail. In an alternate reality, this historical novel brings key elements known as the extracted organs, , a leather apron, the quick work uncovered by a patrolling constable ( see here) and more all pointing to an inside job by the police in this imagined resolution.
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Sunday, June 3, 2018
Review: I Shall Wear Midnight
I Shall Wear Midnight by Terry Pratchett
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I first met Discworld's withes with the "headology" expert Granny Weatherwax. I am glad to see Pratchett continues to flesh out these commentators on human nature with Tiffany Aching, who is now fifteen years old and getting on with the hard work of being a witch. Being a witch, she is also a caregiver, toenail-cutter, and more who helps new mothers learn to parent and fights back against domestic violence and child abuse. Pratchett goes there but still manages to keep it light and witty. The rowdy presence of Chalk's Clan of Nac Mac Feegles (an army of tiny, blue, rowdy, drunken and vaguely Scottish 'pictsies') helps.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I first met Discworld's withes with the "headology" expert Granny Weatherwax. I am glad to see Pratchett continues to flesh out these commentators on human nature with Tiffany Aching, who is now fifteen years old and getting on with the hard work of being a witch. Being a witch, she is also a caregiver, toenail-cutter, and more who helps new mothers learn to parent and fights back against domestic violence and child abuse. Pratchett goes there but still manages to keep it light and witty. The rowdy presence of Chalk's Clan of Nac Mac Feegles (an army of tiny, blue, rowdy, drunken and vaguely Scottish 'pictsies') helps.
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Saturday, June 2, 2018
Review: Mornings on Horseback
Mornings on Horseback by David McCullough
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is my 2nd time taking in this early "morning" biography about the formation of the man that would become president. This focuses on a struggle with asthma (and its apparently psychosomatic dimension among children of that era) as well as his affinity for the outdoors, hunting, being a "ranchman" (and definitely not a "cowboy"). Lot's of family correspondence went into this pre-presidential biography. Theodore Roosevelt's life is considered into the 1890s, before he became the 33rd Governor of New York. His political career and more is quickly summarized in an epilogue.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is my 2nd time taking in this early "morning" biography about the formation of the man that would become president. This focuses on a struggle with asthma (and its apparently psychosomatic dimension among children of that era) as well as his affinity for the outdoors, hunting, being a "ranchman" (and definitely not a "cowboy"). Lot's of family correspondence went into this pre-presidential biography. Theodore Roosevelt's life is considered into the 1890s, before he became the 33rd Governor of New York. His political career and more is quickly summarized in an epilogue.
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