Legend of the Free State of Jones by Rudy H. Leverett
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I have been waiting to read this until Free State of Jones (2016) was on Netflix so I could contrast and compare. Right into it, I found another film inspired by this pit of lore: Tap Roots(1948). That one has the added bonus(?) of seeing Boris Karloff do an entire film in, I guess, "brownface".
Well, one thing I must say about the audio book is the narration, at least in this Audible digital edition, is a bit mechanical in delivery and not engaging at all.
Still, the work does a good job about untangling truths and falsehood about a region known as the "Free State of Jones" prior to any Civil War era succession. (Apparently, this was somewhat in jest due to the low population of citizens and slaves.) While the country initially was against secession, it ultimately proved very loyal to the Confederacy, during the war and even after. While its swamps gave shelter to apparently multiple CSA deserter bands, it never was any kind of formal anit-CSA let alone pro-Union government and nothing as dramatic and on the scale of the battles and rhetoric in the entertaining Matthew McConaughey vehicle.
That is probably fine as this Jones has always been more imagined than real, it seems.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, October 31, 2018
Review: Blade Runner
Blade Runner by Philip K. Dick
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This movie tie-in edition touts itself as the "25th Anniversary Edition" with "Blade Runner" larger than the book title. Fine, I was wanting to compare the two pieces of art: novel and film. This includes a 24-page afterword by the author of Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner that does just that including a history of scripts written for the film, attempts to have a film version made and PKD's own journey from hating the film to loving it. In the book, Deckard's obsession with buying a living animal plays into an emotional and philosophical landscape that has a magnitude of dimension as great at the gritty stylism of Scott's gritty, post-noir vision. Really the idea of lacking control and ceding personal choice through Mercerism, “better living through the mood synthesizer” and the ever-running television puts the books more in the league of Brave New World as a dark musing on a dystopic possibility where free will sublimates to numbing comfort in the absence of hope. Also, these mind- and emotion-controlling devices are springboards for effective, hallucinogenic passages as Deckard looks into the abyss of monstrous androids and looking back at him, it infects him with an existential panic.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This movie tie-in edition touts itself as the "25th Anniversary Edition" with "Blade Runner" larger than the book title. Fine, I was wanting to compare the two pieces of art: novel and film. This includes a 24-page afterword by the author of Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner that does just that including a history of scripts written for the film, attempts to have a film version made and PKD's own journey from hating the film to loving it. In the book, Deckard's obsession with buying a living animal plays into an emotional and philosophical landscape that has a magnitude of dimension as great at the gritty stylism of Scott's gritty, post-noir vision. Really the idea of lacking control and ceding personal choice through Mercerism, “better living through the mood synthesizer” and the ever-running television puts the books more in the league of Brave New World as a dark musing on a dystopic possibility where free will sublimates to numbing comfort in the absence of hope. Also, these mind- and emotion-controlling devices are springboards for effective, hallucinogenic passages as Deckard looks into the abyss of monstrous androids and looking back at him, it infects him with an existential panic.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, October 30, 2018
Review: A New Conception of Geometry
A New Conception of Geometry by Prof Jingzhong Zhang
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Here Professor Zhang shares a toolkit for solving geometry problems based on methods “used successfully by Chinese students training for the International Mathematical Olympiads.” Indeed, many examples and exercises draw on problems presented at Olympiads over the decades. These tools emerge in the proof-driven development of nine theorems with somewhat idiosyncratic names such as Co-Side Theorem, Co-Angle Converse Theorem, his often-applied Area Method, etc. Some more of the language with room for improvement in this translated work includes counterexamples being “thinking from the contrary” and line segments being “lines” while a line is an “extension line”...
[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Here Professor Zhang shares a toolkit for solving geometry problems based on methods “used successfully by Chinese students training for the International Mathematical Olympiads.” Indeed, many examples and exercises draw on problems presented at Olympiads over the decades. These tools emerge in the proof-driven development of nine theorems with somewhat idiosyncratic names such as Co-Side Theorem, Co-Angle Converse Theorem, his often-applied Area Method, etc. Some more of the language with room for improvement in this translated work includes counterexamples being “thinking from the contrary” and line segments being “lines” while a line is an “extension line”...
[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]
View all my reviews
Sunday, October 28, 2018
Review: The Reckoning
The Reckoning by David Halberstam
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I thought from the cover that this was a period and thus maybe dated considering of Japanese disruption of the American car market back in the 80s. If anything, that is a merely the denouement of a consideration of the history of both nation's auto industries, largely from WWII to the early '80s. The author focuses on Ford and the corresponding Japanese #2, Nissan. On the Ford side, the eventual modernization and broadening of the company's scope seems to have occured in spite of Henry Ford the found -- he comes across as heading toward paranoid seclusion -- and his grandson Henry II who comes across as a disinterested, petulant drunk. Of course, Chrysler (apparently perennially in need of rescue) gets a lot of coverage as the Iacocca era is a bit of a post-Ford venture.
The Japanese side is really a tale of a broken nation -- broken even in spirit -- finding will and in America friendly opportunity and then succeeding through the hard work, diligence and attention to quality lacking for too long on the large car-loving other side of the Pacific where fat times got translated into pay (from laborer to CEO) and benefits too dear for indefinite support.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I thought from the cover that this was a period and thus maybe dated considering of Japanese disruption of the American car market back in the 80s. If anything, that is a merely the denouement of a consideration of the history of both nation's auto industries, largely from WWII to the early '80s. The author focuses on Ford and the corresponding Japanese #2, Nissan. On the Ford side, the eventual modernization and broadening of the company's scope seems to have occured in spite of Henry Ford the found -- he comes across as heading toward paranoid seclusion -- and his grandson Henry II who comes across as a disinterested, petulant drunk. Of course, Chrysler (apparently perennially in need of rescue) gets a lot of coverage as the Iacocca era is a bit of a post-Ford venture.
The Japanese side is really a tale of a broken nation -- broken even in spirit -- finding will and in America friendly opportunity and then succeeding through the hard work, diligence and attention to quality lacking for too long on the large car-loving other side of the Pacific where fat times got translated into pay (from laborer to CEO) and benefits too dear for indefinite support.
View all my reviews
Review: Banco
Banco by Henri Charrière
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Quote a fascinating life from escape into Venezuela to final peace with his past. Along the way, we get a first-hand account of not only his personal adventures and capers, but a window in Venezuela at a time of boom and then revolution. A lengthy chapter near the end recounts in detail the murder case that led to the imprisonment recounted in Papillon. This is a rollicking, exciting adventure autobiography.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Quote a fascinating life from escape into Venezuela to final peace with his past. Along the way, we get a first-hand account of not only his personal adventures and capers, but a window in Venezuela at a time of boom and then revolution. A lengthy chapter near the end recounts in detail the murder case that led to the imprisonment recounted in Papillon. This is a rollicking, exciting adventure autobiography.
View all my reviews
Review: #uncensored: inside the animal liberation movement
#uncensored: inside the animal liberation movement by Camille Marino
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
What started as an effective, coherent collective of pro-vegan, anti-vivisection activists devolved into online flaming and friends turned litigants. As seems often the case in such groups, what may be thought a counterculture is really a subculture, reflecting the ills of the society it seeks to correct. The author recognizes as much:
What they mainly seemed to do is out vivisectors; first gen doxxers it seems: http://universityofflorida.us/meet-th...
Marino's consuming dedication and self-confessed travails often caused by herself gets shunted into a personal war with one time friend and cohort Dr. Steven Best. It is a fascinating look into one person's journey into extreme animal rights activism while being very honest of her own imperfections:
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
What started as an effective, coherent collective of pro-vegan, anti-vivisection activists devolved into online flaming and friends turned litigants. As seems often the case in such groups, what may be thought a counterculture is really a subculture, reflecting the ills of the society it seeks to correct. The author recognizes as much:
the animal rights movement is largely regulated by a patriarchy of white men who have the power and want to enforce the rules by which activists can conduct themselves.
What they mainly seemed to do is out vivisectors; first gen doxxers it seems: http://universityofflorida.us/meet-th...
Marino's consuming dedication and self-confessed travails often caused by herself gets shunted into a personal war with one time friend and cohort Dr. Steven Best. It is a fascinating look into one person's journey into extreme animal rights activism while being very honest of her own imperfections:
I want my errors in judgment to prevent other activists from being blinded by cults of personality that are prevalent in every social justice movement; to not lose their sense of right and wrong in service of demagoguery. Drama and trashing others can be alluring and, wherever humans come together, will always happen.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, October 24, 2018
Review: Eminent Victorians: Cardinal Manning, Florence Nightingale, Dr. Arnold, General Gordon
Eminent Victorians: Cardinal Manning, Florence Nightingale, Dr. Arnold, General Gordon by Lytton Strachey
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Really a remarkable, vintage biography anthology. I really don't care about Cardinal Manning's wrestling with the concept of immaculate conception and his conversion to Catholicism, but Strachey made it all interesting. I wonder how much energy and talent was wasted over the centuries in such theological hair-splitting?
Florence Nightingale is the attention-getting life story. Strachey really elevated here from bedside nurse to social reformer and the mother of all hospital administrators in an impressive career that spanned decades where her will, for good or ill, triumphed in a male-dominated, military and colonial empiure bureaucracy.
Dr. Arnold could have been left out as I would have advised had I been Strachey's editor; too much like Manning's life, another career political theologian.
Major-General Charles George Gordon, also known as Gordon Pasha here, was a fascinating British Army officer and administrator. He saw action in the Crimean War as an officer in the British Army, but this focuses on Service with the Khedive in Equatoria building Egypt's empire in the Great Lakes region and ultimately the Mahdist uprising, the siege of Khartoum, and his principled death refusing rescue without his garrison while Prime Minister William Gladstone neglected military affairs and did not act promptly enough to save the besieged Gordon.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Really a remarkable, vintage biography anthology. I really don't care about Cardinal Manning's wrestling with the concept of immaculate conception and his conversion to Catholicism, but Strachey made it all interesting. I wonder how much energy and talent was wasted over the centuries in such theological hair-splitting?
Florence Nightingale is the attention-getting life story. Strachey really elevated here from bedside nurse to social reformer and the mother of all hospital administrators in an impressive career that spanned decades where her will, for good or ill, triumphed in a male-dominated, military and colonial empiure bureaucracy.
Dr. Arnold could have been left out as I would have advised had I been Strachey's editor; too much like Manning's life, another career political theologian.
Major-General Charles George Gordon, also known as Gordon Pasha here, was a fascinating British Army officer and administrator. He saw action in the Crimean War as an officer in the British Army, but this focuses on Service with the Khedive in Equatoria building Egypt's empire in the Great Lakes region and ultimately the Mahdist uprising, the siege of Khartoum, and his principled death refusing rescue without his garrison while Prime Minister William Gladstone neglected military affairs and did not act promptly enough to save the besieged Gordon.
View all my reviews
Saturday, October 20, 2018
Review: Deadeye Dick
Deadeye Dick by Kurt Vonnegut
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This novel concludes with ''You want to know something? We are still in the Dark Ages. The Dark Ages - they haven't ended yet.'' Tying this work from 1982 to today, its plot elements have issues still not yet resolved: the inherent danger of easy access to firearms, nuclear weapons and radioactive waste, and -- instead of the 'bad chemicals' in the brain, such as 'Bad chemicals and bad ideas were the Yin and Yang of madness.' (Breakfast of Champions) -- the bad chemicals around.
Much like "I Hung My Head", the song written by the Sting and released in 1996, this book tackles deeper and more philosophical themes of life and death, justice and redemption. Of course, In 2002, Johnny Cash covered the song on American IV: The Man Comes Around twenty years after this novel and this story of a boy who shoots a person and the resulting shame and consequences for many still has legs and raises uncomfortable issues. Is anyone to blame? Is the gun owner or the boy shooter? Is it a tragic accident and, like something ripped from the headlines, you have abusive cops, too.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This novel concludes with ''You want to know something? We are still in the Dark Ages. The Dark Ages - they haven't ended yet.'' Tying this work from 1982 to today, its plot elements have issues still not yet resolved: the inherent danger of easy access to firearms, nuclear weapons and radioactive waste, and -- instead of the 'bad chemicals' in the brain, such as 'Bad chemicals and bad ideas were the Yin and Yang of madness.' (Breakfast of Champions) -- the bad chemicals around.
Much like "I Hung My Head", the song written by the Sting and released in 1996, this book tackles deeper and more philosophical themes of life and death, justice and redemption. Of course, In 2002, Johnny Cash covered the song on American IV: The Man Comes Around twenty years after this novel and this story of a boy who shoots a person and the resulting shame and consequences for many still has legs and raises uncomfortable issues. Is anyone to blame? Is the gun owner or the boy shooter? Is it a tragic accident and, like something ripped from the headlines, you have abusive cops, too.
View all my reviews
Review: A Beautiful, Terrible Thing: A Memoir of Marriage and Betrayal
A Beautiful, Terrible Thing: A Memoir of Marriage and Betrayal by Jen Waite
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Woman marries apparent sociopath and looks like she missed signs, which happens, but this others including business partners withheld revealing facts which seems an unexplored angle here. Overall, the author is brave and forthright in airing this laundry and proves a resourceful single mom in recovering from it. There is also a very modern angle here in how Jen uncovers the infidelity through access Uber history, cell phone records, email, Facebook activity, etc.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Woman marries apparent sociopath and looks like she missed signs, which happens, but this others including business partners withheld revealing facts which seems an unexplored angle here. Overall, the author is brave and forthright in airing this laundry and proves a resourceful single mom in recovering from it. There is also a very modern angle here in how Jen uncovers the infidelity through access Uber history, cell phone records, email, Facebook activity, etc.
View all my reviews
Thursday, October 18, 2018
Review: Undergraduate Analysis: A Working Textbook
Undergraduate Analysis: A Working Textbook by Aisling McCluskey
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This introduction to analysis is suitable for students who have had at least a year of calculus; “a familiarity with elementary calculus.” It is assumed the reader has “knowledge of how to differentiate basic exponential and trigonometric functions,” etc. The focus is convergence and limits of sequences and series (more than half of the chapters), as well as differentiation (a couple chapters) and a smaller foray into integration. The Cauchy condition for convergence receives a short, dedicated chapter. Other topics include L’Hôpital, Lipschitz, a gamut of mean value theorems, and Taylor series. The authors’ main concerns come across as a firm, even rigorous, foundation in limits and convergence theory...
[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This introduction to analysis is suitable for students who have had at least a year of calculus; “a familiarity with elementary calculus.” It is assumed the reader has “knowledge of how to differentiate basic exponential and trigonometric functions,” etc. The focus is convergence and limits of sequences and series (more than half of the chapters), as well as differentiation (a couple chapters) and a smaller foray into integration. The Cauchy condition for convergence receives a short, dedicated chapter. Other topics include L’Hôpital, Lipschitz, a gamut of mean value theorems, and Taylor series. The authors’ main concerns come across as a firm, even rigorous, foundation in limits and convergence theory...
[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]
View all my reviews
Wednesday, October 17, 2018
Review: Spix’s Macaw: The Race to Save the World’s Rarest Bird
Spix’s Macaw: The Race to Save the World’s Rarest Bird by Tony Juniper
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I came to this book interested about the mother-son smuggling ring I read that was arrested in connection with this and other rare fauna. However, I was really drawn into the book's larger, two-century tale of the discovery, decline and effective extinction of a beautiful and rare creature. It is amazing the detail unearthed on individual birds and individuals heroes and criminals.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I came to this book interested about the mother-son smuggling ring I read that was arrested in connection with this and other rare fauna. However, I was really drawn into the book's larger, two-century tale of the discovery, decline and effective extinction of a beautiful and rare creature. It is amazing the detail unearthed on individual birds and individuals heroes and criminals.
View all my reviews
Review: Hope is the Thing with Feathers: A Personal Chronicle of Vanished Birds
Hope is the Thing with Feathers: A Personal Chronicle of Vanished Birds by Christopher Cokinos
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This work compiles the stories of the extinction of six North American bird species. The demises seems to cluster between the last half of the Nineteenth Century and the fist half of the Twentieth. There is an uncomfortable sameness to the final years: too little too late organized action and almost frenzied destruction triggered by the nearness of extinction. Much of the writing is poetic and evocative as this is obviously a heartfelt subject to the author. Some of the stories are really cruel tragedies: one of the last Ivory-Billed Woodpeckers imprisoned and dying in a hotel room to serve as a model and Martha, perhaps the last Passenger Pigeon, shuffling alone and scruffy in a Cleveland zoo. Other subjects are the colorful Carolina Parakeets, there social clustering good defense against hawks but poor for shotguns. Watching the last of the Heath Hens waste away on Martha's Vineyard could be a stand-in for the shape of all the species' demises, including the Labrador Duck and preyed upon Great Auk.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This work compiles the stories of the extinction of six North American bird species. The demises seems to cluster between the last half of the Nineteenth Century and the fist half of the Twentieth. There is an uncomfortable sameness to the final years: too little too late organized action and almost frenzied destruction triggered by the nearness of extinction. Much of the writing is poetic and evocative as this is obviously a heartfelt subject to the author. Some of the stories are really cruel tragedies: one of the last Ivory-Billed Woodpeckers imprisoned and dying in a hotel room to serve as a model and Martha, perhaps the last Passenger Pigeon, shuffling alone and scruffy in a Cleveland zoo. Other subjects are the colorful Carolina Parakeets, there social clustering good defense against hawks but poor for shotguns. Watching the last of the Heath Hens waste away on Martha's Vineyard could be a stand-in for the shape of all the species' demises, including the Labrador Duck and preyed upon Great Auk.
View all my reviews
Sunday, October 14, 2018
Review: Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life
Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life by William Finnegan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I very much enjoyed this rather sweeping memoir, very ably narrated by the author. Finnegan shares stories of life from Honolulu to Portugal (Madeira) social upheavals of the 1960s. Along the way, he visits Polynesia, Australia, Northern and Southern California and more in many extended surfing ventures in a kind of 'endless summer' while he finds himself and his parents move forward with a career in TV entertainment production. William Finnegan is a staff writer at The New Yorker and has won several awards for his journalism, with the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography for this work being only about one slice of a rich and accomplished life that has included reporting from danger areas and even teaching in South Africa: Crossing the Line: A Year in the Land of Apartheid .
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I very much enjoyed this rather sweeping memoir, very ably narrated by the author. Finnegan shares stories of life from Honolulu to Portugal (Madeira) social upheavals of the 1960s. Along the way, he visits Polynesia, Australia, Northern and Southern California and more in many extended surfing ventures in a kind of 'endless summer' while he finds himself and his parents move forward with a career in TV entertainment production. William Finnegan is a staff writer at The New Yorker and has won several awards for his journalism, with the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography for this work being only about one slice of a rich and accomplished life that has included reporting from danger areas and even teaching in South Africa: Crossing the Line: A Year in the Land of Apartheid .
View all my reviews
Thursday, October 11, 2018
Review: Challenger: Mickey Thompson's own story of his life of Speed
Challenger: Mickey Thompson's own story of his life of Speed by Mickey Thompson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A hot rodder since his youth, Thompson increasingly pursued land speed records in his late 20s and early 30s, as told in this biography covering is career from childhood obsessions to post-Bonneville Salt Flats Indy racing. He achieved international fame in 1960, when he became the first American to break the 400-mph barrier, driving his Challenger 1 to a one-way top speed of 406.60 mph at the Bonneville Salt Flats and surpassing John Cobb's one-way world record mark of 402 mph. A large part of this story is that project. In the decades leading up to 1960, land speed racing was dominated by the British, gentleman racers backed by English motor component companies. He was America's self-nominated, ingenuous Yankee answer to that. His four-engined vehicle was fashioned from junkyard parts in the garage of his family's El Monte home. In 1960, without the benefits of formal training or technical expertise, he became the first American race car driver to go over 400 mph, making him the fastest overall driver in the world. The NHRA Hall of Fame dubbed him "the quintessential California hot rodder" and this tells the story of personal, professional, technical, and supplier challenges to surmount which he did with brash demands, Vegas gambling and suffering bone-breaking injuries while silencing the scoffers. Although he had clinched the highest overall speed, a breakdown on the return run prevented him from capturing the official record. This is an exciting story -- and I am no gearhead -- about an automotive purist uninterested in the then emerging paradigm of jet-powered cars drawing to a close at the dawn of his Indy years.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A hot rodder since his youth, Thompson increasingly pursued land speed records in his late 20s and early 30s, as told in this biography covering is career from childhood obsessions to post-Bonneville Salt Flats Indy racing. He achieved international fame in 1960, when he became the first American to break the 400-mph barrier, driving his Challenger 1 to a one-way top speed of 406.60 mph at the Bonneville Salt Flats and surpassing John Cobb's one-way world record mark of 402 mph. A large part of this story is that project. In the decades leading up to 1960, land speed racing was dominated by the British, gentleman racers backed by English motor component companies. He was America's self-nominated, ingenuous Yankee answer to that. His four-engined vehicle was fashioned from junkyard parts in the garage of his family's El Monte home. In 1960, without the benefits of formal training or technical expertise, he became the first American race car driver to go over 400 mph, making him the fastest overall driver in the world. The NHRA Hall of Fame dubbed him "the quintessential California hot rodder" and this tells the story of personal, professional, technical, and supplier challenges to surmount which he did with brash demands, Vegas gambling and suffering bone-breaking injuries while silencing the scoffers. Although he had clinched the highest overall speed, a breakdown on the return run prevented him from capturing the official record. This is an exciting story -- and I am no gearhead -- about an automotive purist uninterested in the then emerging paradigm of jet-powered cars drawing to a close at the dawn of his Indy years.
View all my reviews
Monday, October 8, 2018
Review: My Folks Don't Want Me to Talk about Slavery: Personal Accounts of Slavery in North Carolina
My Folks Don't Want Me to Talk about Slavery: Personal Accounts of Slavery in North Carolina by Belinda Hurmence
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Culled from the myriad pages of the Federal Writers' Project Slave Narratives, this slim volume focuses on oral history from ex-slaves interviewed in North Carolina. Done at the time of the Depression, some found speaking to the young, white government workers a time to recall slavery as days better or at least no worst than there then current suffering. One thing consistent when mentioned was how Wheeler's Cavalry, though Confederate, were rapacious, horse-borne criminals. Overall, this is a moving, very human recollection of life-long tragedy and travail and I am certain any sampling from that rich trove of oral history would be, so the No. Carolina connection is merely incidental.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Culled from the myriad pages of the Federal Writers' Project Slave Narratives, this slim volume focuses on oral history from ex-slaves interviewed in North Carolina. Done at the time of the Depression, some found speaking to the young, white government workers a time to recall slavery as days better or at least no worst than there then current suffering. One thing consistent when mentioned was how Wheeler's Cavalry, though Confederate, were rapacious, horse-borne criminals. Overall, this is a moving, very human recollection of life-long tragedy and travail and I am certain any sampling from that rich trove of oral history would be, so the No. Carolina connection is merely incidental.
View all my reviews
Friday, October 5, 2018
Review: America at 1750: A Social Portrait
America at 1750: A Social Portrait by Richard Hofstadter
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Throughout my reading life I have often dived into and been impressed with the book of Douglas R. Hofstadter. When reading about that Hofstadter it is often pointed out that he is different from this historian Hofstadter. So, I decided, why not read the "other" Hofstadter? I am glad I did. This brisk, accessible American history explores the pre-Revolutionary War American Colonial Era and the foundations laid there not only for that War but for much of what makes America unique. I find it really breaks along three fault lines:
1) Institutionalized Servitude
2) Middle Class socioeconomics and,
3) Evangelism.
"Institutionalized Servitude" includes not only slavery, but indentured servants and gradations between. Endemic during this era it seems to me this bred into the nation nativisit (anti-immigrant) and even racist beliefs that still surface today.
The Middle Class is perhaps the least explored of the three, but is an important pillar to the American cult of personality as well as a a further key differentiation to the Old World and especially England, those broadening a gulf that opened the door to rebellion.
Evangelism around charismatic preachers in a mesh of post-Puritan sects added a curious and even hypocritical blend of openness. (Since no denomination was national, denominational pluralism supported an acceptance of contrasting [religious] ideas if implicitly only Xtian ones.) However, this division fostered regionalist tumult and a broad adherence to xenophobic fundamentalism supporting the shared belief, among other things, that Providence lights the way for America and a susceptibility to demagogue led revivalism.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Throughout my reading life I have often dived into and been impressed with the book of Douglas R. Hofstadter. When reading about that Hofstadter it is often pointed out that he is different from this historian Hofstadter. So, I decided, why not read the "other" Hofstadter? I am glad I did. This brisk, accessible American history explores the pre-Revolutionary War American Colonial Era and the foundations laid there not only for that War but for much of what makes America unique. I find it really breaks along three fault lines:
1) Institutionalized Servitude
2) Middle Class socioeconomics and,
3) Evangelism.
"Institutionalized Servitude" includes not only slavery, but indentured servants and gradations between. Endemic during this era it seems to me this bred into the nation nativisit (anti-immigrant) and even racist beliefs that still surface today.
The Middle Class is perhaps the least explored of the three, but is an important pillar to the American cult of personality as well as a a further key differentiation to the Old World and especially England, those broadening a gulf that opened the door to rebellion.
Evangelism around charismatic preachers in a mesh of post-Puritan sects added a curious and even hypocritical blend of openness. (Since no denomination was national, denominational pluralism supported an acceptance of contrasting [religious] ideas if implicitly only Xtian ones.) However, this division fostered regionalist tumult and a broad adherence to xenophobic fundamentalism supporting the shared belief, among other things, that Providence lights the way for America and a susceptibility to demagogue led revivalism.
View all my reviews
Review: The Truth of the Matter: My Life in and Out of Politics
The Truth of the Matter: My Life in and Out of Politics by Bert Lance
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I don't know anything about the truth of Lance's supposed pre-government financial malfeasance, but Lance's story here is it was a smear campaign to keep from using his position running the OMB to becoming the Fed Chairman. Maybe. After all, all counts against him and any supposed conspirators were either dropper or resulted in "not guilty".
I found this book interesting as a political memoir, specifically about the post-Nixon arc of the Democratic Party. Lance was there with pal Jimmy Carter from Georgia government to the presidency. It is very interesting the little things gleaned from his proximity: Carter's stingy meal offerings for working lunches and the distance between the two that inevitably developed when the team moved to the national level.
As interesting, and probably more importantly, is Lance's review of the post-Nixon arc of the Democratic Party from his privileged insider view. The proven malfeasance of the Nixon presidency proved entree for outside Jimmy, rejuvenated the "Solid South" as a foursquare DNC foundation. But, once there, Jimmy's overtly outsider status and irking decisiveness for uncomfortable and even radical changes brought the machine and ultimately popular opinion, dooming his first term to be a gateway to the Reagan Era. Lance discusses the weaknesses and faults of the Mondale and Dukakis runs with special attention to the rise of Jesse Jackson.
Even back when Lance had his woes, he decried the national media and an all-too intense glare of investigatory "talk show trial" of character that is so easily fuel for career-limiting character assassination.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I don't know anything about the truth of Lance's supposed pre-government financial malfeasance, but Lance's story here is it was a smear campaign to keep from using his position running the OMB to becoming the Fed Chairman. Maybe. After all, all counts against him and any supposed conspirators were either dropper or resulted in "not guilty".
I found this book interesting as a political memoir, specifically about the post-Nixon arc of the Democratic Party. Lance was there with pal Jimmy Carter from Georgia government to the presidency. It is very interesting the little things gleaned from his proximity: Carter's stingy meal offerings for working lunches and the distance between the two that inevitably developed when the team moved to the national level.
As interesting, and probably more importantly, is Lance's review of the post-Nixon arc of the Democratic Party from his privileged insider view. The proven malfeasance of the Nixon presidency proved entree for outside Jimmy, rejuvenated the "Solid South" as a foursquare DNC foundation. But, once there, Jimmy's overtly outsider status and irking decisiveness for uncomfortable and even radical changes brought the machine and ultimately popular opinion, dooming his first term to be a gateway to the Reagan Era. Lance discusses the weaknesses and faults of the Mondale and Dukakis runs with special attention to the rise of Jesse Jackson.
Even back when Lance had his woes, he decried the national media and an all-too intense glare of investigatory "talk show trial" of character that is so easily fuel for career-limiting character assassination.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, October 3, 2018
Review: The CIA And The Cult Of Intelligence
The CIA And The Cult Of Intelligence by Victor L. Marchetti
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I read the original 1975 paperback edition "Published with spaces and indicating the exact location and length of the 168 deletions demanded by the CIA." (Later editions were able to return some of the expurgated passages.) The authors argue that the CIA has a “profound determinative effect on the formulation and carrying out of American foreign policy." And that is the problem they seek to expose. Marchetti, a former special assistant to the Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency and a prominent paleoconservative critic of the United States Intelligence Community and the Israel lobby in the United States, is sort of a whistleblower here. The authors detail how the CIA works (in a level of granularity that veers between fascinating if dated and overly microscopic) and how its original purpose (i.e. collecting and analyzing information about foreign governments, corporations, and persons in order to advise public policymakers) has, according to the author, been subverted by its obsession with clandestine operations. It is the first book the federal government of the United States ever went to court to censor before its publication. The CIA demanded the authors remove 399 passages but they resisted and only 168 passages were censored. The publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, chose to publish the book with blanks for censored passages and with boldface type for passages that were challenged but later uncensored. Some of the sections are so rife with deletions, it is onerous to read. However, this is rare and mostly seeing the bold-faced sections about Camp Peary, Air America, etc. are interesting.
Some historical details I find fascinating here, such as details on one of the purported Watergate triggers ITT (Hal Hendrix, control of Cuban phone system, South America, etc.) and how Oleg Penkovsky so wanted to serve the CIA, but went to the Birtish by default when the CIA was not convinced. This casts a light on The Penkovsky Papers as its development and publishing with other CIA-rleated books is explored and suggests it is a bit of a pastiche.
Other things I found fascinating are some operational details like the psywar operation that
and that
and also how unions secretly funneled money from the Central Intelligence Agency to anti-Communist unionists overseas, often without concern for any other value. Victor Reuther confirmed that he was himself the dispenser of $50,000 in C.I.A. funds to French and Italian unions not long after VE Day.
Written and published post-Watergate, post-Pentagon Papers and after embarassing CIA exposes in Rampart etc. it feels like a bit of a feeding frenzy on an evil CIA being revealed after its war in Laos and having been found penetrating American campuses especially through penetration and manipulation of the National Student Association.
During those turbulent years, students in 1971, stormed and occupied a Harvard building. Certain documents went missing in that raid. One was a remarkable report of a 1968 meeting by CIA staffer William R. Harris, about whom little is known. Thought now easy to find, these minutes of the “The third meeting of the Discussion Group on Intelligence and Foreign Policy,” known as the “Bissell Meeting” makes up the afterwrod here. Interestingly, Bissell then predicted the rise of electronic surveillance over human operatives.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I read the original 1975 paperback edition "Published with spaces and indicating the exact location and length of the 168 deletions demanded by the CIA." (Later editions were able to return some of the expurgated passages.) The authors argue that the CIA has a “profound determinative effect on the formulation and carrying out of American foreign policy." And that is the problem they seek to expose. Marchetti, a former special assistant to the Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency and a prominent paleoconservative critic of the United States Intelligence Community and the Israel lobby in the United States, is sort of a whistleblower here. The authors detail how the CIA works (in a level of granularity that veers between fascinating if dated and overly microscopic) and how its original purpose (i.e. collecting and analyzing information about foreign governments, corporations, and persons in order to advise public policymakers) has, according to the author, been subverted by its obsession with clandestine operations. It is the first book the federal government of the United States ever went to court to censor before its publication. The CIA demanded the authors remove 399 passages but they resisted and only 168 passages were censored. The publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, chose to publish the book with blanks for censored passages and with boldface type for passages that were challenged but later uncensored. Some of the sections are so rife with deletions, it is onerous to read. However, this is rare and mostly seeing the bold-faced sections about Camp Peary, Air America, etc. are interesting.
Some historical details I find fascinating here, such as details on one of the purported Watergate triggers ITT (Hal Hendrix, control of Cuban phone system, South America, etc.) and how Oleg Penkovsky so wanted to serve the CIA, but went to the Birtish by default when the CIA was not convinced. This casts a light on The Penkovsky Papers as its development and publishing with other CIA-rleated books is explored and suggests it is a bit of a pastiche.
Other things I found fascinating are some operational details like the psywar operation that
played on the superstitious dread in the Philippine countryside of the asuang, a mythical vampire. A psywar squad entered an area, and planted rumors that an asuang lived on where the Communists were based. Two nights later, after giving the rumors time to circulate among Huk sympathizers, the psywar squad laid an ambush for the rebels. When a Huk patrol passed, the ambushers snatched the last man, punctured his neck vampire-fashion with two holes, hung his body until the blood drained out, and put the corpse back on the trail. As superstitious as any other Filipinos, the insurgents fled from the region.
and that
that for several years the agency subsidized the New York communist paper, The Daily Worker. In fairness to the Worker's staff, it must be noted that they were unaware of the CIA's assistance, which came in the form of several thousand secretly purchased prepaid subscriptions. The CIA apparently hoped to demonstrate by this means to the American public that the threat of communism in this country was indeed real.
and also how unions secretly funneled money from the Central Intelligence Agency to anti-Communist unionists overseas, often without concern for any other value. Victor Reuther confirmed that he was himself the dispenser of $50,000 in C.I.A. funds to French and Italian unions not long after VE Day.
Written and published post-Watergate, post-Pentagon Papers and after embarassing CIA exposes in Rampart etc. it feels like a bit of a feeding frenzy on an evil CIA being revealed after its war in Laos and having been found penetrating American campuses especially through penetration and manipulation of the National Student Association.
During those turbulent years, students in 1971, stormed and occupied a Harvard building. Certain documents went missing in that raid. One was a remarkable report of a 1968 meeting by CIA staffer William R. Harris, about whom little is known. Thought now easy to find, these minutes of the “The third meeting of the Discussion Group on Intelligence and Foreign Policy,” known as the “Bissell Meeting” makes up the afterwrod here. Interestingly, Bissell then predicted the rise of electronic surveillance over human operatives.
View all my reviews
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Review: The Joy of x: A Guided Tour of Math from One to Infinity
The Joy of x: A Guided Tour of Math from One to Infinity by Steven H. Strogatz My rating: 3 of 5 stars ...
-
Blacklisted by History: The Untold Story of Senator Joe McCarthy and His Fight Against America by M. Stanton Evans My ...
-
1920: The Year of the Six Presidents by David Pietrusza My rating: 3 of 5 stars The presidential electio...
-
Seeking Hearts: Love, Lust and the Secrets in the Ashes by Ryan Green My rating: 4 of 5 stars ...