Friday, January 31, 2020

Review: Low Down: Junk, Jazz, and Other Fairy Tales from Childhood

Low Down: Junk, Jazz, and Other Fairy Tales from Childhood Low Down: Junk, Jazz, and Other Fairy Tales from Childhood by A.J. Albany
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I was moved by John Hawkes' depiction in the film, and I like very much the soundtrack. Now, I have read the poignant homage to Joe Albany’s extraordinary talent and tragic life by long-suffering daughter Amy-Jo Albany. Most of this tumultuous period of pained art and heroine borne self-destruction occurred during her earliest years making the necessarily hallucinogenic and removed recollections in this revealing memoir all the more moving and even harrowing.

View all my reviews

Monday, January 27, 2020

Review: The Princeton Fugitive Slave: The Trials of James Collins Johnson

The Princeton Fugitive Slave: The Trials of James Collins Johnson The Princeton Fugitive Slave: The Trials of James Collins Johnson by Lolita Buckner Inniss
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is largely a scholarly work, bereft of the novelist's techniques to enliven history. Still, it is an engaging and enlightening tail bringing together the faint threads of evidence on a life's arc from fleeing slavery in Maryland to a life on the margins vending and butlering to a largely uncaring student body in Princeton. This is a fascinating, illustrative, and educational biography.

View all my reviews

Sunday, January 26, 2020

Review: The Curse: A Shocking True Story of Superstition, Human Sacrifice and Cannibalism

The Curse: A Shocking True Story of Superstition, Human Sacrifice and Cannibalism The Curse: A Shocking True Story of Superstition, Human Sacrifice and Cannibalism by Ryan Green
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I had my doubts when I saw the run time under four hours, but Green's efficient economy makes an engaging and complete story of one unique woman's life from being born of rape to soapmaker 'wise woman' (my phrase) to serial killer and foiled necromancer. After this and The Monster of Florence I wonder what other prolific criminals from Italy await book length analysis.

View all my reviews

Review: The Last Victim: A True-Life Journey into the Mind of the Serial Killer

The Last Victim: A True-Life Journey into the Mind of the Serial Killer The Last Victim: A True-Life Journey into the Mind of the Serial Killer by Jason M. Moss
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is really sad - a serial killer fanboy poses to us and others he has some scholarly goal of penological insight in writing and befriending serial killers. Actually he comes across as obsessed, awed, and impressed and is used to varying degrees by each while being victimized by Gacy himself.

View all my reviews

Saturday, January 25, 2020

Review: Blowout: Corrupted Democracy, Rogue State Russia, and the Richest, Most Destructive Industry on Earth

Blowout: Corrupted Democracy, Rogue State Russia, and the Richest, Most Destructive Industry on Earth Blowout: Corrupted Democracy, Rogue State Russia, and the Richest, Most Destructive Industry on Earth by Rachel Maddow
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Following up on Drift: The Unmooring of American Military Power, Maddow continues to explore how the U.S. government has slipped its moorings of good governance. Where the initial one focused on military governance, this one "drifts" into the petrochemical complex to work in economies and governments on a global scale. One common thread is nuclear and Drift touched on such things as lost nuke still cooking away here and there, while this one touches on nuclear bombs used in 1973 underneath Colorado to attempt to loosen natural gas. Starting with Rockefeller as the wealthiest American that has ever lived to today's oil companies that are the wealthiest, most revenue-producing concerns while relying heavily on government subsidies and tax breaks, we have a near century arc of oily grip on the reins of power. This stretches from U.S. voters watching the least significant digit at the pump to Third World countries like Equatorial Guinea seeing an extractive oligarchy enjoying the benefits of resources with little concern for the populace. Rex Tillerson and Putin's "kleptocracy" all get special attention here with explanation helpful to understanding current and recent events. Much is made of the colloquially referred to Dutch disease as it affects and has effected individual nations. I feel a broader impact is implied. As we look back with revulsion on the slave economies of a century and a half ago, I feel in future centuries the global shape and impact of our fossil fuel economies will be similarly reviewed with both wonder and disgust.

View all my reviews

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Review: niceness in the nineties: An Indie Music Memoir

niceness in the nineties: An Indie Music Memoir niceness in the nineties: An Indie Music Memoir by Jim Miller
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Jim Miller's (Trash Can School, Black Angel's Death Song) first-hand accounts of the rise of Sub Pop, grunge and such bands as Possum Dixon, Hole, L7, Love Battery, Gits, and more is a quick and interesting read to a 90s scenester like myself. However, Jim never goes deep to analyze, sufficing only to summarize the years of shows, recording, touring, etc. in a name-dropping chronology. For those were outsiders then, this book will not offer insight. I did an interview with the author in 2011.

View all my reviews

Review: The Martini: An Illustrated History of an American Classic

The Martini: An Illustrated History of an American Classic The Martini: An Illustrated History of an American Classic by Barnaby Conrad III
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is really a love letter from the author to the classic gin & vermouth cocktail. Decorated with many images of martinis in film and art it explores history without attempting anything definitive and nods toward trendy variations of each era while always circling back to traditional expression and portrayal. This is an educational and delightful biography of the classic cocktail.

View all my reviews

Monday, January 20, 2020

Review: Food Writers' Favorites Beverages Alcohol Free Drinks For All Occasions

Food Writers' Favorites Beverages Alcohol Free Drinks For All Occasions Food Writers' Favorites Beverages Alcohol Free Drinks For All Occasions by Barbara Gibbs Ostmann
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

The thin, paperback format will not lay flat to work from and the absorbent pages will quickly turn to mush in vicinity of preparing the recipes inside which lack pictures.

View all my reviews

Review: Cocktails

Cocktails Cocktails by Marks And Spencers
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Nice, heavy glossy pages will help this book lie flat as can even be wiped clean of liquid. A decent introduction with the history of the cocktail is prelude to chapters on cocktail categories making a complete enough recipe collection with many pictured. There are two additional chapters of attractive mocktails (just add vodka) and one on snacks to go with the traditional pre-dinner cocktail hour.

View all my reviews

Review: Moby Dick

Moby Dick Moby Dick by Herman Melville
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

What a wonderfully obsessive imagining and telling - so unique and compelling a tale. Someone said once, "little man, big fish" and I love that succinct review of such a sprawling opus.

View all my reviews

Sunday, January 19, 2020

Review: Flesh Collectors: Their Ghoulish Appetites Drove Them to Crimes that Only

Flesh Collectors: Their Ghoulish Appetites Drove Them to Crimes that Only Flesh Collectors: Their Ghoulish Appetites Drove Them to Crimes that Only by Fred Rosen
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Rosen delivers an easy-to-read, fast-paced recounting of one attempted murder and two brutal killings by a pair of lost low-lifes. The one killing of a female, the last, suggests necrophilia and conspiracy for cannibalism. Considering the direction they were heading, it is a good thing the investigation, also recounted here, led to enough federal and state charges to keep them locked up the rest of their lives. I just checked and am surprised the state capital punishment sentence hasn't been carried out in either case over twenty years since the murders...

View all my reviews

Saturday, January 18, 2020

Review: Crossfire Hurricane: Inside Donald Trump's War on the FBI

Crossfire Hurricane: Inside Donald Trump's War on the FBI Crossfire Hurricane: Inside Donald Trump's War on the FBI by Josh Campbell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Forced out by Trump heat, Campbell emerges as a CNN contributor and author to fight the good fight against Trump attacks on the FBI. Here he takes on debunking Roger Stone's anti-CNN conspiracy theory which I was disappinted to learn was fueled by an ill-considered Mike Huckabee tweet. Even when pulled down, an inaccurate tweet persists out there and has already done damage. Overall, Campbell explains how the FBI actually operations, how the Comey ousting played actually among FBI employees, contrary to Sarak Huckabee's lies on the subject.

View all my reviews

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Review: The Liars' Club

The Liars' Club The Liars' Club by Mary Karr
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Karr's memoir of alcohol-induced family dysfunction across multiple states and into areas as dark as pederasty is told in loose, hallucinogenic recollection befitting traumatic childhood memories.

View all my reviews

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Review: Stephen Fry's Victorian Secrets

Stephen Fry's Victorian Secrets Stephen Fry's Victorian Secrets by NOT A BOOK
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Audible did us readers a favor by packing together a dozen or so podcast episodes delightfully narrated by Stephen Fry. (Material put together by authors John Woolf and Nick Baker.) The guide to the hidden closets of Victorian society cover boot-kissing sadism, sex, madness (mad houses), malice, murder, toilets, homesexuality and even widespread morphine use.

View all my reviews

Review: Fish in a Barrel: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds on Tour

Fish in a Barrel: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds on Tour Fish in a Barrel: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds on Tour by Peter Milne
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

These are candid backstage, onstage and offstage Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds ‎photos of touring in Australia, Japan and Europe in the Henry's Dream era. Artfully and generously presented on full pages, the black and white photos have places (cities) indicated, but no other caption and no date. Bookending the photogallery is an introduction by Cave and then Cave interviewing the photographer Milne.

View all my reviews

Monday, January 13, 2020

Review: Report of the Warren Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy

Report of the Warren Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy Report of the Warren Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy by Warren Commission
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Thoughts I had in 2011 musing upon reading this years earlier:

I read this a long time ago. So, I am left with impressions but rather than details. Well, there are two main impressions: First, it is a very dry read as one would expect for a government body investigation report. Secondly, so many bullets found at the scene and so many people shot (not just those in the car), that it is hard for me to believe it was a single gunmen that less loose all that ammo in six seconds. Still, I suppose it is possible....


Then, I re-read it. I also at the same time read A Concise Compendium of the Warren Commission Report on the Assassination of John F. Kennedy, so I will let my thoughts on the Report itself reside in that review.

This edition from The New York Times including many more photographic displays of Commission exhibits and four introductory pieces:

1. Tom Wicker's Special to The New York Times of Nov. 23, 1963 including such early reporting as:

Mr. Kennedy also had a massive, gaping wound in the back and one on the right side of the head. However, the doctors said it was im­possible to determine immediately whether the wounds had been caused by on bullet or two.


That makes it sound like JFK was hit twice from the front and the only shot that hit anyone from the Texas School Book Depository was the one that hit Connally. There are substantiated theories that Oswald wanted to kill Connally, not Kennedy.

2. An introduction from Harrison E. Salisbury that suggests this is the final word, but won't stop conspiracies from growing.

3. Same thing in a small piece from Anthony Lewis. Well, his adds fuel to the idea above that Kennedy was not Oswald's goal:

After his arrest, he told the police that “My wife and I like the President's family. They are interesting people.” He said, “I am not a malcontent; nothing irritated me about the President."


4. Finally, two pages from James Reston attempting to quickly summarize the inexplicable Oswald in the context of a panoply of other assassinations.

View all my reviews

Sunday, January 12, 2020

Review: A Concise Compendium of the Warren Commission Report on the Assassination of John F. Kennedy

A Concise Compendium of the Warren Commission Report on the Assassination of John F. Kennedy A Concise Compendium of the Warren Commission Report on the Assassination of John F. Kennedy by Robert John Donovan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

When I read a well-composed, well-researched conspiracy book, I can believe that conspiracy. I can see believing this Commission line of the lone gunman. I find the weakest argument to me is that the shot that first hit JFK was also the same that hit Connally. First in the Zapruder film we have the gov. looking back toward POTUS, twisted back far and holding in this right hand his hat, all while he supposedly was shot with the same bullet, including into this hat-holding wrist. Connally's own recollection surfaces:

Governor Connally testified that he recognized the first noise as a rifle shot and the thought immediately crossed his mind that it was an assassination attempt. From his position in the right jump seat immediately in front of the President, he instinctively turned to his right because the shot appeared to come from over his right shoulder. Unable to see the President as he turned to the right, the Governor started to look back over his left shoulder, but he never completed the turn because he felt something strike him in the back.” In his testimony before the Commission, Governor Connally was certain that he was hit by the second shot, which he stated he did not hear.


JFK was reacting to the 2nd shot when Connally was turned to the right, so Connally turning to the left was a third show and thus the JFK headshot was a 4th one. But, since the Commission needs a long gunman, they conclude "The weight of the evidence indicates that there were three shots fired." Actually this second reading of the Report still leaves me thinking the case is for four shots.

Also, despite police HQ disorganization,

Oswald was questioned intermittently for approximately 12 hours between 2:30 p.m., on November 22, and 11 a.m., on November 24. Throughout this interrogation he denied that he had anything to do either with the assassination of President Kennedy or the murder of Patrolman Tippit. Captain Fritz of the homicide and robbery bureau did most of the questioning, but he kept no notes and there were no stenographic or tape recordings.


Gosh that level of mishandling of a subject like this beggars belief.

Conspiracy or none, the period leading right up to Ruby killing Oswald reads like a script for a fast-paced movie. Ruby is constantly on the move, hither and thither running on little sleep, hardly any food and affect by Preludin while emotionally unbalanced by the assassination. He comes across like a man in a fugue state liable to do anything.

The first two thirds of the book, which oddly starts with the conclusion (maybe typical of federal commission reports) feels biased to this true crime reader. Where are all the blind alleys and false clues? Those emerge in the final act, such as the improbable Nov 14 1963 meeting of Bernard Weissman (ostensible head of an anti-JFK ad campaign) with Jack Ruby And JD Tippit at the Carousel Club. Now there is grist for the mill!

Regardless of all, good job Commission on suggesting such assassination be a federal crime and Cabinet-level or NSC attention to protective plans of the overworked Secret Service. I wonder if that hole is filled by Homeland Security, now? Much didn't change it seems since the Commission then said the FBI and CIA needed to be more collaborative (would have been nice before 9/11 to have that worked out) and that we needed really to pay attention to those who still prove to be our most prevalent domestic terrorists:

Subversives, ultrarightists, racists and fascists (a) possessing emotional instability or irrational behavior, (b) who have made threats of bodily harm against officials or employees of Federal, state or local government or officials of a foreign government, (c) who express or have expressed strong or violent anti-U.S. sentiments...


View all my reviews

Saturday, January 11, 2020

Review: Secrets of the Kingdom: The Inside Story of the Secret Saudi-U.S. Connection

Secrets of the Kingdom: The Inside Story of the Secret Saudi-U.S. Connection Secrets of the Kingdom: The Inside Story of the Secret Saudi-U.S. Connection by Gerald Posner
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

In its final report, the 9/11 Commission famously called the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia "a problematic ally in combating Islamic extremism." Ostensibly, Posner "exposes the undeniable truth about U.S.-Saudi relations-and how the Saudis' influence on American business and politics poses a grave threat to our security." That is certainly a main thread here, but there is more just about the inherent racism, sexism and anti-Semitism of thee kingdom.

For this 2005 book, bin Laden and King Fahd are still alive. Not so much the named royal family contacts of the 9/11 terrorists that died mysteriously such as Prince Ahmed bin Salman, dead at 43. Also detailed is the likely close connection between a powerful member of the House of Saud and Abu Zubeydah, the highest-ranking al-Qaeda operative captured up to then by the United States

The role Saudi charities-including many controlled or supported by Kingdom officials-have played in bankrolling al-Qaeda and Islamic terror groups along with official government support to spreading Wahhabism through madrasas implies Saudi-sold oil means US consumers paying for their own threats. Even this is a bit of old hat yet it is instructive how the Nixon-initiated years of attempted self-sufficiency saw The Kingdom succeed in becoming a larger part of US oil imports.

The most interesting thing to me may be the "never-before-revealed" Saudi scorched earth plans in the event of a national crisis in the Kingdom: undetectable ("umarked") Semtex and radiological bombs integrated into critical infrastructure. By today the plastic explosives would be largely degraded. However, if they did in the 80s and 90s they may very well have maintained or improved it.

View all my reviews

Review: Vagabond

Vagabond Vagabond by Gaylord Herron
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I first became aware of this photographer from his well-composed image used on the album Gimme Danger (Bullet LaVolta). This semi-autobiographical photo essay set in Tulsa merges Genesis quotes with remembrances of family life and dark musings upon his own generation.

"Vagabond" is, according to Herron, a response to the death of his father. The photographs, prose and paintings in the book capture Tulsa in a striking and unique way.
- http://roottulsa.com


This collection of thought-provoking photos, paintings and writings that cover Tulsa and Herron’s life from the 1940s to the early ’70s structured around the story of Cain and Abel and Herron’s relationship with his father includes many candid street photos that recall to me Diane Arbus.

View all my reviews

Monday, January 6, 2020

Review: The Townhouse Massacre: The Unforgettable Crimes of Richard Speck

The Townhouse Massacre: The Unforgettable Crimes of Richard Speck The Townhouse Massacre: The Unforgettable Crimes of Richard Speck by Ryan Green
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Real good, brisk yet complete summary of Richard Speck from life in family dysfunction to drifting, drinking and ultimately murdering eight student nurses. This includes trial and appeal and transformation to incarcerated male prostitute as famously depicted in a prison video. I at times want to fault Green for detailed interior monologues, etc. that no one can know while this holds up as a strong true crime book. I don't know that anything is new or previously untold here although I did find interesting the detailed telling of his early, pre-crime life and early relationships with women. This also touches on the XYY syndrome and how it has become discredited. (During the trial of Arthur J. Shawcross, the defense presented evidence of Shawcross' genetic abnormality.)

View all my reviews

Sunday, January 5, 2020

Review: The Secrets of the FBI

The Secrets of the FBI The Secrets of the FBI by Ronald Kessler
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I am really surprised by the tradecraft revelations here from carpet rakes to smooth over footprints and selecting poor weather for break-ins, etc. Still it is all approved with buy-in from the FBI. Beside the techniques and technology (wireless solution to remotely deactivating security systems), there is a director by director overview of the FBI with pros and cons of each era of leadership. The most interesting thing to me there was the Hoover era of embracing "technology", at least in what could be done and categorized in that era of fingerprints, etc. Then, computers are basically ignored to the detriment of the agency until Mueller. Also, big cases from spies like Hansen to taking down UBL are explored in detail.

View all my reviews

Saturday, January 4, 2020

Review: Behind the Trail of Broken Treaties: An Indian Declaration of Independence

Behind the Trail of Broken Treaties: An Indian Declaration of Independence Behind the Trail of Broken Treaties: An Indian Declaration of Independence by Vine Deloria Jr.
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The Trail of Broken Treaties (also known as the Trail of Broken Treaties Caravan and the Pan American Native Quest for Justice ) was a cross-country protest that was staged in the autumn of 1972 in the United States by American Indian and First Nations organizations. Edited by Vine Deloria Jr., multiple authors go over legal details and history leading to Wounded Knee and protests such as the occupation of Alcatraz and the Trail of Broken Treaties itself. The multiple authors and the consensus on legal review makdes for some redundant content as the arc from law of discovery (implicit vanquishing) to Congressionally initiated citizenship (as third-class citizens really) is rehashed from only slightly different angles. While I did not find it as engaging as Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto, it is still very educational on the mistreatment of sovereignty initially considered for the aboriginal peoples of America and then steadily eroded and usurped over the centuries.

View all my reviews

Review: Behind the Trail of Broken Treaties; an Indian declaration of independence

Behind the Trail of Broken Treaties; an Indian declaration of independence Behind the Trail of Broken Treaties; an Indian declaration of independence by Vine Deloria
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The Trail of Broken Treaties (also known as the Trail of Broken Treaties Caravan and the Pan American Native Quest for Justice ) was a cross-country protest that was staged in the autumn of 1972 in the United States by American Indian and First Nations organizations. Edited by Vine Deloria Jr., multiple authors go over legal details and history leading to Wounded Knee and protests such as the occupation of Alcatraz and the Trail of Broken Treaties itself. The multiple authors and the consensus on legal review makdes for some redundant content as the arc from law of discovery (implicit vanquishing) to Congressionally initiated citizenship (as third-class citizens really) is rehashed from only slightly different angles. While I did not find it as engaging as Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto, it is still very educational on the mistreatment of sovereignty initially considered for the aboriginal peoples of America and then steadily eroded and usurped over the centuries.

View all my reviews

Friday, January 3, 2020

Review: The Rothschilds

The Rothschilds The Rothschilds by Frederic Morton
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Fascinating tale of a rise from desperate poverty in an 18th Century Jewish ghetto to globe-influencing wealth in a single generation. I found most interesting how the demise of the Hessians on the fields of the American Revolutionary War enriched the patriarch's patron with trickle down of gold for the formerly humber Rothschilds family. The books goes up to the WWII era and beyond until the rise of prodigal playboys.

View all my reviews

Review: The Role of Statistics in Business and Industry

The Role of Statistics in Business and Industry The Role of Statistics in Business and Industry by Gerald J. Hahn
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

From William Sealy Gosset's late 19th Century work at the Guinness Brewery to The Western Electric SQC Handbook that became the AT&T SQC Handbook in the late 1950s, there is a long tradition of large-scale manufacturers being fertile grounds for comprehensive documentation of basic, applied statistics for largely quality applications in business and industry. This book, by two GE Research and Development employees, follows in that tradition. Decades of work in reliability and quality control areas during the peak years of the six sigma movement applied to real world problems at GE positioned the authors to put together this very practical text on the role of statistics in business and industry. The book describes many of the key problems that they were exposed to during their careers. They start by describing specific problems that are common in manufacturing and test design. They determine the key questions to address and then describe the statistical methods that are employed to solve these problems. This book helps formulate and describe applying statistical thinking to practical business problems.



This book's chapter layout makes the text work as both a reference guide and a textbook for either classroom or self-guided study. A well-thought progression of sections in each chapter concludes with summarizing takeaway bullet points with general and technical questions to motivate discussion and learning. An extensive FTP site provides additional material, including solutions to some of the applications. Always taking a high-level view that admits readers of the most basic mathematical literacy, this is an introduction to statistics and its applications in business and industry. The explanations of how statistics helps one design, build, ensure reliability and improve products from aircraft engines to washing machines and in specialized areas such as the food and beverage, semiconductor and communications industries can be grasped readily by the non-mathematician. Undergraduate students will find valuable connection points to basic theory they are being exposed to while manufacturing managers overseeing projects relying on statistics will find valuable enlightenment here. The core of the text is chapters rich in real-world case studies, if they are only given a brief overview, on such areas as product reliability, product field support, pharmaceuticals, financial services, and more.

View all my reviews

Review: A Child al Confino

A Child al Confino A Child al Confino by Enrico Lamet
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Slow beginning, but overall a good memoir of childhood memories of displacement, confinement, upheaval and transformation of a young Jewish boy in Italy in WW II

View all my reviews

Review: Africa & Africans

Africa & Africans Africa & Africans by Paul Bohannan
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A good read that offers research-based enlightenment despite its age. The book is a well-reasoned, cogent overview of race, economics, history, religion, and more

View all my reviews

Review: Keep the River on Your Right

Keep the River on Your Right Keep the River on Your Right by Tobias Schneebaum
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A very detached, atmospheric, dream-like recollection of going native in the Peruvian jungle, this is an easy and engaging read. However, I wish the author has taken the time and effort to record and recall more detail of this experience non pareil.

View all my reviews

Review: The Mysterious Island

The Mysterious Island The Mysterious Island by Jules Verne
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I love the details of chemistry, metallurgy, history and more with which Verne etches this fantasy tale that holds up well.

View all my reviews

Review: American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America

American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America by Chris Hedges
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Journalist Chris Hedges has another bugbear to keep me up at night: Christian dominionists lurking in the Christian Right yearning for apocalyptic violence and for an assault on freethinkers like me. Hopefully this coming persecution will be held off until after my days. If that is so, it won't be any credit to me because as the author observes, "Tolerance is a virtue, but tolerance coupled with passivity is a vice."

Passable narration by the author.

View all my reviews

Review: American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America

American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America by Chris Hedges
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Journalist Chris Hedges has another bugbear to keep me up at night: Christian dominionists lurking in the Christian Right yearning for apocalyptic violence and for an assault on freethinkers like me. Hopefully this coming persecution will be held off until after my days. If that is so, it won't be any credit to me because as the author observes, "Tolerance is a virtue, but tolerance coupled with passivity is a vice."

View all my reviews

Review: Probability and Statistics

Probability and Statistics Probability and Statistics by Arak Mathai
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

While this appears to be a textbook, teachers may be a more accurate target audience for this introduction to probability relevant to the applied sciences. Including basics of sampling distributions, estimation, and hypothesis testing, the topics here arose in a course for teachers in Kerala, India. “These topics were suggested by the college teachers themselves so that they … could be better prepared to teach the material in their classes”, states the preface. This then companion text for future practitioners or their instructors begins from set theory basics and extends to model-building and experiment design. The two or more semesters of material here range from the undergraduate to early graduate level.

This English text has some notation, verbiage, and grammar idiosyncrasies that separate it from similar texts. For instance, the relative complement of A with respect to a set B is notated AC, rather than the clearer binary operation B ∖ A. (AC is the complement of A relevant to what set?) ...

[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]

View all my reviews

Review: The Demon in the Freezer

The Demon in the Freezer The Demon in the Freezer by Richard Preston
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This tale could have been somewhat better edited for more coherence, but it is still a scary, thought -provoking tale that delivers the horrifying details of small pox its very present threat under Russian military experimentation and the cruel punishment wreaked on the bystander Steven Hatfill. The author doesn't explore the morality of retaining and experimenting on small pox, but along the way provides a basis for both a pro and con view of this controversial subject.

View all my reviews

Review: Tales of the Fish Patrol

Tales of the Fish Patrol Tales of the Fish Patrol by Jack London
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

London's chronological, tightly coupled tales of Fish Patrol fights with oyster pirates, Greek scofflaw salmon poachers and more is marred by this 1982 audio production with low audio quality and a narrator that is just phoning it in.

View all my reviews

Review: Mobituaries: Great Lives Worth Reliving

Mobituaries: Great Lives Worth Reliving Mobituaries: Great Lives Worth Reliving by Mo Rocca
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Wowzer! Mo Rocca's passion for and playful way of relating historical trivia is both entertaining and enlightening. Based on his podcast, this work covers the "deaths" of real people, imagined ones (like TV series characters), trends and trees even. One can dip in anywhere and read with delight and be fully prepared for witty party smalltalk.

View all my reviews

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Review: The Genius Lanny Poffo

The Genius Lanny Poffo The Genius Lanny Poffo by John Crowther
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

As a teen World Wrestling Federation fan, my interest in that franchise overlapped Poffo's presence: 1985–1994. I was entertained by his flamboyant antics and liked rooting for him as an underdog. I had really moved on to other characters when he became “The Genius” and would write and recite an original poem before the match. This comix biography charts his career under the tutelage of trainer and father Angelo Poffo in a career paralleling is even more flamboyant brother "Macho Man" Randy Savage. It is very self-serving and self-glorifying which really doesn't fit the form of his undercard career.

View all my reviews

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 ...