11.6.18

Review: Bringing Columbia Home: The Untold Story of a Lost Shuttle and Her Crew

Bringing Columbia Home: The Untold Story of a Lost Shuttle and Her Crew Bringing Columbia Home: The Untold Story of a Lost Shuttle and Her Crew by Michael D. Leinbach
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A great story about what happened immediately after the Space Shuttle Columbia’s breakup while re-entering earth's atmosphere, from the actions of NASA, first responders throughout the country, federal, state, and local government officials, and citizen volunteers through the accident investigation. This is what I would call a “got their hands dirty” story – the work being described was mostly the hands-on, in the field variety, not so much the stuff happening back at the office. And by in the field, you are literally talking about fields, and forests, and underbrush, and lakes that searchers had to traverse in their efforts to locate pieces of the shuttle, its contents, and its crew. The book culminates with the description of the warehouse used to hold the found pieces and to reconstruct the shuttle in order to determine what caused the critical failure of components. This process is also well described.

On the face of it, this doesn’t sound like there’s enough compelling material to make a book. There wasn't a lot of mystery about the failure that caused the accident to the shuttle in general. This book describes that issue, but there's more here. There were a few things that set this apart. First, this is about NASA. NASA has a kind of cachet, and for those like me who have grown up dreaming and studying about space flight, the astronauts and NASA employees are American heroes. The term “heroes” is overused, but to me NASA represents the American loner ideal, as well as the “can-do” attitude that Americans want to be known for. And NASA also embodies the ability to think things through smartly – another ideal. The books is interesting in that you get to see NASA react to this disaster, and from the book you understand that NASA accorded itself well. For example, within a day or so of the accident, astronauts were on sight when human remains were found and collected, and provided a simple religious service incorporating the religions of all lost astronauts. I found this quick thinking, respectfulness, and sense of duty to set the tone for the rest of the book.

Another aspect of the book that I found enlightening and that provides some hope for our future is the way the various communities and organizations banded together to handle this mission. The physical search for artifacts was incredibly extensive. The search protocol required in effect a person to step over every square foot of land covering an area the size of Rhode Island. The land itself was in a remote area in Texas and Louisiana that was not heavily populated. Many volunteers and first responders from across the country were housed and fed in these communities during the search, which took a few months. The anecdotes and examples of communities pitching in and working together, despite the huge variety of entities involved, was heartening. The authors, NASA employees, were quick to point out the various times that there could have been an issue over who was in charge – was it NASA, the NTSB, the Defense Department, FEMA, local FBI, etc. etc.? In this case, there was no contention, many agencies deferred their normal “emergency” leadership. I suspect the lack of contention was not normal for different agencies working together, and here it seems the NASA folks were expecting contention but didn’t get it. To find this kind of feeling of “we’re all in this together” in the US you may have to go back to WWII. This ends up being another reminder that people can pull together when the situation requires it.

Overall, I found this an unexpectedly good book, exploring the state of readiness in our country to respond to a disaster, but from the human perspective, not a system perspective. I read this book a week ago, and I continue to think about the examples it provides. If American readers want a reminder of what America can do right, this book provides an answer.


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8.6.18

Review: The Undoing Project: A Friendship that Changed Our Minds

The Undoing Project: A Friendship that Changed Our Minds The Undoing Project: A Friendship that Changed Our Minds by Michael Lewis
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A well-told story of friends, not at all what I was expecting. I figured the book would be similar to many of the other books covering the topics that Kahneman and Tversky studied. I’ve read quite a few books that have referenced these studies, and I’ve read Kahneman’s book on these topics, so I expected to be a bit bored. But given that it’s Michael Lewis writing, you have to give him a chance. He delivered. He covered the findings of the two scientists, but interspersed the science with the story of the two friends, how they lived their lives, met, and worked together. These personal vignettes were substantial in this book, and they were well written and interesting. They really made the book for me. The subject’s professional partnership was the unique hook for the story, and Lewis used it well.

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6.6.18

Review: Retirement Reinvention: Making the Most of the Next Stage of Your Life and Career

Retirement Reinvention: Making the Most of the Next Stage of Your Life and Career Retirement Reinvention: Making the Most of the Next Stage of Your Life and Career by Robin Ryan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Quite a few suggestions/ideas/examples of what people have done with their retirement. As is the current trend, the acknowledgement that retirement often includes a “retirement job” is thoroughly discussed here. The oxymoron of our times. After having read quite a few retirement books over the past few years, I find this one has a very good set of examples, and an interesting set of topics. These included housing, the transition process, hobbies, volunteering, travel, maintaining social connections, etc. This does not really cover finances in retirement, beyond the normal reminder that retirees can still work and need to plan. And the author struck me as having a distinct opinion on some topics, one which I did not always agree with. Nevertheless, I found this quite a good survey covering how retirees can spend their time, and I got some new insights into what I may want to do in the future.

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5.6.18

Review: What the Future Looks Like: Scientists Predict the Next Great Discoveries and Reveal How Today's Breakthroughs Are Already Shaping Our World

What the Future Looks Like: Scientists Predict the Next Great Discoveries and Reveal How Today's Breakthroughs Are Already Shaping Our World What the Future Looks Like: Scientists Predict the Next Great Discoveries and Reveal How Today's Breakthroughs Are Already Shaping Our World by Jim Al-Khalili
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I found this somewhat interesting. The book covered a good number of topics, and included near-future as well as far-future possibilities. If you read a lot of science non-fiction books and magazines like Wired, you’ve heard this before, especially the near-future concepts. I most liked the sections where the authors “let it ride” and speculated on the far future. You usually get those kinds of ideas and discussion only from science fiction books, and the prognostications are used to push the plot forward, usually without context. It is good to get a scientist’s take – not just of what may happen, but why. This book does a reasonable job of that.

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30.5.18

Review: The Disorganized Mind: Coaching Your ADHD Brain to Take Control of Your Time, Tasks, and Talents

The Disorganized Mind: Coaching Your ADHD Brain to Take Control of Your Time, Tasks, and Talents The Disorganized Mind: Coaching Your ADHD Brain to Take Control of Your Time, Tasks, and Talents by Nancy A. Ratey
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I read this to get insights into the thoughts of one of my loved ones with late diagnosis ADD, and what I learned was as much about me as them. One of the insights here is, not surprisingly, that dealing with the dimension of time can be difficult for those with ADHD. The author provides a number of tactics to deal with this issue, including creating a habit of planning and including some regular notification of the passage of time, like the ringing of an hourly alarm on a watch. I find that these tactics would work well for me as well, as I tend to get carried away by trivial pursuits, forget to consider travel time, and other symptoms as discussed here. Those are just examples. The book discusses quite a range of behaviors. I found the book quite useful. I listened to the audio version, and I found that the stories were quite interesting, but the organization was more for flow than for conciseness. Easy to listen, but easy to forget the points. I found myself re-listening to sections a few days later to remember examples and suggestions. For this reason, and given there are a few lists and todo sections in the book, this may be best read and not listened to.

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29.5.18

Review: Merle Haggard's My House of Memories

Merle Haggard's My House of Memories Merle Haggard's My House of Memories by Merle Haggard
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I have enjoyed Haggard’s songs for years. And I’ve read a number of Johnny Cash bios recently, so thought I would learn a bit about Haggard. I guess those Johnny Cash biographies led me to imagine Haggard’s life in the same way – overcoming a difficult early life, overcoming weaknesses like pills and women, and learning and becoming successful. At the end of the Cash books I’ve read, he stands larger than life, noble, wise. Haggard also overcame, somehow, early difficulties, but in the end the picture that remains is him nude and plastered on a houseboat, as he often describes. Haggard isn’t out to make himself a saint. In that he is quite successful in this book.

The stories here jump around quite a bit. There are a number of stories about his troubled youth and incarceration – that’s more than half the book. There’s a lot on his personal life, including some sordid bits which he writes about with relish. Given he writes story songs, you’d expect he’d tell a good story, and he does. I was hoping to learn more about his songs, but Haggard instead focuses this book on his personal life. Interesting, but in the end I felt less of Haggard than I expected. Not everyone becomes a saint.

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25.5.18

Review: Don't Retire Broke: An Indespensible Guide to Tax-Efficient Retirement Planning and Financial Freedom

Don't Retire Broke: An Indespensible Guide to Tax-Efficient Retirement Planning and Financial Freedom Don't Retire Broke: An Indespensible Guide to Tax-Efficient Retirement Planning and Financial Freedom by Rick Rodgers
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

These kinds of books on financing a retirement seem to consist of three things: facts, analysis, and exhortations. I like to think of those aspects as the encyclopedia, the professor, and the coach. Each book has a different mix of these aspects, and goes into different levels of each. This one started out heavy on facts. I almost gave up. The first third or so of the book is repeating the “rules of the road” for retirement investing, albeit at a deeper level than most books. This didn’t hold my interest much. But after those initial sections, the author started adding some useful analysis to the facts. There was a bit of coaching in there as well, but not a lot. This is better aimed at the serious retirement investor. As retirement finance books go, I would say this was a step beyond the mass-market business books, and would interest someone who has spent some time understanding the rules of investments and the common suggestions, and wanted a bit of a deeper dive.

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Review: ABC for Book Collectors

ABC for Book Collectors by John Carter My rating: 4 of 5 stars I have a hobby now of flipping modern classic books found at estate ...