The Jealous Kind by James Lee Burke
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
While this James Lee Burke story revolves around a high school kid in the early 50s in Texas, it is no less serious than one of his Robicheaux stories. And the word serious could be capitalized here. The teen, Aaron Broussard, gets involved in theft, murder, suicide, terror, insanity, the mob, hitmen, Nazis and old spies, multiple gangs of bad guys, a lost million dollars, and a pretty girl. Or two. It was kind of like a story of a teen aged Robicheaux, with a goofy best friend ala Clete Purcell, getting into the same kinds of messes that Robicheaux routinely got into in his stories, but with a teen’s way of looking at things. The seriousness was a bit overwrought for the story, I thought. The story had a few too many parts to the plot that didn’t add much. And this wasn’t as moody as Robicheaux stories, mainly because 1950s Houston isn’t as much of a character as New Orleans and rural Louisiana. Burke’s other mysteries include the location as a kind of character, but here the location didn’t matter much to the story. Without the mention of icehouses and rodeos, this could have been about anywhere else. Looking forward to Burke’s next one.
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6.8.18
2.8.18
Review: A Gift to My Children: A Father's Lessons for Life and Investing
A Gift to My Children: A Father's Lessons for Life and Investing by Jim Rogers
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The famous investor wrote this book to share his life advice with his young daughter. There is another review on Goodreads that outlines Rogers’ advice, and that is a large majority of what he has written. What isn’t on that list but is in the book?
- Rogers’ repeated commentary relating his infatuation with China.
- Some stories about his upbringing that are interesting in a homespun way.
- More love of China.
I would love to see what Rogers would have written now, 11 years after the initial publication, after having lived in China. I wonder if the infatuation is still there, and if the investing advice to his daughter, high on China and Brazil, continues or has been modified. The investing advice in particular seemed of its time.
Overall, enjoyable for the guidance given to Rogers’ daughter, with anecdotes as well as investing advice mixed in with the life advice.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The famous investor wrote this book to share his life advice with his young daughter. There is another review on Goodreads that outlines Rogers’ advice, and that is a large majority of what he has written. What isn’t on that list but is in the book?
- Rogers’ repeated commentary relating his infatuation with China.
- Some stories about his upbringing that are interesting in a homespun way.
- More love of China.
I would love to see what Rogers would have written now, 11 years after the initial publication, after having lived in China. I wonder if the infatuation is still there, and if the investing advice to his daughter, high on China and Brazil, continues or has been modified. The investing advice in particular seemed of its time.
Overall, enjoyable for the guidance given to Rogers’ daughter, with anecdotes as well as investing advice mixed in with the life advice.
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1.8.18
Review: Rule #1: The Simple Strategy for Successful Investing in Only 15 Minutes a Week!
Rule #1: The Simple Strategy for Successful Investing in Only 15 Minutes a Week! by Phil Town
My rating: 1 of 5 stars
I’d call this a blue collar investment guide. It is aimed at people early in their stock investing, ones that haven’t spent a lot of time and effort investigating and managing their investments. Given the author’s stories, he’s looking for those that threw some money at a stock or fund without much thought and got burned. The author even positions himself as “one of the guys”, repeating stories about his being a river tour guide and not mentioning more than in passing his career in hedge funds. The advice itself is typical of an investment guide from the 80s, think “One Up on Wall Street” with a bit more math. This runs counter to much of the recent and common investment practice of focusing on matching the market through buying market-spanning funds or ETFs. Instead of that tact, “Rule #1” suggests researching individual stocks. The author includes some basic fundamental company and stock price analysis, mixed with a dollop of subjectiveness based on a person’s familiarity with the stock or industry. The author then suggests market timing using simple technical analysis, buying and selling stocks on a regular basis.
A couple of things I didn’t like about this book. First, in the 9 disk CD audio version of this book, the author spends the entire first disc “teasing” the suggestions he gets around to making afterwards. This can be entirely skipped without missing anything of value. Second, like many books that suggest a process, this starts off very easy – Rule #1 is the only rule. But then you find additional steps are involved, then you find each step consists of more steps. It is a very involved process. And during the teasing part of the book, the author states it’s only 15 minutes a week to make all this money. Only near the end of the book does the author start to mention the hours of research that precede the period where you spend 15 minutes a week. And while there are plenty of opportunities to prove through data analysis that the process being suggested actually works, the author totally avoids providing proof of his partially objective process. After reading this and understanding the process being presented, I find that the way the story is told feels more like it is being told by a salesman, not quite telling the whole truth while ingratiating himself with his audience, than by an advisor just setting out the story. I tend to avoid books with this voice, and I tend to discount what they are (over) selling.
I am a bit of an old school investor. I feel there could be ways to invest in individual stocks and beat the market at times. So I’m primed for the story in this book. But I don’t appreciate the salesman tone, and I feel the lack of data shows the author cannot prove his process works. Nice for a step back to the 80s, though. We’ve come a long way as investors.
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My rating: 1 of 5 stars
I’d call this a blue collar investment guide. It is aimed at people early in their stock investing, ones that haven’t spent a lot of time and effort investigating and managing their investments. Given the author’s stories, he’s looking for those that threw some money at a stock or fund without much thought and got burned. The author even positions himself as “one of the guys”, repeating stories about his being a river tour guide and not mentioning more than in passing his career in hedge funds. The advice itself is typical of an investment guide from the 80s, think “One Up on Wall Street” with a bit more math. This runs counter to much of the recent and common investment practice of focusing on matching the market through buying market-spanning funds or ETFs. Instead of that tact, “Rule #1” suggests researching individual stocks. The author includes some basic fundamental company and stock price analysis, mixed with a dollop of subjectiveness based on a person’s familiarity with the stock or industry. The author then suggests market timing using simple technical analysis, buying and selling stocks on a regular basis.
A couple of things I didn’t like about this book. First, in the 9 disk CD audio version of this book, the author spends the entire first disc “teasing” the suggestions he gets around to making afterwards. This can be entirely skipped without missing anything of value. Second, like many books that suggest a process, this starts off very easy – Rule #1 is the only rule. But then you find additional steps are involved, then you find each step consists of more steps. It is a very involved process. And during the teasing part of the book, the author states it’s only 15 minutes a week to make all this money. Only near the end of the book does the author start to mention the hours of research that precede the period where you spend 15 minutes a week. And while there are plenty of opportunities to prove through data analysis that the process being suggested actually works, the author totally avoids providing proof of his partially objective process. After reading this and understanding the process being presented, I find that the way the story is told feels more like it is being told by a salesman, not quite telling the whole truth while ingratiating himself with his audience, than by an advisor just setting out the story. I tend to avoid books with this voice, and I tend to discount what they are (over) selling.
I am a bit of an old school investor. I feel there could be ways to invest in individual stocks and beat the market at times. So I’m primed for the story in this book. But I don’t appreciate the salesman tone, and I feel the lack of data shows the author cannot prove his process works. Nice for a step back to the 80s, though. We’ve come a long way as investors.
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31.7.18
Review: The Step-By-Step Guide to Copywriting: Online Learning and Course Design: Share Your Knowledge, Teach and Make Money Online With Your Own Course For Udemy or Teachable
The Step-By-Step Guide to Copywriting: Online Learning and Course Design: Share Your Knowledge, Teach and Make Money Online With Your Own Course For Udemy or Teachable by Sandra Shillington
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I’ve had an idea for an online class, but have hit a wall in creating it. I wanted to read a book that would provide some gentle persuasion to complete the work. I found “Online Learning and Course Design” to do a good job in providing me some simple process to create an online course. The author describes the process from initial brainstorming to the technical creation process, the course design, graphic design, publishing, and garnering feedback. I even went deeper than I would have thought, for such a compact book, in describing different instructional design models in use in the industry. If you are looking for a quick read that covers the entire online course creation process, this fits the bill.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I’ve had an idea for an online class, but have hit a wall in creating it. I wanted to read a book that would provide some gentle persuasion to complete the work. I found “Online Learning and Course Design” to do a good job in providing me some simple process to create an online course. The author describes the process from initial brainstorming to the technical creation process, the course design, graphic design, publishing, and garnering feedback. I even went deeper than I would have thought, for such a compact book, in describing different instructional design models in use in the industry. If you are looking for a quick read that covers the entire online course creation process, this fits the bill.
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Review: The Science of Managing Our Digital Stuff
The Science of Managing Our Digital Stuff by Ofer Bergman
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Not quite what I was expecting from a Gildan Media audiobook. The last twenty or so years I have worked in “content management” software, where storing and finding electronic files is required in order to create value from the content. I’ve read about the research into these issues over the years. This book is a survey of research on how people store files and the mental and technological processes people use to find files in a computer. I’ve always likened the two main ways to find information, browsing through a folder tree structure or searching, to the dichotomy between the sod-busters and the ranchers in the old west. The sod-busters were big on separating their fields, with barbed wire, in order to demark their territory. That is like folders – people use folders to mark, or categorize, their fields. Ranchers were used to the world with no fences and would run their cattle through whatever land was in the way going to high ground or market. This seems like searchers, those who disregard categorizations that have been put in place, writing a narrow or broad search term to find their quarry. The authors recognized these main classifications, but added additional classifications, such as tagging or group tagging. These different ways to categorize and/or search for content are described with seemingly endless academic studies. Who knew there were so many studies done? The compilation showed that every strategy had its place, but people tended toward hierarchy in order to better find their files.
The authors surprisingly disregarded some of the capabilities common in corporate content management software that could be used for personal information management. For one, tags can be displayed as folders, allowing for a broad hierarchy view of your content. Tags should be considered virtual folders. Also, I didn’t catch any mention of using what I’d call “virtual documents”, allowing a single document or file to appear in multiple places in a folder hierarchy. This feature of many content management systems (somewhat duplicated with Windows shortcuts) would solve many of the problems that were brought up, but I didn’t hear it mentioned. Being research-based, the book also underreported some of the newer capabilities in the market – think Google Photos autoclassification of pictures that creates folders of pictures by person in the photo (or even by pet).
I read this book hoping it would provide new perspective on retrieval that I could offer to the people and companies I work with, while also hoping I found a new “better way” to handle my own content management chores with personal photos, emails, documents, and the like. About 80% of the book was about studies that appeared to be very basic. The final 20% is where the authors got around to discussing some alternative strategies. While these were not groundbreaking, they weren’t commonplace in what I’ve seen in the market, and I found this last section of value.
The writing was very repetitive. This is not what you would call a business book. This is an academic book. I wasn’t expecting an academic audiobook from Gildan Media – Your Coach in a Box, who I thought only publishes business books. Had I realized that MIT Press published the hardcover, I’d have been more prepared for the possibility of it being academic. There is nothing practical about managing files in this book. This is not a how-to. If you are looking for methods to put into practice, look elsewhere. Best use of the book - if you are looking for ideas for creating new software to help people manage their personal information, you can find some ideas here, as well as explanations for why people use folders and search.
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My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Not quite what I was expecting from a Gildan Media audiobook. The last twenty or so years I have worked in “content management” software, where storing and finding electronic files is required in order to create value from the content. I’ve read about the research into these issues over the years. This book is a survey of research on how people store files and the mental and technological processes people use to find files in a computer. I’ve always likened the two main ways to find information, browsing through a folder tree structure or searching, to the dichotomy between the sod-busters and the ranchers in the old west. The sod-busters were big on separating their fields, with barbed wire, in order to demark their territory. That is like folders – people use folders to mark, or categorize, their fields. Ranchers were used to the world with no fences and would run their cattle through whatever land was in the way going to high ground or market. This seems like searchers, those who disregard categorizations that have been put in place, writing a narrow or broad search term to find their quarry. The authors recognized these main classifications, but added additional classifications, such as tagging or group tagging. These different ways to categorize and/or search for content are described with seemingly endless academic studies. Who knew there were so many studies done? The compilation showed that every strategy had its place, but people tended toward hierarchy in order to better find their files.
The authors surprisingly disregarded some of the capabilities common in corporate content management software that could be used for personal information management. For one, tags can be displayed as folders, allowing for a broad hierarchy view of your content. Tags should be considered virtual folders. Also, I didn’t catch any mention of using what I’d call “virtual documents”, allowing a single document or file to appear in multiple places in a folder hierarchy. This feature of many content management systems (somewhat duplicated with Windows shortcuts) would solve many of the problems that were brought up, but I didn’t hear it mentioned. Being research-based, the book also underreported some of the newer capabilities in the market – think Google Photos autoclassification of pictures that creates folders of pictures by person in the photo (or even by pet).
I read this book hoping it would provide new perspective on retrieval that I could offer to the people and companies I work with, while also hoping I found a new “better way” to handle my own content management chores with personal photos, emails, documents, and the like. About 80% of the book was about studies that appeared to be very basic. The final 20% is where the authors got around to discussing some alternative strategies. While these were not groundbreaking, they weren’t commonplace in what I’ve seen in the market, and I found this last section of value.
The writing was very repetitive. This is not what you would call a business book. This is an academic book. I wasn’t expecting an academic audiobook from Gildan Media – Your Coach in a Box, who I thought only publishes business books. Had I realized that MIT Press published the hardcover, I’d have been more prepared for the possibility of it being academic. There is nothing practical about managing files in this book. This is not a how-to. If you are looking for methods to put into practice, look elsewhere. Best use of the book - if you are looking for ideas for creating new software to help people manage their personal information, you can find some ideas here, as well as explanations for why people use folders and search.
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27.7.18
Review: I Don't Know What I Want But I Know It's Not This: A Step-by-Step Guide to Finding Gratifying Work
I Don't Know What I Want But I Know It's Not This: A Step-by-Step Guide to Finding Gratifying Work by Julie Jansen
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I laugh when I hear U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For”. Because I still haven’t figured out what I’m looking for, so I’m not sure whether I’ve found it already or not. This book takes the tact that you need to answer both of those questions in the correct order – what is it you want with a career, and how do you get there. I appreciated the broad brush used here. The author delves into a number of personality tests and includes many surveys and thought questions to help answer that first question. And she doesn’t narrow down the possible answers to just a new full-time career. The author talks about going part time, volunteering, owning your own business, and retiring. She covers all bases. The final chapter is typical of a book about job hunting. I found this was a different perspective than many books that focus on either “what should I do with my life” or “how do I start a business, retire, get a new job,…”. But that was also a weakness. There was quite a lot covered, so there didn’t seem to be as much depth as other similar books. Overall, I found it a reasonable overview of the topics discussed, with one or two new-to-me things to think about (in my case, about purchases of existing businesses). The title is golden.
I listened to this audiobook, mostly while driving or walking as is my habit. This contained a number of surveys, quizzes, and the like which required stopping the playback and writing down well-thought-thru answers. These interactions were key to getting something out of the book. If you want to play along, you should consider a paper copy of the book.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I laugh when I hear U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For”. Because I still haven’t figured out what I’m looking for, so I’m not sure whether I’ve found it already or not. This book takes the tact that you need to answer both of those questions in the correct order – what is it you want with a career, and how do you get there. I appreciated the broad brush used here. The author delves into a number of personality tests and includes many surveys and thought questions to help answer that first question. And she doesn’t narrow down the possible answers to just a new full-time career. The author talks about going part time, volunteering, owning your own business, and retiring. She covers all bases. The final chapter is typical of a book about job hunting. I found this was a different perspective than many books that focus on either “what should I do with my life” or “how do I start a business, retire, get a new job,…”. But that was also a weakness. There was quite a lot covered, so there didn’t seem to be as much depth as other similar books. Overall, I found it a reasonable overview of the topics discussed, with one or two new-to-me things to think about (in my case, about purchases of existing businesses). The title is golden.
I listened to this audiobook, mostly while driving or walking as is my habit. This contained a number of surveys, quizzes, and the like which required stopping the playback and writing down well-thought-thru answers. These interactions were key to getting something out of the book. If you want to play along, you should consider a paper copy of the book.
View all my reviews
Review: Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine
Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Eleanor Oliphant was a traumatized child, was traumatized as a young adult, but is now hitting 30. She has a job but no friends or family to support her. She is in a shell, conversing with herself using a classic literature vocabulary to express in specific detail what she wants to express. This story is about her coming out of her shell, lead in part by a co-worker who befriends her. At times, this sounded like it was turning itself into a Chuck Palahniuk novel (think “Invisible Monsters”), but ended up more along the lines of, as another reviewer mentioned, Forest Gump or Rainman. It’s “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo”, but instead of murder and hacking and revenge and Blomkvist, there’s accounting and a cat and a scraggly IT guy.
The story grew on me. I did not like it over the first 2/3 or so. Eleanor reminded me of someone I know, and the self-narration felt like an intrusion into what I saw as a daily struggle, but what Eleanor just mindlessly dealt with. We are meant to laugh at some of the predicaments, but again, this felt too close to home to wholly appreciate. As the story ended, though, you saw growth, and are left with a feeling that she will prevail over her situation given enough time, and perhaps even thrive. Can’t ask for much more than that.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Eleanor Oliphant was a traumatized child, was traumatized as a young adult, but is now hitting 30. She has a job but no friends or family to support her. She is in a shell, conversing with herself using a classic literature vocabulary to express in specific detail what she wants to express. This story is about her coming out of her shell, lead in part by a co-worker who befriends her. At times, this sounded like it was turning itself into a Chuck Palahniuk novel (think “Invisible Monsters”), but ended up more along the lines of, as another reviewer mentioned, Forest Gump or Rainman. It’s “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo”, but instead of murder and hacking and revenge and Blomkvist, there’s accounting and a cat and a scraggly IT guy.
The story grew on me. I did not like it over the first 2/3 or so. Eleanor reminded me of someone I know, and the self-narration felt like an intrusion into what I saw as a daily struggle, but what Eleanor just mindlessly dealt with. We are meant to laugh at some of the predicaments, but again, this felt too close to home to wholly appreciate. As the story ended, though, you saw growth, and are left with a feeling that she will prevail over her situation given enough time, and perhaps even thrive. Can’t ask for much more than that.
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Review: The Almanack of Naval Ravikant: A Guide to Wealth and Happiness
The Almanack of Naval Ravikant: A Guide to Wealth and Happiness by Eric Jorgenson My rating: 3 of 5 stars Interesting talk, self-help...
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Foundation by Isaac Asimov My rating: 3 of 5 stars I decided to read the Foundation novels in chronological order, and before this...
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Fortune's Formula: The Untold Story of the Scientific Betting System That Beat the Casinos and Wall Street by William Pou...
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Habeas Data: Privacy vs. the Rise of Surveillance Tech by Cyrus Farivar My rating: 5 of 5 stars I found ...