15.3.20

Review: The Design of Future Things

The Design of Future ThingsThe Design of Future Things by Donald A. Norman
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Short, readable musings on the design of technology to help people and to replace people. Norman exposes some basic limitations of technology in automating human thoughts and actions, including inferring reason. He often looks at these issues through the lens of an automotive designer working on self-driving cars, but discussions on kitchen appliances also are in abundance here. This was written more than a decade back now and the thoughts expressed are more common now than when written. Nevertheless, the conversational, pop-science tone and understandable explanations makes this of interest.

View all my reviews

View all my reviews

12.3.20

Review: The Wrecking Crew

The Wrecking Crew (Matt Helm, #2)The Wrecking Crew by Donald Hamilton
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Fun second book. If you have expectations set from listening to/reading the first book in the series, this meets those expectations. Action involving the other side’s spies, women and men to distrust, politics, the cowboy mentality, shadowy characters from Helm’s past life, and plentiful ruminations by our lead character on topics ranging from girdles to film photography. Helm is a Western American everyman, who is smart, skilled, occasionally aroused, and ready for action. And, as you'd expect, he's a bit dated. The audio version I listened to was narrated by Stefan Rudnicki, who sounds correct as an action-hero spy. I will listen to more.

View all my reviews

View all my reviews

Review: Synesthesia

SynesthesiaSynesthesia by Richard E. Cytowic
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Having never noticed the concept of synesthesia before, I found this an excellent introduction, with engaging writing and enough detail to answer the questions that I came up with while listening to this audiobook. The author describes the different ways this trait manifests itself in different people and identifies some of the causes. He also conjectures people in history who exhibited this trait based on their writings or writings about them. Just the right length for an introduction to the topic…

View all my reviews

View all my reviews

4.3.20

Review: To America

To AmericaTo America by Stephen E. Ambrose
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Just a famous historian and author, riffing on his personal thoughts about various historical figures, his career, and the state of the world. Being a famous historian/author, you expect to read a lot of documentation on reasons, and you get that here -- reasons why Ambrose thinks the way he does. For instance, although I don't believe he actually said that his favorite president was Teddy Roosevelt, he certainly makes the case. His thoughts on Jefferson -- over-rated. He covers other people and topics with the same level of thought he applies throughout. As interesting was his "inside baseball" discussion of the profession of historian, and of his own career autobiography. Historians like Ambrose are measured by their research and by their published output. Ambrose describes the impetus behind most of his books, with many interesting behind-the-scenes anecdotes involving professors and presidents and camping out in reservations. An interesting glimpse into Ambrose's career, life, and personal reflections on his subjects.

View all my reviews

View all my reviews

1.3.20

Review: Going the Distance: The Life and Works of W.P. Kinsella

Going the Distance: The Life and Works of W.P. KinsellaGoing the Distance: The Life and Works of W.P. Kinsella by William Steele
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I’ve been a big Kinsella fan since I read his novels mixing magic realism and baseball, with locations very near to where I grew up. I read all his baseball books, and most of his Silas Ermineskin books. Certainly his characters were interesting, but the thought of local baseball becoming folklore really was the draw for me. Hearing stories about the irascible Kinsella added to the allure. What an interesting author to follow. In this biography, you learn about Kinsella’s life, including the many years he was not foremost an author. You learn of his youth, living with just his parents in remote rural Canada, lacking friends and likely building a strong imagination. Kinsella had a strong personality, and perhaps not surprisingly becomes a good salesman early in his career, then owns a pizzeria. Though writing throughout his life, he focuses on writing after profiting from his pizzeria. The book follows his career through his award-winning years and until his death.

On reflection, what you notice in this book is the extreme level of detail. The biography author had access to the author and was able to write in great details about things like classes, high school girlfriends, a substantial lovelife with quite a few partners, and book reviews. While I enjoyed this rare level of personal detail to some extent, there was quite a lot on his love life, more than I wanted to know. And he wasn't what I'd call a nice guy - he seemed to hate the people he worked for, especially college administrators. Describing him as a curmudgeon might by putting too light a touch on the subject, at least when it came to some areas like authority. I was also left with the feeling that the author used very few sources. Kinsella kept track of his life and his business of writing, and his wives (at least one of them) created substantial biographic and bibliographic references, including tracking book reviews and media mentions, many of which are discussed in this volume. What I didn’t notice was a lot of third party interviews related to the subject, and it feels like something is missing. If I had to guess, the author is an introvert, and this impacted the story he told, using Kinsella-provided written sources to an overwhelming extent. Despite that, this tells the story of a unique author. I found the story so varied that it kept my interest throughout. I liked the subject, and that kicked up my rating of the book.

A bonus to me is that the small college my daughter is attending, Augustana in Rock Island, hosted Kinsella during the summer after he wrote the novel that Field of Dreams was based on. Nice comment, and I missed it when it happened.

View all my reviews

View all my reviews

27.2.20

Review: The Optimistic Decade

The Optimistic DecadeThe Optimistic Decade by Heather Abel
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

“The Optimistic Decade” tells the story of a high plateau summer camp run as a kind of eco/spiritual Outward Bound. The book follows a number of characters:
- the camp director with the crazy idea to start the camp,
- a returning camper who realizes he want to be a part of the camp as his career,
- an idealistic new camp counselor, an activist student,
- the activist’s father, a failing radical newspaper publisher,
- the original owner of the land where the camp stands
- his son, a troubled young man making unlikely plans to take the land back
- various others, including funders, parents, current and former campers.

The book is written with chapters telling the story of the camp through different times, from the original creation of the camp through a current-day story (view spoiler) I listened to the audiobook version and found myself enjoying the descriptions of the camp and the land, but not really getting into the plot. I found it much like following a TV show through a few episodes, where the bad guys and the good guys are all kinda wimpy. Good production values, but the story felt too familiar, and with no one to root for. I was expecting something different.

View all my reviews



View all my reviews

Review: The Starbucks Experience: 5 Principles for Turning Ordinary Into Extraordinary

The Starbucks Experience: 5 Principles for Turning Ordinary Into Extraordinary The Starbucks Experience: 5 Principles for Turning Ordinary Into Extraordinary by Joseph A. Michelli
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I'm glad I read this book after reading Starbuck CEO Howard Schultz's book "Onward". The Schultz book covers the guiding priciples under which Starbucks operates - it's what they train their employees on. "Onward" gives a number of examples of these stories but goes much beyond, with quite a bit of company history. This book, "The Starbucks Experience", really dives into those guiding principles and provides a number of examples of how the company and its employees meet those principles in day-to-day business, really complimenting "Onward". With the variety of examples, I could see many ideas that could apply in my business life. This book met the two reasons I have to read a business book, to provide food for thought and to provide specific ideas to implement. Don't expect earthshattering revelations here, though. A lot of this is really summed up as taking responsibility and looking at the bigger picture. But who couldn't use some reminders and good examples of this? Nice book.

View all my reviews

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...