DEAD WATER The Klindt Affair by Pat Gipple
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I don’t normally read true crime. I’m not a fan. But this book covered a murder near my hometown, a small town on the Mississippi. This murder and the trial took place mostly while I was attending college away from home, so I wasn’t entirely overloaded with news coverage of the events, like the locals were. My small hometown was also related directly with the crime, as the murderer dropped the dismembered victim’s body into the river upstream, and she was found downstream. So some of the events took place alongside my home town. There were so many jokes that people came up with about this murder, in particular from radio show hosts and kids, that I had to learn what it was all about. As I read through the book, I also learned that a high school classmate was a trial witness, so that came as a surprise to me. The book tells the story. It mostly follows the police investigation and the prosecuting attorney’s work to convict the chiropractor of murdering his wife. You also are given stories from the victim’s family and friends. This was very focused on the victim. After finishing the book, I felt I learned much more about the victim than the murderer. I won’t be going out of my way to read more true crime books, but this was what I was looking for in this case.
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25.6.21
Review: Side Hustle: From Idea to Income in 27 Days
Side Hustle: From Idea to Income in 27 Days by Chris Guillebeau
I began reading this book believing it would focus on examples of side hustles making money. Smartly, the author just included a few examples, and even repeated some examples within the text where it made sense. Instead of being a catalog, he made this much more a how-to for coming up with the idea, kicking off a side hustle project, and operating it. Topics include A-B testing, creating an origin story, and how to set pricing. I found many excellent, basic ideas for creating and operating side hustles that were useful. I have listened to more than 500 episodes of Guillebeau’s podcast “Side Hustle School”. He’s taken many of the lessons described in this series and put them in an order here that makes some sense. I liked the way that he organized his side hustle project methodology in a way that it could be presented as a calendar, although I found some of the days’ worth of work should often take much longer. Good book for the topic, at a practical, rule of thumb level.
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I began reading this book believing it would focus on examples of side hustles making money. Smartly, the author just included a few examples, and even repeated some examples within the text where it made sense. Instead of being a catalog, he made this much more a how-to for coming up with the idea, kicking off a side hustle project, and operating it. Topics include A-B testing, creating an origin story, and how to set pricing. I found many excellent, basic ideas for creating and operating side hustles that were useful. I have listened to more than 500 episodes of Guillebeau’s podcast “Side Hustle School”. He’s taken many of the lessons described in this series and put them in an order here that makes some sense. I liked the way that he organized his side hustle project methodology in a way that it could be presented as a calendar, although I found some of the days’ worth of work should often take much longer. Good book for the topic, at a practical, rule of thumb level.
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13.6.21
Review: My First Summer in the Sierra
My First Summer in the Sierra by John Muir
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Muir describes his tagging along with a group of sheep herds taking a flock of sheep up the mountains for a season to graze them on high grass. Muir tends to describe everything natural that he sees as beautiful, from flickers to squirrels to fir trees to black ants. He splits his time describing about everything he sees in equal measure, and includes some little stories if he can. The book is written in diary format, following the trip up, then back in the end. While mostly about nature, Muir also describes his travel companions, with the most ink given to his St. Bernard. He also describes the natives he runs across with as much detail as the nature he sees. By far the strangest anecdote was when Muir was seized with the thought that a former teacher was nearby. He hikes to the nearest city to find that in fact this professor was touring in the area, and he meets up with him. Muir believes it a telepathic connection, which seems out of place in this ode to nature.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Muir describes his tagging along with a group of sheep herds taking a flock of sheep up the mountains for a season to graze them on high grass. Muir tends to describe everything natural that he sees as beautiful, from flickers to squirrels to fir trees to black ants. He splits his time describing about everything he sees in equal measure, and includes some little stories if he can. The book is written in diary format, following the trip up, then back in the end. While mostly about nature, Muir also describes his travel companions, with the most ink given to his St. Bernard. He also describes the natives he runs across with as much detail as the nature he sees. By far the strangest anecdote was when Muir was seized with the thought that a former teacher was nearby. He hikes to the nearest city to find that in fact this professor was touring in the area, and he meets up with him. Muir believes it a telepathic connection, which seems out of place in this ode to nature.
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Review: Tetris: The Games People Play
Tetris: The Games People Play by Box Brown
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The history of the computer game Tetris. Tetris' creator was a researcher in an institute in Russia. The book covers the creator and his small team that built the graphic computer version and the virus-like spread of Tetris. But the bulk of the book is about the various companies that negotiated with the Russians for the rights to resell the game. As the Russians weren't used to this kind of business negotiation, the entire situation became a muddied mess involving European, Japanese, and American companies. Given this is a graphic book, the competing interests are all represented by people from the companies that did the negotiating. You get a sense of the different personalities. Interesting recent history, more about business than gaming.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The history of the computer game Tetris. Tetris' creator was a researcher in an institute in Russia. The book covers the creator and his small team that built the graphic computer version and the virus-like spread of Tetris. But the bulk of the book is about the various companies that negotiated with the Russians for the rights to resell the game. As the Russians weren't used to this kind of business negotiation, the entire situation became a muddied mess involving European, Japanese, and American companies. Given this is a graphic book, the competing interests are all represented by people from the companies that did the negotiating. You get a sense of the different personalities. Interesting recent history, more about business than gaming.
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12.6.21
Review: Polar Volume 1: Came from the Cold
Polar Volume 1: Came from the Cold by VĂctor Santos
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Entertaining use of red, black, and white, with red becoming blood through many panels of this violent artwork. I enjoyed the drawing of the highly stylized older secret agent. The story was pretty basic.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Entertaining use of red, black, and white, with red becoming blood through many panels of this violent artwork. I enjoyed the drawing of the highly stylized older secret agent. The story was pretty basic.
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Review: Moon Rush: The New Space Race
Moon Rush: The New Space Race by Leonard David
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Start with the historic version of events leading to the Apollo moon landings. Add interesting facts along the way. Add a survey of where we stand today, with other countries’ moves toward the moon, as well as new private corporations. Conjecture a little. You end up with a nice little book on the state of humanity’s moon exploration and plans for exploitation. I’d put the expiration on this book at about ten years, when enough has changed to require a rewrite. As I haven’t read much on space travel in decades, I found this a nice, mostly uplifting update.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Start with the historic version of events leading to the Apollo moon landings. Add interesting facts along the way. Add a survey of where we stand today, with other countries’ moves toward the moon, as well as new private corporations. Conjecture a little. You end up with a nice little book on the state of humanity’s moon exploration and plans for exploitation. I’d put the expiration on this book at about ten years, when enough has changed to require a rewrite. As I haven’t read much on space travel in decades, I found this a nice, mostly uplifting update.
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9.6.21
Review: The Growing Season: How I Saved an American Farm--And Built a New Life
The Growing Season: How I Saved an American Farm--And Built a New Life by Sarah Frey
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
My Dad grew up in small town Southern Illinois, but moved North for work (and love) after high school. We often vacationed to visit relatives in the South, and his hometown was often a topic of conversation. About when I was in college I noticed that my family knew a number of people that had become famous for different things from the area in the South. There was a few business founders, some politicians that held or ran for state office, an NBA hall of famer, and famous-at-the-time authors. So I am not surprised when someone from small town Southern Illinois makes something of themselves. That’s what this book documents.
I found this book because it was chosen by the suburban Chicago paper as their reading club selection, and the discussion was led by our local community college. They advertised it in a mailing of their events. I attended the lecture and discussion online before I read the book and found the author intriguing. The quick summary of the book is that the author grows up “dirt poor” (meaning she was from a poor family and they talk about dirt a lot, being farmers) with a father that wants to teach her to stand on her own, and with a number of older brothers that got into a lot of trouble, mostly the good, clean kind. The author learns these lessons, starts a business buying and selling melons, attends local community college, and starts growing her business to include her brothers and to start raising melons and pumpkins in farms across the country. And she does this from her headquarters on a farm near a small town in Southern Illinois, about 10 miles from where my uncle’s family lived and about 20 miles from where my Dad grew up. There must be something in the water that makes a handful of folks stand out.
I liked the story overall. The anecdotes related to growing up and to making those first deals were interesting, and you can tell that that was how the author intended this book to be sold – as a story about a kid who starts from little and bootstraps herself into a big business. The book is not a denigration of her hometown. It's more Horatio Alger story than Hillbilly Elegy. I found this aspect interesting and worth reading. The author comes across with a personality a lot like, say, Dolly Parton, but with watermelon trading instead of music driving her forward.
I also tend to read a lot of business books, and given that this was about a business I was hoping for some details about her business. You don’t really get any indication of how her business relates to her competition, if her company always battles big food wholesalers, how big the company even is. There is also a mention of Frey’s negotiating skills in the book blurb, saying that she is such a good negotiator that Harvard made a case study out of her skills. You would assume this would be a main topic in this book. What she says is that she happened to drive past a new Walmart warehouse/office the day it opened and stopped by to introduce herself to a buyer, who happened to be there. That is the episode that she says led to the Harvard case study. I have to wonder if Harvard made a mistake, or if Frey is being coy. If this book was intended to be a business book, you would have had this question answered, and there would have been a reference to the case study. There is none here. This is a personal narrative that happens to involve a business. I'd give it an A as a personal narrative, and a C+ as a business book. This book opens a lot of opportunities for the author (politics? business celebrity? food celebrity?). I expect to see her again.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
My Dad grew up in small town Southern Illinois, but moved North for work (and love) after high school. We often vacationed to visit relatives in the South, and his hometown was often a topic of conversation. About when I was in college I noticed that my family knew a number of people that had become famous for different things from the area in the South. There was a few business founders, some politicians that held or ran for state office, an NBA hall of famer, and famous-at-the-time authors. So I am not surprised when someone from small town Southern Illinois makes something of themselves. That’s what this book documents.
I found this book because it was chosen by the suburban Chicago paper as their reading club selection, and the discussion was led by our local community college. They advertised it in a mailing of their events. I attended the lecture and discussion online before I read the book and found the author intriguing. The quick summary of the book is that the author grows up “dirt poor” (meaning she was from a poor family and they talk about dirt a lot, being farmers) with a father that wants to teach her to stand on her own, and with a number of older brothers that got into a lot of trouble, mostly the good, clean kind. The author learns these lessons, starts a business buying and selling melons, attends local community college, and starts growing her business to include her brothers and to start raising melons and pumpkins in farms across the country. And she does this from her headquarters on a farm near a small town in Southern Illinois, about 10 miles from where my uncle’s family lived and about 20 miles from where my Dad grew up. There must be something in the water that makes a handful of folks stand out.
I liked the story overall. The anecdotes related to growing up and to making those first deals were interesting, and you can tell that that was how the author intended this book to be sold – as a story about a kid who starts from little and bootstraps herself into a big business. The book is not a denigration of her hometown. It's more Horatio Alger story than Hillbilly Elegy. I found this aspect interesting and worth reading. The author comes across with a personality a lot like, say, Dolly Parton, but with watermelon trading instead of music driving her forward.
I also tend to read a lot of business books, and given that this was about a business I was hoping for some details about her business. You don’t really get any indication of how her business relates to her competition, if her company always battles big food wholesalers, how big the company even is. There is also a mention of Frey’s negotiating skills in the book blurb, saying that she is such a good negotiator that Harvard made a case study out of her skills. You would assume this would be a main topic in this book. What she says is that she happened to drive past a new Walmart warehouse/office the day it opened and stopped by to introduce herself to a buyer, who happened to be there. That is the episode that she says led to the Harvard case study. I have to wonder if Harvard made a mistake, or if Frey is being coy. If this book was intended to be a business book, you would have had this question answered, and there would have been a reference to the case study. There is none here. This is a personal narrative that happens to involve a business. I'd give it an A as a personal narrative, and a C+ as a business book. This book opens a lot of opportunities for the author (politics? business celebrity? food celebrity?). I expect to see her again.
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