4.1.25

Review: The awakened eye: A companion volume to The Zen of seeing, seeing/drawing as meditation

The awakened eye: A companion volume to The Zen of seeing, seeing/drawing as meditation The awakened eye: A companion volume to The Zen of seeing, seeing/drawing as meditation by Frederick Franck
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Frank goes beyond his "The Seeing Eye", which describes his method to look at scenes and draw them quickly. Here, he describes how he teaches others, or attempts to teach others, how to do the same thing in a workshop format. He doesn't have a great success rate at this, but it is interesting in how he choses to present the material to the class and how he makes them practice.

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Review: Broken Glass: Mies Van Der Rohe, Edith Farnsworth, and the Fight Over a Modernist Masterpiece

Broken Glass: Mies Van Der Rohe, Edith Farnsworth, and the Fight Over a Modernist MasterpieceBroken Glass: Mies Van Der Rohe, Edith Farnsworth, and the Fight Over a Modernist Masterpiece by Alex Beam
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I visited the Farnsworth House a few years ago. I took the tour with a number of European and South American visitors, and, I believe, no other Americans. This was an interesting experience, to see an architectural icon (close to my home!) with only visitors from far away to appreciate it. To learn more about the drama involved in the building and the managing of the house (love affairs, lawsuits, money problems, flooding, headstrong architect vs headstrong doctor,...), this is the book.

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14.12.24

Review: Skeleton Man

Skeleton Man (Leaphorn  & Chee, #17)Skeleton Man by Tony Hillerman
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I actually quite enjoyed this one in Hillerman's series. I didn't give it 4 stars because there were some logical and character inconsistencies that puzzled me throughout the book, taking my mind off of the action, as well as dropped lines of action. Leaphorn plays a minor role here (well, he IS retired at this point) but he pulls his girlfriend in and you think the characters would reappear, but they just disappear from the story. This one was more to move forward on the Bernie and Chee romance, with some action thrown in. But it worked for me.

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24.11.24

Review: Washington Square

Washington Square Washington Square by Henry James
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I've found Henry James to be a bit overwhelming for my reading tastes, too many flowery phrases. Yet I find I remember parts of this book more than the other flowery books that I've read. I think it was because the story was tied to a particular house, and I related to having a house know my history, so to speak. I'll be trying another James, wish me luck...

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Review: Summerland

SummerlandSummerland by Michael Chabon
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

I had wanted to read this book for a long time. Chabon, Summer, Baseball, Fantasy -- what could go wrong? I found that I just wasn't into it, though. Perhaps it was because I read it in the fall, at the end of baseball season. The book felt too constructed to me, written to a specification. I did find myself very interested in some scenes, but the whole story - the connectedness of the scenes - just didn't grab me.

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Review: Poem a Day, Vol. 1

Poem a Day, Vol. 1Poem a Day, Vol. 1 by Nicholas Albery
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

It only took me about two and a half years to read this poem-a-day book. I'm not good at doing what people tell me, I guess. Instead of a daily read, I tended to read this in short chunks of a few days at a time. I appreciated the variety, although I enjoyed the more modern poets much more than the ones from centuries ago -- there were way too many of those classics in there. I enjoyed reading these, slowly. I was impressed to read in the foreword that many people would memorize a poem a day. That would be quite an accomplishment with this collection, with so many rare and/or dated words. But the poems are mostly one pagers, so memorizing might be more readily accomplished than longer poems. Overall, I enjoyed this but would have liked more modern and fewer classic poems...and maybe even more American poets -- this is the American version of a British poetry book, and some British poems were traded out for American poems, but not nearly enough for my liking...

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Review: Clete

Clete (Dave Robicheaux #24)Clete by James Lee Burke
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The most amazing part of this audiobook was that the narrator does Clete's voice with a gravelly texture. It has got to hurt his throat doing that voice. And here, he does it through almost the entire book. Kudos to Will Patton.

Strange thing is, now that we get into the mind of Clete, he's almost identical to Robicheaux in how he thinks and imagines. Clete spends a lot of time talking to Joan of Arc in between "investigating", which was very much like Dave seeing the Confederates every few chapters. I'm not sure it's a good thing that two friends seem to share the same mental issues, but that does explain why they are friends.

Typical Burke story, at least typical of the last several Robicheaux books. Burke still describes the oppressive atmosphere in the bayous and parishes of Louisiana and the supernatural visions that atmosphere can release, but it doesn't seem as steamy as it used to be.

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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...