30.8.19

Review: The Courage to Be Disliked: How to Free Yourself, Change Your Life, and Achieve Real Happiness

The Courage to Be Disliked: How to Free Yourself, Change Your Life, and Achieve Real Happiness The Courage to Be Disliked: How to Free Yourself, Change Your Life, and Achieve Real Happiness by Ichiro Kishimi
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Nice introduction to Adlerian psychology. The format, a Socratic dialog/debate, lent itself to building a broad base of understanding while allowing some topics to have deeper discussion. Having no prior knowledge of Adler’s thinking, I found this very interesting, and worthy of further investigation. I found the fiction of the discussion, much like Goldratt’s “The Goal”, was not great literature, but succeeded in getting the story across in a readable way. The young questioner was annoying, but not unlike others I have known.

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27.8.19

Review: Financially Forward: How to Hack Your Wallet in the Digital Age

Financially Forward: How to Hack Your Wallet in the Digital Age Financially Forward: How to Hack Your Wallet in the Digital Age by Alexa Von Tobel
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

I picked this up because it looked like it covered interesting topics, was by someone I had heard of, was short, and was showcased at our local Barnes and Noble. This promised to analyze the current crop of fintech tools. Since I use some of these tools, and I’m always looking for better, this was promising. After reading this, I was a bit underwhelmed. This book meanders all over the place within personal finance. There are basic definitions, some intro to planning, trends in personal finance, pointers on raising financially aware children, and the future of blockchain. Having read quite a few personal finance books, I found that this wasn’t really written for me. I did get something out of it though – the author includes a list of apps and services that are currently available. Some I heard of, some I use. The author also tags the large number of these services where she is an investor. Given she has spread her investments around this arena, you might think this book was written to help “advertise” these services, and there is a feel that this is part of the purpose of the book, given the focus on some of the lesser known highlighted apps. I often don’t appreciate books that are written as advertisements, but given the topic this is interesting and has some value, if only to increase awareness. Probably a better question is whether this book provides value to readers that are new to personal finance and planning. The author covers some of the basics, with advice aimed at the uninitiated, so it probably isn’t a bad book to read early in your learning. So for newbies, not a bad read. For more experienced readers, more of a skim or a skip.

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26.8.19

Review: Planet of Exile

Planet of Exile Planet of Exile by Ursula K. Le Guin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I enjoyed the writing, but the story seemed quite minimal. It’s a ‘humans team with aliens to combat others’ story that has great backstory and great descriptions, and a kind of twist in the beginning, but one where the story kind of fizzled. Without that twist, this would have been a very traditional high adventure combat story with heroes and villains, one that Le Guin would have done well with, but not her cup of tea. Instead, we get a tiny bit of a love story that changes planetary history. There is still adventure and battle against overwhelming odds, but it seemed lessened given the arc of the story. The ending seems to have been a convenient way to wrap up the novel quickly. This felt too manufactured. But again, the world-building writing was quite interesting. You felt the story was written in the 60s, with the questioning of a declining society and dealing with inter-speciel (?) relationships. This felt of its time.

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25.8.19

Review: Code Name: Lise

Code Name: Lise Code Name: Lise by Larry Loftis
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

A real-life spy story that includes the details and the failures as much as the adventure. In fact, if you look at how the story goes, (view spoiler)

The writing reminded me of the youth non-fiction books I would read from the elementary school library, a simple style. The author ended each chapter with a kind of “perils of Pauline” cliff hanger statement. I was hoping for something more refined. Overall, an interesting story, though not what I was expecting, and written in too simple a style. Perhaps this would have been better broken up into 3 books: a love story, a spycraft story, and a separate story of the imprisonment.


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Review: Invisible Ink: My Mother's Love Affair With A Famous Cartoonist

Invisible Ink: My Mother's Love Affair With A Famous Cartoonist Invisible Ink: My Mother's Love Affair With A Famous Cartoonist by Bill Griffith
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I am a fan of Zippy, Griffith’s surreal comix character, and I hoped that this autobiographical graphic work would be in the same vein. It is. Griffith tells the story of his mother’s long affair with a well known cartoonist that he didn’t know about. Ends up his mother worked for said cartoonist, and Griffith’s father was a bit of a loner type. Griffith tells the story of finding out about the affair and doing his own detective work to try to figure out how this happened. He also tells, and better, shows what he thinks might have happened if he knew this when he was a young and impressionable cartoonist. Much like a deep-thought Zippy strip, Griffith illustrates in a different style reflecting the teachings of the elder cartoonist. I really enjoyed that Griffith was able to share some of his deepest thoughts about this unknown aspect of his mother’s life, in writing and drawing. Some of the story, like meeting with his uncle at the beginning and end of the book, felt a bit forced, but otherwise, quite an interesting glimpse into Griffith’s head.

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22.8.19

Review: Geophysics: A Very Short Introduction

Geophysics: A Very Short Introduction Geophysics: A Very Short Introduction by William Lowrie
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Imagine a science textbook that is chock full of math. Now remove all the math, but leave behind a preponderance of term definitions. That is what you get here. I found the onslaught of geophysics terms to overwhelm my listening to this audiobook. Perhaps audio wasn’t the best medium for this type of book. I quickly lost the connections between, for instance, the variety of named waves rippling through the earth at any point in time, or the counterbalancing twisting that the earth experiences. Were I studying this topic, I can see how this presentation might have helped crystalize meaning, but as a more casual observer I wouldn’t recommend it. I did enjoy the breadth of topics covered, including measurements of earthquakes and volcanoes as well as distances in outer space. A quick read provides some familiarity with the terms and the concepts involved in this branch of science and I suspect would help when starting to study this topic. Interesting bit: the author uses as a measurement of the rate at which huge objects are moving in relation to each other (think tectonic plates or the earth and moon) as “about as fast as fingernails grow”. A great analogy.

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Review: Knots: Stories

Knots: Stories Knots: Stories by Gunnhild Øyehaug
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A quick, playful series of stories and bits that loosely related to how people are tied together. I really enjoyed the voice of the author, found the humor in the stories to my liking, and would look for others written by the author.

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21.8.19

Review: The Power of Zero, Revised and Updated: How to Get to the 0% Tax Bracket and Transform Your Retirement

The Power of Zero, Revised and Updated: How to Get to the 0% Tax Bracket and Transform Your Retirement The Power of Zero, Revised and Updated: How to Get to the 0% Tax Bracket and Transform Your Retirement by David McKnight
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is one of those books that was created to try to sell you something. In this case, it’s trying to convince the reader that they have an issue with their savings plan, and that there is a way to pay zero taxes that only a few rich people currently know about. The solution involves using a variation on life insurance. You’ve been warned.

I actually thought the first part of the book, which lays out the forecast of much higher income tax rates in the US and the impact on different retirement savings vehicles, was interesting, if lacking in detail. The author conveniently ignores things like capital gains tax and dividend taxes that are currently at a lower rate than income taxes, and I suspect that will be the case even if his forecast of tax increases occur. And he ignores other tax planning schemes that those rich life insurance owners also avail themselves of, like trusts and corporations. I would agree that tax rates can, and likely will rise from where they are now. And some thought should go into investors tax planning due to that eventuality.

So the problem statement is a good story. But what of the offered solution? The author focuses on the scheme of buying specific life insurance policies that have “additional features” (and when you read additional features, you correctly think additional costs) that allow for additional investment, borrowing your invested money without repayment, and use as a long term care annuity. It’s described a lot like Saturday Night Live skit: it’s a floor wax and a dessert topping. As you read, you want to evaluate this product. But alas, the author really provides no details, instead begging off because there are hundreds of different policies with different costs and different benefits. You can’t even validate the claim that you can live off the proceeds of your savings without paying taxes, because there’s not enough detail, even in the chapter length “case study”. Your only recourse is to visit your local insurance broker. Not surprisingly, the author mentions that the book became a hot seller when insurance agents bought them to give to their prospects. Go figure.

When I read a book that is written as advertising material, I tread lightly. I look to see if there is any value beyond getting informed on some new product. Here, the value I received with in the initial problem description forecasting increasing taxes. I already understand this issue, but it was interesting to read someone else’s take on it. My second takeaway was the reminder that this kind of life insurance product exists. If the need arises while I’m managing my investments, I’ll know my insurance guy will have something to sell me. He always does.


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20.8.19

Review: Palaces for the People: How Social Infrastructure Can Help Fight Inequality, Polarization, and the Decline of Civic Life

Palaces for the People: How Social Infrastructure Can Help Fight Inequality, Polarization, and the Decline of Civic Life Palaces for the People: How Social Infrastructure Can Help Fight Inequality, Polarization, and the Decline of Civic Life by Eric Klinenberg
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I was most interested in this book as I understood from cursory jacket blurb glimpsing that it focused on local public libraries. It did in early chapters, but the author also took chapters to discuss the public good related to public buildings of all kinds, including sports arenas, government office buildings, park buildings and the like. He even extended his targets, digressing into pubs and office building lobbies as “palaces for the people”. About half way through the book, the author turned it into a book about climate change, and spent much of the second half of the book describing how social infrastructure can help in times of disaster and in bringing people together to solve problems. By the end of the book, I felt the climate change “storyline” had been overdone. Overall, I enjoyed the various anecdotes of what ended up being a light read, but I didn’t add much to what I expected.

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19.8.19

Review: Life on Purpose: How Living for What Matters Most Changes Everything

Life on Purpose: How Living for What Matters Most Changes Everything Life on Purpose: How Living for What Matters Most Changes Everything by Victor J. Strecher
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The book blurb makes this sound like something new and “ground breaking”. It really wasn’t, although it did have its good parts and overall I thought it provided positive advice on becoming more focused in your life. I thought this would be one of the more philosophical self-help books, and it started that way with deep-thought advice on finding a purpose in life. But it then took a dogleg turn to living a more healthy life, with pointers on diet and rest. The overall effect was more like reading a health guru than a behavior guru, not that that’s bad, but It didn’t quite jibe with my blurb-based expectations. I found the advice affirming enough, and I would add these to the pile of like-minded books that provide a mental energy refill reinforcing continual growth.

I’ll note a couple of points that I thought were very well done with this book. The author’s voice, his choice of words and the anecdotes he shares were very easy to listen to and agreeable. His anchor anecdotes are about his daughter’s struggle with health issues, and this was very compelling, emotional writing. I listened on audio and found myself sitting in my car in a parking lot to focus on listening to these stories. Having daughters similar in age to the author’s, this hit home. Lastly, I listened to the audio version of this book, narrated by R.C. Bray. The narrator’s voice is deep and gravelly, his pace is slow and thoughtful. I’ve listened to others done by Bray (“The Martian”, “Fat City”) and here he speaks slower and deeper. He comes across as a kind of a voice of wisdom, ala Sam Elliott, with some knowing humor. The narration made this book better.


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16.8.19

Review: Iconic Advantage®: Don't Chase the New, Innovate the Old

Iconic Advantage®: Don't Chase the New, Innovate the Old Iconic Advantage®: Don't Chase the New, Innovate the Old by Soon Yu
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Simple, often to the point of repetitiveness. When you think of iconic brands, you often think of products that everyone knows. I appreciated that this book spends a lot of ink considering iconic service as well. The book provides guidance and examples of how many companies have positioned their products or their services as iconic, including discussion of some tactics that are not universally cheered (such as being a proponent of celebrity endorsements). Interesting, especially for those aspiring marketers whose products and services could be managed into this level of market recognition.

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13.8.19

Review: Chances Are. . .

Chances Are. . . Chances Are. . . by Richard Russo
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Another Russo book, and after a long stretch without, I feel like I’m reading a book written by and for a grown up. I really enjoy the way Russo writes, and what struck me here was Russo drilling into the thoughts of the main characters. It’s almost like time slows down so that Russo can relate those inner thoughts which feel a lot like my own inner thoughts – often questioning my own actions and motives after the fact. I found these characters quite relatable. Russo plays around with time in this one with the story told in part in flashback to various times and characters, so that you really feel the passage of time and its impact on the players. I also enjoyed the story, and the slight twist at the end left this one with hope. I look forward to the next.

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9.8.19

Review: Unmasked: A Memoir

Unmasked: A Memoir Unmasked: A Memoir by Andrew Lloyd Webber
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

There are a lot of interesting tidbits that I learned from reading Lloyd Webber’s book. You understand somewhat the chronology of the music and the productions he has been involved in. I say “somewhat” because the author seems to have always been working on multiple projects at the same time, and each project had its own life, sometimes changing along the way (think “Evita”, with multiple production timelines around the world, movie considerations, prototype album, and changes in music as time goes on). The changes in a production over time were one of those things I never much thought of, but there are a lot of things going on. Lloyd Webber comes across as quite detail oriented when it came to his music, and I found it interesting to read what he found important in creating his work. I also found this book interesting in documenting the author as a young man, starting with many privileges based on his family and at times focusing on art, at times focusing on business, and at times focusing on his lovelife and his family life. He comes across as being even handed, telling good and bad in these areas of his life. At times, though, this feels forced, like the story is being changed. With many autobiographies that I’ve read, and I have read a large number of them, I feel I get a good opinion of the author, and can understand the subject and feel that he is familiar. I don’t feel that way after reading this. Lloyd Webber feels quite foreign. I can’t determine if it is the English upbringing he describes, his lucrative artistic career (isn’t that an oxymoron?), or his wives with the same name that felt exotic to me – probably everything. Mix in a healthy dollop of Thomas the Tank Engine and historic church architecture and you get this book. Note that it even ends strangely. On audio, Lloyd Webber himself introduces the book but lets a professional narrator read the text. Lloyd Webber comes back right at the end and warns the listener that he’s realized that he’s got more to tell, so he’ll continue in another, as-yet-unwritten book. It's kind of like going to a one hour talk about some fellow’s vacation and having him tell you after 2 hours that he’s only half way done. Overall, I feel I learned something, and was mildly entertained, but it wasn’t what I was expecting.

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6.8.19

Review: My Daddy Was a Pistol and I'm a Son of a Gun

My Daddy Was a Pistol and I'm a Son of a Gun My Daddy Was a Pistol and I'm a Son of a Gun by Lewis Grizzard
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

When I reviewed Grizzard’s later “Shoot Low Boys – They’re Ridin’ Shetland Ponies” I found that book was a collection of what appeared to be newspaper columns Grizzard had written earlier, then pasted together with some introductory material and a bit of loose thematic organization. I was expecting much the same from this effort, focused on his father and their relationship. This was different. Instead of a collection of columns, this appeared more an entire book written to the subject. This was good, and author Grizzard injected his humor along the way, playing up the strange character that was his father. Another thing I noticed about Grizzard’s writing is that he knows how to pull the heartstrings when he wants to. He does that here, judiciously. It had to be done judiciously, as Grizzard’s father was a flawed individual, with a past as a war hero and an ability to ingratiate himself with others, but with a knack for borrowing money and disappearing, and a weakness for drink. Grizzard’s father answered to his demons, making him not fully a character for pity. Everything we are told is through the author’s eyes. You feel more for poor young Louis than his father. Yet Grizzard is portrayed as a Southern character, with musical abilities that allowed him to wheedle free food from churches after singing some hymns, while calling himself “Major” even though he was discharged not honorably at a lower rank. In the end, you realize this was son Grizzard’s story of trying to understand his father. It shouldn’t surprise you that he’s not much closer by the end of the book. Major Grizzard was too overwhelming a character to understand. I liked the writing, I liked the descriptions of how Grizzard’s father lived (what a character), but I hoped to find growth beyond expected forgiveness and it wasn’t in the story.

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5.8.19

Review: Hadrian's Wall

Hadrian's Wall Hadrian's Wall by Adrian Goldsworthy
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I took this book on knowing nothing about Hadrian’s Wall. I found it interesting in the level of detail – not too much, not too little. There’s not a lot of detail known about the wall. There are the measurements and descriptions of the wall from current times. There are mentions of the wall in historical documents, as well as the soldiers that patrolled the wall and the townspeople that supported the soldiers. There is plenty of conjecture about the wall’s use – not so much a defense for battle but a way to slow down attackers and force traffic through toll gates. I enjoyed that story, as well as the descriptions of Legionnaires in the society at the time of the wall. I listened on audio. I believe reading the book, assuming it had good pictures, would be more worthwhile, but on audio you still get the descriptions.

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Review: Slow Travel: Escape the Grind and Explore the World

Slow Travel: Escape the Grind and Explore the World Slow Travel: Escape the Grind and Explore the World by Jennifer M. Sparks
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This short travel book focused on the planning aspects of long-term travel. The author speaks from experience, having gone on a number of multi-month trips she relates here. If anything, her trip descriptions are just background here, as the focus is on the planning of extended trips. The author provides some useful ideas on deciding what you want to get out of travel, deciding where to go, affording extended trips, preparing your home and career for absence, packing, and more. The author provides short checklists here, but they are mostly quite high-level “did you think about” items and not the kind of checklist with details. Overall, a good overview of planning for extended trips, with a balance of example and how-to suggestions.

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1.8.19

Review: Forlorn River

Forlorn River Forlorn River by Zane Grey
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I picked up Grey’s popular “Nevada”, but when I found it was a sequel to this book, I decided to read them in order. In “Forlorn River”, I was treated with a story about as I expected. Grey’s writing is more modern than I expected in this 1926 Western. Less of the flowery prose of some of Grey’s other stories, this seemed more direct. Grey did have a tendency to latch on to a word and re-use it to excess – the word of this book is “ejaculated”, in the non-porn sense. Listening to this on audio, I was glad I was using my headphones. The story was typical Western fare, with honor and coyboying along side romance with the rancher’s daughter, who in this book just got back from college. The characters were well written and acted their parts. It was disappointing to see the token Indian treated much like a minor character, doing things for unsatisfactorily explained reasons, and disappearing entirely while apparently on-stage and part of the action near the end. And the plot seemed too contrived at places – the hero conveniently does exactly the wrong thing at the wrong time here to generate the climax. I found the naivety unappealing for an otherwise winning character. The narrator in the version of the audiobook I listened to, Jack Sondericker, did a good job with the various voices, best with hero Ben and his group. All told, I found it an enjoyable story and I look forward to reading more from Grey.

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Review: The Transparency Sale: How Unexpected Honesty and Understanding the Buying Brain Can Transform Your Results

The Transparency Sale: How Unexpected Honesty and Understanding the Buying Brain Can Transform Your Results The Transparency Sale: How Unexpected Honesty and Understanding the Buying Brain Can Transform Your Results by Todd Caponi
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I’ve worked in technical sales for almost two decades now, and I’ve been involved in many sales cycles. I liked “The Transparency Sale” because it agrees with what I’ve seen, and takes the best practices a little farther than many other sales books I’ve read. The author suggests calling out early in the sales process your own product’s weaknesses. I’ve found this counterintuitive with most sales managers and account managers I’ve worked with, who hope to eliminate any discussion of perceived weaknesses. I buy the author’s tact of starting with this discussion to build trust. When I’ve been in talks that start this way, the sales process went much more smoothly. I also appreciate the author’s additional points, including getting in front of contract terms negotiations and using references. I’ve taken many classes on creating and giving good technical demonstrations, appealing to limbic thinking in our prospects, and I appreciate those learnings, but they often stand alone, unconnected with the bigger sales process orchestration. Caponi’s book makes a good companion to those demo processes in order to think about the overall sales and account management process in an integrated way. Good read.

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Review: Foundation

Foundation by Isaac Asimov My rating: 3 of 5 stars I decided to read the Foundation novels in chronological order, and before this...