24.4.22

Review: The Speckled Beauty: A Dog and His People

The Speckled Beauty: A Dog and His PeopleThe Speckled Beauty: A Dog and His People by Rick Bragg
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The titular subject of Rick Bragg’s most recent family story is not a blood relative, but a found stray dog. Bragg describes his dog Speck, short for “Speckled Beauty”, with many of the same traits as he previously described his relatives, sharing hard-headedness, a reflective outlook on life, love of the land, and loyalty. It’s a grand story of a dog. It’s also the story of illness and aging. Bragg compares Speck’s aging and mellowing and medical issues with the people that populate the story, including the author, his mother, and his brother. You strongly sense Bragg focusing on the declining years here, and it adds a weight to the story that Speck can at times counteract through canine adventures. I got the feeling near the end of the book that Bragg really wanted to write a book about his older brother, who was facing medical issues and decline, but didn’t want Bragg to write about him. This might end up being the book on Bragg’s brother as well as his dog. Due to the many medical stories, this book feels melancholier than his other family stories, but the writing is memorable and enjoyable. And Southern. (view spoiler)

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14.4.22

Review: Snowman in Flames

Snowman in Flames (Perry Rhodan - English, #25)Snowman in Flames by Clark Darlton
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I grew up in a small, rural town on the Mississippi River. Our town of 1200 had a small, one-room public library, and I tended to read a lot. I quickly ran out of books there. My parents would take me to the city library about a half hour away to get additional books. The closest library also invested in a different sort of book than was available locally. One example was Perry Rhodan books. Rhodan is a German pulp science fiction character with many episodes in Germany, and 50 years ago they started releasing American versions of the stories in mass market paperback. I would get five at a time and read them, sharing them with my cousin. We must have read dozens back then.

Now, with new free time available, I thought I would try reading some of these again, about 50 years after I began. I found a few at a bookstore in Columbia, Missouri and #25, Snowman in Flames, is the first I’ve read in at least 45 years. I may have read it when in Elementary school, I don’t remember. The story was pretty much what I generically remembered about the series. There were interesting characters and the authors dived into these characters in places. There was a lot of action. There was a lot of discussing what had happened in earlier episodes. It was very sexist in a 60s way – the women were portrayed as scared and as girlfriends of the other characters, despite being research scientists. It ended abruptly, without the final battle described, as if the author had hit his word count goal for the book and called it done. It was poorly edited, or at least poorly typeset, with lots of incorrect words. And I enjoyed it quite a bit as a reminder of my pre-teen days.

I had forgotten that the books in these series had the main story, but also some additional sci-fi stories, movie reviews, letters, and artwork. I also forgot the staple of these mass market paperbacks, a bound in advertisement for True cigarettes. Quite a time machine.


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Review: The Rosie Project

The Rosie ProjectThe Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

I read this based on a Bill Gates recommendation, if I remember correctly. Cute, but while the character seemed familiar at times, at times his actions felt unrealistic. The writing felt a little too forced at times. I won't be putting the sequels high on my toread list.

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Review: How Much Can I Spend in Retirement?: A Guide to Investment-Based Retirement Income Strategies

How Much Can I Spend in Retirement?: A Guide to Investment-Based Retirement Income StrategiesHow Much Can I Spend in Retirement?: A Guide to Investment-Based Retirement Income Strategies by Wade Pfau
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I’d call this a situational review of Wade Pfau’s wonderfully insightful book on different schemes for milking your investments during your golden years of retirement. Here’s my situation – I’ve planned for an early retirement for most of my career, and found myself pretty well positioned for it financially when my employer provided that last not-so-gentle nudge leaving me unemployed during the pandemic. Thank you sir, may I have another. But while my buckets of investments are roughly right, those buckets are disorganized. This, on occasion, leads me to thoughts of personal financial peril and thoughts of ruin. It was during one of these low times when I found Pfau’s book and dived in.

First, it should be noted that this is often categorized as a business book, or for those with more refined classifications, as a personal finance or retirement book. I am here to tell you that in my reading it was better classified as horror. Pfau follows the typical horror book method. He begins by laying out a typical retirement financial planning scenario, one that I felt was very familiar to my own. He then starts knocking away at the foundations of that plan, pointing out how unrealistic this part was, and that part, and how history was up for interpretation, and by the end of his introductory sections, I knew that I had been horribly mistaken to think for one minute that I could ever stop working for “the man”. I found myself reading this section faster and faster, not wanting to believe the often simple math and the conservative takes on historical market numbers and trends. My blood pressure and heart rate rose, despite good drugs to counter. By the middle of the book, the story took on a more academic feel, where Pfau devoted chapters to working on different withdrawal schemes. There are a lot of these, and not all ones that I was overly familiar with from other books and articles I had read. The author defined his topics well and provided insightful commentary at a level deeper than most personal finance books. Reading these sections was when, like in a good horror story, I started to see seeds of hope. By understanding the attributes and the outcomes of these different withdrawal schemes, you could see that there was a way to limit your risks of failure and to limit the negative impacts to your life along the way. I could suddenly see a path that led, strangely, right to how I always thought I would handle my retirement investment withdrawals, and they made sense. So while starting like a horror book, it ended up more positive, like a self help tome. I can only hope that Pfau didn’t plan on this coming across as a horror book, where the foolish bit player thinks he’s eliminated the evil, only to be surprised by that evil’s resurgence hinted at in the conclusion. I didn’t get the Stephen King vibe at the end here, so I believe I am safe. Knock wood.

I should also add here that I see this as being a personal take on the book. I don’t expect a majority of readers would feel the same about this book, as they probably haven’t had the same kinds of long-standing financial thought experiments on this topic as I’ve had, often driven by overheard snippets of commentary from CNBC playing in the background. I’ll admit I can be obsessive. But I found Pfau’s book a good balm for my self-inflicted financial trauma. And once I work up enough psychological wellness on this topic, I’ll take on another of Pfau’s books with the hopes that it comes across as just a good finance book. Five stars for me, your mileage may vary.


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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...