24.1.19

Review: The President Is Missing

The President Is Missing The President Is Missing by Bill Clinton
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Like a Dan Brown book, on steroids, with a plot that makes less sense. There’s a lot of action, and with short chapters, this really goes quickly. Except when it gets to trying to explain the technology behind the threat-to-the-world, it bogs down and gets confusingly written very quickly in an attempt to oversimplify for a mass readership. Technology description is like quicksand here, sounding fake and falsely simple. I was anticipating reading of interesting or believable location or process descriptions about the president and his world, but this was generic D.C thriller. You can’t sense Clinton’s hand on the book here until the tacked-on winner’s monologue at the end of the book – spouting policy initiatives that a president with a high favorable rating could attempt to accomplish. I was quite underwhelmed by the story, but kudos for using Dennis Quaid to read the president’s parts of the audiobook – good casting for a president who’s also an action hero.

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23.1.19

Review: Walden on Wheels: On the Open Road from Debt to Freedom

Walden on Wheels: On the Open Road from Debt to Freedom Walden on Wheels: On the Open Road from Debt to Freedom by Ken Ilgunas
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I chose to read this book because it sounded like an interesting story of a young man who decides to live in a van. Given a short look at the book description and subtitle, it seemed this also would discuss getting out of debt. This seemed to be a very practical direction for a book like this to take, as opposed to another tact, a philosophical review of living in a vehicle. That word “Walden” in the title suggested this might be more philosophical and less practical, but the descriptions seemed to lean toward a practical memoir. Approaching the book this way, I was not looking for wisdom, I was just looking for a good story by a young author. That’s what I got. I’ve noticed reviews that pillory the author for being a self-centered person, finding fault with every one he meets. I saw some of that, but I believe that that is how many young people think. In talking to my nephews, of a similar age to the author, I see the same attempts to “figure out” people and situations, often from a self-centered perspective, and often ending with self-satisfaction in the analysis. That’s what I found here, albeit with an interesting story about the author’s jobs in Alaska, none of which involved a van. In fact, beside a short introductory anecdote, the author doesn’t live in a van until the last third of the book. This didn’t end up being about living in a van.

Instead, this is about an almost paranoid response to having debt. The author frets about his (and his friend’s) student loan debt throughout the book. He decides early on to eliminate his debt as quickly as possible and to not take on more debt for continuing education. He does this through cheap living, low-wage jobs, and a rapid debt repayment schedule. By the time the author decides to return to school and live in a van, he has saved enough to only need free housing for a semester, which is where that van comes in. But of course, the van isn’t free, so the reader wonders if living with roommates would have been as inexpensive. The author ends up writing an article about his van living arrangements, and seems to decide he needs to keep the van despite having the resources to rent his own place. This is an odd choice, not well explained, but I suspect he had decided to write a book about his experiences around that time. Another thing that I was looking for but never found was a discussion about taking on debt for home buying. The author never discusses this, but he seems so opposed to the idea of debt that he will never hold a mortgage.

As a story about a young college graduate rapidly eliminating debt while working interesting jobs, many outdoors and in Alaska, this is a very good story. It’s also interesting in a voyeuristic way to see the lengths the author goes through to avoid spending money. I wouldn’t approach the book expecting great wisdom, though, or a commonly repeatable tightwad-like lifestyle. This seems quite extreme and, in the end, kind of silly.


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22.1.19

Review: The 100: Count ONLY Sugar Calories and Lose Up to 18 Lbs. in 2 Weeks

The 100: Count ONLY Sugar Calories and Lose Up to 18 Lbs. in 2 Weeks The 100: Count ONLY Sugar Calories and Lose Up to 18 Lbs. in 2 Weeks by Jorge Cruise
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

I don’t read diet books, but I found this short audiobook at the library, and thought I would try one. I probably picked the wrong one. The audiobook covered about what I expected. Of the three CDs in the set, the first two went over what the author finds wrong with other diets. The third CD covered the diet, which really was to limit (specific) sugar-based calories to 100 per day. Sounds like a lot of work if you are tracking these things manually. Unfortunately, the publishers of this audiobook decided that three entire chapters would be withheld from audio, and only made available as PDFs. The publishers apparently forgot that people buy audiobooks in order to listen to them, not to read them. While there is certainly some content that is better read than listened to, and in this case that might have been these chapters that actually gave details on how this diet works through recipes and menus, I was left after finishing the audiobook unable to determine if the author had a point or not. For all I know, he could have told you to only eat eye of newt. In cases where the content may be unsuitable for audio, generally where there are long lists, extensive photos or charts, or recipes or Web URLs, publishers would do their readers a favor by providing an audio summary of the extracted content. Authors really should push back if the audio production of their work gets this kind of treatment. The format of this CD set should be listed as partial e-text with abridged audio. Book was going to rate between 1 and 3 stars if I could have listened to all of it, but the audio version gets a 1.

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Review: The Million Dollar Writer: How to Have a Legitimate - and Lucrative - Career as a Writer

The Million Dollar Writer: How to Have a Legitimate - and Lucrative - Career as a Writer The Million Dollar Writer: How to Have a Legitimate - and Lucrative - Career as a Writer by Richard Gallagher
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Like many other “how to make money writing” books out there. This one suggests focusing on a specialty area of writing, like for technical documentation or writing for trade magazines or for online company marketing efforts. Also describes the author’s ghostwriting practice, but suggests it is very difficult to enter this market. I found the writing was fine, and the stories interesting, making this one of the better of the bunch.

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Review: The Age of Cryptocurrency: How Bitcoin and Digital Money Are Challenging the Global Economic Order

The Age of Cryptocurrency: How Bitcoin and Digital Money Are Challenging the Global Economic Order The Age of Cryptocurrency: How Bitcoin and Digital Money Are Challenging the Global Economic Order by Paul Vigna
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A history of money begins this book on cryptocurrency. Following the history (and interesting philosophy discussion about the meaning of value), the book drills into the history of cryptocurrency and the use of blockchain technology to track its use. The author takes what could be a technical subject and gives just enough description to help non-technical readers understand what is going on when they hear these terms. The book provides a lot of recent history on cryptocurrency, including magazine-style profiles of many leading figures in the industry. Many of the ups and downs of the value of cryptocurrency and attempts at regulation are documented. The book ends with a discussion of the future of cryptocurrency. Written in a popular style, not academic. Good for those wanting a readable introduction.

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21.1.19

Review: Retire Securely: Insights on Money Management from an Award-Winning Financial Columnist

Retire Securely: Insights on Money Management from an Award-Winning Financial Columnist Retire Securely: Insights on Money Management from an Award-Winning Financial Columnist by Julie Jason
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Jason has provided a compilation of articles she has written on personal finance topics, organized by theme. I am well read in popular personal finance and retirement planning books, and a majority of the information presented here is covered in other places. Jason does a nice job of organizing the information, and I found that at times she tended to drill a little deeper on topics than, say a Money magazine article. While some times this was useful, at times she included information appropriate when written, such as a discussion on changed savings limits that have, or could, change again in the future. Also, a few topics strayed from the titular intent of this book, such as college funding. Still, overall a good reminder of the issues found when planning for retirement. Two and a half stars, rounded up.

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Review: American Icon: Alan Mulally and the Fight to Save Ford Motor Company

American Icon: Alan Mulally and the Fight to Save Ford Motor Company American Icon: Alan Mulally and the Fight to Save Ford Motor Company by Bryce G. Hoffman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Quite an extensive look at the state of the American auto industry during and immediately prior to the financial crisis of 2008, including the story of Ford avoiding bankruptcy. The book starts with Ford’s declining fortunes under Bill Ford, who steps aside as CEO to bring in Alan Mulally from Boeing. The book did an excellent job in setting the background for Mulally’s early tenure at Ford, including describing the board and Bill Ford’s management and style, Mulally’s experience at Boeing, and the detailed pursuit of Mulally for the CEO’s role. The second half of the book described Mulally’s management style and the company’s response to financial issues that ended with Ford’s American competitors in bankruptcy, but with Ford still operating without those protections. Mulally is often described here as having an engineer mindset, and his ability to manage the complexities of Ford through these financial issues is a good explanation of what that means. I found this to be a great story, and a great example of a business book that lets the reader take away ideas about how to approach problems, especially those managing many people with varied alliances within the company.

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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...