10.5.22

Review: Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal

Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood PalLamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal by Christopher Moore
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

So read the other reviews and the book blurb to find out what the book is about. Given the topic, emotions on this book can run high. For me, the question is, does it work? For the first couple of pages, it didn’t work for me. It seemed too much like Monty Python’s “Life of Brian” to start. But as you start to understand that the author was writing this story to fill in the missing years of Jesus’ life, as told by a buddy, you can see that it could succeed. In the end, I enjoyed this much more than I would have thought after that rocky start. I found the last quarter of the book, as disciples started being added to the group, got quite confusing storywise, and the ending was very sudden and somewhat unfulfilling after a big investment in the story. But I also find that I am remembering more of this book than many others I’ve read recently, so I give the author credit for writing “sticky”. Interesting premise.

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Review: We Need to Talk: A Memoir About Wealth

We Need to Talk: A Memoir About WealthWe Need to Talk: A Memoir About Wealth by Jennifer Risher
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

In “We Need to Talk” we follow a couple from their pre-savings college years, through marriage and family, and through the building of successful careers for both in the tech industry, leaving them very well off. I had been on a similar progression, though not at the fast rate that the author and husband were on. It was fun to follow their early steps in career and in investing, generally based on tech stock grants and options for the high-growth times at Microsoft, then Amazon. In the early chapters I felt some kinship in their own amazement at how quickly some stock grants became worth what seemed like a lot of money. That’s how I felt too. But while my spectacular returns ended in a decade with a move to a lower growth company, the author and husband continued to amplify their net worth, again through grants and investing, and by not becoming spendy. At some point, their ways became quite foreign to what I envisioned for myself, and I quickly lost interest. (I think it was when they started flying charter.) I will say that many of the topics they discussed, like how to talk to others about your wealth, loaning to family, and spoiling kids, were topics I’ve thought about, but depending on where in their net worth they were when they approach the problem, their solutions might or might not seem useful. I did appreciate understanding their thoughts behind these problems though, as the thought process was interesting. Overall, I found this on OK book, but one that I found hard to like all the way through. Read with the FI Book Club on Facebook.

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9.5.22

Review: A Fine and Pleasant Misery

A Fine and Pleasant MiseryA Fine and Pleasant Misery by Patrick F. McManus
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I discovered Patrick McManus through the audiocassettes of his essays and stories, articles from outdoors magazines. The audios, especially the ones narrated by George S. Irving, were truly hilarious. Irving told the stories with the bombast they deserved, particularly the stories involving McManus as a kid with a cast of characters that felt real small town, yet comic. For instance, one Rancid Crabtree keeps showing up to show how foolish outdoorsy bachelors get along.

For this book, “A Fine and Pleasant Misery”, I couldn’t find an audio version, so I went with paper. Crabtree shows up in a few stories in this collection, cantankerous as always. There are 27 essays or stories here, all humorous, and all dealing with the outdoors. There are a few about fishing issues of the day, but a majority of this collection are essays about kids in the outdoors or stories about McManus as a young outdoorsman and his cast of characters – other boys, his dog Strange, wily store owners, wise Granny, and Rancid Crabtree. I think these are where McManus truly shines.

Strangely, three of the stories involve surplus stores, describing the pitiful state that the goods tend to be in, and the effect those goods have on the boys that just have to have that genuine jungle sleeping bag or used Nazi mess kit. I recall from my childhood visiting a surplus store in deep rural Southern Illinois, with the overwhelming smell of long damp canvas, and just full of treasures that my dad wouldn’t let me buy (except for a can of peanut butter from WWII, which I think exploded in the car on the way back from vacation). McManus captured the smell, and the mania, perfectly. Another enjoyable set.


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8.5.22

Review: Hidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family

Hidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American FamilyHidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family by Robert Kolker
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This had an interesting beginning that seemed straight out of a TLC reality show. Take an XL family of 12 kids, all but the youngest two are boys. Describe the difficulties of raising a large family, while also sharing some unusual family hobbies, here falconry. Start telling the story chronologically. After a long introduction, then start filling in the realization that the children are slowly revealing similar, often drastic, often violent mental issues. Focus on the youngest kids, the girls, who gradually realize they may be the next to be afflicted, while their parents split them up, sending one away to school while keeping the other with the now often dangerous brothers and no protection. It starts like “Cheaper by the Dozen” and ends like a Hitchcock movie.

I found the story of passing interest, although by the ¾ mark I was hoping for a quick ending. This seemed like such a unique family that I didn’t learn much that I felt was relatable or usable, but I can see where science would see the family as a goldmine for further study. This is one of those stories that generally got worse for the family members as time went on, and while the author played up the benefit to scientific study, this was a very draining book to read. I appreciated the way the author wrote this story, though, as I can’t picture a better way to portray the mental illness and family dynamics it caused for this large family.

Read along with a college alumni online reading club. This is one of those books where it is valuable to get other peoples opinion on the events and to share some angst.


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2.5.22

Review: American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind Behind the Silk Road

American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind Behind the Silk RoadAmerican Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind Behind the Silk Road by Nick Bilton
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Ross Ulbricht is described here as the kind of guy you might have run across in college. He lived in the stereotypical style of a hippy, albeit a few decades beyond the 60s. He spouted Libertarian dogma, and tended to live his life that way, at least in some aspects. Specifically he said he believed in free markets, for everything, including things that the government made illegal, like drugs and guns. It was very interesting following along as Ulbricht got deeper and deeper into his internet marketplace, and at times had to decide whether his principles would survive real-world situations. Also interesting were the stories of his opposition, people from various branches of government set to take him and his marketplace down. I found it a fascinating read. The part that seems strangest relates to (view spoiler)

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1.5.22

Review: The Sacred Bridge

The Sacred Bridge (Leaphorn, Chee & Manuelito #25)The Sacred Bridge by Anne Hillerman
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Another in the Hillerman family enterprise of Navajo nation mysteries. Daughter Anne Hillerman has taken the lead characters from her father’s time and transformed them to side characters to her detective Manuelito. I haven’t found the stories gripping, but have found them mostly entertaining. Compared to the previous book in the series, I found this one to have much more Navajo-related description, with Chee deeply involved in a personal spiritual crossroad that ends up entwined with a murder investigation with aspects of ancient history and modern tourism. Manuelito gets involved with another aspect of modern Navajo nation issues, dealing with corporate hemp growers and their interactions with traditional Navajo ways. I liked the main story lines here. However, the author added a number of side stories that detracted and distracted from the interesting bits - overlarge red herrings. I also found the beginning of the book had a number of long descriptive monologues by characters that sounded like they were quoting from Wikipedia. I realize the author needs to set the stage for the rest of the story, but the beginning was too forced and formulaic.

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Review: Stargazer

Stargazer (Leaphorn & Chee, #24)Stargazer by Anne Hillerman
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Another in the Hillerman family enterprise of Navajo nation mysteries. Daughter Anne Hillerman has taken the lead characters from her father’s time and transformed them to side characters to her detective Manuelito. I haven’t found the stories gripping, but have found them mostly entertaining. This one had some of the Navajo character and feel that was prevalent in most of her father’s books, but to a lesser extent. This could almost have been an episode in many other modern mysteries taking place in very different areas. Also noticeable in this story is that Manuelito seems to act in an out-of-character manner, more whiney and oblivious than other books. Good for a quick entertainment.

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Review: The Dying Animal

The Dying Animal by Philip Roth My rating: 4 of 5 stars I read this at the same age as the protagonist, and I greatly appreciated t...