20.10.22

Review: The Grasshopper Trap

The Grasshopper TrapThe Grasshopper Trap by Patrick F. McManus
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

More of McManus’ peculiar brand of outdoorsy folk tales mixed with comic essays, like crossing Mark Twain with, maybe Elmer Fudd. Favorites in this collection were “The Skunk Ladder” and “The Grasshopper Trap”, with Retch Sweeney, Rancid Crabtree, and Crazy Eddie Muldoon. I you think those names are humorous, I suspect you'd like the stories.

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10.10.22

Review: Flowers for Algernon

Flowers for AlgernonFlowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

In a concerted effort to read those high school English class classics that my high school didn’t assign, I read (or rather listened to the audio of) “Flowers for Algernon”. It’s easy to understand how this came to be considered a classic, evoking emotion and thought. Sad, and it makes you wonder what you would have done had you been in Charlie’s place. Could I have been less petty nearing the peak, or more accepting facing the imminent decline.

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6.10.22

Review: More From Less: How We Learned to Create More Without Using More

More From Less: How We Learned to Create More Without Using MoreMore From Less: How We Learned to Create More Without Using More by Andrew McAfee
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I read “More From Less”, or rather listened to the audiobook, a couple months ago. What I recall is the optimism expressed by the author that the world is using fewer resources to greater effect. This seems to be true to the level the author “peeled the onion”. I’m used to seeing dire predictions of impending doom when reading books about the future, so some optimism is a nice change of pace. There are plenty of stats that show progress. As some reviewers point out, if you peel the onion more or less, you can come often come up with some dire future result, or unconsidered cost or benefit. I think your reaction to a book like this really depends on your outlook on life. I believe I’m pessimistically optimistic, and I kinda liked it. I hope more people get to read this book or others like it.

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Review: How I Got This Way

How I Got This WayHow I Got This Way by Patrick F. McManus
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I greatly enjoy the audio versions of McManus’ books narrated by George S. Irving. The best parts of these books are truly the funniest recordings I’ve heard. It’s nice to read some of the source material for these audios, and “How I Got This Way” contains 27 of McManus’ articles of the same ilk. I can help but hear George Irving’s voice in my head when I read any story about Retch McSweeney, Rancid Crabtree, Crazy Eddie Muldoon, and company. I enjoy those stories in McManus’ collections the most. McManus captures the feeling of kids with free time and the ability to think of something to do, usually dangerous. Reminds me of growing up in the country, without a preponderance of pre-scheduled activities. My favorite, a Crazy Eddie story called “The Big Woods”. An excellent collection.

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3.10.22

Review: The Book of Joe: Trying Not to Suck at Baseball and Life

The Book of Joe: Trying Not to Suck at Baseball and LifeThe Book of Joe: Trying Not to Suck at Baseball and Life by Joe Maddon
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

It’s a business book! It’s a baseball book! It’s a self-help book! It’s all three!!! Joe Maddon’s new book is like Saturday Night Live’s product – it’s a dessert topping! It’s a floor wax! It’s both! Maddon anecdotes his way through his life, starting with stories of school, then his early years playing and coaching baseball. But most of the stories here are about managing. At times, you feel you are reading a baseballer’s life story. At other times, you slip into management suggestions. And, given we’re talking about Joe Maddon, at times, often involving Maddon’s sloganeering, you feel you are deep in a self-help book. Those slogans work well on the team, but they also have some power over the individual. The reader will get whipsawed a bit as he goes through these stories, but readers of all these genres can get something out of the book.

A few other things I noted.

As you read, you will be accosted with an incredible amount of trivial details, many tangentially related to the flow of the text. It’s a bit overwhelming. Some of the trivia relates to things going on in the world at the point we’re at in the story. Other trivia is more personal detail, like what Joe had to eat on a certain day 40 years ago. Unless Maddon kept meticulous diaries, this feels like liberties were taken to tell the story. I can live with some of this, but this was more than I was willing to believe was remembered. When you start to realize you are asking yourself as you read “why does this matter?” or “how did someone remember this?” over and over, you start to wonder. Sometimes, less specificity tells the story better.

I received an advanced reader’s copy of the book. I won it in a contest, I believe. Like every other non-fiction ARC I’ve read (a few dozen), there were no photos in the ARC, while photos often do appear in the final book. I can imagine this could have some interesting photos when it comes out. But more intriguing, unlike all other ARCs I’ve read, this one has one chapter that was embargoed – pulled out of the ARC. And for those interested in Maddon’s tenure with the Cubs, it is the key chapter – the one about his last year. I suspect the embargo was to maintain some secrecy until Maddon could do a press tour behind the book, and this year in his career is probably of key interest to baseball fans, especially Cubs fans. Despite having read the ARC, I am really looking forward to reading the book when it comes out in November. (Yes, I’m a Cubs fan.) I don’t believe I’ve ever thought this with other ARCs. Note that the ARC doesn’t cover Maddon leaving the Angels. I wonder if something will also be added to address that, with lessons learned. Or perhaps that’s the beginning of the next book.

In the end, it's Joe Maddon. He's a character. He's a baseballer. He's a Cub. I'm gonna enjoy the book.

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Review: I Married a Communist

I Married a Communist (The American Trilogy, #2)I Married a Communist by Philip Roth
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I listened to this audiobook mostly on a 10 hour drive by myself to move my daughter’s belongings back home. I appreciated Roth’s story, the second-hand retelling of Ira Ringold’s life. Ira seems to be a kind of jewish Ronald Reagan when younger, moving from physical jobs to union work to radio. Ira, though, ends up on the other side of the communist hunts of the 50s, which puts him in a downward trajectory in life. Roth’s writing, as can be expected, was quite riveting, keeping me involved in the story, and paying attention during the many places where you could learn something about the characters, usually through a well written conversation. I will remember parts of this story, which is about the best I can hope for.

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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...