Monday, November 30, 2009

The Singularity is Near, by Ray Kurzweil

In a short time we all will merge with our computers and take over the universe in a transformation to such a strange new state of being that it is called the Singularity, named after the unknowable state of affairs inside a black hole. So Ray Kurzweil, the “Singularitarian,” believes and preaches.

Kurzweil looks at history and sees exponential change occurring over and over again. From this he concludes that this is the way that things develop in all aspects of technology–an initial slow rise, then an exponential increase, then a leveling off until a new technology comes along in a paradigm shift to start the process again. This is most familiar from Moore’s Law, which states that computer processing power doubles every 24 months. Kurzweil sees a similar exponential growth in many other areas, and provides graphs in the book to illustrate his conclusion with the examples of cellphone adoption, Internet hosts, increase in GDP, etc. If you question that last example, check the copyright page–the book was published in 2005.

Kurzweil was born in 1948 but believes that he will live to see the benefits of MNT (molecular nanotechnology) and GNR (Genetics, Nanotechnology, Robotics) to increase the human lifespan to hundreds of years. To make it that far, he follows a strict dietary regimen, which includes taking over 250 supplements a day. This is optimism concretized.

He has developed these ideas for decades now, and so has encountered many objections. Kurzweil addresses many of them in the book. They don’t stop him long. There is no patience for dystopias; we are accumulating more knowledge, more power, more technique, and this is as unstoppable as the arrow at the end of a parabola, moving upward and outward, forever.

The objections of theists fall in with all the others and have no special place for Kurzweil. There is no bitterness or scorn for those who would block his future with an immutable human nature. He is supremely confident in his vision and does not dwell on the obstacles of fundamentalists or other believers.

“Es irrt der Mensch, solong er strebt.” (“Man will stray, as long as he strives.”) There is no Gretchen in this book, or Helen of Troy, though Kurzweil’s daughter makes a brief appearance in a discussion of virtual reality. This seems fitting. Entirely lacking is any discussion of real human relationships, families, and communities and how they will adapt to the changes that he wants to bring on.

One day Kurzweil is unlikely to say, “Verweile doch, du bist so schön!” (“Remain awhile, you are so fair!”)–because that would break the spell.

[Via http://georgiarambler.wordpress.com]

Friday, November 27, 2009

Pro Silverlight 3 in C# book review

 

It’s very easy to say that ” I loved reading Pro Silverlight 3 in C#
book and worth my time and money”. The book is very easy to read. All the chapters are arranged systematically, that way it’s easy for readers at every level. It starts with explaining the history of Silverlight and slowly introduces all the basic concepts necessary to develop Silverlight applications.

 I loved that the author has a “What’s New” sections wherever applicable, that way for people like me who is upgrading their skills from Silverlight 2 can jump to those areas if they are only interested in the new features of Silverlight. As far as the depth, the author has done a very good job of explaining all the important concepts and almost all the controls available out of the box and controls available in Silverlight Toolkit.

 What I liked is that the author also mentions the limitations if any or cautions and because I have implemented multiple projects in Silverlight, I can tell that all those tips , cautions and Notes  can save you lot of time and frustration. For example, the mouse wheel event only fires in IE and not in other browsers or how to handle exceptions at an application level and how VS handles them when you are in debug mode vs. release mode. Those types of tips are very useful when implementing a feature and when you put the app in productions. 

All the new features like Out of Browser, Navigation are discussed. Individual chapters  are dedicated to Animation and Sound, Video and  Deep Zoom to go deep in these areas which was very useful for me personally. 

.NET Ria Services is slightly touched, not in depth as its relatively new which can be slightly disappointing for those who want to learn about it .Data Annotations and Data Validation for the forms  and other Data Controls are discussed in depth.

I wished the author has talked a little bit more about  Rest Services as the web Client has some limitations in areas of REST,  Frameworks like Prism and Caliburn and Commonly used design patterns like MVVM  and other TDD  best practices in context of Silverlight.

For that reason, I would say that this book is more suitable for entry level to mid level Silverlight developers. But if you are completely new to Silverlight or just touched few areas in developing Silverlight, I seriously recommend this book to get strong in all core areas of developing Silverlight applications.

[Via http://softwareandservice.wordpress.com]

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

I Want to Be Free

Name of the Book:  I Want to Be Free

Author: Joseph Slate

Illustrator:  E.B. Lewis

Publisher:  Putnam Juvenile

Audience:  Grades 3-6

Summary: This is the story of a young man who is a slave and wants to be free more than anything in the world.  The “Big Man” overseer has placed an ankle collar on the young man and freedom becomes tied up in his efforts to take the collar off.  As the story moves to its conclusion, freedom comes to the man through love and not through force or personal effort.

Literary elements at work in the story: This is a touching story of slavery and love set in the south, most likely prior to the Civil War as told by a narrator.  The setting is what we would assume to be a typical plantation where slaves are tightly controlled by the overseer.  The plot is based on the escape of the young slave and the chance involvement of a young black orphan.  The illustrations demonstrate emotion through both light and dark shading.

Perspective on gender, race, culture, economic, ability:  The focus of the story is on the submission of the slave population and the domination of the overseer.  The overseer is not overtly illustrated as white, just in control and mean which allows the audience to discuss who they feel the oppressor might be.  The story focuses on the dreams of a young man but the death of the child’s mother who was also trying to escape, allows gender to remain neutral.  The oppression allows for discussion of total domination including economic limitations.

Scripture:  Galatians 3:28-29; Genesis 1:27

Theology:  We are all the same in God’s eyes.

Faith-talk questions:

  1. What did it mean to be a slave during the time period the book portrays and how would you have felt if you had been a slave?
  2. Why do you think it was so hard for the people in the south at that time to free their slaves?
  3. Would you be willing to set your dream aside to help someone else?

Review prepared by Jim Collins, MACE, Entering Cohort Fall 2007

[Via http://storypath.wordpress.com]

The Thirteen American Arguments

If Howard Fineman ever decides to give up his job as senior Washington correspondent and columnist for Newsweek magazine, and his work as an NBC and MSNBC news analyst, he can easily become a college professor. Reading his book, The Thirteen American Arguments, is like taking a really good political science course.

He begins by defining the word “argument” as he will use it throughout the book, and calls an argument a “clash” between two entities (people, political parties, regions, etc.) that happens “over facts and ideas.” America, as he tells it, is a land of ideas.

“We are an endless argument,” Mr. Fineman states. And, when you think about it, he is so right. Pick the first piece of American history that comes to mind. Let’s say, the Vietnam War. What do you immediately think of? You think of the argument. Should we have been in Vietnam? Should we have gotten out?

The book’s introduction includes a brief history of America, focusing on our country as a place where certain ideas vie for dominance. But, according to Mr. Fineman, the struggle is not just about which idea “wins,” but about what the idea represents in terms of the American identity. We argue, in other words, about who we are as a country.

I need only think about what happened on November 3, 2009 to know that Mr. Fineman’s thesis is true. New Jersey and Virginia decided to elect Republican governors, reflecting their desire for a different identity in their states.

As the health care reform debate goes on and on, we see another American argument unfolding before us. Actually, the health care issue involves two of Mr. Fineman’s thirteen arguments: “The Limits of Individualism” and “Local vs. National Authority.”

In the book, each argument is given a chapter, and each chapter is filled with examples from both past and recent political debates, showing Mr. Fineman’s great knowledge of history, as well as his ability to connect that history to a dissection of the argument at hand.

For example, in the first chapter, “Who Is a Person?”, Mr. Fineman takes the reader through the permutations of that question. Initially, in America, a person was a land-owning male. A slave became two-thirds of a person. A woman became a person (someone who could vote) in 1920. One of the debates ongoing now is whether a fetus is a person.

The Thirteen American Arguments is subtitled “Enduring Debates that Define and Inspire Our Country.” Now more than ever before, this book is necessary. It gives you a sense of the continuity of our habit of disagreeing, and makes you realize that, as Mr. Fineman writes, “Our disputes are not a burden, but a blessing,” as long as we argue with the goal of improving our country.

XAG2C9GFV4FK

[Via http://srgaissert.wordpress.com]

Impossible- Nancy Werlin (book review)

I love being able to review a book before I’ve finished it. I’m almost done with Impossible, and I love it. I picked up Impossible by Nancy Werlin, because it has some of my favorite things. Magic and folklore, in a modern setting. Echoes of Tam Lin. Ties to a song that’s piqued my imagination.

Lucy Scarborough’s foster parents love and support her no matter what. When she is assaulted at her junior prom, her family draws her close, and promises to help her any way they can. But the help she needs is more supernatural than just helping a teenage mother get through skill. Tied to literal interpretations of the impossible tasks in the song “Scarborough Fair.”

I’m loving the way the story unfolds, the right blend of magic, supernatural, good pacing, great characters who are understanding but not saints. And wow- I envy Nancy Werlin for having thought of this take on a song that’s gotten stuck in my head, and made me wonder and daydream.

[Via http://elizabethwillse.com]

Monday, November 23, 2009

The Clear Glass Windowpane: Zadie Smith on the Rise of the Essay

Novelist Zadie Smith ponders why so many fiction writers have embraced the essay in an extended Guardian article.  Smith spends much of her time discussing and digesting David Shields’ forthcoming Reality Hunger: A Manifesto — my goodness, that book has buzz  — before reclaiming the sanctity of fiction.  A fascinating read, and worth reading a second time.

Within the confines of an essay or – even better! – an aphorism, you can be the writer you dream of being. No word out of place, no tell-tale weak spots (dialogue, the convincing representation of other people, plot), no absences, no lack. I think it’s the limits of the essay, and of the real, that truly attract fiction writers. In the confined space of an essay you have the possibility of being wise, of making your case, of appearing to see deeply into things – although the thing you’re generally looking into is the self. “Other people”, that mainstay of what Shields calls the “moribund conventional novel”, have a habit of receding to a point of non-existence in the “lyrical essay”.

These are all satisfactions the practice of writing novels is most unlikely to provide for you. Perfect essays abound in this world – almost every one of Joan Didion’s fits the category. Perfect novels, as we all know, are rarer than Halley’s comet. And so, for a writer, composing an essay instead of a novel is like turning from staring into a filthy, unfathomable puddle to looking through a clear glass windowpane. How perfectly it fits the frame! How little draught passes through!

[Via http://brevity.wordpress.com]

Friday, November 20, 2009

Stalking Richard and Judy by Valentine Honeyman

I bought this book because Stephen Fry recommended it on Twitter. If you are broadminded enough and like a good laugh you will love this book. I loved the one-liners most of which I will never use as coming out of my mouth they would be totally inappropriate (what would the children say?). Was this book intended for the gay fraternity? I’m not sure but it definitely deserves a wider audience. His take on growing older made me laugh out loud:
“Old people really aren’t funny, are they? They make you worry about your future. One day you’re upgrading your mobile every time they bring out a shinier one and illegally downloading the Artic Monkeys. Then, all of a sudden, you lose it. You go out and buy an entire new wardrobe in mushroom-coloured polyester and you have to phone your grandchildren before you can user the microwave. Why is that? And, more importantly, when?”
Haven’t quite reached that stage yet and I’m more likely to wear purple than beige.

The End is Near! 2012 and the Work that Remains

Its opening weekend, the movie 2012 topped the box office charts by pulling in $65 million. In the film, Jackson Curtis and his family attempt to survive the catastrophic events taking place all around the world–from earthquakes in California, to erupting volcanoes in Yellowstone, to overwhelming tsunamis in Washington, D.C., the world falls apart around the ears of the Curtis family, and in front of our eyes.

But the movie 2012 is only one prediction in a slew of other prophecies regarding the events of December 21, 2012–the end of the Mayan Long Count Calendar and the date of the winter solstice in the Northern Hemisphere. Author Jim DeKorne of The Cracking Tower: A Strategy for Transcending 2012, explains:

Within the past twenty years a growing body of literature has emerged to advise us of a major cosmic alignment focused around the date of December 21, 2012. Many of these prophecies are deduced from the Mayan calendar, others from shamanic vision quests using psychedelic drugs. Some groups imply this date will mark the end of the world [Filmmakers of 2012: Raise your hands]; a few declare that humanity will ascend (apparently en masse) to a higher level of awareness; still another asserts that we’ll either be absorbed or destroyed by a computerized ‘Artificial Intelligence.’

So what’s the answer? Jim DeKorne has a piece of advice: whatever happens on in 2012, “it is totally irrelevant to your private welfare.” The world’s future is not in your hands, but your own future is. The major refrain of the book–”Do the Work in the space in which you find yourself”–is one of the many times when DeKorne begins with a overwhelming topic–The End of the World–and zooms in to the reader. And even though The Cracking Tower delves into a discussion about the end of the world later on, it first sets up a framework for us to evaluate its meaning.

Applying the principles of Perennial Philosophy—concepts that appear in every world religion and correspond to the paradigm of human awareness—Jim DeKorne urges us to “Wake up, Turn inward, Meet Essence, Do the Work in the space in which you find yourself.” He explains:

‘Wake up’ means to extract your focus from the prevailing consensus trance. ‘Turn inward’ means to become acquainted with your personal sector of hyperspace…’Meet Essence should be self-explanatory. ‘Do the Work in the space in which you find yourself’ is the mantra my own Essence gave me many years ago. For me, it means to work from the center f the Cube of Space…It’s where the ego and the Self meet….The first phase of the Work is to determine your dharma (duty). After that, you can just do it to the best of your ability. It’s really all you came to do here anyway.

The world may very well end on December 21, 2012, but those who have read The Cracking Tower know that the world within is more valuable, more precious, and more rewarding than the world outside.

What is your Work? How are you accomplishing it in the space in which you are finding yourself?

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Exclusive: Book Review – ‘Muslim Mafia: Inside the Secret Underworld that's Conspiring to Islamize America’

The latest book review for Family Security Matters by Taylor Company investigator/manager and FSM contributing editor, Renee Taylor:

“How can we defeat the enemy if we cannot define it?” – Muslim Mafia

In the days following the Fort Hood massacre by Army psychiatrist, Nidal Malik Hasan, everyone from news anchors to Dr. Phil scrambled to find the reason for Hasan’s murderous shooting spree. As details emerged and the media and investigators tiptoed around the words “terrorism” and apologetically used the word “Muslim” to describe Hasan, there were many of us who weren’t wondering what would make a U.S. military doctor launch an apparent one-man attack on his fellow soldiers. We were wondering why it took so long to happen.  Read more HERE

“Beauty is Strength” by Marjorie Barnard Anatomy of a Perfect Short Story

“Beauty is Strength” is a short story in the book “The Persimmon Tree and Other Stories” by Marjorie Barnard.  A more complete discussion of this book will appear in a later entry at this site. All of the quotes in boldface are taken verbatim from the story.

This story begins with a woman going to the beauty salon for her regular appointment.

    “The locks lay dank against her head.  A sleepless night always took the life out of her hair.  It was part of the weariness of being over forty that you daren’t have any emotions, they took it out of your looks too much.  A month at the beach hadn’t done her hair any good either.”

It hadn’t been a good holiday.

    “She would rather, after all, have stayed home with Ced.  When he had urged her to go she’d taken it for granted that he was being generous as he always was.”

While the girl in the beauty salon adjusts the hair dryer, the woman sees herself .

    “It was from moments like these, when you saw your face isolated, that you learned the truth about it.  Her mouth looked hard and disappointed, and round each corner there was clearly discernable, in this impartial light, a little bracket of wrinkles….Her cheek bones looked high and stiff and on her throat, where age first shows itself, the working of the muscles showed too clearly, and the skin under the chin was ever so puckered.“

The woman begins to question why her husband sent her away on this month-long holiday and thinks of the suspicious tell-tale signs she found when she returned from the holiday to home.

    “Three dress shirts.  And he’d said he’d been nowhere…He always grumbled at getting into a dress shirt but he looked his best in evening dress…To see those three new-laundered shirts was like picking up a bird’s feather bright with the tell-tale mating colors.”

The woman remembered a letter addressed to her husband lying on the table when she returned from the holiday.

    “She recognized Viola’s handwriting at once large, eager, rather unformed.  It was bulky; even in Viola’s sprawling script, a long letter.  She had weighed it speculatively and put it by with an open mind.  She wasn’t, she often told people – particularly Ced – a jealous  wife, nor would she be but for the possessive streak as strong in her as instinct in an animal…Why exactly had Ced stayed behind when she went to the beach?  All she could remember was something vague about business.”

The woman’s salon session continues.

    “She stared at her grotesque image.  There was a bright red spot on either cheek.  Her spirits plunged even lower…She never imagined he’d let her down.  What if he were serious and he wanted her to divorce him?  Her mind widened in horror.  That would take everything from her, her home, her background,, her position.  A woman could only divorce successfully if there was another man waiting for her. She would have to make a new life.  She was too tired, TOO OLD.”

But then her hair styling was done.

    “For a moment she forgot her troubles.  It was a beautiful wave, her head never looked better   She began to make up her face, rediscovering all its lost virtues…She, not he, was in the strong position.  If he wanted to be a fool, he’d have to pay for it.  She bent forward and looked into her own eyes, bright once more under the influence of eye shadow and mascara – and then she would win him back again.  While she had her looks she could do anything.  She had been through an ordeal but now she felt secure again.  She wasn’t even very angry.  She had put on again the whole armor of sophistication.  If anyone was going to look foolish it was Ced and Viola—especially Viola.”

No Experts Needed, Really!

Losing a job is one of life’s most stressful experiences and, can even be devastating too. With the economy in meltdown, and more and more companies getting leaner and meaner, most of the employees end up being laid off.

I was a victim of a workforce reduction about 7 months ago.

Though I’ve not much responsibility (as in taking care of the family et all), I realized I’ve been going through a range of emotions: emotions that can spur me to action, send me seething into a rage, or make me wanting to crawl and hide in my own cocoon, moments of shame, betrayal, and as a result almost stopped socializing with my friends. I’ve gone through all. I know my termination was through no fault of my own, and I know it’s not a career killer, but it definitely is depressing and hard to overcome the emotions! To divert my mind, Mom even took me for a 2 week vacation to India.

As months passed, I started devoting most of my time on blogging and twittering, which led me to meet a bunch of wonderful people, aka my blog-and-twitter buddies, who inspired me so much in one way or the other. Nothing would have been the same without you all!  Gradually, I started to think of my job loss as an opportunity to re-frame my thinking, and to pause and reflect on how happy I was with my career. Before I knew, it was a relief and a much-needed break from a much-hated job, and hence ended up learning new technologies and, now I’m a freelancer.  Working from the comforts of my home plus I’m my own boss too! So much freedom and I’m enjoying it. Yaaaaay!!

Now the purpose behind this post is to introduce you all to Louise Lewis and her book “No Experts Needed: The Meaning of Life According to You!”.

No Experts Needed by Louise Lewis

Most of us have been through terrifying times in our lives, that often lead us to lose hope, and Louise had been there too. She had lost her job of eleven years. There were all the emotional and financial concerns to get through.

One day as she sat relaxing at home watching TV, one particular episode of a program caught her attention. It was the episode titled “What Does the World Think of Us?” on The Oprah Show!  (Love the show BTW! )

Inspired from the show, she then decided to embrace life and find out just what life means. Through many interviews with people and getting their definitions of life, a book was born.

Hadn’t she passed by my blog and dropped in a comment, I wouldn’t have known her.

I started reading her masterpiece and I must say that it’s absolutely amazing! It’s more than just a book in dealing with job loss. A book full of positive thoughts and by reading it you could almost feel her energy through her words!

The book doesn’t bring out the advice of the experts, but rather from everyday people who share what they believe, and how they face the bumps along the road of life.

If you just need a break from the doom and gloom, I did recommend you read the book and pass it on to your family and friends or to someone who is struggling in life.

That's Louise!

The beautiful author will be sending the link to a FREE cover-to-cover download of her book to my lovely readers! All you got to do is to sign up here.

Ain’t that cool?

Thanks a bunch, Louise!

P.S.: She recently celebrated her birthday. So here’s me wishing Lou once again a happy belated birthday!!!!

Monday, November 16, 2009

Purity in this sex-saturated world

Challenged in the most subtle things that I never knew could affect so much.
Convinced that we need to step up a standard living in this sex-saturated world.
Convicted to live a life that is Holy and pleasing to God – guarding my mind, heart and body.

Yup, thats right, I have finished reading Every Young Women’s battle by Shannon Ethridge & Stephen Arterburn. I kind of started this booked in the middle of my semester but never finished it because of my busyness, but within these 2 days, I finished about close to 20 chapters. I was so into completing the book! Many times as I was reading, I kinda wished I read this much earlier, but I guess its’ never too late. There were many things that God really spoke to me through this book. And discussing everything here might be just too much, if you haven’t read the book, I encourage you to, there is a men’s version too! I read it fast also because my housemate wants to read it too! And some of my girls…

One area I was really challenged in was the area of drama-ing. Although I can argue that Asian dramas are generally more tame compared to American sitcoms/dramas like Friends, Gossip Girl, Friday Night Lights and One tree Hill, I cannot deny the fact that a lot of the dramas are promoting a lot of ungodly mindsets about relationships, marriage and sex. Moreover, dramas always have happy endings despite all the terrible happenings, sadly that doesn’t happen much in real life. The guilt, the shame, that bad memory, is something that people have to deal with. But thank God that there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus (Rom 8:1). I never knew that dramas could have that much effect on how you think about such things. Recently, with God’s help, I have reduced a lot of drama watching compared to previous times, but its still something I can continue to work on. Especially for American dramas.

I’m convinced that no matter how strong I think I am as a Christian, doesn’t protect me any more from these temptation than others, so stop trying to fight it and just flee from it. Sometimes as Christians we can just easily take for granted that we will never struggle with compromising in the area of relationships, sex or marriage. This is where I think we are so wrong, because many of the examples given by the authors in the books are from Christians. Also in the bible is clearly states: No temptation has seized you except what is common to man. And God is faithful; he will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear. But when you are tempted, he will also provide a way out so that you can stand up under it (1 Cor 10:13). So don’t be complacent, and never let your guard down. Because once you do, Satan will use this opportunity to cause you to fall into sin.

I’m convicted in guarding my mind, heart and body as well as my fellow brothers’ as well. Sometimes I realise I do a lot of subtle things unknowingly, either through the way I dress or through my joking statement. You just never know how much damage or hurt it can bring to a person. I have a bad habit of blaming it on the way I was brought up, growing up with heaps of guys, as such feeling very comfortable to interact with them. But I’m not a little girl anymore and everything I do has its consequences! So I am learning to be more aware and to not put myself in compromising situations that might cause my actions to be questionable.

There were many other things that God spoke to me specifically, but its really too much to go into detail, and I would definitely encourage you to read it if you haven’t! It’s a must! You will get reactions like “Oh my goodness! Amen! Yeah! I shouldn’t do that!” And don’t read it with a defensive mode, but really allow God to speak to you as you read it!

Book Review: WorldCom 'Extraordinary Circumstances' by Cynthia Cooper

I’ve wondered for a while why there are over half a dozen books about the collapse of Enron, but only two about WorldCom. Maybe it was because Enron happened first.  Maybe it was because Enron disappeared but WorldCom survived in the form of MCI, who presumably have lawyers. Maybe it’s because Enron’s story is sexier and more complex.

One of the few books available about WorldCom was written by the Vice President of Internal Audit, Cynthia Cooper: Extraordinary Circumstances the Journey of a Corporate Whistleblower.  Let’s get the housekeeping out of the way: it’s written in the present tense and has no illustrations, and both these things are constantly annoying.

So what actually happened at WorldCom?  According to Cooper, it was a fairly simple accounting fraud, well hidden but nowhere near as specialised as the off-balance sheet stuff at Enron, and it was committed to save the company not so a Fastow-figure could skim off illicit cream for personal gain. Basically, WorldCom played PacCom in the 1980s and 1990s munching up telecoms and internet companies but failing to integrate them.  Cooper asserts that it wasn’t the fraud or exposing the fraud that killed WorldCom; it became a dead company walking when the internet bubble burst in 2000 and sucked telecoms into its wake.

The most engaging section of the book is when Cooper tells the story of the few months before and after she and her team of internal auditors discovered the fraud, reported it to the internal audit committee and all hell broke loose. WorldCom had become a lumbering Frankenstein’s monster of acquisitions but it had no single set of operating systems. You can only only make savings from acquisitions by doing the boring operational stuff of cutting out duplication and waste. Instead it was faced with the rising costs involved in managing a hodge-podge of companies, falling revenues as telecoms tanked, and a share-price that burst with the bubble, and that was when CFO Scott Sullivan instigated the fraud. WorldCom started making a loss, but Sullivan reported non-existant profits by moving the cost of renting lines from operating costs to capital, to the tune of $3bn over 5 quarters and (according to Wikipedia) by over-stating sales.

The final few chapters of the book are among the most interesting. It’s clear that CFO Sullivan was, as the judge said, the architect of the fraud. Cooper says she could not decide in her own mind about CEO Bernie Ebbers’ guilt. The book is well lawyered, so although these doubts are phrased in the present tense they are located in the section before the jury came to their verdict.But in Cooper’s mind at that time at least the case against Ebbers was not-proven. Ebbers is serving 25 years, mainly on Sullivan’s testimony.  Sullivan has just finished a 5 year jail term.

The case against Ebbers hinged on the financial pressure he was under following the fall of telecoms stocks.  In [date] PacCom’s cigar-chewing, cowboy booted CEO walked out one weekend. He was personally bankrupt. He had been the king of the deal, driving forward to one takeover after another, and Cooper comments on how his personal style changed as he grew in hubris and then fear kicked in. By the end of his tenure he’d cancelled the free coffee and was issuing memos telling staff not to use the colour copiers. All his wealth was in WorldCom stock, and he borrowed against it, so when telecoms stocks collapsed he effectively ended up with ‘negative equity’ to the tune of $300 million dollars. Even so, there is no concrete proof he instigated, encouraged or permitted the fraud.  The only evidence against him was Sullivan’s testimony saying that Ebbers told him to commit fraud quarter by quarter by telling him ‘we must make the numbers’.

It’s hard to tell if this was plausible deniability in action, or a matter of style.  Cooper implies the latter, and the implication that a nod is as good as a wink in the C-Suite, or the C-Suite of WorldCom at least, is one of the other interesting aspects of the book. Because it’s a first person account, Cooper reports what was said and what she thought at various meetings throughout her career.  Most corporate auto-biographies are not about how people interact, being the narrative equivalent of a series of photographs of the mighty hunter clutching his rifle, one foot on an animal’s corpse.  Those biographies leave me wondering to what extent the C-Suite is a foreign country and how differently they do things there. Cooper casts some first-person light on this, and WorldCom appears to have been political and focused but less testosterone-fuelled than Enron, running at a rapid pace on cryptic comments, laconic remarks and inference.  One could argue, though Cooper is careful not to, that Ebbers is a modern-day Henry II.  If so, then the disparity in sentencing is troubling, to say the least.

As a British reader, there were two things I found intriguing which Cooper didn’t even notice.  One is that the main players are actively religious: Ebbers started each board meeting with a prayer, Cooper’s main contact with colleagues out of work is through their Church.  The second is that both WorldCom and Enron were companies located in the South, these are stories of hicks made good who went bad.  That’s not to say the patricians on the East Coast don’t do the same – look at our current banking crisis and the Wall St scandals of the 1980s.  Cooper mentions but does not explore the cultural differences between the various organisations that ultimately comprised WorldCom.

The book (like this review) is over-long and (unlike me) Cooper leaves it up to you to do your own analysis or not as you see fit.  But there is one extraordinary Ozymandias-like vignette:

It’s November, 2004.  The double glass doors to the executive suite are locked.  I peer through to see drops of water leaking from the ceiling in several spots, and a dimly lit room, many of the lights burned out and the remaining ones flickering, a ghostly symbol of the fall of a company and an executive team that once seemed invincible. The guard unlocks the doors and we file in.  Brown cardboard boxes are everywhere, each labeled with the name of a former WorldCom executive. There is barely room to walk. It feels as if we’re somehow trespassing on private property.  I read the names of people I used to work with as we slowly walk through. Bernie’s office is completely empty, not even a hook on the wall.

The Confession of Fitzwilliam Darcy by Mary Street

The Confession of Fitzwilliam Darcy by Mary Street

I hardly thought Darcy had much to “confess,” but, in a delightful, insightful manner, Street delivers his perspective here on the events we see from Elizabeth’s angle in Pride and Prejudice. Darcy begins by thinking of Elizabeth much as his aunt later will, as a woman employing some sort of evil art to capture his attention. He misunderstands a light sarcastic remark she makes to her family, and that mistaken first impression sets the scene for the errors in judgment he makes with respect to snubbing her at the assembly rooms.

There are a few details with which I might quibble before sharing everything I enjoyed here. First, Street has a comment about Darcy not enjoying dancing, but I always understood him as enjoying dancing only with the right partner; he certainly doesn’t dislike it with Elizabeth, even here. Street also has Darcy deliberately insult Elizabeth as “tolerable” within her hearing range, which seems too cruel for his character to me, even given his assumptions about Elizabeth’s character and motives. When Wickham and Darcy see each other in Meryton for the first time in the book, Street says the color drained from Darcy’s face. Wouldn’t that make his, then, the face that turned white, and Wickham’s the one that turned red? I had always read the colors as being fear/shock of Wickham (white) and anger of Darcy (red). Wickham would be unlikely to blush, and Street even says later how angry Darcy is, so . . . What is the usual reading of this passage? The text offers other thought-provoking additions, and a few strange ones, including Darcy’s belief that Elizabeth stayed home from Rosings (on the occasion of the first proposal) hoping he could find her alone to propose.

Street fills in some very interesting gaps that I had never really contemplated as “missing” before. The Bingley sisters, for instance, actually think Mr. Bennet showed less desperation than the other fathers who rushed to welcome Bingley to the neighborhood on behalf of their unmarried daughters—because Mr. Bennet, after all, had five single daughters of whom to dispose, and he bides his time. The opening scene of P &P, then, reveals Mr. Bennet’s wisdom in the delay that so torments his wife. Street also nicely explains why Darcy went to the assembly rooms in the first place if he was so uncomfortable with strangers assessing him based on net worth; he goes to avoid staying home alone with Caroline Bingley, who, he assumes, would stay at Netherfield with him were he to refuse to go with Bingley. He is all too aware of how his wealth and status invite female calculation, and many of his seeming rude behaviors stem from that awkwardness and desire to avoid women who want his money. Darcy here actually has a reason to refuse to dance with Elizabeth, but he realizes the error of his first impression within a few visits.

Street also provides some explanation for why Darcy admits he admires Elizabeth’s fine eyes to Caroline Bingley, of all people; he does so to discourage Caroline, whom he notices fawning over him. Street explains why the Bingley sisters invite Jane to dine with them; it isn’t just, as Caroline writes, so that she and Louisa will not kill each other from sheer boredom, but rather to inquire of Jane who her more distant relations are, as they assess her suitability for their brother. Once Elizabeth is staying at Netherfield, Darcy picks on Bingley about Bingley’s supposed boast of his speed in all things; it never occurred to me to question Darcy’s being a bit harsh to his friend, or Bingley teasing Darcy. Street makes it all clear: Darcy is jealous of Elizabeth’s warm praise for Bingley, and Bingley is trying to impress Elizabeth. Later, Georgiana is particularly shy when she first meets Elizabeth because Colonel Fitzwilliam has told her that Darcy told Elizabeth of Georgiana’s indiscretion with Wickham.

The scenes between only men are always new to an Austen sequel, and here some of them are quite interesting, particularly the one in which Darcy reads a letter from Lady Catherine, mistakenly understands that Elizabeth accepted Mr. Collins’ proposal, and snaps rudely at Bingley for no reason that Bingley can discern. When Darcy sits with his sister, Elizabeth, and Bingley’s sisters while Georgiana plays piano, it had never occurred to me to question where Bingley and Mr. Hurst were, but Street has them fishing, and has Darcy take leave of them only briefly. We also see Darcy with Georgiana, as she begins to deduce that her brother has, at the very least, a very strong crush. Even the Bingley sisters get some extra time—for good—when they return from Longbourne after having invited the Bennets to the Netherfield Ball with the news about how Mr. Collins is connected to Darcy. They decide not to tell him, to save the good joke for the ball, which explains how Darcy doesn’t know who Mr. Collins is when the latter introduces himself so comically at the ball. Of course Bingley and his sisters must have already met Mr. Collins, but the thought had not occurred to me (maybe because the BBC handles it differently .

In essence, Street provides logical explanations for parts of the story to which we have incomplete information in our favorite classic, everything from why Darcy goes to Lambton (at the moment when Elizabeth learns about Lydia’s elopement) to how much exactly Colonel Fitzwilliam knows about Georgiana, Wickham, Elizabeth, and Darcy. Street also provides parallels, such as Darcy needing to reject one offer of marriage (Lady Catherine’s, of Anne) to please one parent (his father) while upsetting the other (his mother, at least according to Lady Catherine), much as Elizabeth rejects Mr. Collins, to her father’s relief and her mother’s chagrin. Street also provides some good fun, such as the comment Darcy makes about standing Caroline Bingley and Elizabeth next to each other before a mirror and seeing how Miss Bingley fares, or the glorious second kiss.

You’ll have to read it to see for yourself.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Book Review: The Carousel Painter

Title: The Carousel Painter

Author: Judith Miller

Publisher: Bethany House, (Click Here to Purchase)

In this season of my life, I rarely read fictional stories. With all of my business and marketing endeavors, I tend to stick to reading materials that further my education, as my once-cherished novels collect dust on a shelf. However, when I saw the opportunity to review The Carousel Painter, my interest was stirred by simply the title alone. I thought a break from my normal studies would be refreshing and so I took the plunge.

The Carousel Painter proved to be a beautiful story that captured me from the very beginning. The main character, Carrington Brouwer, is a young women who struggles with opposition everywhere she goes, or so it seems to her. She doesn’t understand why God would allow her to be wrongly accused of such horrible things on so many occasions! She is just a simple girl trying to do her best in life and pursue what she loves, and yet her efforts would go unappreciated and often times misinterpreted. What really stood out to me about “Carrie” was her enduring faith and longing to learn more about God even in the heat of her trials. If I were to put myself in the shoes of this fictional woman, I know that my own reaction to much of what she encountered would not have been so proper!

I was impressed by the author’s ability to portray the character and found myself unable to put the book down, which is unusual for me. I rarely find a book so good that I literally don’t want to turn my lamp off and go to bed. Carrie is a lovely character that will certainly capture any reader’s heart with her sweet spirit and willingness to do what is right.

For more information or to order this wonderful book by Judith Miller, visit Bethany House Publishers at the link given above. This book was provided for review by the publisher.

Book Review: Same Kind of Different As Me by Ron Hall and Denver Moore with Lynn Vincent

Available in paperback from Thomas Nelson

Before I say anything else, let me tell you how I came to read this book…

In September 2008, just as the school year began, I got a call at work from a man who taught shop class at a local middle school.  His school required students to participate in sustained silent reading (SSR) for twenty minutes every Tuesday and Thursday morning—the time was built into a certain period of the day, and all teachers who had students in their classrooms during that period supervised—and he was tired of watching them read magazines and manga and comic books. He wanted to introduce them to a book with real substance.

So he ordered twenty copies of Same Kind of Different As Me, a book about which he was deeply passionate, and he gave a short book talk at the beginning of his SSR period, and he offered a free copy of the book to anyone who wanted it.

All twenty copies were gone by the end of the day. He couldn’t believe it….but he was still nervous. What if they didn’t like the book? What if they didn’t get it? How would he regain his credibility and get his students to take future recommendations seriously?

But he had nothing to worry about because something amazing was about to happen.

Those twenty students took the book home and read it from cover to cover—many in just a matter of a few days—and started talking about it. So the teacher ordered twenty more and gave away twenty more, and all of a sudden, these kids who hadn’t really had any interest in reading real books were getting fired up. Here was something they could relate to. Here was a story told with candor and humor and genuine emotion. Here was something real.

This September the teacher called again, but this time he started with a hundred copies. He told me that this was the first book he had stayed up late into the night to finish in a very long time, the first book that had really made him cry, and the first book he felt like everyone should read. Including me.

How can you say no to that?

So I read it. And I sobbed big giant crocodile tears. And I started telling people about this wonderful book.

Here’s how the publisher describes Same Kind of Different As Me: A Modern-Day Slave, An International Art Dealer, and the Unlikely Woman Who Bound Them Together:

A dangerous, homeless drifter who grew up picking cotton in virtual slavery.

An upscale art dealer accustomed to the world of Armani and Chanel.

A gutsy woman with a stubborn dream.

A story so incredible no novelist would dare dream it.

It begins outside a burning plantation hut in Louisiana . . . and an East Texas honky-tonk . . . and, without a doubt, in the heart of God. It unfolds in a Hollywood hacienda . . . an upscale New York gallery . . . a downtown dumpster . . . a Texas ranch.

Gritty with pain and betrayal and brutality, this true story also shines with an unexpected, life-changing love.

The “dangerous, homeless drifter” is Denver Moore; the “upscale art dealer” is Ron Hall;  and the “gutsy woman” is Hall’s wife Debbie. The three meet when Ron and Debbie begin volunteering at a Fort Worth, Texas homeless shelter and food kitchen. Denver, having lived a life on the streets, is generally wary of strangers and distrusting of those who say they just want to help, but Debbie is determined to get through to him. She sees something special there, and she encourages Ron to forge a friendship with this seemingly unreachable man.

Same Kind of Different As Me chronicles the unlikely friendship that grows up between Ron and Denver and explores the many ways in which it was life-saving for both men. A story like this could easily be told too sweetly, but Hall and Moore go with a warts-and-all approach that makes the story gritty, gripping, and unexpectedly moving. Christianity and faith play a large role in the book, as both Hall and Moore discuss their personal journeys of belief and the ways their faith affected their life decisions. While I didn’t completely relate to, agree with, or understand all of their experiences, I was won over by their sincerity and found their stories compelling and deeply touching.

Despite the heavy religious elements in this book, where you fall on the religious and political spectrums—I’m a liberal, feminist, non-practicing Methodist—really doesn’t matter because this is a book about two people who come together to do something amazing. They happen to believe they were brought together and bonded by God’s plan, but you don’t have to believe that in order to believe in the transformative power of their friendship (though I suspect that if you do share their beliefs, you’ll find this book even more powerful).

Near the end of the book, people outside of Ron and Denver’s community start to hear about their story and ask them to give talks at churches and religious and community organizations. When asked how he should be introduced, Denver instructs someone,

Just tell em I’m a nobody that’s tryin to tell everybody ’bout Somebody that can save anybody.

Now that’s the kind of preacher I might be willing to listen to.

I’m so grateful to the amazing teacher who shared this book with me and who continues to share it with his students to ignite a love of reading in their lives. Same Kind of Different As Me is an unforgettable read that I would recommend for just about anyone. 4.75 out of 5.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Second Book Review due Thursday, November 12

Remember that if you are writing a book review over Pamela Riney-Kehrberg’s Rooted in Dust, the assignment is due by the beginning of class on Thursday in hard copy AND in the SafeAssign dropbox. It must be submitted both ways in order to ensure that you get full credit; it is in your best interest to upload it anyway, since that way there is incontrovertible proof that you did turn it in on time, in case I lose the hard copy or you forget to give it me.

Late papers (i.e. any papers turned in after class) will be docked one letter grade for each day they are late. So, a paper turned in between 4:01pm on Thursday and 4:00pm on Friday will lose one full letter grade.

If you have any questions, please email me.  See one of the previous posts for some suggestions about how to write a history book review.

2009's Last Release...

Hi Everyone!  I’m all rested from this weekend’s festivities.  I attended my second Eternal Press launch party and–believe it or not–this one was even more fun that the last (my first)!  No kidding.  It was a blast!!!! In October Eternal Press instituted a new feature:  Author Live Chat, which takes place every launch day now.  I admit, I was a little apprehensive about the live chat because my last foray into hosting a live chat met with less than stellar results.  I had 4 chatters!  Oh well.  I did say it was my first *and* I hadn’t done my homework like promoting it or inviting folks.  So it’s my own fault that the turn out was small. So, when the time rolled around for me to attend the launch day live chat, I went with a bit of trepidation.  All the worrying was for naught!  It was well attended and I had a blast.  I shared my time with fellow author J. Rose Allister.  She’s the perfect partner for a live chat.  She’s got a wonderful sense of humor and shared some great excerpts from her new release Their Secret Paradise. If you’re ever around on the 7th of the month, stop by the Eternal Press website and take part in the Author Live Chat!  You won’t regret it! Okay…my final release of 2009 is That Taste of Orange.  While I was involved in the Author Live Chat, Seriously Reviewed showed up and announced she’d just posted a review of my release to her site.  Here’s the review: There are times in most marriages when we let life get in the way of the relationship. Times we worry about the little things instead of what should be more important. This tasty little treat is brimming with a couple in love who have hit the end of their rope. Stressed out by a business that is booming, their love seems to have fallen by the way side. Fortunately a little Holiday spirit might be just the thing to put them back in the spirit of love. I have read several works by this author and have to admit that I keep my eyes peeled for anything with her name on it. Congrats on another release Ms Patterson. Here is wishing you many more To read the entire write-up click here. Here’s a little excerpt to tempt you into buying the book!    “We have an order for an orange fondant cake with a layer of chocolate-orange velvet cream in the center. I need a bottle of orange extract from the Food Depot and a bottle of Amade ChocOrange liqueur from the Wine & Spirits shop.” “There’s a bottle of Amade in the pantry.” “No, I used the last of that several weeks ago.” “For what? We haven’t had an order for that cake in a couple months.” “I used it for your birthday cake, Sabrina.” How had she forgotten that? It was the nicest thing he’d done for her in eons. “I’m sorry. I wasn’t thinking.” Chas was silent so long she was certain he was either counting to ten to avoid slamming back at her or he was gathering steam so he could let her have it. He surprised her. “I thought it was an unforgettable cake, Bri. Remember what we did with the icing?” Sabrina laughed. “That’s something I don’t think I’ll ever forget. We didn’t leave the bedroom all weekend.” A deep rumble greeted her as a response. “Lucky for me your birthday was on a Friday.” “Yeah, and do you remember talking to Pastor John about why we were late for Sunday school?” “I do. I also remember that his lesson that morning was about the importance of the physical side of marriage.” “And I recall you bringing that up once we got home, too.” He laughed. “It worked, didn’t it? We spent the rest of the day proving that lesson.” “That was a very good cake.” “It led to a lot of good, uh, things.” That Taste of Orange…available now!

Concentration camps - book review

Viktor Frankl, 1949. Prisoner No. 119,104.

Due to the neo Nazis being in Chippendale, I refreshed my mind yesterday on concentration camps by reading Viktor Frankl’s account of his time in Auschwitz and Dachau and others in Man’s Search For Meaning.  It was completely dire. He outlines the various ways people mentally coped.
He took the fatalist approach and a couple of times he made what seemed to be the “wrong” choices but luckily, those ended up being the right ones and he survived. (eg. to go on a truck or not; to look after typhoid patients and die of that …) It was impossible to know which way to jump, everything was so unpredictable.


When he got out his life was sh*t and his pregnant wife had died in the camps. The thoughts of his wife had been the only thing keeping him going. Basically, it was miserable all the time and excruciating, with just a few brief moments of joy. He said the extreme physical pain and hunger didn’t necessarily reduce everyone to animals — it just unmasked what they were really like: decent or not. He reckoned everyone from all races can be put into those two categories and that being decent takes more effort.

He wrote 20 volumes about his theories afterwards, but it’s condensed as the second part of this book.  When the camp was liberated, he was one of the few Jews to stay in Vienna and he died there. He strongly believed that a whole race wasn’t bad, just individuals.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Process, Process, Process

Anyone who writes is intrigued by the writing process of prolific authors. I’m not sure if this is the one question we feel might hand over the keys to success, or if it serves the more voyeuristic purpose of shedding light on the lives of the people we read. Regardless, for those of us who flounder, stall, and procrastinate when it comes to ‘getting down to it’, this article from The Wall Street Journal sheds light on how some of our favorites tackle the task.

Take a look at WSJ’s How to Write a Great Novel to read how authors such as Junot Diaz, Orhan Pamuk, Hilary Matel and more move their ideas from pen to page. Surprisingly, it seems as if the majority of these authors opt for the old fashioned way.

Book review: "The Marketing of Evil" by David Kupelian.

I just completed a page-turner that I highly recommend to the readers of DefCon. David Kupelian’s provocative missive The Marketing of Evil: How Radicals, Elitists, And Pseudo-Experts Sell Us Corruption Disguised As Freedom, takes you behind the scenes of how the media, entertainment, and politicians drive the culture and how they not only shape how the masses think, but also what to think.

If you ever wanted to know how sodomy went from a commonly shunned taboo (i.e. a sin) to now not only being accepted as normal, but those who dare to speak against it considered the new outcasts of society, you have to read this book.

If you ever wanted to know how our society can decry the atrocities of the Nazi Holocaust while simultaneously accepting and condoning the barbaric dismemberment of their own children under the guise of “freedom of choice,” you have to read this book.

Recommended to me by a friend, I found this book to be shocking, riveting, compelling, and impossible to put down.

Although I can’t recommend this book enough, I do caution some readers that the material dealt with can be disturbing at times and even profanity is present in the section dealing with the hip-hop culture’s grasp on our youth.

Well over 200 reader reviews have been done on this book on Amazon.com with an overall rating of 4.5 out of 5 stars. Click here to read the reviews on Amazon.



Concise book review No. 8: "The House at Riverton"

After I read (and loved) Kate Morton’s second book, “The Forgotten Garden,” I decided to go back and read her first, “The House at Riverton.” “House” is narrated by 99-year-old Grace Bradley, who was a maid at the titular house in the early 1900s. During a party, she witnessed the death of one of the guests; now, 75 years later, a movie is being made about the incident.

To say that “House” doesn’t quite hit the heights of “Garden” is not at all an insult; I liked it very much. Grace, both in the early part of the 20th century and in 1999, is an engaging narrator and the story is suspenseful, with a tragic, haunting denouement.

Friday, November 6, 2009

Book Review: <em>I Run to the Hills: Reflections on the Christian Journey</em> by C. Maggie Woychik

Eloquence, wisdom and reflection is found throughout this exceptional book.

Maggie Woychik’s I Run to the Hills: Reflections on the Christian Journey is as it states in the title a journey through the thoughts and ponderings of a christian.

The writing style is quite unlike what I am accustomed to and very refreshing.

Inspiring vivid mental imagery sometimes by poem, sometimes by short essay, the reader becomes lost in the thought of the concepts, not merely the story.

Much of the book provokes reflective response in the reader. Though it is a short book, it takes some time to absorb.  I pondered such thoughts as:

  • “Musing involves our innate sense of inspiration or genius.  Today, musing (thinking deeply at at length for a purpose of discovery) is an almost forgotten concept. Time is too scarce in our hustle and bustle society to allow for questionable extravagances, like musing.”
  • “Genuine love adores from a distance, content to watch and patiently wait. But, idolatry worships and kisses the fetish, intent on immediate gratification.”
  • “Is it really possible to live on the brink of wonderment?”

This is indeed a book conceived and experienced by many a quiet time in deep reflection.

Those who have such times with their Lord will enjoy and identify with the emotions and thoughts described in this book. Quite an enjoyable book to read.  Be ready to ponder and perhaps seek out some of the concepts mentioned.

About the Author
Maggie Woychik is a freelance writer and former homeschooling mom of 10 years, wife of 27 years, and mother of a 20 year old son, and lives on a small acreage in the Midwest with their sheep and chickens, and lots to keep them busy!

# Paperback: 136 pages
# Publisher: Port Yonder Press (September 23, 2009)
# Language: English
# ISBN-10: 0984169407
# ISBN-13: 978-0984169405

Disclaimer:  I am thankful that Maggie Woychik offered a copy of this book to me for review free of charge which has now been donated to the library of Westwood Baptist Church.

Wine & War

I recently polished off an interesting book:  Wine & War:  The French, the Nazis & the Battle for France’s Greatest Treasure by Don and Petie Kladstrup.  As the title implies, this book is a non-fiction, predominately anecdotal account of France’s wine country while it was occupied by the Germans in World War II.  The book centers around Bordeaux, Champagne, Alsace, the Loire  and Burgundy with particular emphasis on Bordeaux given it’s strategic importance and overall size.

World War II has been covered from every conceivable angle and from every possible perspective.  Up until this point, the most interesting accounts to me have revolved around all of the battles and strategy.  Not much of a stretch considering I am a red-blooded American male.  Win & War is somewhat different.  Though it does touch on those that took up arms in the war, it focuses on an industry that one would not necessarily think about when discussing war.  France’s wine industry and winemakers were profoundly impacted by the occupation of France and the course of the war.  Through individual’s stories and intuitive synthesis, the Kladstrups paint a vivid picture of what it meant to tend to vineyards during World War II in France and the role that the wine industry played there and abroad.

Germany occupied France from May of 1940 till December of 1944.  During that period, as one might imagine, the wine trade in France suffered dearly.  Many vineyards were occupied by the German military.  All markets save Germany were cut off for wine export.  Winemakers were required to fill whatever orders they received from the German government regardless of size or price.  French wine cellars holding decades if not centuries of wine history were open to plunder or destruction.  Vineyard conditions were severely stressed due to rationing of raw materials for maintainance and a lack of labor.  It is a wonder that anything survived and wine was produced at all.

All of these hardships and their historical context is neatly presented by the Kladstrups in Wine & War.  The stories, as relayed in most cases by the winemakers that lived them, are distinctly human and put a face on historical reality that many would not recognize at fist as a natural consequence of military strife.  Beyond that, it highlights what an integral part of French society that wine plays by showing how close the wine industry came to complete annihilation .  Without wine, there is no France or at least no France that any of the French would want to live in.

Wine & War is an interesting read where one can get a snapshot of World War II’s impact on a specific group of people.  The stories relayed in the book are sometimes boring, sometimes riveting, but always real.  I enjoyed the book and although it did not change the way I live my life or keep me up at night turning pages, it did give me a better understanding of how important wine is to French culture and what a terrible struggle it was for the people of France’s wine country during the German occupation of WWII

Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld

So how to explain Leviathan? It is set during 1914 in an alternate world in which Charles Darwin discovered biotechnology. So the British Empire was built on the backs of strange, fabricated beasties while the Germans and the Austro-Hungarian Empire bulked at such blasphemy and relied on machines instead, earning them the title of Clankers. 

Reading it on the heels of Howl’s Moving Castle, I couldn’t help but imagine the book coming to life in the hands of Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli. The was an element of mecha anime – the “clanker” machines used by that walk around like AT Imperial Walkers (think of Howl’s Castle). Then imagining the blend of machine and animal employed by the British; what the creators of Spirited Away and Princess Mononoke could do with that! 

It is the first in a series of three books (published October 2009, 2010, and 2011) and one full-color guidebook, The Manual of Aeronautics. It includes illustrations by Keith Thompson “because back in 1914, almost all books were illustrated, and I wanted it to look and feel like a book from that period. Plus, there are so many weird animals and machines in the world of Leviathan that I wanted to show them” (Scott Westerfeld).

According to the Akron-Summit County Public Library, “Steampunk is a genre with a huge underground following… but it has yet to become mainstream. Scott Westerfeld may help to change that. His newest title, Leviathan, takes history, fantasy, adventure, animals, Star Wars and the women’s movement, tosses them in a pot, swirls them around, and creates an absolutely delicious feast of a story.”

Read the great review at A Chair, A Teacozy and a Fireplace that made me pick this one up.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

[REVIEW] Three Days to Dead - Kelly Meding

Kelly Meding
Three Days to Dead (Dreg City, Book 1)
Random House Dell (US & CA: 24th November 2009)
Buy (US) Buy (UK) Buy (CA)

Evy Stone regains consciousness in a different body in the morgue. But this new life has a time limit: three days. Before the clock runs out, she has to find out to whom her new body belonged, how Evy herself died, and all the events that led up to this countdown. Extending her lifetime would be nice, too.

My attention waned whilst reading this, likely my own eejit brain’s fault. Though if I could find fault with the novel…It’s an awesome premise, but the execution of it isn’t quite right. A Hunter as a lead character. Number of different paranormal species. (Remind me to explain my crackpot “kitchen sink” theory someday.) Workplace romance. Dreg City nowhere near as interesting as First Break.

And First Break is fabulous, with a freaky, original journey to get there. And another kind of transportation in the novel is pretty awesome, too, because of the way it came about – thanks to the author’s intriguing world-building and plotting.

So if your attention span is better than mine (and undoubtedly it is), you should enjoy this more than I did. I’ll be cursing my brain in the corner.

The Awakening by Kelley Armstrong

My old life felt like a dream – a mostly pleasant, uneventful dream. Now I’d awakened from it and realized who I was and what I was, for better or worse. There was no closing my eyes and sliding back into that blissful dream of normal. This was my normal now.

The Awakening is the second book in Kelley Armstrong’s Dark Powers series. Picking up back at Edison headquarters, necromancer Chloe continues to unearth secrets about the Edison group and her supernatural friends. With the help of a few surprising allies, Chloe and Tori are able to escape and find Simon and Derek. The four decide to try and look for the boys’ father’s best friend and set off to find him. Separated and constantly chased, the four must struggle to control their powers and accept all that is left behind.

The second book contained a lot more action and was faster paced, but it lost some of its richness in the process. Many of the cliff hanger secrets of the first book are solved in the first quarter of thisbook, which leaves the reader with little to look forward to. There was also a lot of plot repetition and I quickly tired of the characters separating during escape, finding each other, separating during escape, etc. Central to the storyline, however, is Chloe’s relationship with the boys. Kelley Armstrong spends a great deal of time focusing on her interactions with Derek and Simon and it definitely perks the reader’s interest. While this book was not nearly as enjoyable as the first, it did set the stage for what I can only guess will be an action packed third book as the foursome get ready to take on the Edison group.

For further reading selections see my review for the first book The Summoning.

Rating: 3Q 5P JS

*The third book in the Darkest Powers series, The Reckoning, is set to be released April 27, 2010.

Not Rocket Science ... Oh, wait ....

At the risk of sounding nonsensical, there’s something too wonderful for words about a well-written science article.  No, really.  Have you picked up a copy of Discover magazine lately?  Reading one of their articles is almost as good as eating ice cream.  Almost.  And that’s saying something.

Now, by science articles I don’t mean the ones written for actual scientists.  Those are full of intimidating equations and mysterious jargon and teeny, tiny footnotes referencing names only a molecular biologist could love.  I’m talking about science articles written for the rest of us, the great unwashed (scientifically speaking) masses who get a kick out of reading about things like “Why Your Brain Loves Math.”  (Mine doesn’t, by the way, but I appreciated the thought.)

The truly wonderful thing is, you don’t actually have to buy any magazines to get this stuff.  New Science, Discover, and Technology Review all have terrific websites.  Better still, they tweet.  There is absolutely no more rousing way to start to the day than logging into Twitter and finding some irreverently funny tweet pointing you to a entertaining-yet-informative article from New Science!  Trust me on this.  Better than Wheaties.  If you aren’t following them–New Science, not Wheaties–you’re missing out.

I know I promised to give you some helpful pointers on bathtub books, but that was before I read the blurb about haptic-feedback devices and got carried away all over again by the marriage made in heaven, i.e., the marvels of modern science and first-class writing.  I thought about trying for a tie-in … you know, magazines as bathtub books … but that was before my copy of Discover wilted in the rising steam.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Slave to the Traffic Light

Driving is something that I’ve become very interested in over the past year or so, and something that I’ve been interested in learning more about. It’s very rare that I come across a book that really challenges a lot of the perceptions that I have about something, but Tom Vanderbilt’s fantastic examination of driving, Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do (And What It Says About Us) really did the trick. Traffic looks at, well, Traffic, in all of its numerous and complicated elements, and in doing so, has become a book that is absolutely essential for everyone who gets behind the wheel of an automobile, and even those who come across a road with any regularity. Vanderbilt has put together a wonderfully comprehensive, exhaustive and accessible read that explains just why we drive the way we do and what it says about us.

There are several main arguments and elements of driving that Vanderbilt covers over the course of the book. The first is largely psychological, looking at the first major aspect of driving: The Driver. Without a driver, a car just sits in the driveway or a parking lot, and is for all intents and purposes, harmless. Putting a person behind the wheel subjects the car, driver and passengers to the judgment, attention and skill of the driver.

Attention seems to be the most important element for the driver, and this is something that Vanderbilt tackles right away in the book. Driver error is arguably one of the leading causes of crashes, and in this day and age, there’s certainly no shortage of things to distract the driver, from other cars on the road, to mobile phones that are increasingly more complicated. Vanderbilt explains that driving is an extremely complicated process, and that in order to drive around safely without crashing into anything, the brain receives and processes a lot of information – eye tracking cameras have found that a driver is looking all over the place, to the side of the road, in front of the car and ahead, all while analyzing their surroundings and making decisions accordingly that minimize the risk to the occupants. In the instance of driving, eating, talking, fiddling with the radio and so forth, the brain has to essentially divert resources and stimuli in order to properly make those actions. Drivers who look down to text on their phone take their eyes off the road while moving, which creates an incredibly dangerous situation, as the car, moving at speed, is now captained by a driver who isn’t acting on their surroundings.

Besides the driver looking at the road, the mentality of the drivers also comes into play. Vanderbilt describes the road as a place where a number of people who don’t know each other must interact and cooperate, for the good of the system. Humans are social creatures – look to the difficulty of communicating online, where you are deprived of access of someone’s voice and subsequent inflections, facial cues and so forth, and think back to the last time someone honked at you, passed aggressively, and so forth – the road is a place where numerous people come together, with a huge variety of training, habits and attitudes, and where there is virtually no feedback as to how you are doing on the road. Vanderbilt notes that just because a driver doesn’t get into an accident, that doesn’t necessarily mean that they aren’t a poor driver – they’ve just been lucky. Most problems on the road stem from these relationships between drivers – miscommunications, the absence of communication and drivers not interpreting traffic correctly. As more drivers enter the road – and Vanderbilt notes that traffic is on the rise in the United States – it becomes more crucial for people to work better together while on the road.

Congestion and traffic is the next major issue that is covered in the book. It is noted several times that as highways were constructed in the 1950s and 1960s, they were put together with a certain intent for capacity. In the ensuing years since these roads were constructed, the ceilings for traffic volume has shot through the roof and roads are carrying far more than they were ever intended for. Vanderbilt looks at several issues associated with this: the various ways in which traffic is dealt with, but also how some solutions are really not solutions at all. With a higher volume of vehicles on the roads, Vanderbilt notes that traffic systems have to jockey all these cars around – traffic lights and signs have been longtime elements that have managed traffic, but have severe limitations. Similarly, their very presence impacts the behavior in of cars in ways that are sometimes counter to what is good for the overall system. Traffic lights stop cars completely, which stops the vehicles behind them. Once the green light clicks on, cars go though, but there is an inherent risk there, as cars travel through a projected path of the cars to the side of the intersection. I’ve long been a fan of rotaries – there is one here in Montpelier, with another one just opened after a couple months of construction, and I believe that they should be put into far more widespread use, as it not only keeps traffic moving smoothly (once people get used to using them), but it keeps drivers on their toes, rather than automatically expecting that they will be safe going through an intersection.

A major issue with congestion is traffic volume, and how driving impacts the rest of an overall system. Vanderbilt notes that often times, roads can handle a high number of cars, provided that there are no bottlenecks, such as accidents and slow-moving cars. He compares the system to a bucket of rice going through a funnel. A certain volume can be handled going through, but with more and more added, everything backs up. He cites one example of stop-lights that monitor the volume of an interstate, and will allow cars on accordingly, at lulls in the system, allowing traffic to move smoothly as a whole. At times, what is best for an individual driver can be harmful to the overall health of the system.

With that in mind, consider that the best thing for the system as a whole is the health and well being of the driver, and in order for that to be achieved most often, drivers need to drive safely, and to be alert. Vanderbilt suggests an argument that on the face seems very counter-intuitive, but one that makes a lot of sense: In order for drivers to be safer, they need to drive in unusually unsafe conditions. Think back to the time when you drove in unfamiliar territory, or a road that was somewhat dangerous, such as a mountain road. I’ve done that recently, and remembered that I was more alert, a little slower, and more conscious of my surroundings. Thus, I was paying far more attention to the road, and less on what was far less important, such as my mobile phone. This argument has been tried out in various countries, where municipalities have removed road signs from the road in order to make drivers more aware of their surroundings. The result was fewer accidents, not more, as drivers were forced to pay more attention to the cars and roadside than before, where they could not assume safety in the regulations.

Branching off from that argument, Vanderbilt notes that there is an increasingly seductive move to give drivers more space, more warning, and more comfort in order to take cars further apart from one another, or to give drivers more warnings about hazards. The result is that drivers feel more comfortable with their surroundings, but instead of making the road safer, it provides a sense of security that allows drivers to drive more hazardously. Top Gear, the popular BBC show, has ranted about an excess of road signs, placed in towns to mitigate liability for accidents, such as ‘Falling Rocks’ (What am I meant to do with that information) and ‘Changed Priorities Ahead’ (I’d been thinking that I’ll be more responsible, pay off my mortgage and eat healthier, but when I saw that, I said screw it, I’ll go to the pub). Similarly, cities with large numbers of bicycles and pedestrians have noted trends that follow this information: as drivers are more aware of less protected people, they tend to act accordingly. I recently read an article on a city that saw an increase in bike traffic, and rather than a rapid rise in collisions, there were fewer. The problem as I see it is that that drivers do not realize that driving is an inherently risky activity – seatbelts, airbags, crumple zones and the like give us the illusion that we are safer than we really are. To be fair, these instruments are still essential – it may make drivers feel safer, but in an accident, they will absolutely help to save people’s lives.

The overall effect of this book is taking a familiar activity and looking at it in an incredible amount of detail. Prior to reading this book, I had no idea of much of the information, and after reading it, I’ve noticed a number of bad habits with my own driving – things that I’m mindful of now that I’m going to be working to correct. At the very least, I, and I’m sure far more people, are largely unaware of how our actions impact those around us. I’ve gone, in my mind, from a good driver to an average one, and I’m honestly surprised that I haven’t been in an accident before. It’s a revelation that needs to be imparted to the rest of the driving population, simply because of one chilling statistic: every time you drive, you have a 1 in a 100 chance of dying in a car accident over the course of your lifetime. This book, in a way, is about risk-management, and examining driving in a way that helps us become more aware of the risks that we take every time we get behind the wheel of the car. Similarly, it helps to put into perspective just how traffic works. It will certainly make me more responsible, knowing the overall context the roadway.

Alexandria of Africa by Eric Walters

Alexandria is your typical spoiled brat. With no respect for anyone put herself, her biggest concern in life is making sure her brand new car doesn’t clash with her outfit. She is thus surprised to find that her father’s money cannot get her out of her latest scrape with the law. She quickly finds herself on a plane to Kenya to serve a community by building schools instead of serving her time in detention. However, once in Africa she comes to realize that perhaps there are more important things that money can buy, and that friendship may be more important than money altogether.

While this was my first Eric Walter’s novel, I do not expect it to be my last. Alexandria of Africa is fast paced and easy to read. While the characters are highly stereotyped, the realities of life for many of those living in areas like Walter has described are accurate. The story is compelling, and the reader is glad to see Alex come to learn more about the world and herself. A typical coming of age story but set apart by its exciting landscape, this book will appeal to a younger audience interested in social issues or a character with a little more depth than the classic gossip girl type.

Other books by Eric Walters: War of the Eagles, Special Edward, Stars, Northern Exposures

Rating: 3Q 3P J

*This book is largely based off of Walter’s experience while in Africa working with the amazing organization Free the Children.  Free the Children is an international organization that sends children, young adults or families in North America overseas to help the lives of the less fortunate.  They build schools, send over medicine, provide education, etc.

From the website: “The primary goals of the organization are to free children from poverty and exploitation and free young people from the notion that they are powerless to affect positive change in the world.”

Short video from the brothers who started Free the Children