Saturday, January 31, 2026

Heart, Be at Peace, Donal Ryan

 

Heart, Be At Peace by Donal Ryan is a sequel to The Spinning Heart

Started: January 24, 2025
Completed: January 26, 2025
Recommendation: Highly Recommended
Recommended By: The Guardian

Review:

Ryan tells a story of several characters intertwined in a small Irish town.  Once again, he captures the multi-perspective story process well.  I enjoyed hearing the same events from different perspectives with overlapping events being sufficient to carry the story forward without simply retelling the story repeatedly.  Really enjoyed it.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

A Fine Balance, Rohinton Mistry

 

A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry

Started: January 15, 2026
Completed: January 24, 2026
Recommendation: Recommended
Media: Audio
Recommended By: My brother-in-law via my nephew

Review:

There is a belief that everyone is connected to everyone else in some way.  This book draws out connections, many unlikely but all based on struggle of one form or another.  I don't think that I am giving anything away by saying that the fine balance in the title has many possible references (not the least of which is pictured on the cover--two young children tied to the top of a pole being balanced on the thumb of a performer).  I think also that it refers to the immeasurably small room for error for those close to the poverty line.  The thin room between abject poverty and just poverty is often measured by being in the wrong place at the wrong time.  This book explores the resilience of those who survive, the resilience of those who do not, and the striking role that luck plays in the entire process.  The disheartening view of those who must witness others under duress and how they react to the problems and people they see is also explored.  I will say that the stories are presented with compassion and seem to strive for understanding.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Savings and Trust, Justene Hill Edwards

 

Savings and Trust:  The rise and betrayal of the Freedman's bank est. 1865 by Justene Hill Edwards

Started: January 7, 2026
Completed: January 15, 2026
Recommendation: Recommended
Media: Audio
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

For some reason, I thought that this was a book about how newly freed slaves recovered from the collapse of the bank.  Instead, this is a fairly detailed look at how the bank collapsed--sort of a history of both the individuals and the structures that led to the collapse of the bank.  I learned here that the bank collapsed because of the Panic of 1873 when there was a worldwide depression.  Other banks collapsed at the same time.  What made the bank subject to collapse, however, was the trustees of the bank (Cook in particular, who was also the mayor of Washington DC and the brother of a New York banker) functioning as self-serving dealers instead of fiduciary care takers of the wealth of the freedmen.

This was capitalist white predation and the trustees failed to adhere to the requirements set up by Congress for offering loans.  They did not fail due to mismanagement (though most of the trustees were not bankers), they failed because they provided loans to themselves and their cronies with little or no collateral and were not held to account when their loans became due--they effectively stole from the bank.  At the time, the bank was sold to the community as a way to save up for land and that is what patrons did--they put their money into the bank until such time as there was enough to buy land, then they pulled the money out.  Since the fundamentals of the bank were based on US Bonds whose maturity time exceeded this cycle, the bank was illiquid and could not meet this cycle except by increasing the number of customers (this amounts to a Ponzi scheme).  Because this was an impossible situation, the already corrupt trustees convinced Congress to approve the bank moving from a US Bond investment approach (safe) to a loan based investment approach (risky) and the corrupt members of the trustees abused these loans.  A huge number of the loans were simply never repaid and those who took out the loans were never held to account.

As is too often the case, the bank spent money it did not have on lavish extras (like the most expensive building in Washington, DC) amidst the extreme corruption of its loan practices among the trustees and the petty corruption/incompetence of cashiers (think branch managers) who struggled to keep accurate records and provided loans on their own non-existent authority.  The black patrons of the bank were left with the losses rarely recovering over half they money they had put into their savings accounts.

Monday, January 5, 2026

The Ferryman and His Wife, Frode Grytten

 

The Ferryman and His Wife by Frode Grytten

Started: January 4, 2026
Completed: January 6, 2026
Recommendation: Recommended
Media: Audio
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

This is a very well written story.  It is sad (maybe poignant is better?) and that makes it hard for me to put it on my highly recommended list.  In all honesty, I would like to spend my last day as well as the ferryman does.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Pursuit of Liberty, Jeffrey Rosen

 

The Pursuit of Liberty:  How Hamilton vs. Jefferson ignited the lasting battle over power in America by Jeffrey Rosen

Started: December 26, 2025
Completed: January 4, 2026
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: Washington Independent Review of Books
Media: Audio

Review:

There is an argument to be made that Hamilton and Jefferson were opposites and this book does a pretty good job of explaining that argument.  I feel like they disagreed on some stuff and agreed on other stuff.  There is little doubt that Hamilton went to great lengths to support the Constitution's ratification whereas Jefferson did less.  There is no doubt that they differed strongly on the National Bank which is where Rosen makes his case.  I think his effort to draw a through line to modern politics is weak and reflective of politicians quoting the founding fathers when the quotations are useful (Rosen, for example, points out that he collected quotations from Hamilton for Biden's use).  That is different then modern politicians adopting the positions of the founding fathers.  As a practice, I do not see modern politicians (with the reasonable exception of Trump who seems to go with Andrew Jackson without really knowing very much about him) as making an effort to adopt a founding father's position.  It seems to me (as Rosen demonstrates) that politicians quote a founding father when that quotation is useful.

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Nobody's Girl, Virginia Roberts Giuffre

 

Nobody's Girl:  A memoir of surviving abuse and fighting for justice by Virginia Roberts Giuffre.  I really do not have the stomach for what I am sure is in this book.  My sister, however, is very important to me and I will read this because she has asked.  Amy Wallace appears to be a ghost co-author.

Started: December 22, 2025
Completed: December 28, 2025
Recommendation: Highly Recommended
Media: Audio
Recommended By: The older of my sisters

Review:

Honestly, this book is not as graphic as I thought it would be.  If, however, you have been abused yourself, there must be thousands of triggers, so be careful.  Giuffre did a good job of making clear the scale and broad nature of her abuse without describing any particular abuse in graphic detail.  Her most frequent reference was to "servicing" people (though the details of what that entailed surely differed from occasion to occasion, this book provides details far more about how Giuffre felt before, occasionally during, and generally after).  This is not an easy read, but surely nobody who reads a book about surviving abuse can expect an easy read.  Sexual slavery is also unpleasant even as a concept.  For those who can, this is a book worth reading.  It is important to have the context of Giuffre's experience to understand what happened to her and why continuing to fight for justice for her and her sister survivors is terribly important.