Tuesday, December 31, 2019

The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O, Stephenson and Galland

The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O:  A novel by Neal Stephenson and Nicole Galland.  I have no idea what this novel is about.  Neal Stephenson...done.

Started: 9/18/2019
Completed: 12/31/2019
Recommendation: Not Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

The premise of magic being real and then destroyed is pretty awesome.  There are some fun plays with ideas on how time travel has effected the current time.  The structure of the book (particularly as an audio book) using emails and other text messages to talk back and forth is mind numbingly boring to hear.  The tool of using different chapters as collections of different people's recollections is also useful, but it feels like a crutch towards the end of the book.  I did not enjoy this one.

Stiletto, Daniel O'Malley

Stiletto by Daniel O'Malley is a sequel to The Rook.

Started:  12/13/2019
Completed: 12/31/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Words for which I sought help:

insouciance -- casual lack of concern; indifference

Review:

This is a pretty interesting book.  It carries forward from the previous book, but in a new way with very little of the original character.  The basic story carries along the same theme, but attacks it from a different angle.  I have to say that I enjoyed it.

I really loved this simile:  "The car moved forward in fits and starts like an opera singer who had been hit by a hockey stick in the middle of an aria, but insisted that the show must go on."  The idea that an opera singer could be hit by a hockey stick (of all things) just came out of left field.  In addition, the idea of a diva insisting that things go forward despite being in a clearly dilapidated state also caught me as clever.  The image I had was a large viking woman (which kept flipping back in my mind to Bugs Bunny wearing a horned helm) struggling to hold it together while hitting her high C, coughing (understandably), then wheezing back to the correct note.

Monday, December 30, 2019

1491, Charles Mann

1491:  New revolutions of the Americas before Columbus by Charles C. Mann is a book I picked up at the Greenbelt Labor Day Festival.

Started: 12/27/2019
Completed: 12/30/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Words for which I sought help:

hugger-mugger -- of a confused or disorderly nature

Review:

Charles Mann is so thorough.  It is shocking to see all of the research that he has brought together and then communicated it clearly.  It is surprising to me, as well, to learn how heavily populated the Americas were.  I've also wondered about the tales of prairie schooners passing through forest.  It seemed impossible to me that the forest floor could ever be so clear.  I was told that it was the rich wild life that had just eaten everything.  That seemed a bit ludicrous to me at the time, but now I know otherwise.

Friday, December 27, 2019

Night Boat to Tangier, Kevin Barry

Night Boat to Tangier by Kevin Barry showed up on several of the best books of 2019.  The book was long listed for the Booker Prize.

Started: 12/26/2019
Completed: 12/27/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: several best books of 2019

Words for which I sought help:

cirrhotic -- characterized by cirrhosis; in this case I think it is  a synonym for alcoholic.

Review:

Some of the mental pictures drawn in the book were quite clever and very meaningful, like: "They had an excellent view sitting upon the stack of their years."

Somehow, the book wraps you in its cold, foggy touch and throws in front of you the odd collection of characters who move across decades and between relationships in odd ways.  Nothing seems real and, yet, all of it seems ground in the grungy, ugly, sordid lubricant of reality.

I never would have thought that a book which is essentially about a pair of truly unsympathetic drug runners would be even mildly enticing.  This is a benefit of checking out books on a top something list.  There is usually a reason the book has made this kind of list and I have found that the reason often shows up in the book.  In this book, it is just a good yarn.  About horrible people.  Who all like each other in horrible ways.

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Oryx and Crake, Margaret Atwood

Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood is a book I found on a list of the best fiction.  I'm a bit leery of Atwood because the Handsmaid's stuff is so uneven.  The title seems like something from Neil Gaiman.  Who knows.

Started: 12/24/2019
Completed: 12/26/2019
Recommendation: Not Recommended
Recommended By: A list

Review:

WARNING:  This book discusses child pornography from the child's perspective as a flash back.  This could be a trigger issue for some people.  Just unpleasant for the rest of us.

I hate being dumped into a dystopian future with no reference points.  Margaret Atwood does that fairly consistently.  I should know better.

The book is well written.  The plot is pretty basic, but there is plenty of nuance.  The way the plot developed was frustrating for me.  There is a lot of flashback and parallel story lines.  The book is interesting, but it felt to me that there was no character development--at best some sort of character revealing.

The premise does not carry the wait of the disorientation that is Atwood's hallmark.

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Empire of the Summer Moon, S. C. Gwynne


Started: 12/21/2019
Completed: 12/24/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By:  Nobody

Words for which I sought help:

priapic -- relating to male sexuality and sexual activity

Review:

Easily half the book is about the state of the Comanches before Quanah.  This is all very interesting, but kind of caught me off-guard.  I think it was necessary to establish the nature of the Comanche way of life and also to provide some perspective on how his mother (a white woman) came to the tribe and her perspective on Comanches in general.  The book is really interesting if you can get by how terribly bloody things were.  It seems to me that Quanah could have had a book that focused more purely on him, but I have a feeling that the author wanted to have more than just that.

Saturday, December 21, 2019

Proof of Conspiracy, Seth Abramson


Started: 12/10/2019
Completed: 12/21/2019
Recommendation: Highly recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Words and phrases for which I sought help:

sub rosa lobbying -- Literally "under the rose" this is lobbying that is done in secret.

Review:

So this is a huge take down on Trump and his clan.  It is amazing in its detail, focus, and rigorous sources.  Must read for anyone who wants to know what our President has been doing and how bad it is for the USA.

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

The Blade Itself, Joe Abercrombie

The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie was on a list of recommended books in the Washington Post that my mother-in-law had cut out and recommended to me.  I think that this was in the year the book was published, 2006.  It took a long time to buy a copy as it did not show up in used book stores and I eventually took it out of the library.

Started: 12/6/2019
Completed: 12/10/2019
Recommendation: Mild recommendation
Recommended By:  The Washington Post

Review:

Some of the descriptions were really good: "...silence but for the wind fumbling across the dark stones...."  Others, however, such as long battle scenes were just kind of gross.  Maybe they were needed, it will take the subsequent books to know for sure.  This is, however, a book that was written in need of a sequel.  We shall see.  For now, however, I can offer a mild recommendation.

Friday, December 6, 2019

Exhalation, Ted Chiang

Exhalation by Ted Chiang is a collection of science fiction short stories.  This book shows up on numerous lists of good science fiction books to read.

Started: 12/2/2019
Completed: 12/6/2019
Recommendation: Highly recommended
Recommended By: A list of some sort

Review:

I am not big on collections of short stories, but this is a pretty cool collection.

"Skill at debate is not the same as maturity."  This is an excellent and fundamental insight.  I find it hard to distinguish them myself.  The story in which this insight appeared did a good job of explaining what was happening.

These are great stories that address lots of cool issues.  The time was well spent and I really enjoyed these carefully crafted stories.

Monday, December 2, 2019

A Warning, Anonymous

A Warning by Anonymous is a book I could not miss.

Started: 11/30/2019
Completed: 12/2/2019
Recommendation: Mildly Recommended
Recommended By: Cousin Charles

Review:

"He is out of his mind."  'nuff said.

Then he said this, "Given enough time and space, Donald J. Trump, will seek to abuse any power he is given."  Wow.

Sunday, December 1, 2019

The Education of Brett Kavanaugh, Pogrebin and Kelly


Started: 11/27/2019
Completed: 11/28/2019
Recommendation:  Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

This well researched book follows the education of Justice Kavanaugh.

Leadership, Doris Kearns Goodwin

Leadership:  In turbulent times by Doris Kearns Goodwin is a book that was reviewed in the Washington Post.  The review came up at a Thoughtful Discussion Group when the topic was on the nature of leadership.  I enjoyed Team of Rivals so I have a sense that I will enjoy this book as well.

Started: 11/21/2019
Completed: 11/29/2019
Recommendation: Mild recommendation
Recommended By: Ann

Review:

Goodwin is a good writer who can synthesize information from multiple sources.  Unfortunately, large sections of this book a cribbed from her previous books with a little editing.  The material remains good, it is just redundant.  The final section looks at how each of the leaders addressed fundamental problems with their leadership skills.  That is the part of the book that is truly new.

Universal Darwinism, John Campbell

Universal Darwinism:  The path of knowledge by John Campbell is a book about how multiple phase states might affect philosophy.

Started:  8/10/2019
Completed: 11/27/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By:  I saw John Campbell referenced in an on-line blurb talking about multiple phase states and that made me curious--Philosopher discussing physics?

Review:

The link between Bayesian probability and physics results in philosophy.  I think that this is a seminal work.  It is worth taking time to read it carefully.

Thursday, November 21, 2019

A Gentleman in Moscow, Amor Towles

A Gentleman In Moscow:  A novel by Amor Towles is a book I found on a reading list or two.

Started: 11/14/2019
Completed: 11/21/2019
Recommendation: Highly Recommended
Recommended By:  A reading list

Review:

First and foremost:  Get the audio version of this book.  Nicholas Guy Smith simply does a fantastic job.

The story is fabulous and the prose is riveting.  I enjoyed almost every moment.  The plot is surprisingly good as well, perhaps, in part, to the deftness with which it is revealed.  Seemingly hidden in the skein, but present all along.  Really a great book.  I cannot say enough good things about it.

For what it is worth, it has little to do with Moscow while being distinctly about Russia.  It is so much more about friendship and family.

Thursday, November 14, 2019

The Testaments, Margaret Atwood

The Testaments by Margaret Atwood is a sequel to The Handmaid's Tale.  I didn't particularly like The Handmaid's Tale, but I'm hoping this one is informed by the television series.

Started: 11/11/2019
Completed: 11/14/2019
Recommendation: Highly Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

Using the mechanism of Aunt Lydia's notes, this book had more of a narrative to it then The Handmaid's Tale.  It also leveraged the television series--so, it is important that you see the television series at least the first few seasons for this book to make a lot of sense.  It was written in the same general style as The Handmaid's Tale in terms of being a collection of artifacts.  It also included the meeting at the end to review how the material was found and to provide a little more context.  In general, I found this story better.  It explained a lot of things that were suggested in The Handmaid's Tale and being told from Aunt Lydia's perspective could include details that a Handmaid would simply not know.

Monday, November 11, 2019

Blink, Malcolm Gladwell

Blink:  The power of thinking without thinking by Malcolm Gladwell.  I was disappointed by The Tipping Point, but I thought it was worth the read.  I'm hoping for more from this book.

Started: 11/8/2019
Completed: 11/11/2019
Recommendation: Mild Recommendation
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

So there were a bunch of interesting points in this book and it points out both the pros and cons of snap judgement.  It was nice that the pros and cons had good examples that stuck in my head.  One example that seemed to dominate the book was an example of how couples interacted.  I had read about this example in articles written by Gladwell and so that part was repetitive to me.

Friday, November 8, 2019

Just Mercy, Bryan Stevenson


Started: 11/5/2019
Completed: 11/8/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended by: a bunch of people

Review:

This is very hard to read.  The stories of people charged with crimes (both those who actually committed those crimes and those who did not) take your breath away.  I have been aware that some people on death row had been found innocent.  I have been aware of notorious criminals who were unquestionably guilty (e.g. Charles Manson).  Neither of these small samples is representative of the bulk of those charged, but it is too easy to view all prisoners using these bold strokes.  This book, written by a lawyer who defends those on death row (and some lifers), looks at examples of many more types of prisoners.  It goes into detail on a few cases and still remains a small sample.  It talks about those who were executed and those who were not.  It is a hard read, but worth the read.

"Just mercy belongs to the undeserving.  That is when it is most powerful."

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Catch and Kill, Ronan Farrow


Started: 11/2/2019
Completed: 11/5/2019
Recommendation: Highly Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Words for which I sought help:

insucciant -- showing a casual lack of concern; indifferent.

Review:

What a great book about the reporting behind the "Me too" movement.  This book is hard to read and it is important for us all to remember that it is money that allows the powerful to do what they want.  Ronan Farrow is among the free press and the free press, in general, keeps the government honest.  Heck, it even keeps itself honest.  Ask NBC.  Or CBS.

Saturday, November 2, 2019

The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt

The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt was a Pulitzer prize winner.

Started: 10/27/2019
Completed: 11/2/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

This is a pretty impressive book.  It captures a young life with way too many twists and turns.  It tries to explore the space between pure good and pure evil suggesting that nothing in life is really either.  It also argues that loving a thing can enrich one's life in a good and productive way.  It can also be bad.  It is really, in the end, neither one and a lot of the gray space in between.

The prose is good, the conversations are really good, and the exploration of the experience of taking drugs is appropriately off-putting.

Sunday, October 27, 2019

The City of Brass, S. A. Chakraborty

The City of Brass by S. A. Chakraborty is a book that I got from a list of science fiction books to read.  I cannot remember which list.  It is the first in a trilogy.

Started: 10/23/2019
Completed: 10/27/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By:  A list of books somewhere

Review:

This story takes place in an Arabic mythology.  It is sweeping and it is extremely interesting.  Catching up on the mythology itself is a challenge, but worth doing while reading through.  The end has a twist that it is reasonable to expect, but that still surprised me and made me smile.  Wait for the twist and enjoy it when it happens.  This book really lays the foundation for the rest of the trilogy, but it is worth reading on its own as well.

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Amity and Prosperity, Eliza Griswold


Amity and Prosperity:  One family and the fracturing of America by Eliza Griswold is a Pulitzer Prize winning book that I heard about on the NYT Review of Books pod cast.

Started: 10/19/2019
Completed: 10/23/2019
Recommendation: Mild Recommendation
Recommended By: The New York Times

Review:
This book will not make you happy.  It will embarrass you as an American.  Nobody will read this book and think that the United States is great or even functional.  I found the book frustrating and the dark message arrived at the same time as some personal dark times so it was a double whammy.

This is similar to Love Canal.  The start is equally horrifying.  The woman at the center matches.  This is not the same story.

I can recommend it, but I'm not happy about it.

Saturday, October 19, 2019

The Rook, Daniel O'Malley

The Rook by Daniel O'Malley was on a list of fantasy books being made into shows/movies.  The plot looked interesting.

Started: 10/15/2019
Completed: 10/19/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By:  A book list

Review:

I love that the author was comfortable throwing in political commentary:  "Nobody pays any attention to protesters.  Even environmentalists are routinely ignored and their arguments make sense."

The premise of the book (that the protagonist has amnesia) is a little reminiscent of the Jason Bourne books, but, in my opinion, is done much better.  The twist of adding in the supernatural also helps.  This was a good read stand-alone, but there is also a sequel and it is clear how the hooks were built in the book to allow for that.

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Educated, Tara Westover


Educated: A memoir by Tara Westover is a must read book for 2019.  In addition this book was on Barack Obama's summer reading list for 2018.

Started: 10/12/2019
Completed: 10/15/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By:  The New York Times

Words for which I sought help:

fictive -- creating or created by imagination.

polyphony -- the style of simultaneously combining a number of parts, each forming an individual melody and harmonizing with each other.

shibboleth -- a custom, principal, or belief distinguishing a particular call or group of people, especially a long-standing one regarded as outmoded or no longer important.

Review:

I was interested in the Illuminati for a little while, but it never took over my life.  Ms. Westover was dominated by this kind of conspiracy theory for her childhood.  It was amazing to hear how completely indoctrination can dominate a child's life.  Of course, it makes sense, that this would happen to a child, but it is hard to hear about.

Preparing for Y2K, Tara's father says, "When the hour of need arises, the time of preparation has past."  I really like this quotation (though it is oddly displaced in the imagined dystopia that surrounds the Westover clan).

I love this description:  "terms...were dotted around the page like black holes sucking all of the other words into them."  There were several more clever descriptions that revolved around reading and math that I enjoyed.

The story of how Ms. Westover overcomes the machinations and twisted rewritten histories of her family is compelling.  It seems to me, however, that she wrote her story too early.  There is so much more to tell.  I think that the subtitle should be, "an introduction."

Saturday, October 12, 2019

The Fifth Season, N. K. Jemison

The Fifth Season: Every age must come to an end by N. K. Jemisin was recommended on a list of good books.  This is the first book in the Broken Earth series and have enjoyed other books by Jemisin.

Started: 10/7/2019
Completed: 10/12/2019
Recommendation: Highly Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Words for which I sought help:

redolent -- fragrant or sweet-smelling

spavined -- suffering from or affected by spavin.  Being of or marked by a decrepit or being broken-down condition.

Review:

Jemisin builds worlds that are starkly different from our current world, but introduces them so gradually with a pinch of this odd thing or a snippet of that alien concept that one does not even realize how unfamiliar this should all be.  Through this gradual introduction Jemisin has the reader buying into the world and its constructs without even having to think about how odd it is.  This ability to create a consistent and coherent world and then introduce it as though it were a familiar environment is an incredible execution of craft.

Monday, October 7, 2019

A Game of Thrones, George R. R. Martin

A Game of Thrones by George R. R. Martin is the first book in the Song of Fire and Ice Series.  I was told about this book many years ago, long before the HBO series was shot, but had never gotten around to reading it.  This is the first book in the A Song of Ice and Fire series.

Started: 9/28/2019
Completed: 10/6/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By:  Aaron

Review:

The rumors of the series on HBO suggest that this series is awash in blood.  It occurred to me that the series could only capture a portion of the series and that, therefore, it would capture the most "exciting" portions.  This is often life and death.  My suspicions bore true and the book was much more than simply a swim through gore.

That is not to say that the gore is not rampant, but it does not seem like it is purely for its own sake.  There is a certain amount of blood and gore to be expected in a medieval fantasy.

The scope of the book is fantastic and this book was clearly not written to stand on its own.  Too many things simply get started.  Be careful, it is addictive.

Saturday, September 28, 2019

How Fascism Works, Jason Stanley

How Fascism Works:  The politics of us and them by Jason Stanley is a book relevant to current politics written by a Yale philosopher.  What a shock I would want to read it.

Started: 9/25/2019
Completed: 9/28/2019
Recommendation: Highly Recommended
Recommended By:  Nobody

Review:

A cogent and careful analysis of Fascism in general and an understanding of how current Republican politics are fascist in nature.  Establishing immigrants as a "them" against America as an "us" is a fascist effort.  Describing immigrants as rapists, despite evidence to the contrary, is a fascist tactic that develops a mythic threat to "our" manhood and a threat to the patriarchal family.  Further mythic assaults (e.g. the attack on Christmas) attack "our" culture.  Fascism strives to keep a "pure" culture, sense of family, and, often, race.  Current Republican political arguments are fascist in nature.  A mythical history to which the country is to be restored is also a fascist talking point (e.g. make America great again).  Finally, the fascist politician works to become the soul source of truth so that even current events can be warped to match the Fascist myths.   We should be worried when Lamar Smith (R-TX) says, "Donald Trump is the sole source of truth."

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Life 3.0, Max Tegmark

Life 3.0: Being human in the age of artificial intelligence by Max Tegmark was a New York Times best seller that caught my attention.  The audio version was read by Rob Shapiro.

Started: 9/19/2019
Completed: 9/25/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

This book provided a fresh look at artificial intelligence for me.  I really thought that the Terminator series was ridiculous.  So does the author of this book.  He demonstrates that it is quite conceivable that a true superintelligence would not need to build killer robots.  Humans could be eliminated (if that was the goal) in much easier ways and argues convincingly that it is likely we wouldn't even know it was happening until it was done.  The question, therefore, is whether (and if so how) a superintelligence can be fostered and developed without this outcome.  The book is worth the read. 

Sunday, September 22, 2019

Obergefell et al. v. Hodges, Director, Ohio Department of Health, et al., Supreme Court

Obergefell v Hodges is a case with the opinion written by Justice Kennedy and dissenting opinions from Chief Justice Roberts, Justice Scalia, Justice Thomas, and Justice Alito.  This case made same-sex marriage the law of the land in the United States of America.

Started:  6/26/2015
Completed: 9/22/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By:  Nobody


Review:

This is less a review and more a walk-through of the ruling from the Court.

HELD The Fourteenth amendment requires a State to recognize a same-sex marriage that was performed in another State.  The Petitioners in this case were not trying to demean marriage, but to gain the benefits and responsibilities thereof.  Changes to the nature of such things as marriage is consistent with the history of the country and have served to improve such covenants.  The Due Process clause (found in Section 1) of the Fourteenth amendment extends to personal choices inherent in individual dignity and autonomy.  The right to personal choice regarding marriage is inherent in the concept of marriage.  The right to have intimate interactions is inextricably linked to the right to marriage as well.

The court accepted the case on two basic issues:  1) is a State required to allow the marriage between two people of the same sex and 2) is a state required to recognize the marriage licenses of another state.

This is a collection of several cases rolled into one before the Supreme Court.  Obergefell and Arthur were married in Maryland after a 20 year relationship and after Arthur was diagnosed with ALS.  The returned to Ohio and Arthur died.  Obergefell was denied by the state of Ohio being listed as Arthur's spouse on the death certificate.  DeBoer and Rowse have several special needs children, but adoption laws in Michigan do not recognize same sex couples, so only one of the two is the legally recognized parent.  They came to the court seeking a way for them both to be legally the parents of their children.  DeKoe and Kostura were married in New York, but moved to Tennessee after DeKoe returned from deployment to Afghanistan.  Tennessee does not recognize same sex marriage, so their marriage was invalidated every time they crossed the state line.

The Supreme Court has addressed same sex relationships in only a few cases.  In Browers v. Hardwick the court ruled that there was no right to consensual sodomy.  In Romer v. Evans, however the court struck down an amendment to the Colorado constitution that explicitly prevented laws that protected LGBTQ people from discrimination.  The third case was Lawrence v. Texas which reversed Browers v. Hardwick and held that consensual sex could not be criminalized.

In 1993, Hawaii's Supreme Court dismissed a case regarding same sex marriage due to a change in the Hawaiian constitution as the case moved through the court system.  As a result, many concluded that same sex marriage could be allowed (see Baehr v. Miike).  The United State Congress passed the Defense of Marriage Act in response.  This act defined marriage on the federal level as heterosexual.  Several states disagreed and provided for same sex marriage within their laws and these laws were upheld by state supreme courts.

The fourteenth amendment has been interpreted by the Supreme Court as a protector of intimate choices (see Eisenstadt v. Baird in which a lecturer provided free vaginal foam as a contraceptive to an unmarried woman and was charged with a crime which was reversed by the Supreme Court).

Marriage, itself, has been addressed by the Supreme Court (most famously in Loving v. Virginia which affirmed a right to interracial marriage).  These cases addressed who was eligible to marry (Zablocki v. Redhail struck down a law that prevented people behind on child support from marrying; Turner v Safley held that inmates could marry).  The Supreme Court, however, has not considered the issue of same sex marriage to be a Federal question in the past (see Baker v. Nelson from Minnesota's Supreme Court, which was rejected by the Supreme Court on appeal), but DOMA changed that.

The court argued that there were four points in its consideration of the case:

  1. Marriage is inherently linked to personal choice (the logic is in Loving v. Virginia) and is effectively the height of intimacy.
  2. The right to marriage is older than any other right (as argued in Griswold v. Connecticut) including the Bill of Rights.
  3. Marriage protects children and the family
  4. Marriage is a keystone of social order
The plaintiffs argued that this case was not about including a disenfranchised group in an existing right, but the creation of a new right (same-sex marriage) and that such a thing should be very carefully reviewed in keeping with Washington v. Glucksberg (a case that wanted to establish the physician assisted suicide as a right via the fourteenth amendment and failed).  The Court's opinion held that Loving, for example, did not seek a new "interracial marriage" right and that Turner did not seek a new "inmate marriage" right--rather both asked that the existing marriage right be extended to a disenfranchised class.

The Court also found that the lack of an ability to marry was very harmful to same sex couples, that these harms extended to society as a whole, and that the result was subordination of an entire group (same sex couples).

A curious part of this opinion is that the Court argued that sufficient debate had occurred on this issue to be able to gauge whether same sex marriage was worthy of a decision instead of a call for more intense discussion.  The court cited the number of amicus briefs (among other things) as a way of evaluating whether or not the issue had been intensively discussed.  To my mind, this suggests that important court cases simply need more amicus briefs submitted to the Court.  These briefs should be present from people from different walks of life, with different backgrounds from the plaintiffs whether they are supportive of the plaintiff or the defendant.  

The Court identified that marriage was a fundamental right and that it is the unique role of the Judiciary to protect fundamental rights (which cannot be legislated into or out of existence).  The majority opinion effectively dismissed many of the arguments put forward against marriage on the basis of harms to the institution of marriage, potential for people to change their decision to procreate (a bit bizarre that one), and religion (it is a not a First Amendment right to bar someone else from doing something because you have a religious belief against the practice).

The Court's decision to require that states recognize that people legally married in another state are legally married in their state is quickly asserted as a matter of consistency in the ruling.

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Just Six Numbers, Martin Rees

Just Six Numbers:  The deep forces that shape the universe by Martin J. Rees was a book that I picked up from the discount table at a book store (I am listening to a library version narrated by John Curless because vision is a problem at the moment).  I have often heard that physicist tend to ponder why the six basic numbers have the values that they have (to me this seems like wondering what things would be like if photons weighed 10 pounds).  Some philosophers argue that it should be possible for these numbers to be anything if they are to be meaningful.  I don't get either of those, so I picked up this book hoping Baron Rees could explain at least some of it.

Started: 9/16/2019
Completed: 9/19/2019
Recommendation: Mild Recommendation
Recommended By:  Nobody

Review:

Fairly quickly Rees claims that the particular six numbers are not magic and should be no more surprising than that humans came into being on the particular planet on which we did.  The numbers are the way they are because we live in the universe we do (just as the Earth is where we live because we developed here).

Towards the end, however, Rees argues that this explanation is broadly unsatisfactory.  He uses the example of a man in front of a shooting squad of 50 marksman who, somehow survives unscathed.  It is true that he was not killed (after all his survival demonstrates that), but it is not a terribly satisfactory state and one would desire to investigate to understand why he survived.  To that end, Rees argues in favor of the multiverse (every possible universe with every possible configuration was created, we just happen to live in the one in which we find ourselves--an edge case that allows biological processes).

I did not get from this book what I had hoped, but it is a good book and gives a solid lay understanding of the six numbers that shape the universe.

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Fall, Neal Stephenson

Fall; or, A Dodge in Hell by Neal Stephenson is a sequel to Reamde.

Started:  7/29/2019
Completed: 9/18/2019
Recommendation: Mild Recommendation
Recommended By:  Nobody

Review:

Clearly Neal Stephenson is spending a lot of time thinking about uploading brains to a virtual environment.  I'm not really thrilled about the creation of the garden from nothingness, but OK, I guess it is important to grab onto something.

The thought of the United States swiftly riding off the rails makes some sense given the current trend.  I guess I am tainted by having recently read "The Handmaid's Tale" and am a little spun out on the religious dystopia.  The thought of all society just going away and living in the cloud seems highly unlikely.

This is a very long book about the recreation of society.  Of course, I love Neal Stephenson, so I listened to the whole thing.  If this is your first Stephenson distopian novel, pick another.  If you liked the last one, then you will probably like this one and it is shorter than whatever you read before.

Monday, September 16, 2019

Adams vs. Jefferson

Adams vs. Jefferson:  The tumultuous election of 1800 by John Ferling fits neatly into my interest in both Adams and Jefferson.  I picked this book up on a mark down table at a brick and mortar book store many years ago and it has languished on my shelves as I have slowly read the books there.  Recently, I have had eye problems and learned about the audio books available from the library.  I was thrilled to see this one and picked it up quickly.

Started: 9/13/2019 (Friday the 13th)
Completed: 9/16/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Words for which I sought help:

bloviate -- talk at length, especially in an inflated or empty way

calumny -- the making of false and defamatory statements about someone in order to damage their reputation; slander

Review:

This book brings to life the background and actions of the election of 1800.  I was aware that the election was decided in the House of Representatives, that Jefferson was the victor, and that Burr felt he had a good chance of winning.  The book sort of glosses over the previous election in which Adams beat Jefferson without going to the House of Representatives.  It seems like the author really likes Jefferson, sees his presidency as the revolution Jefferson claimed it to be, and felt that Burr was a warped personality.

What interested me most was the deadlock in the House.  I was unaware of this and equally unaware of the likelihood that Jefferson had made a deal (which he denied) to break it.  I also had no idea how central to the election South Carolina was and equally so Delaware in the House.  Thus, the almost week long effort to elect a president seems to have come to an end through a deal with Delaware and that was brought to the House largely through the electoral votes of South Carolina (although it seems that the electoral votes of New York might have been equally telling, though less unknown).  It was also fascinating to learn that every elector cast two votes for president (with at least one coming from a different state)--this was resolved by the 14th(?) amendment to the constitution which changed it to one vote making a tie far less likely.

A good book and a decent read.

Friday, September 13, 2019

Incognito, David Eagleman

Incognito:  The secret lives of the brain by David Eagleman is a book written about the brain for the lay reader by a neuroscientist.

Started:  9/9/2019
Completed: 9/13/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

This book is pretty darn good and introduces a slew of questions.  Near the end, however, the author looks at judicial proceedings and concludes that a sentencing process which looks at the likelihood of recidivism is the best way to move forward.  The author suggests that the prison sentence should be based on the risk of future criminal activity.  While this may have a lot of meaning from neuropsychology, it is pretty scary to have prison sentences not based on the action that occurred, but based on the risk of that person committing future crimes.  This is a pretty bad thing for the judiciary.  Your genetics determine your sentence.  Or your brain tumor.  Or your exposure to some kind of virus that changes the expression of your genetics.  Or, chillingly, your poverty.

The other side, equally chilling, is that criminal behavior is subject to medical treatment.  Certainly, to an extent, this is true.  One wonders, however, how it is possible to treat an individual based on a sociological statistical analysis.  The implications are pretty scary.  Would criminals be allowed to reproduce and pass on their dangerous genetics (the author frequently notes that the single highest genetic prediction of criminal activity is to have a "Y" chromosome--be male)?  We have seen this attempt at "forward thinking" (considering a current action in terms of likely future outcomes) with sterilization in the 1920s...

The conclusion of the book kind of throws shade at the judicial section.  The author argues that simply looking at the structures of the brain (at whatever level of detail) is probably insufficient to understanding how the brain works.  If that approach is accurate, then the judicial component of the book is woefully misguided.  It is almost as though two different people wrote the book (or there was a lack of "full thinking" in applying the conclusion to the arguments made previously).  Of course, the author would be comfortable with the concept that one actual brain could posit multiple different overlapping and conflicting opinions--what he refers to as a "team of rivals"--as he argues that this is how the brain operates (many different approaches to the same problem rattle around in the brain until a single approach wins).  The downside, however, to his demonstrating one of his basic concepts is that the intent of the book is to elucidate how an understanding of the brain is important, not demonstrate how a brain might appear if the "controls" were peeled back and the seething maelstrom of potential actions were exposed. 

Monday, September 9, 2019

Spinning Silver, Naomi Novik

Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik is not a clear a sequel to Uprooted, but may occur in a similar world.

Started: 9/6/2019
Completed: 9/9/2019
Recommendation: Highly Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

A wonderful novel that takes a side-ways look at the traditional Rumpelstiltskin.  As usual, stepping into a Novik world is a treat and the characters are rich.  The story line is compelling and this story is told from many different perspectives which enriches the story telling.

Saturday, September 7, 2019

The Air We Breathe, Andrea Barrett

The Air We Breathe by Andrea Barrett is a book that came recommended, but I simply cannot remember who/what made the recommendation.

Started: 9/2/2019
Completed: 9/6/2019
Recommendation: Mild Recommendation
Recomended By: Nobody

Review:

In many ways this reminds me of books from the turn of the century (Anthony Trollope comes to mind).  The nature of entertainment and the richness of formal human interaction.  It seems like a Victorian ideal.  In a consumptive ward.

The book, however, does not resolve the way that a turn of the century novel did and many things are left unanswered as the book closes.  In this case, it is not a problem that things are not tied up.  The book did not have a mounting sense of an impending big end, it seemed like a character study from the start.  The characters do evolve and, in some ways, seems almost like a modern romantic comedy (or, looking the other way, Shakespearean comedy) with the misunderstood feelings that swoop across the novel.  The book also seems to have a societal understanding as the characters are largely reduced to their own society due to illness (vaguely reminiscent of the United States before the first World War and its isolationist policies) and the small society turns on itself in much the same way as the nation did upon entering the war.

This book also quietly examines the love-hate relationship that Americans have with scientists, doctors, and nurses.

I enjoyed this little book while I read it, but I do not expect it to make a lasting impression on me.

Monday, September 2, 2019

Born on a Blue Day, Daniel Tammet


Started:  9/1/2019
Completed: 9/2/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: Nikolay

Review:

This was an eye-opening book.  It is interesting to hear from an autistic person directly and not through the medium of someone interpreting what happens in their life.  The savant part was impressive, but the synesthesia and the way it was experienced directly was truly interesting.  This reminded me of Temple Grandin's description of how she came to understand what the animals were feeling at a slaughter house.  Well worth the time to read through this little book.

Sunday, September 1, 2019

Throne of Jade, Naomi Novik

Throne of Jade by Naomi Novik is a sequel to His Majesty's Dragon which I enjoyed very much.

Started: 8/26/2019
Completed: 9/1/2019
Recommendation: Highly Recommended
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

The austerity of English nobles in the 1800s is less on evidence in this book, but the concept of the dragon as part of everyday life in Chinese nobility is addressed.  The book is far less about aerial battles and more about machinations with the Chinese court which is equally enjoyable.  The plots and sub-plots are well executed and the clear move of adding another dragon to the British ranks from China is well established.  Also, the idea of dragons hoarding their wealth is now explained and a mechanism for it in a society which is starkly different from Tolkien established.  The major characters are enriched and a small portion of minor characters meet their ends leaving many ways for the author to go in the next book.  I particularly enjoyed the concept of dragons getting involved in poetry.

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

American Pastoral, Philip Roth

American Pastoral by Philip Roth is a Pulitzer prize winner that was on a list of books that should be read.

Started: 8/20/2019
Completed: 8/26/2019
Recommendation: Not Recommended
Recommended By:  A list of top books to read before you die

Review:

The author does a great job of contrast throughout the book.  For example after envisioning the scene of a rape, the author offers a contrasting view of the innocence of the woman as a young child, "[a] body that looks quickly put on after having been freshly ironed--no folds anywhere."

Having said that, while the author pursues great detail in some areas, far too many lines of the story are left entirely disjoint and one repeatedly wonders to what extent the story would be true to the characters themselves.  This is a literary device in two ways:  the story is non-linear and it is a projection of the narrator's opinion of other characters motives.  This makes it a story within a story and seems to be the narrator's collection of theories offered in a disorganized matter.  To my mind, this detracts from the story itself and lessons the value of the book to me, though it may increase the literature value.

The person who read the book (I listened to an audio version), Ron Silver, did an excellent job of interpreting the patois of the male Jewish narrator and really made the book seem like it was being told rather than read.  He did an excellent job.

In the end, I read books for enjoyment.  I like to be immersed in the story.  Even a difficult story can be immersive.  While I also like the way a story is told, I am not fond of literary style for its own sake.  As a result, I did not find this book and found myself frequently isolated from the narrative as I tried to figure out what was happening (not understanding a complex series of events as in a mystery, which can be enjoyable, but trying to find some link to associate events which seemed displaced in time and place without any help from the narrator).  I cannot recommend this book.

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Altered Carbon, Richard Morgan

Altered Carbon by Richard Morgan is a book recommended from one of the top 10 lists.

Started: 8/13/2019
Completed: 8/20/2019
Recommendation: Not Recommended
Recommended By:  A top ten list

Review:

This book is almost explicitly erotic.  It is also enormously violent.  I like the concepts, but did not like the material in the story line.  It is not my style and I did not enjoy it.

I have to admit that the concept of being downloaded into a body and calling that body a "sleeve" was a really good idea.  I also liked some of the descriptions and the use of language.  All in all, however, I cannot in good conscious recommend this book.

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Uprooted, Naomi Novik

Uprooted by Naomi Novik has been on my list for quite a few years (ever since reading His Majesty's Dragon).  It seems likely that a television series based on this book and its sequel are in the works.

Started:  8/5/2019
Completed: 8/11/2019
Recommendation: Highly Recommended
Recommended By:  Nobody

Review:

What a wonderful read!  Really enjoyed it.  I enjoyed the approach to magic which viewed it as enhancing that which already exists.  The story was good and it was fun.  It was also great to hear a story that has Baba Yaga as a positive influence--the witch you kind of like.

Saturday, August 10, 2019

Beyond Charlottesville, Terry McAuliffe

Beyond Charlottesville:  Taking a stand against white nationalism by Governor Terry McAuliffe was sent to me by its editor,  Stephen Power.  This was ostensibly in appreciation for some fact checking that I did on Team of Vipers, but I think it is more likely that Mr. Power is just a nice guy.

Started: 8/4/2019
Completed: 8/10/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By:  Stephen Power

Review:

It so happened that I started this book just after two back-to-back mass shootings by white supremacists.  It appeared in my mail box and went straight to the top of the pile, so it was coincidence of a sort.  Given that we are currently averaging more than one mass shooting per day this year it couldn't be too much of a coincidence, but enough that the book felt heavy in my hands (despite it being a small treatise) before I started reading John Lewis' introduction.

"Alt-right protesters who had lived double lives soon found they could no longer hide from whom they really were.  They had exposed themselves--and the world took notice, and recoiled."  Not the most adroit prose, but striking none the less.

McAuliffe quotes Larry Sabato, "Until whites do get [racism], progress is going to be very limited.  We'll never make lasting progress if we pretend race isn't still central to many of the problems that bedevil us."

This book is well written.  I thought that the beginning was sort of a "pat myself on the back" for Gov. McAuliffe, but fight through it.  That background material is important to understand his commitment to acting in Charlottesville then and continuing to work against white nationalism today.

A geeky book note:  I really like the dust jacket.  It is mildly textured and it makes the book much easier to hold.  It does not wear well as it is already showing wear around the edges (white is showing through the mostly black cover).  Maybe black paper would fix that instead of black ink on white paper.

Monday, August 5, 2019

New York 2140, Kim Stanley Robinson

New York 2140 by Kim Stanley Robinson is not a book I would normally select.  New York under water.  Ho-hum.  If New York is under water things would be much worse then the plight of New York.  Oh, and that is what Kim Stanley Robinson addresses.  Hmmmm...  I really enjoyed the Mars series, so I think I will find this a light, but interesting read.  Perfect for audio book on commutes.

Started: 7/24/2019
Completed: 8/5/2019
Recommendation: Mild Recommendation
Recommended By: Nobody in particular, but I read about it in several places

Words for which I sought help:

tumescent -- swollen or becoming swollen, especially as a response to sexual arousal

Review:

This is light reading.  There really isn't very much there.  It does feel like Robinson is on his bully pulpit to explain climate crisis boldly to those who many not really get it and to forward a pet theory about how it could be much worse than expected much more quickly then expected.  I have a feeling that those who read a book about New York being inundated are already solidly sold on climate change; are willing to believe the theory that sort of runs through the book; and, don't need the repetition to "get it."

The characters are pretty flat without any real development as far as I can tell.  Mutt and Jeff run through a horror and emerge about the same as they went in (with the exception of preferring the out doors--no real character change).  It sort of feels like the scientific ideas predated the story (typical of many a sci-fi novel), but instead of the book examining what happens when the scientific ideas appear, it feels like the novel is a form of presentation for the scientific (and political) ideas.

New York is the setting for the familiarity of the landmarks that are transformed by water and, thus, different.  Despite the author's protestations, this city could be any coastal city and the book would read the same.

Sunday, August 4, 2019

An Uncivil War, Greg Sargent

An Uncivil War:  Taking back our democracy in an age of Trumpian disinformation and thunderdome politics by Greg Sargent was recommended in a magazine.  I have read a few of Sargent's columns in the post, so it seemed like a good book to pick up.

Started: 7/14/2019
Completed: 8/3/2019
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By:  A magazine, but I cannot remember which one

Review:

Sargent argues that Americans' perception of the political landscape and its threats to democracy fall into two broad categories.  "Voter suppression and extreme gerrymandering--perpetrated mostly by Republicans--are hideously undemocratic practices, while voter fraud is largely a fiction."  Clear from Republican attempts to prosecute those who vote inappropriately, voter fraud is exceedingly rare.  This was laid bare in Kansas when an entire portion of the government was dedicated to eliminating voter fraud and could only find a handful of cases to pursue over the recent history (20 years?) of voting in Kansas.  On the other hand, the Supreme Court recognized that gerrymandering was happening, but determined that it was not a problem for the courts:  "[T]he fact that such gerrymandering is ‘incompatible with democratic principles’ ... does not mean that the solution lies with the federal judiciary. We conclude that partisan gerrymandering claims present political questions beyond the reach of the federal courts" (Baltimore Sun, June 27, 2019).

While it is hard to argue that Sargent is even handed, he does give credit where it is due:  "We should also acknowledge that a good number of Republican election officials...take their public duty to oversee election very seriously and want those to run smoothly and inclusively for all voters."

As far as Trump goes, Sargent pulls no punches (as one might expect from the title):  "[taunts and abuse of reporters] got worse once Trump was elected, given that such attacks on the media--when waged by the president himself--amount to a direct effort to weaken the role of the institution that is supposed to hold elected officials like him accountable."

This book is not a book bred solely from anger.  It seems like there is more frustration, a touch of fear, and an effort to calm and provide perspective.  Sargent makes the case it is not only possible to go to far, but that it is a concern for our democracy that the Democratic party might do that.  He provides some suggestions for where the line might be.  It is very hard for me to see the line through the shock, anger, and outright sense of hurt at how the scorched earth policy of the right has gone so far.