Monday, August 9, 2021

Inventing a Nation, Gore Vidal

 

Inventing a Nation:  Washington, Adams, Jefferson by Gore Vidal is a take on the creation of the United States that I didn't realize I had missed.

Started: 8/8/2021
Completed:
Recommendation:
Recommended By:

Words for which I Sought Help:

etiolate -- to deprive of natural vigor; to make feeble

hypergamous -- marriage into a higher caste or group

Lady Potiphar syndrome -- This appears to be a term coined by Vidal.  Potiphar was a minor figure in the Bible and his wife was said to have accused Joseph (at the time a Hebrew slave boy) of untoward advances.  This resulted in Joseph being put in jail.  Later Jewish analysis, suggests that Joseph was attractive to all the women in court and that Lady Potiphar's wife probably wanted to be with him like everyone else, but could not be.  Within context, it appears that Vidal appears this to mean that one is looking at a situation through a lens of love and, perhaps, that this results in a false accusation.  In the book, Vidal uses it to refer to Mrs. Adams who speaks poorly of Mr. Hamilton to Mr. Adams (who is himself inclined to believe that Hamilton is dastardly).  Thus, Mrs. Adams (Lady Potiphar) speaks poorly of Mr. Hamilton (Joseph), though she does not love Mr. Hamilton (or at least, Vidal does not make this case), her love is for Mr. Adams.  To me, this is a tortured reference and perhaps Vidal was simply inclined to create a new term, but strained to do so within the context of this book.

lapidary -- relating to stone and gems and the work involved in engraving, cutting, or polishing

lubricious -- offensively displaying or intended to arouse sexual desire

Review:

I did not realize that Gore Vidal and JFK hung out.  I also did not realize how strongly Vidal disliked Bush's policies--heck, Republicans in general.  This book is an excellent overview of the three founding fathers and a brief history of how they interacted and effected one-another.  Hamilton haunts the narrative.  I enjoyed this quick read.

Sunday, August 8, 2021

There There, Tommy Orange

 

There There by Tommy Orange is a book about the genocide of the Indian in the United States.

Started: 8/7/2021
Completed: 8/8/2021
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: None

Review:

This book tracks a whole bunch (10?) of characters leading up to a pow-wow.  The characters are interwoven through community and native American interests.  Their personal stories mirror some of the larger stories in native American history.  This book is well written and the stories are quite complex.  It is worth the read.

Saturday, August 7, 2021

Dear Committee Members, Julie Schumacher

 

Dear Committee Members by Julie Schumacher is a book recommended in The Week.  I need to have some more books with a little bit of humor in them to read just before I go to sleep in an effort to fight the negative thoughts that go with jury duty.

Started: 8/5/2021
Completed: 8/7/2021
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: The Week

Words for which I sought Help:

aphasia -- inability (or impaired ability) to understand or produce speech, as a result of brain damage

auto-da-fé -- the burning of a heretic by the Spanish Inquisition

divagate -- stray or digress

dybbuk -- a malevolent wandering spirit that enters and possesses the body of a living person until exorcised

fanfaronade -- arrogant or boastful talk

mephitic -- foul-smelling; noxious

panegyric -- a public speech or published text in praise of someone or something

yclept -- by the name of

Review:

Basically a fun, easy read.  This series of letters from an English professor of dubious character who seems to genuinely believe in his field of study and good students is an entertaining walk through the agony of letters of referral.  A few moments of laughing out loud punctuated by a smile.

The Deep, Rivers Solomon

 

The Deep by Rivers Solomon is a book I think I read about in the Washington Post, then my wife later mentioned it to me as something I might be interested in reading.

Started: 8/6/2021
Completed: 8/7/2021
Recommendation: Recommended
Recommended By: The Washington Post and my wife

Review:

This is a very odd book and that is part of its charm.  The idea that a people could desire to live without knowledge of their history and yet crave that history is one of many perplexing contradictions that litter this little book.  That this is tied to a song and an album adds layers without explanation and provides another layer of complexity.  I'm not entirely sure what to do with all of it.  It does make me think and Solomon does a great job of making a compelling story.  I think it is the reading done by Diggs that makes the story a story of a people and not a scream.  This story is also riffled with making lemonade from lemons with the understanding is that lemonade is both bitter and sweet.  For such a little book, there is a lot "beneath the surface."

Friday, August 6, 2021

The Return of Depression Economics, Paul Krugman

 

The Return of Depression Economics and The Crisis of 2008 by Paul Krugman was a Nobel prize winner, so it is good to pay attention.

Started: 8/3/2021
Completed: 8/6/2021
Recommendation: Recommended (but realize it is dated)
Recommended By: Nobody

Review:

The basic economic theory remains good and the analysis of how the currency was manipulated was fantastic.  I especially enjoyed the how Krugman explains how Supply Side economics got muddled by the time it got to policy.

Tuesday, August 3, 2021

A Rule Against Murder, Louise Penny

 

A Rule Against Murder by Louise Penny is the next in the Amand Gamash books.

Started: 7/29/2021
Completed: 8/3/2021
Recommendation: Highly recommended
Recommended By: My parents

Review:

I really enjoy Louise Penny.  Such a fantastic author who builds a rich story line and still leaves parts uninvestigated...maybe for a future book?  The visit to the mansion on the lake in this book was really enjoyable and I called the sugar from the start--though I mostly get these murder mysteries wrong.

The Heavens, Sandra Newman

 

The Heavens by Sandra Newman is a book that I saw reviewed in The Week.

Started: 7/26/2021
Completed: Did not finish
Recommendation: I HATED THIS BOOK
Recommended By: The Week

Review:

I could not stand the way this author went and grabbed the thesaurus at every opportunity.  The plot manipulations were transparent and useless.  I will never read another book by this author.