Motley Moose – Archive

Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

What are you reading? Jan 23, 2013

For those who are new … we discuss books.  I list what I’m reading, and people comment with what they’re reading.  Sometimes, on Sundays, I post a special edition on a particular genre or topic.

If you like to trade books, try Bookmooch

I’ve written some book reviews on Yahoo Voices

Just finished

Nothing this week

Now reading

Cooler Smarter: Practical tips for low carbon living by the scientists at Union of Concerned Scientists, a great group. These folk make sense, concentrating on the changes you can make that have the biggest impact with the least effort.

Thinking, fast and slow by Daniel Kahneman.  Kahneman, most famous for his work with the late Amos Tversky, is one of the leading psychologists of the times. Here, he posits that our brains have two systems: A fast one and a slow one. Neither is better, but they are good at different things. This is a brilliant book: Full of insight and very well written, as well.

What hath God wrought? by Daniel Walker Howe. Subtitled “The transformation of America 1815-1848. I am reading this with the History group at GoodReads.  This is very well written, and does a good job especially with coverage of the treatment of Blacks and Native Americans.

The hard SF renaissance ed. by David G. Hartwell.  A large anthology of “hard” SF from the 90’s and 00’s. I think Hartwell takes SF a bit too seriously, but the stories are good.

On politics: A history of political thought from Herodotus to the present  by Alan Ryan. What the subtitle says – a history of political thought.  

Snakes can’t run by Ed Lin

A mystery/police procedural set in NYC’s Chinatown in the 1970s. “Snakes” is a slang term for illegal immigrants.

Far from the Tree: Parents, children and the search for identity  by Andrew Solomon.

The title comes from the phrase “the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree”. This book is about apples (children) who did fall far from the tree (parents). This book got amazing reviews and it grabbed me from the opening:

“There is no such thing as reproduction. When two people decide to have a baby, they engage in an act of production, and the widespread use of the word reproduction for this activity, with its implication that two people are but braiding themselves together, is at best a euphemism to comfort prospective parents before they get in over their heads”

I don’t agree with all that Solomon says, but this is a book to make you think about deep questions of humanity.

Rayburn: A Biography by D. B. Hardeman. A very admiring look at Sam Rayburn, former speaker of the House.

Just started

He, she and it  by Marge Percy. Really only a couple pages into it, but it’s near future dystopian SF set on Earth.  


21 comments

  1. iriti

    I’ve been kind of odd. I’m trying to get back to reading at least some fiction (it’s hard to keep myself stocked in non-fiction honestly) but having only limited success.

    Finished: Far From the Tree by Andrew Solomon, which I give 6 stars out of a possible 5. Very timely for me because of a diagnostic process I’m going through and some of the reactions/reflections that’s triggering in me.

    Read: Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling (book 2). Struck out with Lord of the Rings, now seem to be striking out with Harry Potter.

    Read: The Archimedes Codes by Reviel Netz & William Noel. Non-fiction about Archimedes Codex C, a palimphset which was located in the 90’s. Full & partial Archimedes texts copied in the first millenium (along with other ancient parchment texts) had been scraped and re-used for a middle ages prayer book. This is the story of the attempt to decipher some of the Archimedes text that exists nowhere else.

    Just started: The Aleppo Codex by Matti Friedman. Again non-fiction, about the history of an very ancient Old Testament manuscript.

    Coming next: The Hangman’s Daughter by Oliver Pötzsch. Another attempt at fiction. Set in the 1660’s, it appealed to me because I’m on an ancient manuscript kick.

  2. blue jersey mom

    It is forcing me to think about social change from the 5th through the 7th century in various parts of Britain. It is really difficult because we have so little in the way of written history, and most of the classic Anglo-Saxon archaeology comes from eastern England (East Anglia and Yorkshire).

  3. ceriboo

    and I couldn’t do it.  The villains were all so BEYOND evil they were completely unbelievable – not a shred of humanity in any of them but Tyrion. It actually made me angry and I threw the (cheap, badly printed paperback) book down. I have never before mistreated a book in my life. At least it was onto the sofa, so it had a soft landing.

    And this is from someone who slogged through all of Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time books.

  4. LabWitch

    always a special favorite of mine.  

    also lots of medical history, toxicology and serial murder reality (this is mostly to see how the police are botching it all up.  i don’t go in for the gory and sensationalizing aspects of these cases.

    maybe i might contribute a diary for ya sometime?  

  5. bill d

    The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt’s Darkest Journey by Candice Millard

    It is taking me almost as long to read this book as it did for him to go down the river. I am having a better time though and suffering far fewer bug bites.

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