Author: seanv2

  • Review: Simon’s Homocide

    Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets David Simon You’ve read this right? You have to. The best book on cops ever and its written by the creator of the world’s greatest TV show, the Wire. Baltimore in the early nineties was a violent place, policed by a largely white and often racist police force…

  • Review: Zimler’s The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon

    The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon Richard Zimler Murder mystery set among the Jewish community of Lisbon at the time they were being forced into exile. Good for the pop history of the Jews of Lisbon, but sub-par as a murder mystery. The scene of a community being torn apart and murdered because of antisemitism is…

  • Review: Davis’s In Praise of Barbarians

    ed note: originally written for the now defunct Left Turn magazine. In Praise of Barbarians: Essays against Empire Mike Davis I am writing this review as Southern California burns and I cannot help wondering what Mike Davis, the great social critic of Los Angeles, is thinking right now. Mike Davis is among the best of left wing…

  • Review: Taleb’s Black Swan

    The Black Swan: Second Edition: The Impact of the Highly Improbable: With a new section: “On Robustness and Fragility” (Incerto) Nassim Nicolas Taleb The book every trader/i-banker/finance nerd had to read. The thesis of this is pretty much the same as Taleb’s earlier work – we discount the chances and effects of the random or…

  • Review: Pelecanos’s Right as Rain

    Right As Rain: A Derek Strange Novel (Derek Strange Novels) George Pelecanos Pelecanos is the great chronicler of our nation’s capital (Washington, D.C.) as it is lived by its actual citizens. For a crime writer who works in place and character, he is top of his game. This is the first of Pelecanos’s series chronicling…

  • Review: Lessig’s Free Culture

    Free Culture: The Nature and Future of Creativity Lawrence Lessig Lessig is a law professor and one of the preeminent thinkers on open source and intellectual property in the contemporary era. This is his popular book in favor of open source software and a rethinking of the law of intellectual property. If you’re interested in…

  • Review: Littell’s The Company

    The Company: A Novel of the CIA Robert Littell A better than average page-turner spy novel tracing the history of the agency through the stories of a group of men who come into it as it was being formed and end up in the upper reaches of the organization. Clearly based on real guys, some…

  • Review: Baer’s See No Evil

    See No Evil: The True Story of a Ground Soldier in the CIA’s War on Terrorism Robert Baer Did you see Syriana? Well, Clooney’s character is allegedly based on Baer. If that’s true, it doesn’t seem to be a very accurate portrayal. What I got out of this book was not the story of a…

  • Review: Collier’s Bottom Billion

    The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries are Failing and What Can Be Done About It Paul Collier Here is the basic argument – while it sucks to be poor in countries like India, India is heading for relative prosperity, and therefore some hope for its poorest citizens. Where is really, really sucks to be…

  • Review: Everitt’s Cicero

    Cicero: The Life and Times of Rome’s Greatest Politician Anthony Everitt Odds are, you have heard of Cicero. Considered one of Rome’s greatest orators, his writings are the major influence on how way we remember the last days of the Roman republic. The story of Cicero’s life is the story of end of last years…