Category: Uncategorized
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Review: Rinpoche’s In Love With The World
In Love With The World: A Monk’s Journey Through the Bardos of Living and Dying Yongey Minguy Rinpoche Mingyur Rinpoche is one of the most respected Tibetan Buddhist teachers in the world. He has taught at meditation retreats in every continent, runs a group of prominent monasteries, and is a member of a distinguished line…
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Review: Epstein’s Range
Range: Why Generalists Triumph In A Specialized World David Epstein There is a certain kind of book I cannot resist and that book follows this basic format: Here is an ostensibly counter intuitive idea. Here are a series of chapters wherein the following form to substantiate the idea An anecdote is presented A study or…
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Review: Foucault in California
Foucault in California: A True Story Wherein the Great Philosopher Drops Acid in the Valley of Death Simeon Wade Whoa boy, this one was a trip. Famous French philosopher hooks up with a young academic and an experimental musician. They head to death valley and take acid. Serious 1970s content ensues. Foucault acid trip…
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Milo Hits 300,000 Views: Top 30 Posts And Pages
Even though I all but ignored it for the past six months or so, this little old website has been chug chug chugging along and as of this week it went over 300,000 hits. I realize that in the land of tik tok this is nothing, and blogging is very old fashioned, but I remain…
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Review: Winslow’s The Border
The Border Don Winslow The final book in Don Winslow’s trilogy about the drug war completing the story of a troubled American agent and his series of drug king pin nemesis. While not as stark as Power of the Dog, and (thankfully) not as violent as The Cartel, this was still top-notch crime writing. I…
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Review: Keefe’s Say Nothing
Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland Patrick Radden Keefe Where to even start with this book? This is the story of the tragic murder of Jean McConville, a mother of ten who was taken from her home in the middle of the night. It’s also the story of the…
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Review: Soyinka’s Death and the King’s Horseman
Death and the Kings Horseman Wole Soyinka I’m a bit embarrassed I never read this classic before, but glad I rectified that this month. This short play is a story of colonialism, western chauvinism and profound cultural divides. It’s about what happens when ancient cultural traditions get disrespected by a new, allegedly more progressive force,…