Tag: books

  • 2016: My Reading Goals

    2015 was another pretty good year for my reading. 52 books, half by women. I’ll take it. This year, I have two overarching goals: to dig deeper in a subject matter, and to increase the diversity of my reading further. Here’s how I plan to achieve that: Read fifty two books. I’ve done this now…

  • 2015: My Year In Books

    I set two reading goals for 2015 – to read fifty two books for the year and to have fifty percent of those books be by women. Unlike most of the other goals I set this year, I actually accomplished both of these.I’m pretty happy with that. Now that I’m a dad who almost never…

  • Nabokovs Notecards

    Research materials for Lolita 138 notecards that make up the as of yet unpublished The Original of Laura . V.N. would write them by hand, often in bed, or at a stand up desk. He would dictate them to his wife, Vera. After dinner, they often played games. Chess and Scrabble were favorites. VN was…

  • Review: Brown’s Angels and Demons

    Angels & Demons – Movie Tie-In Dan Brown In my attempt to understand America, I read Dan Brown’s Angels and Demons 1. It is terribly written. There, I said it. Now to be fair, I don’t know if I could have written it. For many reasons. I couldn’t sustain the level of cliff hanger chapters,…

  • Review: Lewis’s the Big Short

    The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine Michael Lewis It took the movie coming out for me to finally read this great book on the guys who figured out the subprime crash before the subprime crash. I’m not sure why I didn’t read this earlier, I’m a fan of both Michael Lewis and books skewering…

  • Review: Winslow’s The Cartel

    The Cartel  Don Winslow The sequel to Winslow’s page-turner Power of the Dog, the Cartel takes our tale of the Mexican drug trade to the present day and includes the rise of the ultra-violent new breed of narcos such as the Zetas. In writing and character development, perhaps a better book than Power of the…

  • Review: Buettner’s Blue Zones

    The Blue Zones: Lessons for Living Longer From the People Who’ve Lived the Longest Dan Buettner The first book in the Blue Zone empire. Though it is at times silly, this is a must read for anyone interested in longevity. If you’ve been living under a rock, let me briefly explain the conceit of this…

  • Review: Winslow’s Power of the Dog

    The Power of the Dog Don Winslow Wow, what a read. A top-notch crime writer does the research and takes the time to understand the modern origins of the drug war in Mexico, then tells that story through the lives of petty criminals, cartel bosses, DEA agents and regular people caught up in the drug…

  • Review: Chopra’s Shapeshifter

    Shapeshifter: The Evolution of a Cricket Fan (awaiting publication) Samir Chopra For many sports fans, myself included, our personal lives are intertwined with the fortunes of millionaires we have never met. I remember watching, with my father, when Brett Favre threw for four hundred yards the night after his own father died. I remember the…

  • Review: Kraus’s I Love Dick

    I Love Dick (Semiotext(e) / Native Agents) Chris Kraus   A strange book; it unsettled me. Now, months after finishing it, I’m still not sure what I thought of it.   The basic premise is well known – Kraus, filmmaker, theorist, and wife of French theorist Sylvere Lotringer has a short encounter with a theorist…