Saturday, February 29, 2020

Review: Persuasion

Persuasion Persuasion by Jane Austen
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is a wonderful story on the virtue of quiet intelligence, authentic love and true honor. Often referred to as the perfect novel, Austen lovers will not be disappointed in Persuasion.

There are an abundance of false scoundrels, avaricious whims, and pompous fools and they all drag down the courageous and long-suffering in a kind of pastoral good vs. evil fight to the end. Really great stuff!

It had real pace, and for a book with single sentences spanning one-third of the page, although beautiful and perfect sentences, this quick pace was much appreciated.

Reading Austin is like going to the opera. It feels foreign, yet it is thoroughly enriching; either in spite of the fact that the "stage" is so foreign to modern life, or because of this. Who wouldn't want Anne as a dear friend and be better for it? Who wouldn't be wiser and better for having a mentor like Captain Wentworth?

I'm always sad when I finish such a fine read as this. Two thumbs up!

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Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Review: Caffeine: How Caffeine Created the Modern World

Caffeine: How Caffeine Created the Modern World Caffeine: How Caffeine Created the Modern World by Michael Pollan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A thoroughly enjoyable read - I only wish it were longer.

Who could have guessed that a secondary metabolite produced by plants to poison insects would end up enslaving most of humanity to their morning cup of rise and shine? If the chemical that helps us all face the world is a product of a clever plant that is trying not to get eaten by other things, it also begs the question - are plants using us in this relationship or are we using them? Have we all been duped into our dominated state by ... plants? .

These are the kinds of compelling perspectives Pollan puts forth as he examines the coffee bean, the history of coffee production, and our intractable dependence on trimethylxanthine.

His writing is spry (as always) and his insights are potent. You might even think twice about continuing with caffeine. Although the central purpose of this book is not to persuade people to give up coffee, facts are facts. It will cross your mind.

I will leave you with this quote on adenosine, the current focus of my research, and the reason I read this book:

"Caffeine consumption is simply hiding or postponing our exhaustion by blocking the action of adenosine. As the liver removes the caffeine from circulation, the dam holding back all that pent-up, still-mounting adenosine will break, and when the rebounding chemical floods the brain, you will crash, feeling even more tired than you did before that first cup of coffee. So what will you do then? Probably have another cup.

Yup. Heavy sigh.

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Thursday, February 13, 2020

Review: Brideshead Revisited

Brideshead Revisited Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Every sentence is festooned with snobbery and every deeply-flawed character is an appliance for the author's main task. (I just loved this!)

Years ago, I saw the Brideshead Revisited PBS series with Jeremy Irons (as Charles Ryder). So, I was actually very surprised, throughout my reading, by this most obvious theme - Catholicism. Every character undergoes some kind of a religious awakening and conversion. It is woven into every major occurrence - it is a repeating chorus.

However, it is the bombast, the hauteur - all wrapped beautifully in such ornamental language - that kept me reading with joy for many hours.

A quote which has stuck with me: He wasn't a complete human being at all. He was a tiny bit of one, unnaturally developed; something in a bottle, an organ kept alive in a laboratory. I thought he was a sort of primitive savage, but he was something absolutely modern and up-to-date that only this ghastly age could produce. A tiny bit of a man pretending he was the whole.

A solidly interesting story relayed in the most luxurious language imaginable - two thumbs up!

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Thursday, February 6, 2020

Review: The Woman in White

The Woman in White The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

"Through all the ways of our unintelligible world, the trivial and the terrible walk hand in hand together."

The depth and breadth of this epic was astounding. I am absolutely not ready to let go of the magnificent characters. For days I awoke thinking about them (and their fates) and fell asleep thinking about the same. The Woman in White is a dark and sinister story - so terrifying at times that I found myself gesticulating wildly during the most exquisitely tense and scary moments. I am not sure I've ever read a scarier book, yet it is not science fiction or fantasy. It is everyday evil one confronts in this story and the author's magic pen reveals it with great composure, calm and care; the effect of this approach is hair-raising.

A friend recommended I read Wilkie Collins knowing that I am a huge Dickens fan. The two were contemporaries and even collaborated on a few things. What Collins had that Dickens did not is legal scholarship. In fact Dickens did not like lawyers. Collins, however, has a deep respect for the process and his legal training comes through in many ways. It is a real asset in this story. The man is thorough.

The author treats every element, every slice of his intricate story, as all worthy of complete explanation and complete resolution. With such art, he leaves no detail unaddressed. Sometimes after reading a BIG book you might wonder about little things....."How did he get from that house to the station so rapidly .....? Why didn't that character who was introduced in the beginning ever show up again?" . I promise you. You will not have any unanswered questions when the end unravels. He gives each denouement the utmost care in explanation, and each is like a gift to the reader.

This is written in the 19th century. The world was different. Whether or not you like the social constructs of long ago, you will be completely transported to 1850-something. I mean, you will feel like you are there.

My favorite quotes:

"Habits of literary composition are perfectly familiar to me. One of the rarest of all the intellectual accomplishments that a man can possess is the grand faculty of arranging his ideas. Immense privilege! I possess it. Do you?"

"I say what other people only think, and when all the rest of the world is in a conspiracy to accept the mask for the true face, mine is the rash hand that tears off the plump pasteboard, and shows the bare bones beneath."

"We don't want genius in this country unless it is accompanied by respectability.


If you read this book, your heart will pound with excitement. You will look for something with which to whack the scoundrels and you will be fist-pumping the accomplishments of the good in the face of great evil. It is about love and hate, laziness and industry, treachery and goodwill -- and every sentence written is perfection. The writing is so superb, it will raise you up along with it and suspend you there. You will love it.


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Sunday, February 2, 2020

Review: Pivot to the Future: Discovering Value and Creating Growth in a Disrupted World

Pivot to the Future: Discovering Value and Creating Growth in a Disrupted World Pivot to the Future: Discovering Value and Creating Growth in a Disrupted World by Omar Abbosh
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a book about how businesses should prepare for the present and ongoing disruption caused by new technologies. Pivot to the Future is well-written, although it is Accenture-centric. No surprise there, as they author it.

There were great insights gained from stories of business successes and failures - the results of good or not-so-good responses to what they call big bang disruption and compressed disruption.

The "wise pivot" is an especially useful idea - and not just for business success. It's good life advice. The authors want us to extract full value from all that was, all that is, and all that is yet to come. They touch on old styles of leadership no longer being relevant in a maker's world that is constantly scanning for the net big thing, eager to seize the moment. The old corporate culture must be prepared to leave the safe harbor of today in its quest for the future.

The most succinct advice offered in the book: "Look to the future without being beguiled by it." I guess if you are doing this, never taking your eye off the ball, while working hard to release all of the trapped value in your current gig, you are bound to grow in the right direction.

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