Monday, March 23, 2020

Review: Red Scarf Girl

Red Scarf Girl Red Scarf Girl by Ji-li Jiang
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A middle school student I tutor in English told me she was reading this book. I promised her I would read it, too, so we could talk about it together. I was pleasantly surprised.

It is a valuable book for so many reasons. The history is instructive for any era, but I think especially instructive today. Nothing I learned in history class revealed the fear and brutality of the Cultural Revolution in Chairman Mao's New China as well as this book. Oh, the terror of being scorned or possibly beaten for having a pretty sweater or an educated, successful parent or even for being suspected of thinking in old ways was brought into sharp focus.

It is told in the voice of a girl and this somehow made the events reported even more impactful. The reader is able to struggle for understanding along with this young girl. The reader feels the growing tension and foreboding. The reader witnesses the terrible pain of children being turned against their own loving parents.

The writer's ebbing innocence as she stumbles through the stages of the unfolding horror will stay with you for a long time. You will remember the signs in (any) political party of a tragic plunge into evil.

Two thumbs up!

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Review: I Am a Strange Loop

I Am a Strange Loop I Am a Strange Loop by Douglas R. Hofstadter
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Mr. Hofstadter is brilliant and entertaining. He masterfully whips up analogies for the most obscure ideas making them fully approachable and comprehendible, although he did at times perseverate in this task.

I am not sure if I agree with his theory of mind, but this is probably due to some limitations of my own imagination. He tackles so many abstractions, real or not (depending on your thoughts on consciousness) that I often gave up on the heavy lifting half way through the presentation of his case.

It is not a book to "chill with" but it was a blast to watch his mind at work.

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Review: Cranford

Cranford Cranford by Elizabeth Gaskell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Satirical and charming in equal measure, I thoroughly enjoyed the story Gaskell tells of the lives of the unmarried and widowed ladies of Cranford. This is a Victorian era feel-good novel. Everyone is either kind or a silly fool, and there are no murderers or truly sinister deeds, yet there are big events and the story has a healthy pace.

Tongues wag constantly amid sudden deaths, sudden departures and sudden turns of fortune, but propriety never takes a back seat, no matter how indignant the events.

I fell in love with all the ladies of Cranford (especially Miss Matty!) and I have discovered another author who writes words the way I love to read them -- in long, beautifully-constructed sentences.

Two thumbs up for Cranford.

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Review: The Snowman

The Snowman The Snowman by Jo Nesbø
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Superb -- with plenty of twists and turns to keep even the most highly distractible fully engaged to the very end. It had many layers of creepiness from men without nipples to large snowmen materializing outside of once happy homes.
Nesbo grabs you by the wrist from the first page and doesn't let go until the very end.
100% diverting.
Two thumbs up!

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Sunday, March 1, 2020

Review: Reframing Healthcare: A Roadmap For Creating Disruptive Change

Reframing Healthcare: A Roadmap For Creating Disruptive Change Reframing Healthcare: A Roadmap For Creating Disruptive Change by Zeev E. Neuwirth MD
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a well-organized roadmap for addressing all that ails the healthcare system. Dr. Neuwirth is thorough and convincing. The great bonus it offers is that is is free of all political vitriol and platitudes - something I was concerned about when I embarked on this book.

Chapter after chapter I was struck by how much our public education system has in common with our healthcare delivery systems. Both are ginormous and complex, both are scandalously expensive (education - a terrible financial burden on taxpayers; healthcare - an enormous financial burden on families and businesses and governments) and both are pretty lousy. Several times, I actually substituted the words "public education" for "healthcare" and every sentence totally worked. Interesting, right?

I would pair this book with Pivot to the Future as I would pair a fine wine with a particular dish, and I'd suggest reading Reframing Healthcare second. The Pivot book will grease the skids and you will better grasp the kind of disruption sought by Neuwirth. You will better understand the importance of timing and how, in light of the direction of all manner of enterprise in the 21st Century, you will know that not acting boldly is not an option.

Neuwirth's offers very specific recipes for building a healthcare delivery system of the future. I really appreciated and admired this specificity.

His recommendations for reframing healthcare require imagination and are best viewed through the lenses of technology. The role of a customer-centric delivery system and digital and telemed delivery systems were my favorite parts of the book.

The elephant that remained in the room until the very end of the book is the role of the individual in achieving meaningful progress in reducing the burden on the healthcare systems by caring for their own health. Neuwirth does not call it this - he put this issue under the heading of "social determinants", which subtly places it all at the feet of a faceless, nameless group. Surely, there are social determinants to health (poverty, environment, lack of education, etc). This is very real. But, here is where public education and healthcare share many of the same fundamental issues. Whether rich or poor, whenever we decide to have BIG matters - like the education or health of our kids - handled by others entirely, the abdication can become part of the problem. I think this book would have had even more impact if there had been a chapter devoted to personal responsibility (at the individual level) to become informed and to make better choices. We seem to accept the legal principle that ignorance of the law excuses no one but when it comes to matters of health and education, many of us shrug and wait for others to do it for us.

More than half of healthcare expenses arise from behaviors and lifestyle choices that cause illness and disease processes. The poor and the down-trodden have an added burden, that is for sure. When I was poor, I carried a heavier burden to make wise choices. I remember this well, and it is why I think promoting change at the individual level, while recasting and reinventing the system that delivers healthcare is the one-two punch needed for a truly disruptive pivot to the future of healthcare.

I learned a great deal about the healthcare industry problems by reading this book and I was very encouraged by Dr. Neuwirth's corrective prescriptions.

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