I listened to this via Spotify. Romero was a good reader. There’s not a lot here that isn’t covered in Masters of Doom, but there is one thing I appreciated. Almost never does Romero speak a bad word about anyone in this book. If he has to relate something negative, he is quick to point out the context, e.g.: We were …

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September 15, 2024

The Final Solution

by Michael Chabon

It’s 1944, and Sherlock Holmes (never named as such) has retired to Sussex to keep bees. A boy comes walking along with a large, gray parrot on his shoulder. The boy is mute, but the parrot speaks, mostly in German, and sometimes strings of numbers.

There’s a murder, and the bird goes missing, and Holmes has to solve it. I would …

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September 7, 2024

Did not finish. This was recommended by an author I follow on Twitter. The whole book is around 100 pages, and I wanted something I could finish quickly. But I gave up on this one pretty early.

It’s snippets of the inner mental life of Billy the Kid. Some of them are quite nonsensical. For example:

(To come) …
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September 1, 2024

So Anyway...

by John Cleese

I was surprised this book ended when Monty Python began. Nothing in-depth about Fawlty Towers or A Fish Called Wanda, either. Very little about the other Pythons except Graham Chapman. Still, I enjoyed it. Cleese performed with the Footlights at Cambridge, was offered a job writing comedy for the BBC just as he was graduating, and went for it.

He was …

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August 28, 2024

How to Stay Married

by Harrison Scott Key

K requested this book from the library. Somehow, my Libby app was logged in to her account, so I got the alert when it became available. I thought, hey, I must have put a hold on this and forgotten about it. So I downloaded it, started listening, and got hooked before I realized this wasn’t really my book.

This man’s …

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July 30, 2024

Gilead

by Marilynne Robinson

In Gilead, Iowa, in the 1950s, an old pastor’s heart is beginning to fail. His first wife died years earlier in childbirth, and he was resolved to live the rest of his life as a bachelor, but he met and married a much younger woman, and they have a son. The book is written by the pastor, John Ames, to his son, who is about seven years old.

I …

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July 23, 2024

Notes from various essays and things I read.

The Dethronement of Power, by C.S. Lewis

Written in 1955. Read 6/23/24. It’s in the book Tolkien and the Critics.

Lewis is reviewing The Two Towers and The Return of the King. Tolkien wrote of good and evil as unchanging absolutes, but that does not mean his characters are simplistic, always black or white (see the conflict of Boromir, of even Gollum, for example). The war writing is realistic – “the endless, unintelligible …

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June 23, 2024

Backflash

by Richard Stark

Years ago, I read the first Parker book, The Hunter. I remember finishing it and thinking it was okay, but I didn’t need to keep reading the series. But recently, the character of Parker came up again in Quentin Tarantino’s book Cinema Speculation. So when I saw this book at Half Price, I picked it up.

Overall, it was entertaining. A …

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June 14, 2024

Make Your Own Rules

by Andrew Huang

On growing up Chinese in Canada: “I rejected the Chinese culture I came from, and I rejected the Canadian culture around me and not letting me in.” “It was rare for the immigrant kids to find the same depth of community among each other, because our backgrounds and experiences were all mixed up. What we shared was our …

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April 21, 2024

Elon Musk

by Walter Isaacson

I read (listened to) the Ashley Vance biography in 2018. This covers a lot of the same material, but a lot more has happened in recent years, too. I don’t have careful notes from this, just a few impressions.

Elon can switch between “modes” – deep engineering discussions, “demon mode” (very dark, cruel, firing …

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February 25, 2024