America Unchained

November 4th, 2011

Dave Gorman

The goal: cross the US without patronizing any chain businesses: no chain restaurants, motels, or, even, gas stations. Dave Gorman’s a funny guy, but this book is a thoughtful consideration of the Coporatization of Everything as well as a humorous travelog.

Despite my sympathies with the anti-corporate stance, I was delighted to be able to get this book for next to nothing, all the way from England, thanks to a giant corporation that arguably has put many non-corporate booksellers out of business. But the actual seller seems to have been a small business.  Oh, it’s a complicated world. (And used book stores in the Twin Cities, with the exception of the chain of Half Price stores, are overpriced and generally unfriendly, not like those charming mythical bookstores you always read about.)

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Sink the Bismark!

November 3rd, 2011

C. S. Forester

This was originally published in 1958 as “The Last Nine Days of the Bismark” and was the basis for the 1960 movie.  It reads more like a thin novelization of a movie, though.    There’s little detail and some  dialog and, presumably, some characters are made up.  I expected better from creator of Hornblower.

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Strat-O-Matic Fanatics: The Unlikely Success Story Of A Game That Became An American Passion

November 2nd, 2011

Glen Guzzo

Strat-O-Matic” is a cardboard baseball game based on real world stats.  For its most avid players, its more than a just a game.

Even though I’m not a baseball fan I really enjoyed this book about the invention and life of the game and its players.   It’s the story of game inventor Hal Richman and how the game helped him escape the malign influence of a domineering father.   There’s some great stuff here about game players and ball players’  players relationships to the game, but it’s mostly the story of Richman.

Guzzo’s packed the book with more human interest here than I expected; it’s a great story that will appeal to baseball fans, gamers, and game designers

(One thing that struck me in the book: Richman’s stats and scouting-based analysis, which he used to create tables that allow simulated seasons that are accurate in the aggregate (i.e., statistically) preceeded Bill James’ stats and Sabremetrics.)

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Rock On: An Office Power Ballad

November 1st, 2011

Dan Kennedy

Dan Kennedy found out the hard way that working in the music industry was more a corporate job than a creative one.  His coming of age story for thirty somethings captures feeling of not fitting in at corporate job because you  just don’t understand corporate culture.  This is a funny book that will resonate with office workers.

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My Korean Deli: Risking It All for a Convenience Store

October 30th, 2011

Ben Ryder Howe

While working for George Plimpton’s “Paris Review”, Ben Howe was living with his Korean wife’s family and trying to run a New York City convenience store with his fearsome, insanely hard-working immigrant mother-in-law.  His story is a warm, amusing memoir, a meditation on the immigrant experience,  a portrait of Plimpton’s last days, and a classic fish-out-of-water story.

 

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Lost Ilusions

October 19th, 2011

Honoré de Balzac

Set – and written – in the early 19th Century, this is a long, detailed novel that tells the story of a naive poet from a rural city and his rise and fall in Paris.  Lucien Chardon has talent, though not as much as he thinks he has, and lacks the social smarts to distinguish real friends from those who mock his pretensions.  It’s the tragic tale of an ambitious young man with promise who betrays his talents by devoting his energies to finding shortcuts to success.  It could be titled “Wasted Potential”.

I read this book on my iPod and it took forever, but it was very satisfying to sink into such a richly drawn world populated by dozens of interesting characters.

 

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