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What are you reading?

I like physical bookstores. Some of my favorite books are ones I saw randomly on shelves, books on subjects I'd never consider searching for at an on-line bookstore.

An example I'm reading now is Gods, Graves & Scholars: The Story of Archeology by C.W. Ceram -- not a topic I particularly sought but it caught my eye in a used bookstore. Rather than just drily recitating key discoveries, the author does a great job of vividly depicting the key persons, settings and events.

I'm reading some other books also, e.g. Mission to Paris, a spy thriller by Alan Furst; and am re-reading two fascinating books by the biochemist Nick Lane.

I never thought I'd see the day, but I'm using physical bookstores less these days. Most of what I want to read lately is esoteric enough that it never hits the shelves of any of our locals. I still visit, still browse, but more and more don't walk out with anything. I'd say about 75% of what I buy these days is from Abe Books online, and I check out a lot from the library.

Although recently I discovered that my favourite local sells ex-library books at a discount in their basement, and all the weird, academic library books that no one wants are now exactly what I want.
 
Currently reading Killer Priest by Mark Gado, which is the true-life story of Father Hans Schmidt. The book combines the best of religion with the best dating tips. (For anyone who wants just the facts, see Schmidt's wikipedia page.) Back in 1913, Schmidt cut the throat of his pregnant mistress (actually, he said they were married, and he had conducted the service himself), dismembered her, and put her in the Hudson River in several installments. He was arrested just a few hours after conducting confessions in the church.
The book is hampered by Gado's ill-considered additions of novelistic touches of what the various figures felt or said. But the facts are garish and twisted enough to keep a reader like me on the case. (There are tons of pervo things that would take several long paragraphs to convey.)
I'm convinced Hitchcock knew about this case -- he was a true crime buff -- and used some of it to garnish the script of Rear Window.
 
Might as well get one of my favorite threads going over here in the new place:

Continental Drift by Russell Banks. This fellow was the keynote speaker at the Kachemak Bay Writers' Conference several years ago. He was not a very likable guy--seemed aloof and sort of stuck on himself--but he writes with a confidence that few can manage. This is a remarkable novel of twentieth-century America.
Just finished reading Dolls, Dolls, Dolls by REbello. It is about the book and movie versions of Valley of the Dolls. Valley of the Dolls was one of three movies that I saw in the late 60s in my late teens that shocked me by being just awful. The other 2 were Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf & Barbarella. In all 3 cases I had read the source material first--in the case of Barbarella an English translation of one issue of the French comic. I think this comic was better than Albee's play and Susann's novel. But all three movies were bad--Valley of the Dolls the worst except tht it didn't have the pretentiously, ostentasiously black-and-white cinematography of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. According to Rebello, poor Patty Duke thought she would get an Oscar nomination, for her Valley performance. (After all, I note, Elizabeth Taylor had got the nod the year before for much the same performance with her screeching Martha.) However, Taylor wasn't playing a diva singer--and Duke is just awful at that. (Taylor did a bad turn as a singer in the 1970s in A Little Night Music, a movie which she sinks.0
 
Purest coincidence. I was reading The Baby Boom. Assuming that was by some right wing US commentator. Forgotten the name, and had to leave it on the ship, half read.

Next book I pick up is Tom Ballard's I Millenial. I like the way he thinks, if a little whingy. Not sure comedians are good at economics but I can't argue with much that he says, and there are a few laughs.

Saving Lessons in Chemistry for the flight home.
 
I'm always reading about 5 books at a time and if I'm really motivated, I might finish one of them. When I want something very light,
I read Flappers to Rappers: American Youth Slang by Tom Dalzell. The interesting thing about slang is how often the same word becomes popular in different decades. Who knew that groovy originally came from the 30s or 40s, or that hep cat and hip cat were both around at about the same time, until hep finally became square and hip lasted long beyond the times when it diverged into hippie.

When I want to read something more serious this week, I'm reading "The Patriarchs" by Angela Saini. I've only read one chapter and in that one, the author researches and explores a rare matrilineal society that existed for a long time in a part of India, until European influences among others slowly influenced it to change. That society sounded more like a bonobo society, compared to the patriarchal ones that remind me more of chimps.

But, I think her primary purpose in writing the book is to explore and figure out how patriarchal societies became the most common. Of course, certain religions had a lot to do with it and if White Christian Nationalism should become the dominant culture, we women are fucked, and not in a good way.
 
The Lankavatara Sutra by D.T. Suzuki. The only existing English translation of this Mahayana text, thought to have been written around 350 - 400 CE, with an uncertain place of origin. Suzuki spent 7 years of his life on the project, and I managed to buy it for 2.50 CDN.

Apparently the historical debate is about whether the text came before or after Nagarjuna, who was a major Buddhist philosopher.
 
The Lankavatara Sutra by D.T. Suzuki. The only existing English translation of this Mahayana text, thought to have been written around 350 - 400 CE, with an uncertain place of origin. Suzuki spent 7 years of his life on the project, and I managed to buy it for 2.50 CDN.

Apparently the historical debate is about whether the text came before or after Nagarjuna, who was a major Buddhist philosopher.

I lied. It's no longer the only existing English translation, but I believe it was the first one.
 
By coincidence, my weekend reading took a turn for the bizarre. I had picked up a signed copy of Kwame Dawes' poetry, "Duppy Conqueror", a few weeks ago, and finally found a moment to take off to the lake with it on Saturday. The next day, I dug into a textbook I'd been asked to review, Jeremy Black's "The Atlantic Slave Trade in World History". Both were short works suitable for an afternoon's read, but that's about all they had in common, despite theoretically both being reflections on the same world events. It was a very strange experience. reading a mournful, poetic lament for lost histories, written by a Black African-Jamaican, just a few hours before reading a bombastic, all but overtly biased attempt by an old school British historian to obscure or outright bury his nation's culpability in the pernicious slave trade that built Jamaica as we know it.

In case you couldn't tell, I give very high marks to Dawes' book, and recommend giving the other a pass... I'm kind of shocked that it survived peer review in the current climate. But not too shocked. Everyone wants to hear that it wasn't really their fault, even respected priests and scholars. Maybe especially respected priests and scholars.

Dawes puts it this way, in his 1995 poem "Prophets":

You see, I've always known this stuff -
this stuffing of history - to be
the baggage of your sterile sermons

secretly concealed behind those curtains
while you down the best part of the wine
after we've just dipped and sipped small

behind your Oxford tongue, acrobatic
around that clean sermon of bloodless salvation;
locked up in some closet, all this stuff

is sitting there, and if it wasn't for that smell,
that thick muggy smell seeping through,
I would never know you had all this stuff

30 years ago he wrote that. Some things never change, eh?
 
A book on Lost English. Funnily, some Aussies still use some of it. It’s a stop gap book till Bilby had finished his Richard Osman books. He got some very good books for Christmas that I feel I cannot read until he has.
 
Justice is Coming by Cenk Uygur

Founder and host of The Young Turks, which I've been listening to since the Bush years. Knew most of what he talked about, but there were some interesting new facts, lots of notes giving references. Goes into how we got here, from the supreme court case that was misleadingly (and purposely) summarized as giving corporations rights, Republican push to increase corporate power, and Democrats getting sucked in by the promise of campaign donations, and the media that pretends none of this is corruption.
 
I have just finished a continuing education course/seminar on James Baldwin, wherein we read various essays, short stories, and a novel, most of which are banned in Texas schools. Damn he is a great writer! I can't believe we never read him in high school, college or even graduate school. Actually, I can believe that.
 
Just got a new, interesting one in the mail. The Great Jazz Pianists by Len Lyons, which I discovered via Reddit. It looks like it includes a survey of piano history in jazz, then a write-up and interview with about thirtyish different jazz pianists.

It's right up my alley as I've been collecting records from jazz pianists for a number of years now.
 
When I read on here that Gregory Benford had died I thought it was about time I reread Timescape.

10 pages in, I was thinking "No, I would have remembered this."

Now I'm trying to figure out what iconic SF novel I had mixed up in my mind with this one.
 
House of Open Wounds. Adrian Tchaikovsky


I might have to go in to mourning when I finally read the last of his books.
 
The Rising Tide of Cultural Pluralism edited by Crawford Young, which is a follow up work of his 1976 title The Politics of Cultural Pluralism (which he won the Herskovits prize for). In it a number of academics write about different aspects of cultural diversity and their association with politics and the state.

I also have Ideology and Development in Africa by Young coming in the mail. I had to get it to round out my collection of his major titles. This is the last one I don't own, and I've enjoyed all of them.
 
I am reading Book 8 of the Sven Hassel collection. I started reading Legion of the Damned, the first book he wrote last October and bought the entire 14 book collection on Kindle shortly thereafter. These are fictional stories written by a soldier in one of the penal tank regiments in the German army that fought in World War II.
 
Just finished John D. Clark's excellent Ignition! - An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants

Published in 1972, it is a readable and entertaing account of the author's and his collegues work in the first few decades of the Cold War, during the "fuck around and find out" period of chemical engineering prior to widespread use of computer modelling, when if you wanted to know the properties of a potential fuel or oxidiser, you had to make some and test it.

This was as hazardous as might be expected when working with explosive, highly flammable, toxic, and otherwise horrible materials of uncertain (or horrifyingly certain) temperament.

For example:

Chlorine trifluoride, ClF3, or "CTF" as the engineers insist on calling it, is a colorless gas, a greenish liquid, or a white solid. It boils at 12°C (so that a trivial pressure will keep it liquid at room temperature) and freezes at a convenient -76°C. It also has a nice fat density, about 1.81 at room temperature. It is also quite probably the most vigorous fluorinating agent in existence—much more vigorous than fluorine itself. Gaseous fluorine, of course, is much more dilute than the liquid ClF3, and liquid fluorine is so cold that its activity is very much reduced.

All this sounds fairly academic and innocuous, but when it is translated into the problem of handling the stuff, the results are horrendous. It is, of course, extremely toxic, but that's the least of the problem.

It is hypergolic with every known fuel, and so rapidly hypergolic that no ignition delay has ever been measured. It is also hypergolic with such things as cloth, wood, and test engineers, not to mention asbestos, sand, and water —with which it reacts explosively.

It can be kept in some of the ordinary structural metals — steel, copper, aluminum, etc. — because of the formation of a thin film of insoluble metal fluoride which protects the bulk of the metal, just as the invisible coat of oxide on aluminum keeps it from burning up in the atmosphere. If, however, this coat is melted or scrubbed off, and has no chance to reform, the operator is confronted with the problem of coping with a metal-fluorine fire. For dealing with this situation, I have always recommended a good pair of running shoes.

And even if you don't have a fire, the results can be devastating enough when chlorine trifluoride gets loose, as the General Chemical Co. discovered when they had a big spill. Their salesmen were awfully coy about discussing the matter, and it wasn't until I threatened to buy my RFNA from Du Pont that one of them would come across with the details.

It happened at their Shreveport, Louisiana, installation, while they were preparing to ship out, for the first time, a one-ton steel cylinder of CTF. The cylinder had been cooled with dry ice to make it easier to load the material into it, and the cold had apparently embrittled the steel. For as they were maneuvering the cylinder onto a dolly, it split and dumped one ton of chlorine trifluoride onto the floor.

It chewed its way through twelve inches of concrete and dug a three foot hole in the gravel underneath, filled the place with fumes which corroded everything in sight, and, in general, made one hell of a mess.

Civil Defense turned out, and started to evacuate the neighborhood, and to put it mildly, there was quite a brouhaha before things quieted down. Miraculously, nobody was killed, but there was one casualty — the man who had been steadying the cylinder when it split. He was found some five hundred feet away, where he had reached Mach 2 and was still picking up speed when he was stopped by a heart attack.
 
Does it make me a bad person that I laughed, and laughed.

I've just finished

How Not to be a Boy. Robert Webb,
The Journeys of Socrates. Dan Millman,
A Jerk on One End. Robert Hughes.

I don't know what I was thinking several years ago, or if it's pure coincidence, but the next 2 books on the pile were both heavily Christian propaganda oriented stories.

Bomber Grounded, Runway Closed. Ciaron O'Reilly and The Shack, Wm. Paul Young. I will not be finishing either, and have recently changed my stance on book burning. I know what I'll be lighting my fires with for a week or so.
 
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