Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Thursday, December 26, 2019

2019 Year In Books

I read 37 books this year. Every year I vow to review every book I read and every year I fall short. 

Books of the Year: This year, I am picking two books to share the book of the year award. The first is Rise and Kill First, an absolutely engrossing account of the Israeli secret services (Mossad and Shin Bet) from their origins before the founding of the nation until the present day. Ronen Bergman gives masterful tick-tock accounts of complicated missions the Israelis have pulled off over the last 70 years to preserve their nation. But Bergman’s book is not a fan boy account of plots so meticulous that explosive devices are inserted into spare tires hundreds of miles outside Israel’s borders and explode in the split second a target walks past them or drone attacks that can take out a single person and leave a person walking next to that person unharmed. No, his is a meditation on the unintended consequences of using targeted assassination as official national policy, of military leaders who become so impressed with their own ingenuity innocent people died and the danger that arises when you cease viewing others as humans and instead as threats that must be snuffed out. It is a book that stays with you and forces the reader to think, deeply, about the sacrifices and tradeoffs that must be made in the name of national security. 

The other book sharing this honor is Bad Blood, a must-read chronicling the rise and fall of Elizabeth Holmes and her medical start-up company, Theranos. What could be written off as a cautionary tale of a Silicon Valley darling that went belly up (think Pets.Com or GeoCities) is instead a more sinister, nefarious tale. The reporter John Carreyrou weaves a devastating tale of Holmes, who uses a combination of Steve Jobs-like leadership (minimalist clothing, nose-to-the-grindstone work habits), a compelling backstory (dropping out of Stanford to start her company), and a simple elevator pitch (eliminating veinous blood draws in favor of finger prick testing for a wide range of testing), to convince (mostly) older, wealthy, white men (including former Secretary of State George Schultz and then-Army General James Mattis) to invest in her to the point she briefly became (on paper) the world’s youngest billionaire. But what Carreyrou uncovers in a fast-paced tale that reads like a crime thriller, is fraud, deception, and the deployment of high priced attorneys (David Boies is a villain and ethically ambiguous character in the book) to threaten, cajole, and litigate against anyone who tried to blow the whistle on Holmes, whose technology never came close to meeting the promises she sold to her investors and corporations (like Walgreens) that partnered with her. 

Honorable Mention: A few other notable books. The first is the breezy Bachelor Nation, Amy Kaufman’s history of the eponymous TV show, dark underbelly and all. The second is The Library Book, where Susan Orlean uses a massive fire at a Los Angeles public library in the 1980s as a springboard for delving into the history of libraries in America and their unique (and important!) role in our communities. The third is Camelot’s End, Jon Ward’s outstanding history of the 1980 Democratic presidential primary race between Jimmy Carter and Ted Kennedy. The final honorable mention is Solid State, a fascinating, if melancholy, look at The Beatles as they break apart even as they create their final masterpiece, Abbey Road

Other Books I Really Enjoyed: Next, a few books that would make excellent additions to your personal collections. First, Guac Is Extra, But So Am I, an essential how-to guide from Sarah Solomon for young adults who want to know the finer points of everything from hosting dinner parties to starting retirement accounts, with important asides on proper ghosting etiquette, job interviewing, and keeping your social media 100 p. Second, K: A History of Baseball in Ten Pitches, Tyler Kepner’s ode to the joys of baseball as told through its pitches - from Uncle Charlie to the split finger fastball and eight others in between. Third, Rocket Men, the story of the lesser-known Apollo 8 mission that orbited (but did not land on) the moon. It is not an easy thing to make a story whose outcome is known still feel like a pulse-pounding thriller, but Robert Kurson achieves it. Fourth, The Lost Gutenberg, is one of those lost-to-history stories I love. Margaret Leslie Davis follows a rare Gutenberg bible from the 1500s through its ownership by scoundrels, knaves, legitimate book collectors, and, ultimately, a Japanese conglomerate (because of course). Fifth, Norco ’80 is one of those books you expect to be turned into a Netflix series. Peter Houlahan’s telling of an infamous bank robbery in California is an adrenaline-filled page turner I had trouble putting down. Finally, Elvis in Vegas, Richard Zoglin’s wonderful history of that town’s co-dependent relationship with movie and music celebrity culture that reached its apotheosis (or nadir, depending on your point of view) when the King of Rock ’n’ Roll decamped to the desert in 1969 a lean, mean musical making machine and slunk out in 1976, a bloated, drug addicted lounge act. 

Solid Picks That You Will Not Regret: Best. Movie. Year. Ever. is a fun return to what Brian Raftery argues is a stand out year (1999) in the movies. We Are Never Meeting In Real Life, a collection of essays (the stronger ones are at the beginning) by Samantha Irby. Howard Stern Comes Again, another collection, this one of edited interviews by the King of All Media, shows Howard’s skills but the truncated versions of his sometimes hour-plus conversations might disappoint hard core fans. She Said, is two-thirds of a great book. Specifically, the book excels as the New York Times reporters Meghan Twohey and Jodi Kantor tell their own tale of reporting on Harvey Weinstein, but the final third (once their story breaks and Weinstein is taken down) is a hot mess that felt like filler to meet a page quota. Finally, Bill Bryson’s The Body, has the author’s signature attention to detail (if you ever wondered what helps make your poo brown, YOU’RE IN LUCK) but also felt bloated (a phenomenon he also explains) and in need of a firmer editorial hand. 

Best of the Rest: The Elephant in the Room (Tommy Tomlinson) is a mostly upbeat tale of a sports writer’s attempt to lose weight. Mortal Republic (Edward J. Watts) is a sometimes dense history of the fall of the Roman republic into dictatorship with not-so-veiled comparisons to America in the 21st century. I Like to Watch (Emily Nussbaum) is an uneven collection of essays by the television critic Emily Nussbaum. Dreyer’s English (Benjamin Dreyer) was the best of several grammar-related books I read this year but the author thinks he is more clever (or is it cleverer?) than he is (yes, I’m ending this sentence on a preposition, eat it!) 

In One Ear and Out the Other: The Death of Hitler, Jean-Christophe Brisard and Lana Parshina. How to Hold a Grudge, Sophie Hannah. The Grandmaster, Brin-Jonathan Butler. If We Can Keep It, Michael Tomasky. You Could Look It Up, Jack Lynch. Bullshit Jobs, David Graeber. American Predator, Maureen Callahan. Wordslut, Amanda Montell. Republic of Lies, Anna Merlan. The Day It Finally Happens, Mike Pearl. Because Internet, Gretchen McCullough. Semicolon, Cecilia Watson.

Do Not Read: Duped, Abby Ellin. Okay, Fine, Whatever, Courtenay Hameister. A Lot of People Are Saying, Russell Muirhead and Nancy Rosenblum. Talking to Strangers, Malcolm Gladwell.


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Friday, December 21, 2018

2018 Year in Books

2018 was a very good year in books. I read thirty, but two stood above all others. In fact, I liked them both so much, for the first time, I am picking co-books of the year. Emmy Favilla’s A World Without Whom and Kassia St. Clair’s The Secret Lives of Color do the two things books I enjoy do best - they inform and entertain. But more than that, both authors write with wit and élan, cheeky good humor and just the right amount of bawdiness (at least for me). Click on the links to read my full reviews.

My honorable mentions are several. Erin Carlson’s I’ll Have What She’s Having was not just an homage to the brilliant Nora Ephron, but a meditation on modern romance and how it is portrayed in movies. Marve Emre’s The Personality Brokers was a beautifully written and extensively researched history of the Myers-Briggs Personality Test and how it became ubiquitous in society while also lacking any scientific grounding. For immersive experiences, Miles Unger’s Picasso and the Painting that Shocked the World, read like the first part of a multi-part biography of the 20th century’s unquestioned grand master. While the book is ostensibly about the creation of the proto-cubist masterpiece Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, it is much more than that. It is the story of a prodigy who, before he turned thirty, had moved through three distinct phases (Blue Period, Rose Period, and Cubism) that have influenced modern art ever since. Finally, Rebecca Traistor’s Good and Mad is a rip-roaring polemic against the patriarchy and encourages women to stop apologizing for wanting to exercise their power. I am here for it. All of it.

Other good reads included Hope Never Dies, a fanfic imagination of Joe Biden in his post-Obama Administration years becoming an amateur gumshoe, The Secret Diary of Hendrik Groen, Age 83 1/4, a fictional account of an elderly man’s life in an assisted living facility that captures the poignancy, small joys and absurdity when the final grains are passing through the hourglass, and Broadway, a historical journey of the great Broad Way that has defined New York City for more than 400 years. 

Follow me on Twitter - @scarylawyerguy 

Prior years-in-review:


Saturday, December 23, 2017

2017 Year in Books

I'm too lazy to blurb all the books I read this year, so here's the list. My goal was to review every book I read, but as you'll see, I didn't quite make it. Of the books I did review, a couple I really liked are "Word by Word" (#18), "Nomadland" (#31) and "Fear City" (#33). A couple I liked but didn't review are "The Stranger in the Woods" (#14) and "The Lonely City" (#28), the latter was probably one of my two or three favorites of the year. I thought Grann's "Killers of the Flower Moon" (#17) which landed on a few best-of lists was a little disappointing and Perrotta's Mrs. Fletcher (#29) was WAY overrated. There is also a bit of fluff like "Make Trouble" (#27), which you can read in about 20 minutes and "The Asshole Survival Guide" (#34). The rest are a mixed bag of good ("A First Class Catastrophe" (#35)), bad ("The Road to Little Dribbling" (#5)) and ugly (in that early 70s facial hair is not good, but reading about the Swingin' A's was excellent "Dynastic, Bombastic, Fantastic" (#11)). 

I hope you got to read some good books this year too! 

6. The African Svelte, Daniel Menaker
9. If Our Bodies Could Talk, Dr. James Hamblin
10. Arthur & Sherlock: Conan Doyle & the Creation of Holmes, Michael Mims
11. Dynastic, Bombastic, Fantastic, Jason Turbow
13. The One Cent Magenta: Inside the Quest to Own the Most Valuable Stamp in the World, James Barron
14. The Stranger in the Woods: The Extraordinary Story of the Last True Hermit, Michael Finkel
15. The Course of Love, Alain de Botton
16. The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge & Why It Matters, Tom Nichols
17. Killers of the Flower Moon, David Grann
20. The Descent of Man, Grayson Perry
22. Last Call, Daniel Okrent
23. Grocery, Michael Ruhlman
25. Paths to Happiness, Edward Hoffman
26. Caeser’s Last Breath, Sam Kean
27. Make Trouble, John Waters
28. The Lonely City, Olivia Laing
30. The Thousand Dollar Dinner, Becky Diamond
34. Get Capone, Jonathan Eig
35. The Asshole Survival Guide, Robert Sutton
36. A First Class Catastrophe, Diana Henriques

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Book Review - Too Dumb To Fail

Presaging what will surely be a flood of books about the 2016 campaign is Matt Lewis’s Too Dumb to Fail, equal parts polemic and screed by a card-carrying member of the conservative media establishment (Lewis is an editor of The Daily Caller and regularly appears on “the shows”). Lewis’s thesis is simple - the ideas that undergirded the so-called “Reagan Revolution” have been jettisoned by the Republican Party, which needs to get back to being a party animated by the big, bold ideas that, according to Lewis, led to Reagan’s ascent.

While one cannot question Lewis’s conviction, he cherry picks information to suit his point of view. Perhaps this is simply my own political perspective, but if the first step in solving a problem is admitting its existence, readers will find little comfort here. It is not simply the pot shots Lewis takes at President Obama, Democrats, or the definite article “The Left,” it is the failure of his book to come to terms with some basic facts about Saint Ronnie. 

While the hagiography embraces Reagan’s bumper sticker appeal - low taxes, less government, and a strong national defense - his record was not that simple. Yes, Reagan cut taxes in 1981, but he subsequently raised them - several times - during his time in office. His attempts to rein in the federal government barely moved the needle on the actual number of federal workers (Republicans would have to wait for some guy named Bill Clinton to arrive before a meaningful reduction occurred), and the massive military build-up was done on the government’s credit card, leading to swelling budget deficits that undermined any suggestion of fiscal restraint. And this is without even getting into Reagan’s signing of a bill in 1986 that granted “amnesty” to millions of undocumented individuals, his decision to “cut and run” from Lebanon in 1983, or his sale of sophisticated weapons to the Iranians and the shifting of the proceeds from those sales to Nicaraguan Contras, action that should have gotten him impeached. 

Similarly, Lewis whistles past the graveyard of other recent Republican apostasies. The Second Iraq War barely rates a mention, the Great Recession is an afterthought, and the massive deficits accumulated under recent Republican administrations are barely touched on. Meanwhile, President Obama is dismissed as a paint-by-numbers liberal who has attempted to foist any number of evil government policies on a gullible electorate, not the least of which is of course the Heritage Foundation idea that people be required to purchase health insurance, which forms the core of what we now call Obamacare. 

Lewis also overstates the direness of the state of the Republican Party. The Obama years have been phenomenal for the GOP at the state level, where they control more than half the governorships and legislatures. Indeed, but for a single house of the Kentucky Legislature, the entire Old Confederacy is under Republican rule - a decimation of the Democratic Party that has been as total as the Republicans in the Northeast. In Congress, more Republicans are seated in the House of Representatives than at any time since 1928 and they also hold a majority in the Senate.

On public policy, for all the Republican kvelling about Obama’s overuse of executive authority (itself a pile of Grade A horseshit), after Sandy Hook, states passed more laws expanding gun rights than restricting them, and many states in the South have all but eliminated access to abortion. At the national level, the battle over tax policy has been won by Republicans with the assent of Democratic Presidents who have defined up the “middle class” from $250,000 under President Clinton to $400,000 under President Obama, who, incidentally, signed the law that permanently codified 99% of the George W. Bush-era tax rates. Reductions in capital gains and carried interest rates have shifted wealth upward, with many millionaires paying lower marginal rates than middle class wage earners while the amount of federal spending going toward so-called “discretionary” parts of the federal budget are at Eisenhower-era lows. 

And therein lies the limitation in Lewis’s argument. On the one hand, there is little interest in seriously examining the Reagan Revolution and its distortion by Republicans to suit their facile arguments about things like taxes, the military, and domestic policy and on the other, they have suffered no political consequences for it - indeed, but for the Presidency, Republicans have not held so many offices at the federal and state level in eight decades. 

What Lewis is left with is a lot of Poli Sci 101 ruminations on political philosophy and a few well-placed critiques. For example, Lewis rightly criticizes the anti-intellectualism of his party and its failure to adjust with the shifting winds of social change. He points to the weakening of the party structure and the rise of outside groups as one symptom of why there is less party unity and fidelity. Instead of having extremism rooted out, the party has been overtaken by its most intransigent members. In an alternate universe, Senate Republicans would be willing to give an Obama nominee to fill Justice Scalia’s seat a fair shake, would have negotiated (and voted for) the stimulus bill, and provided suggestions that could have incorporated more conservative policies into the Affordable Care Act - but Lewis cannot bring himself to suggest even these modest concessions.  

When it comes to solutions, Lewis goes for some unusual options - promoting “New Urbanism” - and more conventional choices - hello, outreach to Hispanics. But even here, he cannot mask his disdain for “the Left.” After a pages-long screed over how “the Left” politicizes climate change, the best Lewis can muster is the idea that it is okay to question the science but not demonize it (never mind that the Republican Party literally stands alone among all political parties in the Western Hemisphere as questioning man’s role in climate change). Similarly, instead of questioning (and offering answers to) the near total rejection of Republicans by African-American voters, Lewis glides right past this problem to focus on attracting other minority groups. In doing so, he misses the opportunity to mine what is a deep vein of skepticism toward his party by people of color based on the policies they advocate and the message they send. Finally, he encourages young conservatives to be well-read, but fails to identify anything other than standard conservative reading material as a starting point for their education. 

Any reckoning for why the Republican Party is so monochromatic and why the demographics that are making it harder and harder for them to compete for the White House will be lost so long as there are no electoral consequences in off year elections and at the state level. In the meantime, while the chances for winning in November become more remote with every batshit crazy Donald Trump incident, the reality is the GOP is that one election away from complete control of the federal government - hardly a political party in decline.


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Sunday, December 18, 2011

2011 Year In Review - The Books I Read

I read some great (and not so great) books in 2011.  Here is my pocket review of each: 

Book of the Year: At Home (Bill Bryson)
Bryson is one of my favorite authors.  He combines a conversational style with a nerd's appreciation for historical context.  In At Home, Bryson takes readers on a tour of his English country home while stretching back centuries to source the origin of each room's purpose within the modern day house.  Along the way, Bryson takes us back to Dickensian England to discuss sanitation, the dark ages to discuss great rooms and many other stops along the way.  

Runner-Up: The Disappearing Spoon (Sam Kean)

Kean's exploration of the periodic table of the elements is chock full of fascinating little tidbits about the scientists behind the discovery of these elements, how the table is constructed and anecdotes about each substance.  You will learn about everything from how dynamite was invented to what happens if you accidentally ingest silver (spoiler alert: you turn kind of blue).  
Honorable Mention: Maphead (Ken Jennings)
Ken Jennings, best known for winning about 345 games of Jeopardy!, is also a cartography freak with a winning writing style.  In his book Maphead, Jennings's love of maps shines through, as he takes us to the Geography Bee, introduces us to geocaching, follows people who update road signs and visits the historical maps contained in the Library of Congress among many other stops along the way of explaining the importance of maps.  

Honorable Mention: Sex On The Moon (Ben Mezrich)
The author of The Social Network weaves a tale of a NASA scientist and his girlfriend, who hatched a plot to steal (and sell) moon rocks brought back by the Apollo space missions.  The amateurishness of the criminal scheme is matched by the wistfulness of the romance between the main characters.  Highly readable.

Everything else:

Tears Of A Clown, Glenn Beck and the Tea Bagging of America (Dana Milbank)
This book seemed far more relevant when I read it in January than it does now that Beck has slithered off FOX and disappeared into oblivion, but basically, Milbank traces the complete and utter douchiness of this latter day Father Coughlin.  A truly execrable human being.

There's A Word For It, The Explosion of the American Language Since 1900 (Sol Steinmetz)
Steinmetz splits the 20th century into 10 chapters and showing when certain words came into popular use.  Marginally satisfying and not particularly challenging.

Quite Literally (Wynford Hicks)

A far better usage book that would look handsome on any reference desk or bookshelf.  Very enjoyable.

Endgame (Frank Brady)
I usually don't like biographies because I get bored with the backstory, but Brady's one volume Bobby Fischer biography is actually stronger on the early part of Fischer's life than the post-Spassky downward spiral.  This is the book equivalent of Full Metal Jacket - amazing first half, so-so second half.  Fischer is a subject who begged either for a two-volume treatment that would have allowed the author to more deeply explore Fischer's adult life, or a shorter one volume work that was more balanced between youth and adulthood.  The early chapters on Fischer's childhood and rearing are fascinating as is the (too short) meditation on Fischer's skid row years in the early 1980s.  Unfortunately, the early part of Fischer's adulthood, when his genius truly blossomed and he was the unquestioned greatest chess player in the world is given somewhat short shrift. Fischer's unquestioned genius is noted but so too is his reprehensible anti-Semitism.  If you are interested in the definitive book about the 1972 Fischer-Spassky Match, check out Bobby Fischer Goes To War.
The Lover's Dictionary (David Levithan)
This book is as slim as it is bad.  I hated it.

All Facts Considered (Kee Malesky)
I remember absolutely nothing about this book.  When I looked it up on Amazon, it appears to be a reference book of some sort.  

Rawhide Down (Del Quentin Wilber)

This book tells the story of John Hinckley's 1981 assassination attempt against President Ronald Reagan.  Wilber borrows from Dave Cullen's haunting book Columbine in flipping chapters between Hinckley and Reagan until we get to the climactic incident outside the Washington Hilton.  The behind the scenes chaos at the White House and how close Reagan actually was to death are both notable, especially since the "official" story at the time was far different than what was actually happening.

Bryson's Dictionary of Troublesome Words (Bill Bryson)
I told you I was a big fan of Bill Bryson.  This book is a nice companion to Bryson's Dictionary for Writers and Editors, offering commonly (and some not-so commonly) used words with definitions and proper spelling.

Mad As Hell, The Crisis of the 1970s and the Rise of the Populist Right (Dominic Sandbrook)
I'm fascinated by the 1970s.  The decade is easily stereotyped as a sea of leisure suits, 8-Track stereos and shag carpets, but the political system almost came apart during Watergate, the country elected a complete unknown in 1976 and by the end of the decade, interest rates were flirting with 20 percent.  Sandbrook touches on these issues and many more, tracing the decade from Nixon's secret bombing of Laos and Cambodia all the way through how Reagan and his advisors successfully leveraged economic distress, military emasculation and religious fervor to sweep into office in 1980. 

The Eichmann Trial (Deborah Lipstadt)
I found this book much less enjoyable than Hunting Eichmann, though Lipstadt focuses more on the trial itself, whereas Bascomb's tale was focused almost exclusively on how Eichmann was tracked down by the Mossad.  Admittedly, the latter is far more provocative than the former.

The Lost City of Z (David Grann)
Fascinating story of British explorers of the Amazon in the late 18th and early 19th century, and particularly Percy Fawcett, who comes across as a stentorian Indiana Jones as he searches for the eponymous city for which the book is named. 

The Psychopath Test (Jon Ronson)
Those Ronsons are one talented group of people.  I imagine their holiday dinners are latter day Algonquin roundtable, but to be honest, I remember very little of this book's contents.  Probably not that good.  

In The Garden of Beasts (Erik Larson)
Larson probably reached his creative apex with The Devil in the White City, but this highly enjoyable story of our Ambassador to Germany at the dawn of Hitler's rise to power is really good.  Larson modifies his two disparate story signature by telling what are more like parallel stories of the Ambassador and his daughter, each of whom has unique and unconventional experiences in early 1930s Germany.  The book felt about 20-30 pages too long, but overall, a solid read.

Fraud of the Century (Roy Morris)

The shenanigans of the 1876 Presidential election do, in their way, make what happened in 2000 look mild by comparison.  Morris's telling, which is filled with the type of political minutiae that junkies like me live for, was great.  That the election itself was not certified until a few days before the actual Inaugural presents the interesting question of why there was such a rush to "select" G.W. Bush, but in 1876, the politically distant Sam Tilden was outmaneuvered by the Republican machine supporting Rutherford Hayes.  Hayes's own complicity in the actions is questionable, but the stain left by the result (Tilden outpolled Hayes nationwide) played a big part in Hayes's decision to not stand for re-election in 1880. 

The President and the Assassin (Scott Miller)

Keeping with the post-Civil War theme, Scott Miller takes us to Buffalo, New York in September 1901 to tell the story of the assassination of President William McKinley.  His murder is a major historical pivot point for the country, as he was succeeded by the mercurial Theodore Roosevelt, whose progressivism was completely contrary to McKinley's rigid protection of industry.  His killer, Leon Czolgosz, was also a man of his time, but of the masses who were disillusioned by government and flirted with anarchism.  A final thread is the still modest amount of medical knowledge and technology - sterilization, anesthesia, and x-ray machines that were not in wide use, but might have contributed to McKinley's recovery had there been greater understanding of those techniques.

Game Six (Mark Frost)

Baseball fans will enjoy Mark Frost's inning by inning (and in some cases, at-bat by at-bat) story of Game Six of the 1975 World Series between the Boston Red Sox and Cincinnati Reds.  Widely believed to be one of, if not, the greatest World Series game of all-time, Frost not only breaks down the small strategic decisions that went into the game, but layers a rich tapestry of stories about the players involved.  He's particularly fond of Luis Tiant, the Red Sox starting pitcher for Game Six and Reds manager Sparky Anderson.  Even though you know the result, reading about the myriad times where the game could have gone in a different direction still makes for an entertaining yarn.

The Last Gunfight (Jeff Guinn)
Guinn's story of "The Gunfight at the OK Corral" takes the reader back to the sometimes lawless West that was still being developed and settled in the late 1800s.  Guinn makes a persuasive case both for Wyatt Earp's self-promotion in the wake of the gun fight and its inevitability based on bruised egos and simmering feuds between the Earps and the Clantons.  Like many things related to the "Wild West," the legend was printed before the truth had a chance to come out.  

The Speech (Senator Bernie Sanders)

This is the verbatim text of Senator Sanders's December 2010 filibuster against the extension of the Bush tax cuts.  I know, you are noting the irony that the only time someone has been forced to do an "old school" filibuster, that is, speaking without break on the Senate floor, is when we want to extend tax cuts that overwhelmingly benefit the rich, but such is life.  The speech repeated itself in a number of places but the overall message of income inequality looks prescient in the wake of the Occupy Wall Street movement.  There is no denying the Senator's passion and his desire to help the middle class and poor is laudable.  That people in Vermont and elsewhere are struggling just to buy food and heat their homes is, sadly, just as common today as it was a year ago when Senator Sanders made his speech.  
The President Is A Sick Man (Matthew Algeo)

Yet another Gilded Age era tale, this time of President Grover Cleveland's secret surgery to remove a tumor from his mouth, and how the procedure was kept from the general public (spoiler alert: overlong boat trip from DC to NY).  The wrinkle in the story is that one reporter actually sniffed out the story but was mercilessly crushed by the President's men when he published it.  Along with a piece of Abe Lincoln, Cleveland's tumor (which turned out to be benign) is still in the possession of the federal government. 

A Billion Wicked Thoughts (Ogi Ogas and Sai Gaddam)

Two authors data mined porn searches conducted by thousands of men and women to tease out the differences between what we say we want sexually and what we crave when we watch it.  
Destiny of the Republic (Candice Miller)
Rounding out the post-Civil War presidential jag I went on is this book, which discusses the 1881 assassination of President James Garfield by Charles Guiteau.  Miller makes clear that poor medical techniques directly contributed to Garfield's painful and slow death, Alexander Graham Bell makes a cameo appearance with an early version of a metal detector (his failed b/c the bed Garfield was on when Bell scanned him had metal springs - you can't make some of this stuff up) and Guiteau is another aimless drifter and neer-do-well (like Czolgosz in 1901) who did little with his life.  Miller's fondness for the President is clear and, to a lesser extent than McKinley, his death changed the course of our country's history by elevating career hack Chester Arthur to the Presidency.  The Arthur Administration was unmemorable, but one wonders what Garfield could have achieved had he lived.  I've also seen this book pop up on some "best of the year" lists. 

Snoop, What Your Stuff Says About You (Sam Gosling)

I thought I would enjoy this book because I'm a bit of a snooper myself - primarily bookshelves, and I found out that the bookshelf is one of three places where people tend to express themselves (the bathroom (of all places) and bedroom being the other two).  Otherwise, there was a lot of, "it could mean this, or it could mean nothing" observations that I find so frustrating in sociological books.  

Should You Judge This Book By Its Cover (Julian Baggini)

Baggini takes a bunch of conventional wisdom tropes and attempts to determine whether they are true or not.  Each aphorism (e.g., "no pain, no gain," "a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush") is given a whopping 2 pages of discussion, so it's hard to take anything in the book (or its conclusions) too seriously.

Red State, Blue State, Rich State, Poor State (Andrew Gelman)

This book is what I imagine Nate Silver's masturbatory fantasies look like.  Dense with data points and impenetrable to those without a PhD in statistics, my one basic takeaway was the (partial) debunking of Thomas Frank's What's the Matter With Kansas as Gelman argues that rich people in "blue" and "red" state vote Republican and where Republicans win the middle class vote too (and get better turnout) in the Deep South and Midwest, they win.  Kansas poor people vote for Democrats too, they just don't make up enough of the electorate to tilt it blue.  Or something.  It's a bit blurry.  

That Used To Be Us (Thomas Friedman & Michael Mandelbaum)

See: http://scarylawyerguy.blogspot.com/2011/11/book-review-that-used-to-be-us.html

Boomerang (Michael Lewis)

This book feels like 5 overly long Vanity Fair articles embellished with enough fluff to turn it into a book-long treatment to take advantage of the superb (and 2010 Book of the Year "honorable mention") The Big Short.  While no one can doubt Lewis's talent as a writer, this story of foreign countries hit by the financial crisis (he focuses on Iceland, Ireland, Greece and Germany) and whether California portends a fiscally calamitous future for the U.S. just does not have enough weight to carry itself as a coherent whole.  Interspersed with trenchant observations that muse on what countries did "when the lights were out and no one was looking," were mindless and distracting ruminations on German shit fetishes, how odd Lewis felt arriving at a Greek abbey in a pink Brooks Brothers polo shirt (don't ask) and how a leader of the Irish parliament looked drunk (really?).  On balance, the good outweighs the bad, but this feels like a bad sequel along the lines of Caddyshack II or Another 48 Hours

Why Read Moby Dick (Nathaniel Philbrick)
This slim volume discusses the importance of Moby Dick in our literary canon and Philbrick's passion for the book is clear.  Having not read the book myself (and frankly, Philbrick's description of the difficulty of getting through the book made me less inclined to read it), I enjoyed Philbrick's point of view and learning about the way in which Melville put the story together.

The Professor and The Madman (Simon Winchester)

An entertaining look at the creation of The Oxford English Dictionary and how one of the primary contributors to the OED was (literally) a mental patient housed in an insane asylum in England.  Whereas Brady's Endgame should have either been much longer or much shorter, Winchester's book felt too short, that a lot was left out of the creation of the mammoth, original 20 volume OED.  That notwithstanding, this was a good book.  

Back To Work (President Bill Clinton)

See: http://scarylawyerguy.blogspot.com/2011/12/big-dog-tells-us-how-to-get-back-to.html

I am looking forward to more great reads in 2012!