Showing posts with label Steven Johnson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steven Johnson. Show all posts

2015 TBR Pile Challenge Complete!

Wednesday, December 2, 2015


Adam, the Roof Beam Reader hosted the TBR Pile Challenge again this year and despite the craziness of the past few months, I actually completed it! Here's the link to my original post.
The goal was to read 12 books from your “to be read” pile within 12 months. Each of the 12 books must have been on your bookshelf or “To Be Read” list for AT LEAST one full year. Caveat: Two (2) alternates are allowed, just in case one or two of the books end up in the “can’t get through” pile. 

There were two on my main list that I didn't get to, but I read both of my alternates. I found a new favorite, A Girl of the Limberlost, tried Haruki Murakami for the first time, and read a good book set in my home state, The Circus in Winter. It was definitely a successful challenge.

Here’s my list:


1) Gulliver's Travels (Done)
    by Jonathan Swift 

2) A Girl of the Limberlost (Done)
    by Gene Stratton-Porter 
3) The Ghost Map (Done)
    by Steven Johnson 
4) Tess of the D'urbervilles (Done)
    by Thomas Hardy 
5) Asterios Polyp (Done)
    by David Mazzucchelli 
6) Master and Commander (Done)
    by Patrick O'Brian 
7) Kafka on the Shore (Done)
    by Haruki Murakami 
8) The Night Watch (Done)
   by Sarah Waters 
9) Light in August  
    by William Faulkner 
10) The Circus in Winter (Done)
    by Cathy Day 
11) Inherit the Wind (Done)
    by Jerome Lawrence 
12) On the Beach  
    by Nevil Shute

ALTERNATES:

1) A Monstrous Regiment of Women (Done)
     by Laurie R. King 
 
2) A Quiet Storm (Done)
     by Rachel Howzell Hall

Nonfiction Mini Reviews

Monday, August 24, 2015



Bad Feminist 
by Roxane Gay 
★★★★ 

I might be the last person to read this collection of essays but I got to say, all the reviews I read about it did not make it sound appealing. I got the impression that it was a head-shaking, staring-down-your-nose-at-someone book about what we were all doing wrong as feminist. I was so far off! Now that’s not to say that the book is all humorous. Gay tackles some incredibly tough issues. She talks about racism in pop culture, birth control, gang rape, etc., but she does so in a very accessible way. 


The author’s essays cover everything from her love of Sweet Valley High books to her scrabble tournament skills. She's funny and witty and she is brutally honest about herself. This is not a book about what everyone else is doing wrong as a feminist. It's a book about her, what she likes and doesn't like and the issues she feels passionate about. I really enjoyed it. 


BOTTOM LINE: A wonderful collection of essays! I’m looking forward to trying her novel “An Untamed State” though I’ve heard it’s much darker.


Five Days in London, May 1940 
by John Lukacs 
★★★


The title pretty much tells you what you’re getting with this one. Lukacs drilled into a short time frame after Winston Churchill became prime minister and some of his cabinet members wanted avoid war with Hitler at all costs. The subject matter is interesting, but his writing style is a bit stale. It feels a lot like he’s defending his dissertation instead of just writing a book. He keeps circling back on a point and explaining why he made it, which was distracting. The actually history was interesting, but the writing style didn’t work for me. 


He would cite a letter or speech word-for-word as if he’s trying to prove that the point he was making was based on fact. If I’m reading nonfiction books on a historical event I tend to trust that the author has done their research. There’s also usually a biography full of the cited works at the end of the book that people can check if they want to. 


BOTTOM LINE: I won’t be searching out any more work by this author, but I enjoyed learning more about this short window in history. It was interesting to see how much can hinge upon what seems like a small decision.  


The Ghost Map 
The Story of London's Most Terrifying Epidemic--and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World 
by Steven Johnson 

★★☆

Johnson tells the story of the massive Cholera outbreak in England in the 1850s. He traces its impact on society and the lasting impacts that still resonate today. He discusses the contaminated water sources that caused so many problems and made frequent reference to Dickens novels that were written around the same time. 


One point the author made that I did find fascinating was his conclusion about modern day society’s alcohol tolerance. He says our population went through a “genetic bottleneck” and many of us are descended from people who can tolerate alcohol, because those are the people who survived the bad plague outbreaks in Europe. Native Americans and Aborigines’ descendants in Australia on the other hand were never forced to go through that form of survival and tend to have a higher tendency towards alcoholism. It’s something I never considered, but it’s an interesting conclusion. 


BOTTOM LINE: The book is impeccably well researched, but not too readable. It had a hard time keeping my attention. Skip it unless disease outbreak, medical research, etc. are of particular interest to you.

2015 TBR Pile Challenge

Monday, December 1, 2014



The Roof Beam Reader (Adam) is once again hosting the TBR Pile Challenge. I am pretty picky about what challenges I participate in, but I love this one because it encourages me to read books I already own. 

The Goal: To finally read 12 books from your “to be read” pile (within 12 months).

Specifics: Each of these 12 books must have been on your bookshelf or “To Be Read” list for AT LEAST one full year. Caveat: Two (2) alternates are allowed, just in case one or two of the books end up in the “can’t get through” pile.


Here’s my list for 2015:

1) Gulliver's Travels (Done)
    by Jonathan Swift
2) A Girl of the Limberlost (Done)
    by Gene Stratton-Porter
3) The Ghost Map (Done)
    by Steven Johnson
4) Tess of the D'urbervilles (Done)
    by Thomas Hardy
5) Asterios Polyp (Done)
    by David Mazzucchelli
6) Master and Commander (Done)
    by Patrick O'Brian
7) Kafka on the Shore (Done)
    by Haruki Murakami
8) The Night Watch (Done)
   by Sarah Waters
9) Light in August  
    by William Faulkner
10) The Circus in Winter (Done)
    by Cathy Day
11) Inherit the Wind (Done)
    by Jerome Lawrence
12) On the Beach  
    by Nevil Shute

ALTERNATES:

1) A Monstrous Regiment of Women (Done)
     by Laurie R. King  
2) A Quiet Storm (Done)
     by Rachel Howzell Hall