Friday, December 28, 2018

Review: The Science of Mom: A Research-Based Guide to Your Baby's First Year

The Science of Mom: A Research-Based Guide to Your Baby's First Year The Science of Mom: A Research-Based Guide to Your Baby's First Year by Alice Callahan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

We have yet to tackle many of the issues mentioned in the book (solid foods, full night's rest, etc.), so I might change my rating slightly later on, but for now I'd say this is the perfect follow up to Emily Oster's "Expecting Better". Once again, the information given here is based on studies, and most of the information seems to be quite solid.

The book deals with nutrition, sleep, health, etc. So don't expect advice on getting your baby to crawl/walk/keep quiet in public/etc.

As a side note, I found it sad that an entire chapter and so many of the appendices had to be dedicated to vaccines, which you'd think would be an obvious choice.

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Thursday, December 27, 2018

Review: Hanging Devils

Hanging Devils Hanging Devils by He Jiahong
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

My first detective mystery from Mainland China. Not bad for the first in a series. Some parts did seem a bit simplistic, but I found some of the details of how the Chinese justice system works different and refreshing. The description of the town in Heilongjiang, life in that area, and the Orochen people, were all interesting as well.



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Monday, December 24, 2018

Review: Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience

Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is probably the seminal book on happiness, and could very likely be a great book for people who need more of it in their life.

I did think it dragged on in certain parts, trying to relate "flow" to any and every circumstance imaginable, but there were plenty of takeaways. I guess my Kindle highlights are linked here so I can defer to them.

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Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Review: In Cold Blood

In Cold Blood In Cold Blood by Truman Capote
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Quite interesting. As the first of its kind it sometimes doesn't feel as polished as a modern version of this would be, and at other times it seems more contrived. Sometimes the dialog is clearly changed in order to sound more like a work of fiction (e.g. direct dialog quotes from dialog that wouldn't be remembered verbatim, a few too many coincidences, etc.), and at other times some extra information is added that seems not to pertain to the story directly. I must admit I liked it a lot though, and I think it has aged quite well. Including being a glimpse into life in Western Kansas in the 1950s. His deep deep dive into this case and the people involved in it pays off.

I also get the impression that this was a book that was needed when it came out; when crime, criminals and the circumstances surrounding criminal activity were viewed very differently.



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Friday, December 14, 2018

Review: Translating Culture - Late-Victorian Literature into Chinese

Translating Culture - Late-Victorian Literature into Chinese Translating Culture - Late-Victorian Literature into Chinese by Isaac Yue
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Once again, this was probably beyond my pay grade. The subject seemed a tad esoteric, and I guess it is, but it's pretty fascinating regardless. It reminded me of Tim Parks' "Translating Style", although that was for IT-EN, which is my language combination. This one dealt with late Victorian literature and the translations of some select works into Chinese. As with Tim Parks' book, I think that even someone with little or no knowledge of Chinese will get quite a bit out of this, since it is a very thorough analysis of what was going on in Late Victorian literature, and how it affected the authors. I especially enjoyed "New Women Novels and their Translations" and "Dandyism and Witticism: The importance of being Oscar Wilde in the Context of Translation".



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Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Review: The anthology of taiwan indigenous literature - Short Stories

The anthology of taiwan indigenous literature - Short Stories The anthology of taiwan indigenous literature - Short Stories by Cheng Fang Ming
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

First of all, I should mention that this book is available for free here: https://alilin.apc.gov.tw/files/ebook...

I only found this out when I was googling one of the authors.

Anyway, for some reason I enjoyed this so much more than Part 1. I found almost every story to be of higher quality and more enjoyable. If you want to read a sample of Taiwan indigenous literature, this is probably the best bet.

Also, an oddity: three different stories feature a character called Watan. Two are by the same author, but none of them seems to be related to the others. I guess it's a very common Atayal name.

I didn't understand "Scarlet Earth" at all, so if anyone else has read it maybe they can explain it to me.


4.5 stars. Might revise this to a 5 later on.

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Sunday, December 09, 2018

Review: The 10x Rule: The Only Difference Between Success and Failure

The 10x Rule: The Only Difference Between Success and Failure The 10x Rule: The Only Difference Between Success and Failure by Grant Cardone
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I don't think there's anything earth shattering here, but then again it might be because I ready many business books of this type. By and large, 10x means what it sounds like. He's less of the Tim Ferriss type of "find hacks" mentality, and more of the Gary V "hustle your ass off" mentality. I do like the way he puts it. Someone might think that to hustle means doing an extra sales call at the end of each day, or something along those lines. But by labeling it 10X, he makes it clear you need to think bigger. So you should be up making sales calls in your PJs and maybe even hire an intern or part-timer to get a sales team going (or something like that, I'm sort of inventing here) so you can make ten times as many calls as before.

I saw he has a TV show now (The Turnaround guy), which I'm interested in checking out.


Some of my notes:
Never diminish your target
Instead increase your input
Success is your duty
Average achievements are worse than no achievements, because people feel like they're putting in the effort already.
Don't get the victim mentality. If bad things happen to you, it's your fault, even when it isn't. Just think of a way to make sure it never happens again and move on.
Competing is copying
Don't let a good recession go to waste
Go all in (unlike with poker, you don' t have a limited number of chips)
You want new problems (means you're growing and doing new things).
Don't give Fear time to grow
Trying to avoid complaints is wrong (just another way of avoiding expansion). Complaints are direct ways customers give feedback. Encourage them, and you can improve.
Don't try to get money. Try to get wealth.
It's unethical not to achieve your full potential. You're robbing others of possible well-being
Be uncomfortable

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Thursday, December 06, 2018

Review: Hoofprint of the Ox: Principles of the Chan Buddhist Path as Taught by a Modern Chinese Master

Hoofprint of the Ox: Principles of the Chan Buddhist Path as Taught by a Modern Chinese Master Hoofprint of the Ox: Principles of the Chan Buddhist Path as Taught by a Modern Chinese Master by 聖嚴法師
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I picked this up on a visit to Fagushan Nongchan Temple (法鼓山農禪寺) in Taipei, looking for an overview of Chan (Zen) Buddhism. The introduction is basically Sheng-yen's biography. The first chapter seemed to be an overview of Chan Buddhism that got way too technical for me, but I'm glad I stuck with it. The second chapter starts dealing with meditation, and then the other aspect of Chan Buddhism.

This is probably an excellent book if you are ready to set out and are serious about getting into Zen Buddhism. If you're just mildly interested and want to read more about it (like I was) this may be a bit much. Certain things were just too dense for me. For example, here's a sentence taken at random:

"The fourth station of mindfulness of dharmas entails taking a microscopic look at the continuum of psycho-physical experience from which concepts of self, mind and body are produced, using its constituent dharmas as the frame of reference".

It's not as bad as it may sound there, since the terminology is all explained beforehand, but it still ain't easy.

Having said that, it basically details all the aspects, history and beliefs of Chan Buddhism. The title is explained in the final chapter.


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Sunday, December 02, 2018

Review: Religion in Taiwan and China: Locality and Transmission

Religion in Taiwan and China: Locality and Transmission Religion in Taiwan and China: Locality and Transmission by Institute of Ethnology Academia Sinica
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A collection of essays and articles. Once again, these are hit or miss. However, there was something interesting in each one of these for me. I either learned about a new person (Yu Yue), or a new sect (Yi-Guan Dao, which is apparently huge in Taiwan), or about a Chinese-born Christian sect (Local Church), or Chinese Sufism, or Shamanism for the Paiwan tribe. .

The Chapters:
1) In Search of the Original Scriptures. About a Japanese and a Chinese monk who try to find original Indian Buddhists scripts, mostly via London
2) Locality and Temple Fundraising in Northern Qing China
3) Yu Yue
4) Inside and Outside the British Settlement in Shanghai
5) The Construction of Fundamentalism in I-Kuan Tao
6) The problem of Locality. About the Little Flock, or the Local Church, the Chinese-born Christian sect.
7) Singing your own song? About New Age in Taiwan. Not sure why this would be considered religious, and the author seems to be criticizing one of the founders (and probably rightly so), but pretty interesting nonetheless.
8) Rituals as Local knowledge. How Several Indigenous populations relate to Millet.
9) A resurgent Temple. All about Fengtian temple in Xingang, Jiayi.
10) Decline and Revitalization of Shamanic traditions in Paiwan village. Relates it to Shamanism in Siberia and Korea. Also discusses how Christianity (and the Japanese and the KMT government) relegated these traditions and tried to get rid of them.
11) City of Saint. About Sufism in China. Quite fascinatin
12) Rivers and Lakes. About Diviners (fortune tellers, Feng shui experts, etc.)

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Saturday, December 01, 2018

Review: Pompeii

Pompeii Pompeii by Robert Harris
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This book was excellent. Pompeii and the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius is something we've all heard about. I thought I had heard quite a bit about it, and I also went to visit Pompeii several years ago, and yet it wasn't until reading this book that I felt I got a real sense of what it must have been like to go through this ordeal. I've heard it said that A Tale of Two Cities does a better job than any history book of conveying what it was like to go through the French Revolution, and I suspect this is its equivalent for Pompeii and its inhabitants.

I also enjoyed the angle, and how the observations started from the changes in the water supply and aqueducts.

The (love) story in itself was a tad simplistic, but there were many other reasons to enjoy this book. The story was almost just an excuse to tell all the rest.

Also (SPOILER AHEAD) it seemed to be a bit of a stretch how Attilius manages to be on Mt. Vesuvius when the eruption starts, passes through Herculaneum and then Misenum, and the gets to Pompeii for the final pyroclastic surge (and obviously survives).

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Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Review: Voices from the Beautiful Island

Voices from the Beautiful Island Voices from the Beautiful Island by Chiu, Tzuhsiu Beryl
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A nice collection of bilingual poetry and stories from various authors, with the Chinese and English side by side. My favorites were "Spring rain" (春雨), by Cheng, ching-wen, and "Soul Palanquin" (魂轎), By Tonfang Po.

Apparently the version of Spring Rain is slightly altered here, at least the English translation is. I also noticed there is a story by Husluman Vava, which was featured in The anthology of Taiwan indigenous literature, and this was different as well. I'm not sure why in either case.

Still, a good mix, also with an indigenous story and an ode to the military compounds that many mainland Chinese grew up in when they came here.



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Friday, November 23, 2018

Review: Twain’s Feast

Twain’s Feast Twain’s Feast by Audible Originals
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

More of a chat amongst friends than a book. If these friends happen to be experts on Mark Twain or subjects related to him.

This is also a fascinating journey into certain aspects of Americana from Mark Twain's time, stemming from a couple dishes and types of food he writes about.

It would have been much better had they actually tried eating the food mentioned (every dish seems to be a "vegetarian" or "Wagyu beef" version of what Mark Twain once had). It would have been interesting to at least hear what his favorite foods tasted like.

Very anecdotal, very colloquial, but also entertaining.

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Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Review: A New Illustrated History of Taiwan

A New Illustrated History of Taiwan A New Illustrated History of Taiwan by Wan-yao Chou
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is probably the definitive history of Taiwan to read (in English) for those who are interested in the subject. It is actually quite a quick read, and the illustrations are excellent.

The complicated history of how Taiwan feels vis-a-vis Japan, China, the ROC, and Taiwan itself is outlined very clearly, as well as how its history relates to the region, including Okinawa and Korea. I also appreciated that the author touched upon issues such as the frivolity of the news in Taiwan, which one notices when living here, but is hardly ever addressed.

A couple of my notes:
- The name "Taiwan" comes from an indigenous word
- Japan was able to use Taiwan to have China recognize it (Japan) as ruler of Okinawa
- Suniuo, an Amis, went to Indonesia as a soldier for Japan, and then hid in the forests of Indonesia for 30 years following the defeat of Japan in WWII.

A couple issues:
Why Wade-giles?? I understand it might have made sense when it was first written, in the 90s, but now they include a Wade-giles - Pinyin glossary at the end, which seems would be more trouble than just changing everything to Pinyin.

Would be interesting to have an update for the past 20 years or so, especially the whole China-Taiwan relationship and lack of recognition on an international stage, and maybe another look at the 90s from more of a historical perspective. An update would make me revise this to 5 stars.

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Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Review: Blitzscaling: The Lightning-Fast Path to Building Massively Valuable Companies

Blitzscaling: The Lightning-Fast Path to Building Massively Valuable Companies Blitzscaling: The Lightning-Fast Path to Building Massively Valuable Companies by Reid Hoffman
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Maybe I'm just getting old, but I'm not sure how I feel about these books that try to make a point without any sort of comprehensive study, just some personal anecdotes of the author's. Granted, the author giving the personal anecdotes is one of the biggest success stories out there.

This also seems to apply only to people trying to make their businesses go viral, so it might not be applicable to B2B companies, or local restaurants, etc. To be fair, he addresses this (around halfway through the book), but he then states that most businesses will be online businesses (or already are). While this is true, it would have been handier (and frankly, more honest), to state this at the beginning, or on the dust jacket, so people who pick this book up know who its target market is right away.

All of this isn't to say I don't believe in his message. On the contrary, for some businesses this book is probably essential reading. This may even, at some point, include mine, in which case I should probably re-read it at that point. In the meantime, these are some of the notes I took:

The only time to blitzscale is when you have determined that speed is THE critical strategy to achieve massive outcomes. (This means greater uncertainty)

8 Transitions in Management Innovation:
1. Small teams to large teams
2. Generalists to Specialists
(Marines, army and police analogy)
3. Contributors to managers to executives
4. Dialogue to Broadcasting
5. Inspiration to Data
6. Single focus to multi-threading
"Freedom just means you have nothing to lose"
7. Pirate to Navy
(If I wanted to compete with myself, what would I do?)
8. Scale yourself (Founder to leader)

Always have a Plan A, Plan B, and Plan Z

Launch a product that embarrasses you (no time for perfection)



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Sunday, November 18, 2018

Review: Stephen Fry's Victorian Secrets

Stephen Fry's Victorian Secrets Stephen Fry's Victorian Secrets by Stephen Fry
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A delightful listen. Of course, these are all anecdotes - so don't expect a thorough or scientific study of any sort - and they concentrate on the scandalous, outrageous, etc. etc. But still, impeccably narrated, and with many interesting tidbits, facts and names that I had never heard before.

You also get to hear a recording of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle speaking!




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Friday, November 16, 2018

Review: Down the Common: A Year in the Life of a Medieval Woman

Down the Common: A Year in the Life of a Medieval Woman Down the Common: A Year in the Life of a Medieval Woman by Ann Baer
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This was a very pleasant surprise. Picked this up on spec in a used book store in Southern Taiwan. I was afraid it would be overly simplistic, or a children's book or something along those lines. It turned out to be entertaining and, as far as I can tell, quite accurate. The author goes into so much detail, it is obvious she has a passion for this subject (and she illustrated the book as well!).

All in all, an excellent perspective on life for a medieval woman somewhere in England, and it also makes you wonder how many stories like this there have been throughout time: people living their lives, with their family, friends, neighbors, dreams, desires, and thoughts.





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Thursday, November 08, 2018

Review: Discovering Language

Discovering Language Discovering Language by Thomas Nash
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

So this is a textbook, complete with exercises at the end of each chapter. It is a Linguistics primer, and the target audience is English speaking students in Taiwan. Taking all this into account, it is a rather interesting book, especially if English and Chinese are two of your languages. 3 stars, but rounded up to 4 because I should have know it would be a normal textbook ahead of time.

Some interesting notes:
- Words with /sl/ are said to convey unpleasant associations (slime, slither, slug, sloppy, etc.)
- Most words ending in -ump suggest heaviness and bluntness (rump, dump, hump, mump, lump, chump, thump, bump)
- The section on the different ways of being polite for Americans vs. Chinese (P. 55)
- The p's in the words "pit" and "spit" are pronounced differently, though English speakers do not normally realize this.
- Relatively new in-fix in English: "ma" (as in edu-ma-cation)
- Peoples' names have become common words: lumberjack, jack of all trades, Tomboy, tomcat, jimmy open
- 蒙古大夫 for a quack
- Languages with inclusive and exclusive "we": Taiwanese, Quechua, Tok Pisin, Hawaiian
- "gamel" became gamble. Same process added "d" to thunder and tender, and "p" to empty
- "Dog" used to mean a certain breed, and "hound" meant all breeds of dogs. Now the opposite.
- Silly used to mean Happy, then naive, now Foolish.
- Want used to mean "lack"


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Monday, November 05, 2018

Review: Cultural Discourse in Taiwan

Cultural Discourse in Taiwan Cultural Discourse in Taiwan by Chin-Chuan Cheng
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A collection of essays, most of which deal with Taiwanese literature in some form. As with any collection of essays, these are hit or miss. Some points I found interesting:

- The similarities between post-war Taiwan and Korea, from having a (US-backed) dictator, to the Kaohsiong incident in 1979 and the Kwangju uprising in 1980, to protests and gradual reform, to democratic elections (Seoul olympics in 88 and Chiang Ching-kuo's death in 87 both helped).
- The essay on Malaysian-Chinese authors in Taiwan.
- The ancestral origin entry in birth certificates was only removed in 1992!
- The whole essay on the various origins of people living in Taiwan

Also, most of the essays seem to mention or refer to Homi Bhabha's "The Location of Culture" for some reason, so I think I should read that at some point.

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Thursday, November 01, 2018

Review: Under the Phoenix Tree

Under the Phoenix Tree Under the Phoenix Tree by Catherine Dai
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I enjoyed reading this book. It deals with a family of 外省人, or Chinese who came to Taiwan to escape the communists. I don't usually enjoys these types of books too much because the stories are usually just about how much they miss their home province, but this was interesting. A story of a family in Taiwan, which is changing from a more traditional place to a more modern one. I especially enjoyed the little anecdotal stories about Taipei's history, like how Tianmu (allegedly) got its name, and the first foreign coffee shop in Taipei (Cafe Astoria), etc.



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Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Review: The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle

The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Why can't Murakami novels just last forever so I can just keep living in his weird world? Instead I need to wake up and deal with a lack of wells, not counting bald heads, no cats that disappear and turn up again with a new tail, not having to worry about water, or a lack thereof, or baseball bats, or a lack thereof.

Once again I feel like there's a bunch of symbolism I don't get, but I do enjoy the experience.

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Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Review: The anthology of taiwan indigenous literature - Short Stories

The anthology of taiwan indigenous literature - Short Stories The anthology of taiwan indigenous literature - Short Stories by Chang fang-ming
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A collections of short stories, which were sort of hit or miss. Some were basically a list of customs and beliefs of a tribe, with a semi-story as a sort of excuse to name them all. Also, it's hard to retain much since pretty much each short story deals with a different tribe.

Still, interesting for those who wish to know more about the indigenous Taiwanese. I was also quite happy that one of the stories dealt with Orchid island, since it's hard to find their stories, and they're somewhat different from the other tribes.

All in all, however, short stories don't seem to delve deep enough to really get a feel for each tribe.

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Tuesday, October 09, 2018

Review: The Artist's Journey: The Wake of the Hero's Journey and the Lifelong Pursuit of Meaning

The Artist's Journey: The Wake of the Hero's Journey and the Lifelong Pursuit of Meaning The Artist's Journey: The Wake of the Hero's Journey and the Lifelong Pursuit of Meaning by Steven Pressfield
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

It might just be my impression but I felt like he bit off more than he could chew here. This book is *much* more philosophical than the other books I've read by him ("Do the work" and "The War of Art"), and I felt like it missed the mark. He quotes Jung, Marx, Homer, Joseph Campbell, and many others, but just seems to pick and choose random quotes or tidbits. I couldn't help feeling like he wanted to sound philosophical, but wasn't sure exactly how.

I did like some of the points he made, such as how all artists create empathy through their art (not sure if it's all that true for songs, but definitely seems true for books, movies and paintings).

I also liked his notion of following the muse. I just don't think he had to justify it with so many odd references.

Probably 2.5 stars. I would recommend checking out some of his other books first.

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Review: The Drucker Lectures : Essential Lessons on Management, Society and Economy

The Drucker Lectures : Essential Lessons on Management, Society and Economy The Drucker Lectures : Essential Lessons on Management, Society and Economy by Peter F. Drucker
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I'm a fan of Drucker's and I really liked "The Effective Executive", but this collection of essays still surprised me, and very pleasantly. He has a quote at a certain point:

"Every 3 or 4 years I pick a new subject. It may be Japanese art; it may be economics. So for more than 60 years I have kept on studying one subject at a time."

This is reflected in his lectures. He covers a great many topics, and I was constantly surprised at how prescient he was, from the 40s to the 2000s. There were a few faulty predictions here and there, and some odd statements (about how deregulation would make Japan richer, but was still socially unacceptable, as an example), but by and large many of his statements from over 40 years ago still apply today.

Some passages I highlighted:

"The Ford Motor Company, we say, abandoned the Edsel. Well, this is polite euphemism. You and I abandoned the Edsel."

"The moment you can manage, you are no longer underdeveloped. You may still be poor, but you know how to get out of poverty fast."

"for there is no more conservative cause in the most profound sense of the words than the maintenance of the balance between man and his environment."

"American education tomorrow will no longer assume that one stops working when one starts working"

"Until very recently, there was no industry around for which the basic technological foundations had not been laid before World War I"

"Information is something that is pertinent to the task that can be converted into knowledge. And knowledge is information in action."

"He found in the orchestra's contract that they had to play five evenings, and he said, "No, you are going to be on duty 5 evenings, but you play 4. The fifth evening you sit out in the audience and listen.""

"And let me say the greatest weakness of our nonprofit institutions is that they don't reimburse. They have tremendous resistance against acquiring additional knowledge and skill on the part of their people, and it's stupid. It's very, very shortsighted, and it doesn't save anything. It costs money."

"74% of the people who work for Toyota are not on the Toyota payroll but on the payroll of contractors, suppliers, and have been for a long time. This is what makes "life-time employment" possible in Japan"

5 fundamental questions that every enterprise, profit or nonprofit, should be required to answer: What is our mission? Who is our customer? What does the customer value? What are our results? What is our plan?"

"And when the job becomes simply a a place to hang your hat, when it's "Thank God It's Friday", when you being to play games with yourself so that it makes the job more complicated, then you are bored. And boredom is a deadly disease."

"If you had no Department of Agriculture, would we now start one?"

"Whenever you do something of significance, whenever you are making an important decision, and especially whenever you are making a decision about people, you write down what you expect the results to be."

"The department stores in the United States and Japan are in terrible trouble" (written in 1996)

"No organization can possibly survive if it is both labor intensive and capital intensive. This is Economics 101."

"Is there a world economy? The answer is both yes and no. Economically, the world is becoming steadily more integrated. But politically the world is more likely to splinter."

"Total sales have tripled, while employment is a quarter of what it was. They think the company has become more productive. No. It has outsourced."

"one of the major challenges ahead is the fact that politics, military might, and economics no longer move in complete parallel but diverge."

"the fewer farmers there are, the more protection they get in every country"


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Sunday, October 07, 2018

Review: A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court

A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

It took me a while to get into it (maybe the first chapter), but after that it was excellent. They really need to create a modern day version of this. Possibly a movie. Obviously most things are tongue and cheek, although the ending is a bit different.

I listened to the audio version, narrated by Nick Offerman, and he was excellent as well.

The only quote I jotted down:
"It reminded me of a time thirteen centuries away, when the "poor whites" of our South who were always despised and frequently insulted by the slave-lords around them, and who owed their base condition simply to the presence of slavery in their midst, were yet pusillanimously ready to side with the slave-lords in all political moves for the upholding and perpetuating of slavery, and did also finally shoulder their muskets and pour out their lives in an effort to prevent the destruction of that very institution which degraded them."

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Monday, October 01, 2018

Review: The China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever Conducted and the Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss, and Long-term Health

The China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever Conducted and the Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss, and Long-term Health The China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever Conducted and the Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss, and Long-term Health by T. Colin Campbell
My rating: 3 of 5 stars



I'm in no position to question his findings, nor his methods. He does call out several other diets and nutritionists by name (South beach, Atkins, Perlmutter, Paleo, etc.). I find it interesting to note the points in common between all these diets and books: More veggies, fruits, nuts, beans, berries, etc. The difference seems to lie in meat, grains, animal products.

He's very much against isolating chemicals and finding benefits/disadvantages to each, since he says the way they all interact together is what matters (eating food vs. taking pills with isolated compounds).

If I were to play devil's advocate, I'd say that many of the studies mentioned (not all) seem to have a low number of participants (below 100), in contrast he seems to go into great detail to debunk studies that oppose his WFPB diet.

Toward the end the tone shifts (actually more or less the whole second half). He starts discussing how and why other scientists and lawmakers disagree with his findings. I won't opine on this, although for the most part it seems pretty credible.

Also,if you're calling the book "The China Study", I appreciate including other studies and information, but there should be much more about the China study. It is almost added as an afterthought at the end (it is mentioned throughout, but the study itself is only explained in more detail at the end). Even then, it has lots of ambiguity ("several suspect results were thrown out" sounds suspect in itself. How many is several? What criteria were there for judging them 'suspect'?)



Some of my notes:
US spends more on healthcare than any other country
US healthcare system is the 3rd (after heart disease and cancer) leading cause of death in the US.
Doesn't just cover China study
Premise: Too much protein (animal protein, Casein) is bad for us. --> Opposite of most diets (low on carbs, high on protein)

Study on Sodium nitrite:
1970: Journal Nature said Nitrite in our hotdogs may create nitrosamines (carcinogens)
Why: Animal experiments
Study: 2 groups of rats exposed to different levels of NASR (type of nitrosamine). Low dose received 1/2 amount of high dose.
Low dose: 35% died of cancer.
High does: 100% died of cancer.
BUT-->
The low dose, translated into human terms: 270,000 bologna sandwiches with 1 pound of bologna each, per day, for 30 years. This is how much rats in Low dose group had per bodyweight.
But studies with casein protein brought about cancer in 100% of test animals, and without the protein: 0% of animals.

Says he had nothing to gain in discovering this, and everything to lose, but then says those who pay his grants were reviewing his studies--> so it had to work out.

Cholesterol below 150 mg per deciliter means no heart disease according to most doctors.
He calls out Perlmutter by name.

"Hardly any study has done more damage to the nutritional landscape than the Nurses' Health Study, and it should serve as a warning for the rest of science for what not to do."

Interestingly, it mentions the Mcdougall plan, which I then looked up:
(From Wikipedia): The McDougall Plan—is a fad diet that carries some possible disadvantages, such as a boring food choice and the risk of feeling hungry."
Is it a fad diet if those are the only "possible" disadvantages? No mention of possible advantages.
So maybe he's onto something when he says the industry has a smear campaign going against nutrition-centered care. Then again, maybe he just knows people will oppose his findings so he's preemptively going after them.



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Sunday, September 30, 2018

Review: The Stolen Bicycle

The Stolen Bicycle The Stolen Bicycle by Wu Ming-Yi
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

So, this book was longlisted for the Man Booker prize, and there was some controversy since Man Booker first listed the author as Taiwanese, then switched to Chinese (under pressure from Beijing), which made the author protest on his facebook page. Anyway, the book didn't make the shortlist, and I can't help thinking the whole China/Taiwan drama may have had something to do with it.

Regardless, this was an excellent book, although this may be partly because I love Taiwan, and this book is thoroughly Taiwanese. It delves deep into certain aspects of Taiwanese history that I otherwise would know nothing about. In the process you also get a more Japanese perspective of certain events in WW2.

It's certainly not a clean, straightforward narrative, but it branches out into many avenues. I won't say it gets sidetracked, since the narrator is always in pursuit of the same thing (the bicycle), but in doing so a lot of ground is covered.

There's quite a bit of interesting symbolism (holding onto peoples' waists while riding a bicycle behind them, to then being the person in front with someone holding on behind. Also the parallels between the inanimate bicycle and the animate elephant, and I'm sure there are plenty more I've missed).

The postscript is beautiful. And thanks to it I found my favorite Jonathan Franzen quote: "Fiction meant taking up whatever the world had abandoned by the road and making something beautiful out of it."

A pet peeve though: The Chinese transliteration was really weird. Most of it was done using Wade-Giles (who does that anymore?), but some seemed haphazard (Ssu-Chuan for Sichuan/Szechuan)? I do wish I could read this in the original Chinese though, since I heard his prose is very poetic. I think some of this comes across in translation, but I'm sure a lot of it is lost.

If you're going to read one work of contemporary Taiwanese fiction, this should probably be it.


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Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Review: The Mysterious Etruscans

The Mysterious Etruscans The Mysterious Etruscans by Steven L. Tuck
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Excellent overview of the Etruscans, which had been very hard for me to find, whether in English or Italian.

There seemed to be a couple times where he was overreaching and exaggerating a bit. I understand that the evidence is limited, so we have to guess and surmise quite a bit, but sometimes it just seemed taken a tad too far (No, the Romans would not have been going around in fig leafs if the Etruscans hadn't given them togas).

But I shouldn't overemphasize the fact. It doesn't detract (too much) from the overall story of the Etruscans.

Some of my notes:
Ostrich eggs were signs of international trade. Some were engraved by Phoenicians, others by Etruscans.
Warfare: Etruscans were very courageous, but bad at overarching strategies (just charge in for personal glory/machismo, with no real macro strategy)
Women had more power than Greece. Portrayals of childbirth and child rearing. Also literature aimed at women. Also portrayals of women at games and religious rites.

"The Etruscans are almost completely responsible for for the western notion of family, and they originated the very idea of the Family name in Europe."

"Tuscany" comes from the Latin for 'Etruscan'. "Tyrrhenian" comes from the Greek for 'Etruscan'. "Rome" comes from 'Rumon', the Etruscan word for the Tiber river.
Etruscan games were always religious in nature, so bleeding (although not necessarily death) was required in fights as an offering, unlike in Greek games. This then led to Gladiator fights of Ancient Rome.
More things we got from the Etruscans: togas, and aqueducts and stone archways were Etruscan inventions. Agrippa was Etruscan too.
Etruscan was still being used (at least in temples) up to the 4th century (so pretty much to the end of the Roman empire).
Capua (Etruscan city) sided with Hannibal, since he was fighting the Romans.

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Sunday, September 16, 2018

Review: The Coming Storm

The Coming Storm The Coming Storm by Michael Lewis
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I feel like Michael Lewis is a genius at finding interesting topics in nooks and crannies others would have never thought to look. This is another one, showing how basically Barry Myers, slated to be the next head of NOAA, could (and is likely to) suppress weather data, thereby literally killing people, if he is confirmed.

I don't doubt that Myers is basically a gangster. From what little I've read about him (aside from this book), it sounds like he is, and wouldn't flinch at trying to gain personally at the expenses of citizens. However, this book would have been more interesting if Lewis had interviewed someone else at Accuweather. He mentions that Myers declined an interview, which is understandable actually, but there are other board members and employees (and former employees).

I always figured the NWS collected the data, and then companies, like Accuweather, could run their analyses on it (as well as on other data from other countries), and come up with their products. Like market research agencies use demographic data. If Accuweather comes up with good info (or can convince people they do), then they can sell it.

Of course, saying idiotic statements like 'we don't need the NWS because Accuweather is better' is like saying we don't need the census data because Nielsen has more useful reports, but that doesn't mean the private company has no use.

Anyway, a lot of the information was maddening, and Myers is most likely a terrible choice for head of NOAA, but I also think this book could have used more input from the other side.


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Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Review: The Xiaomi Way: Customer Engagement Strategies That Built One of the Largest Smartphone Companies in the World

The Xiaomi Way: Customer Engagement Strategies That Built One of the Largest Smartphone Companies in the World The Xiaomi Way: Customer Engagement Strategies That Built One of the Largest Smartphone Companies in the World by Li Wanqiang
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I'm not sure I would call this a general history of the company. Usually, when people write about a company that is still in operation (or a living person), they emphasize the fact that they were unbiased/had access to all papers/didn't have to give final approval to the subject/etc.etc.
I recently read two books about Alibaba and Jack Ma, and both of them dedicated the entire preface/first chapter to emphasizing this point.
Anyway, this book doesn't pretend to have any of this. However, it is also probably the only place we can find a history of Xiaomi in English, so it is interesting nonetheless.

I don't have too much experience with this brand, but when I lived in China, in 2014, it was certainly pervasive. We used the Xiaomibox (小米盒子)and still do on occasion, and I also still use mi-fit, and I definitely saw the cell phone around a lot.
The last chapter was odd. Mostly about his love for art. I imagine as an explanation for their style (maybe to counteract the accusations of copying?). Still, it was pretty interesting and made me want to read more about Muji.
Also, it was written in 2014. Since the company started in 2010, this means it basically covers the 1st half of the company's existence. Curious about the second half.


Bad points:
They NEVER did anything wrong. This is odd, but they don't mention one mistake they've made. An example:
An employee wanted to leave, so whenever he mentioned this, the boss would take him drinking until 5am, and do so for several nights in a row, until the employee felt guilty about wanting to leave. This is an interesting anecdote, but I doubt it would work with all employees. Anyway, I very much doubt any company of that size got by without any missteps. Alibaba certainly had plenty.
The quote: "Motorola invented the smartphone, but Nokia popularized it"(p. 15). I'm guessing this was a typo and was supposed to say "mobile phone". But this is a book about a smartphone company, so it stuck out.
Illustrations were not translated. So some of them are diagrams all in Chinese (p. 131, many others).
Some illustrations were just weird. (Figure 5.1, 5.2, etc.). Not sure what they mean.
Some contradictions, including two on one page (p.92: "we wanted to reach a mass market through conventional media" and then "This ad was for Xiaomi employees, Mi Fans and our partners."). Not that bad, but still made it confusing.
I do wish they had addressed the whole "copying Apple" issue (Lei Jun, Xiaomi's CEO, being called a "counterfeit Steve Jobs"). They seem to sidestep it, and just mention other inspirations (user input, Art, Muji).


Good points:
Very interesting to have an inside look at Xiaomi. I liked the analogy of using "air, ground and naval forces" to "attack the market".
Very interesting to see how they opened R&D to users and proceeded with their input. This seems to be the opposite of Apple. This could also account for the flak they get for being accused of "copying" other companies. Maybe their users just want better versions of whatever's out there.
Interesting to see how they tested their e-commerce on their own employees first, to see their reactions.
Interesting to see how they styled their customer service after Haidilao hotpot, since I'm a big fan of that chain --> Make employees love their job, and this will show.
Like the idea of "Mi homes". Like Apple stores, but not for sales, just after-sale service. So they're located in offices inside buildings, but very welcoming.


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Wednesday, September 05, 2018

Review: The Impossible Fairy Tale

The Impossible Fairy Tale The Impossible Fairy Tale by Han Yujoo
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Ok, I think I have to join all the other reviewers who have no idea what to make of this book. It was disturbing, and the writing style was odd but somehow catching. The second half made it more confusing, but also much more interesting. For some reason I really enjoyed the afterword.

I have to confess, however, that I didn't fully understand the style, and it probably needs to be read in the original language to be fully appreciated (or understood).

SERIOUS SPOILERS BELOW
The first half had that ambience of pointlessness that I've come across in other contemporary Korean fiction, but the writing style definitely added to the general feeling of hopelessness. The second half was the oddest part. It was from a teacher's point of view, although I don't think it was the teacher from the first half, but rather the author herself, and the person she's talking to is the main character from the first half. Somewhat reminiscent of Pirandello's "Six characters in search of an Author", but here she finds her author and has some questions for her. At least that's how I saw it. Then again, maybe I'm wrong. The writing style was definitely not one of the clearest. Oddly enough I really liked the afterword.

4 stars, for now

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Monday, September 03, 2018

Review: The Case Against Education: Why the Education System Is a Waste of Time and Money

The Case Against Education: Why the Education System Is a Waste of Time and Money The Case Against Education: Why the Education System Is a Waste of Time and Money by Bryan Caplan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This should probably be required reading not only for lawmakers, but for all voters (since lawmakers won't make uncomfortable changes without having voters on board).
It deals with Signaling in education, and the Sheepskin effect.
I'm not sure about the makeshift dialog of the final chapter. It's in a Socratic style (which tends to annoy me), although it's probably useful if some of the main points didn't stick the first time around.

Some of my notes:
Signaling exists, but not the only factor (Around 80% signaling, 20% not)
High school is almost always worth it.
College worth it if you're a decent student
Masters is almost never worth it.

Implications: If not signaling, if everyone gets a degree it's better. More education for everyone.
If signaling, if everyone gets a degree it's worse. Everyone is at the same level, so like no one got education.
Signaling is zero sum (it doesn't increase the pie). So, society doesn't benefit from more education if education is signaling.
Most education spending is useless, so--> make it harder to attend schools? Not for skills they will actually use in life (bad readers are better than illiterate people). For other subjects, Yes. Only the best should study Arts, Music, etc.
Signaling: If we subsidize diamond rings for marriage, the rich will find something else to show wealth. Diamond rings will be deemed worthless.
We are against child labor unless A) It is unpaid (internships must not be to company's benefit) or B) It is school (so, no real use for the future if 80% signaling)
If people were interested in cultural issues, they would find everything they need on the internet--> humanities is shoving cultural topics down the throats of the unwilling.
Most professors (around 51% for universities) are liberal, but most students tend to become more conservative the more they are educated.
More education raises levels of civic awareness and lowers racism and sexism. More education raises support for capitalism, free markets, and globalization.
More education makes individuals less religious, but makes society more religious.

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Saturday, September 01, 2018

Review: My Son's Girlfriend

My Son's Girlfriend My Son's Girlfriend by Mi-Kyung Jung
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Giving another 4 stars, since Goodreads doesn't allow much subtlety in their rating system. Anyway, the translation seemed a bit shoddy at times, but overall I enjoyed this a lot.

Oddly enough, I kept guessing the gender of the narrator incorrectly at the beginning of each story for some reason. Not sure why.

My favorite is probably the last story, about a rival who has bested you at everything (including a little etymology of the word rival, which makes me wonder what the original version says in Korean), only to find out things are different and how it affects you. It's hard to make too many comments without giving it away.

But I really liked all of them, with the possible exception of the first story, which just didn't pull me in much.



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Tuesday, August 28, 2018

La sciamana di Chatsil by Tong-Ni Kim

La sciamana di ChatsilLa sciamana di Chatsil by Tong-Ni Kim
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Molto interessante, una sciamana che vede suo figlio "posseduto dal demone Yasù", e il figlio cristiano che vuole convincere la sua mamma sciamana a convertirsi. Uno scontro di religioni e di generazioni diversi.

Mi chiedo se esiste ancora questo tipo di sciamanesimo in Corea. Sarebbe un peccato se non ci fosse più, ma mi ricordo d'aver intravisto alcuni pali totem come descritti nel libro nelle vicinanze di Busan diversi anni fa. Forse ci sono ancora sciamani come lei...

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Wednesday, August 22, 2018

A Calculated Risk by Katherine Neville

A Calculated RiskA Calculated Risk by Katherine Neville
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

So, Verity Banks is a banker. Kislick Willingly is her boss. They work at Bank of the World.

I wish there had been more flashbacks to the Rothschilds. In fact, I could have done without the flash-forwards.

Some cool twists and turns, but overall not really worth it. 2 stars.


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Tuesday, August 14, 2018

The Accusation: Forbidden Stories from Inside North Korea by Bandi

The Accusation: Forbidden Stories from Inside North KoreaThe Accusation: Forbidden Stories from Inside North Korea by Bandi
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

"The South Korean publication of this piece of fiction, which sharply criticizes and satirizes the North Korean regime, and which is written by a man who still lives and works under that same system, is a historical first - [...] No work denouncing the oppressive, antidemocratic regime of North Korea, by a writer still living in North Korea, has ever before been published." (From the Afterword)

The stories are depressing and oppressing. They felt rather claustrophobic and suffocating to me, and I guess that means they're written well. It brings home what it is like to live in a regime like North Korea's, and it isn't pretty. Almost equally amazing and interesting is the story of how the manuscript was finally smuggled out of North Korea, as described in the Afterword.

Regardless, this is a very important and unique book.


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Friday, August 10, 2018

Heroes: From Alexander the Great & Julius Caesar to Churchill & de Gaulle by Paul Johnson

Heroes: From Alexander the Great & Julius Caesar to Churchill & de GaulleHeroes: From Alexander the Great & Julius Caesar to Churchill & de Gaulle by Paul  Johnson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

It was so easy to get annoyed with this book that I was actively trying not to, so I could get more out of it. This book is a collection of some very notable characters, and a couple extremely mediocre ones. Mostly, it is a collection of people the author either met, saw in person, or otherwise give him an excuse to namedrop (this reaches a truly annoying level in the section on Margaret Thatcher). Having said that, there are some fascinating insights into people I wouldn't have otherwise read about (like Robert E. Lee, Mae West and Wittgenstein).

Still, I'm still not sure what exactly his criteria for a "hero" was, but stating that "Women have had few opportunities to play heroic roles", and then using that as an excuse to feature Lady Pamela Berry (she's a hostess, btw. As in, someone who hosted parties), seems like a lame excuse to feature a personal acquaintance. Not even any mention of, say, Florence Nightingale, Emilie du Chatelet, Eleanor of Aquitaine, or Hatshepsut? Instead, he featured women like Mae West, Marilyn Monroe, and the hostess (even there, why not Madame de Stael, which is probably the only "hostess" people readily think of?). Although his section on Boudica was fascinating.

I haven't read his other books (Intellectuals or Creators), but I kept thinking of people I thought he should have included but didn't. First of all, it was very Euro-American centric. No Confucius or Genghis Khan, but rather Alexander the Great and King David. Still though, no mention of Martin Luther King, Augustus, Davinci or even Gandhi? Also, Jesus, Muhammed and Buddha weren't among his chosen heroes.


Regardless, the people he does mention are (almost) all fascinating in their own right, and he certainly knows a lot about them. And even his namedropping often includes interesting anecdotes.


Some of my notes:
"Pelest" in Ancient Egyptian means Sea Peoples (Root of Palestine and Philistines)
Roman republic was a sham. Caesar destroyed nothing but exposed everything
Was it Seneca's fault that Rome lost Britain? Cassius Dio says so
No heir apparent has ever become a good king (except with childhood adversity)
The ideal society in More's Utopia is not unlike the society in Orwell's 1984.
George Washington's main gripe with King George was the limit to westward expansion (is this true??)
Lincoln seemingly had no weaknesses
Robert E. Lee wasn't necessarily pro-slavery (he thought it damaged both whites and blacks), but joined for VA (state's rights), but the South being a confederacy meant no strong national leadership-> its downfall.
Thatcher was the first UK leader since Churchill to have worldwide influence.
Such a weird quote: "But Pinochet remains a hero to me because I know the facts"


Still, if you want a book on Heroes, check out "Heroes of History" by Will Durant. An excellent book by a superb historian.


3 stars


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Thursday, August 02, 2018

Hangeul in the World by Hong, Jongseon and co-authors

Hangeul in the WorldHangeul in the World by Hong, Jongseon and co-authors
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A collection of essays that discuss Hangeul (or hangul) and its place in the world. Some of the essays were a bit annoying with their praise of, admittedly, a unique and very useful alphabet. But saying things like "Hangeul is such a perfect alphabet that even present day linguists cannot come up with anything more perfect" (p.34), among other similar comments, carries no real meaning, and in fact it lessens the validity of everything else that is mentioned, since it sounds less like an objective essay and more like a promotional campaign.

Having said that, it is certainly a unique writing system, and almost certainly the most mathematical (or logical) of all alphabets, and there are definitely some very interesting tidbits in here, including a whole essay on the various types of Hangeul fonts! Its usage in Japan, China and Europe was all eye-opening to me, as well as its history.

Recommended for any non-Korean speaker who has any interest in this language, and can't get their hands on Gari Ledyard's book, or wants to supplement it.


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Sunday, July 29, 2018

Down Below by Leonora Carrington

Down BelowDown Below by Leonora Carrington
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

****Spoilers ahead. Definitely****

Wow. That was disturbing. I confess I started reading it without knowing anything about the book (and practically nothing about the author). I thought it was pure fiction until about halfway through, when I read the back cover. Then it was pretty intense. And damn, Max Ernst is a d-bag. Also the tone is interesting. Not a drop of self-pity or anything along those lines. If you happen across this book I would recommend picking it up. If you have an interest in surrealist painters, or in how World War II might affect someone's psyche, then look for it.


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Friday, July 27, 2018

Levitation: Five Fictions by Cynthia Ozick

Levitation: Five FictionsLevitation: Five Fictions by Cynthia Ozick
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I wanted to like this, since it reminded me of 1970's New York (the time and place I was born). I must admit, however, I really didn't enjoy it until the last story, which was excellent (and it's a bit of a continuation of the second story, although I don't think the second was necessarily needed).




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Thursday, July 26, 2018

The Pumpkin Plan: A Simple Strategy to Grow a Remarkable Business in Any Field by Mike Michalowicz

The Pumpkin Plan: A Simple Strategy to Grow a Remarkable Business in Any FieldThe Pumpkin Plan: A Simple Strategy to Grow a Remarkable Business in Any Field by Mike Michalowicz
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A surprisingly useful book. His tone was annoying at times, but that didn't really detract from the substance. This book is very actionable and all the steps seem concrete and are ones you will probably figure out at some point, but reading this book can save you years of wrong turns.

The advice of dumping all the "average" pumpkins to concentrate on the biggest one is good. I also liked other tidbits, like "under-promise and over-deliver 80% of the time (not 100%)", "don't let your chosen clients know they're getting special treatment", and "be transparent about your methods with your clients".

Also, I don't understand those reviewers saying these pieces of advice are "obvious" or "common sense". Are they basically saying they've already followed all his steps and they've attained success thanks to them but they're too obvious to qualify as advice? Otherwise I'm guessing they'd say it's "incorrect" or "incomplete" or something. Or maybe I'm overanalyzing the book reviews.



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Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Memoirs of a Polar Bear by Yōko Tawada

Memoirs of a Polar BearMemoirs of a Polar Bear by Yōko Tawada
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

What an odd book. I'd rate it somewhere between 1 and 5 stars. Probably rounded up to a 4, since I think more people should read this. Makes me want to read more contemporary German literature. Or does it?


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Saturday, July 21, 2018

Homecoming (K-Fiction 008) by Cheon Myeong-kwan, Jeon Miseli (Translator)

Homecoming (K-Fiction 008)Homecoming by Cheon Myeong-kwan
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I'm not sure why, but the economics of this book annoyed me. I think I just let it get to me. Anyway, "overly capitalist society divided into 1% haves and 99% have-nots" aside (entirely ignoring the overly anti-capitalist society divided into <1 and="" haves="">99% have-nots just to the North), it was actually an engaging and very poignant novella.


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Friday, July 20, 2018

God Has No Grandchildren by Kim Gyeong-uk

God Has No GrandchildrenGod Has No Grandchildren by Kim Gyeong-uk
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

These stories were entertaining and interesting. The commentary at the end was enlightening as well. The stories deal mostly with being able to commit to something (or not), and general values, etc. They all have a certain ambience, somewhere between spooky and lonely. My favorites were probably "99 percent", "The runner" and "The ups and downs of Hurricane Joe".


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Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Good Strategy Bad Strategy: The Difference and Why It Matters by Richard P. Rumelt

Good Strategy Bad Strategy: The Difference and Why It MattersGood Strategy Bad Strategy: The Difference and Why It Matters by Richard P. Rumelt
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Maybe I just expected something different from this book. It seemed to be a collection of case studies. These were mostly based on the author's personal experience, and definitely seemed like good examples of bad and good strategy (or no strategy at all), but that's all they were. Every now and then general rules could be extracted, but it would have been nice to then have everything boiled down to the main principles that constitute a viable strategy, and how these can be applied.

All the examples are with big companies, or governments and the like, so it is sometimes hard to adapt them to more personal use, unless you run a very big organization (or government).



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Thursday, July 12, 2018

Expecting Better: Why the Conventional Pregnancy Wisdom is Wrong - and What You Really Need to Know by Emily Oster

Expecting Better: Why the Conventional Pregnancy Wisdom is Wrong - and What You Really Need to KnowExpecting Better: Why the Conventional Pregnancy Wisdom is Wrong - and What You Really Need to Know by Emily Oster
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Probably the best book my wife and I have read thus far during her pregnancy. This is by no means a scientific paper or study, but she takes us through her pregnancy and consults with all the studies she can find for every stage and issue she encounters during this time. Anyway, here you will find data behind most of the issues encountered during pregnancy (with all the sources in the endnotes, in case you're interested in the original studies).

I was amazed how, considering humans have been getting pregnant since before we were humans, so much advice and "common knowledge" isn't based on any reliable data, but just repeated as fact.



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Sunday, July 08, 2018

Son of Man by Yi Mun-Yol

Son of ManSon of Man by Yi Mun-Yol
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Tempted to give it 5 stars. Maybe I'll see how I feel about it after some time has passed. It starts off as a detective novel but becomes more of a voyage into various gnostic-like apocrypha theories. All quite interesting, although toward the end it really started losing me. I loved his discussions on why evil had to exist and how he looks at some of the stories of the Gospels from different points of view. And it made me read up on "The Wandering Jew".
The detective part of the novel falls pretty flat, however, and it pretty easy to figure out.





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Thursday, June 28, 2018

A History of God: The 4,000-Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam by Karen Armstrong

A History of God: The 4,000-Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity, and IslamA History of God: The 4,000-Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam by Karen Armstrong
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is actually an extremely good book, and probably very necessary if you want to understand religious beliefs, especially Christianity, Islam and Judaism. I found it quite heavy at times, but I'm glad I stuck with it. Also interesting to see that what I thought were current trends in religion were actually quite different when put into historical context.

Some things I found especially interesting:
- how the emphasis on literal interpretation that came about during the reformation led to unavoidable discrepancies and contradictions, and this led to people to start to become bona fide atheists (p. 291)
- Christianity used to be a religion of revolution, now it is a religion of the status quo (p. 20)
- how Christianity is a religion of loss and failure, while Islam has always been more a religion of triumph, and the differences caused by this
- the thorough chronological history of the three Abrahamic religions and how they tie into each other

I saw other readers complain that it was boring, which it really was at certain points. I don't really blame the author, but a good editor should have been able to cut down certain parts, or make them more palatable. Having said that, it's worth trudging through these to get to the good points.





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Monday, June 25, 2018

The Talent Code: Unlocking the Secret of Skill in Sports, Art, Music, Math, and Just About Everything Else by Daniel Coyle (Goodreads Author)

The Talent Code: Unlocking the Secret of Skill in Sports, Art, Music, Math, and Just About Everything ElseThe Talent Code: Unlocking the Secret of Skill in Sports, Art, Music, Math, and Just About Everything Else by Daniel Coyle
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Actually an excellent book. From the renaissance to Korean female golfers of today to the Bronte sisters to the Z-boys in the 1970s, he examines clusters of talent and genius and how they came to be.

Oddly I feel like it should have been either shorter or longer. It would've made a great article, while as a book it could have expanded more into how we can apply what he says in different settings (have there been other studies on this? Are there differences between applying his steps to one main endeavor and trying to apply them to many different aspects in our life, such as getting better at our job, learning a new language, playing a musical instrument, and sports, all at the same time?).

Obviously I don't know enough to confirm or refute the science, and it sounded a tad snake-oil salesman-y at times, but it does seem like a very interesting premise. A step up from the whole "10 years' experience" or "10,000 hours rule" theories.


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Wednesday, May 30, 2018

The Economists' Diet: The Surprising Formula for Losing Weight and Keeping It Off by Christopher Payne, Rob Barnett

The Economists' Diet: The Surprising Formula for Losing Weight and Keeping It OffThe Economists' Diet: The Surprising Formula for Losing Weight and Keeping It Off by Christopher Payne
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I guess I expected a book by economists to have more empirical data rather than anecdotes and personal stories. Actually, I agreed with pretty much everything they said, and I rather liked their ideas (weigh yourself every day, limit variety in your diet, etc.). Obviously they both lost weight and their approach worked for both of them, but they even mentioned how what works for one person may not work for another, so I guess I expected more in the way of aggregate studies and data.

Although the study by John Cisna (page 131), where he ate nothing but McDonald's for six months and lost 61 pounds, was interesting.


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