Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Review: Alone Over There

Alone Over There Alone Over There by Kim Hoon
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I went to the bookstore run by Asia publishers and the editor working there recommended this book to me. I have no idea why she did, but I did enjoy it. The feeling is very melancholy, and gives a sense of the futility of life, but it's also very different from other contemporary Korean fiction I've read. I'll be looking out for more books by this author. 

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Tuesday, July 19, 2022

Review: Naval Surgeon In Yi Korea: The Journal Of George W. Woods

Naval Surgeon In Yi Korea: The Journal Of George W. Woods Naval Surgeon In Yi Korea: The Journal Of George W. Woods by Fred C. Bohm
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I love these types of books, and for his time Woods seems to be pretty reliable and kept a very detailed journal. He seems to be quite enthralled with Korea and its people (again, given the times). 

Some of my highlights:

"I have never been so surprised at any sight as I was at the beauty, symmetry, and one might say grandeur, of this gateway, as well as with the artistic construction of both gateway and wall" (p.36, in reference to Namdaemun (South gate)? 

"She (Mrs. Foote) and Mrs. Mohlendorff are the only European ladies who have ever been in Seoul, and yet they have never met" (p. 43. Apparently there was some feud between their husbands?)

"After curfew, no man must go into the street, but women are allowed to wander until 1 a.m." (p. 52)

"The Colonel informed me - a Corean compliment - that I looked much older than 46" (P. 58)

"tea houses do not exist, because the people do not drink tea, as a rule" (p. 67)

"This is the sort of pageantry I like to see, something that in a few years will belong to the past, when the King will move like other civilised potentates and perhaps forget his ancestors, as our sceptical sovereigns have forgotten their religious duties" (p. 97, regarding a royal procession)


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Review: The Nineties

The Nineties The Nineties by Chuck Klosterman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

What a fascinating book, at least for someone who lived through the 90s and remembers it decently (at least the second half). Obviously the 90s means different things for different people, and I did find he skipped over many things that affected me more. The discussion on Hip Hop was cursory at best, and many international events were skipped altogether (Rwandan genocide, HK handover, German unification). 

But the topics covered were very interesting, and I tend to agree with his take on how exactly the 90s mentality was different from ours, and why. 

Some of my notes:
Not knowing something (and accepting it) was the norm (I remember a scene about this on HIMYM, and just spent 5 minutes searching for it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lb458ATRByc)
Keeping it real was a big thing. Not Selling out. And trying too hard often just equaled Selling out. He goes over this in detail with examples like Nirvana, Reality Bites, etc. 

Most of what we think of how the Internet changed everything in the 90s actually has to do with social media, which didn't come until later. The Internet of the 90s was full of potential, but no one was sure how it would manifest itself. 

The section about the Unabomber is fascinating. 

I had forgotten about Dolly the sheep and what a big scare cloning was at the time. Everyone was just expecting a cloned baby at any moment. 

"If you ask a semi-educated young person to define the root cause of most American problems, there's a strong possibility they will say 'capitalism'... In the 90's [...] the more likely response would have been 'commercialism'"

The author says The Sopranos was the first serious TV show, with the same prestige as a movie. I would argue it was West Wing, since that came out before The Sopranos. (Edit: I just looked it up. I was wrong. The Sopranos aired first, although they were both the same year). 

The analysis of Titanic seems a bit over the top, although I can't really negate it. The Meet Joe Black statistic (most people who bought the ticket to the movie and didn't watch it) is fascinating, as is the analysis of American Beauty, and how it was considered avant-guard in the 90s, but is now considered disgusting and elitist. Same with Reality Bites, how Siskel and Ebert would essentially agree with millennials and Gen Z, in wondering why Wynona Rider didn't want to be with Ben Stiller. That reasoning only worked for Gen Xers in the 90s. 

The Y2K and 2000 elections sections brought me back. The 90s essentially ended on September 10th, 2001. 

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Saturday, July 16, 2022

Review: Is That So? I'm a Giraffe 그렇습니까? 기린 입니다

Is That So? I'm a Giraffe 그렇습니까? 기린 입니다 Is That So? I'm a Giraffe 그렇습니까? 기린 입니다 by Min-gyu Park
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A short story that is a critique on modern society in Korea. The afterword actually really helped me in getting a more general idea as to what the book was about (symbolism is almost always over my head). 

I'm a fan of Min-gyu Park, but I realized I'm always looking for another "Pavane for a Dead Princess", and, while this was good, it wasn't as good as that. 

Still, a nice easy quick read. Also, I'm really wondering: why a giraffe?? 


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Friday, July 15, 2022

Review: Men Without Women

Men Without Women Men Without Women by Haruki Murakami
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A collection of short stories by Murakami. I've complained about his short stories before, mainly because I love the slightly off-realities he creates in his books, and I feel like his short stories aren't long enough to really dive into them. However, I may have found the perfect solution. These stories were great company for my weeklong trip abroad. I guess his off-reality went well with being slightly off-kilter in a different country. /End Rambling

All the stories were entertaining, and all except one seem to follow the theme of men being away from women. The men being away from women isn't necessarily the point of each story, but it sets the scene. The one exception is Samsa in love, which is a clever premise, and a so-so follow-through. And I also read it somewhere else. 

Kino was great, and a tad reminiscent of "Dance Dance Dance", but it left me hanging. 

My favorite story was "Men without Women". I'm not really sure why. 


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Wednesday, July 13, 2022

Review: Zero to IPO: Over $1 Trillion Worth of Advice from the World's Most Successful Entrepreneurs

Zero to IPO: Over $1 Trillion Worth of Advice from the World's Most Successful Entrepreneurs Zero to IPO: Over $1 Trillion Worth of Advice from the World's Most Successful Entrepreneurs by Frederic Kerrest
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A great book if you have anything to do with silicon valley, or are looking for investment (especially from silicon valley or somewhere along those lines). The author has been in there in the trenches and got a big investor (Andreessen Horowitz), so he knows his stuff. These only touch me tangentially, but I still found quite a few interesting tidbits, including how the average age of the founders Andreessen Horowitz invest in is in the 40's, so substantially higher than you tend to hear about. 

I will probably give this another read if and when I have to do a road show for any business, in the meantime it was good background knowledge. 

Much of the advice (how to deal with a team, talk to investors, etc.) probably doesn't apply outside the US. 

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Wednesday, July 06, 2022

Review: Sweet Potato: Collected Short Stories

Sweet Potato: Collected Short Stories Sweet Potato: Collected Short Stories by Kim Tongin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I feel a bit embarrassed to say this, but this book just never really clicked for me. Many of the stories blend in together and I can't say I enjoyed most of them. In fact, I gave up and came back to this book more than once. 

Regardless, I guess my favorite stories were probably Fire Sonata and Sweet Potato. 

I feel guilty because I know Kim Tongjin is considered a very important author in early modern Korean literature - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kim_Dong-in . Maybe much of it was just over my head, or I don't understand the symbolism or background behind what he was writing. 

Apparently the story "Traitor" is about Yi Kwang-su? If so that is quite interesting. 

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Sunday, July 03, 2022

Review: Palm-of-the-Hand Stories

Palm-of-the-Hand Stories Palm-of-the-Hand Stories by Yasunari Kawabata
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I'm a big fan of Yasunari Kawabata novels, and I confess I was a bit skeptical about these short stories. I really like the atmosphere in his novels (I saw another reviewer say his books “all share an eerily moving quality that lingers long in the mind". I agree with this 100%), and I wasn't sure they could be recreated in 2-3 pages. But these stories, by and large,  did not disappoint. 

It is interesting that they are in chronological order. I was marking my favorite stories, and noticed they were grouped toward the beginning and end, with a large gap in the middle (minus a few in 1949-1950). His style during these years is quite different (it continues to change over time), and I confess that the stories from these intermediary years interested me less. 

These were my favorite:
A Sunny Place (1923)
The grasshopper and the Bell cricket (1924)
Glass (1925)
A child's viewpoint (1926)
Umbrella (1932)
The Jay (1949)
Bamboo-leaf boats (1950)
Eggs (1950)
Up in the tree (1962)
Immortality (1963)
Snow (1964)
Gleanings from Snow Country (1972)

The last story really made me want to re-read Snow Country. Maybe I will. 

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Saturday, July 02, 2022

Review: Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World

Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World by David Epstein
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book must be read by anyone who is convinced they need to specialize, specialize, specialize, or who wish to have their children start some sport/instrument/hobby while a child in order to excel later (à la battle hymn of the Tiger mother).


The initial example of Tiger Woods vs. Roger Federer made me a believer pretty much right off the bat. 

The discussion of Grit was great too. Made me want to read the book again. 

He states that often quitting is the best option. "Winners never quit" is a bad statement for many of us. (see the Freakonomics example of people flipping a coin to see if people should make a change in life. Those who ended up making it ended up happier across the board, no matter the change). 

The afterword was very useful as a parent as well. Detailing some erroneous beliefs and some possible methods (e.g. if you teach a child to read earlier in life, they won't be better "readers" later on in life, so the initial advantage is lost within a few years). 




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