Sunday, March 31, 2024

FROM THE SPINE - MARCH 2024 BOOK REVIEWS

March 2024

March is usually a transition month as we move from winter into spring. The weather improves and we get to spend more time outside, shaking off the winter fog and darkness. This month was tough. I had another surgery to repair my ACL. The surgeon also fixed some cartilage damage he found which is great that he was able to do that while he was already in there, but not great because it means four weeks on crutches and four weeks of no driving or being able to carry anything. My recovery from surgery was also very confusing because I picked up Influenza B so it was hard to tell which symptoms were related to anesthesia and surgery and which were related to the sickness. Millie got it too so we spent a solid week watching Bluey and listening to Harry Potter audiobooks. It was a miracle that Jet and Aubrey escaped the flu this round because Aubrey is the only functional adult right now and Jet had state testing at school. March also brings basketball. Basketball is fun. Several of you threw brackets into my pool. It’s fun to see how the upsets explode brackets along the way. We have also been decluttering the house. It feels good to organize, clean, and offload stuff and junk. 


Anyway, here are the books I finished and my reviews of them:


Fiction Books

The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

I found this little book on my 100 Book Bucket List poster. It is translated from French, and I managed to get a different translation in audiobook than the illustrated Kindle version. I don’t know why, but I expected them to be more similar. Of course, the main bit- the story- was the same, but there’s something in the telling that makes a story better or more engaging sometimes. I went through the audio version and read the illustrated version, but they were quite different. The audio version was much shorter and left out some bits. The story is about a pilot whose airplane experiences engine trouble over the African desert. While he is stranded in the desert working to fix his engine, he meets the little Prince. The Prince asks the pilot many questions and tells him his story.  The Prince is from a different planet, which is very small. The planet has two active volcanoes and one dormant volcano. The Prince cares for his planet by raking out the volcanoes and digging up any seedlings that sprout from Baobab seeds. Boabab trees would destroy his whole planet if they grew to their full size. The Prince also cares for a single flower. A rose, who has four thorns and who has tamed the Prince. The Prince tells the pilot about his visits to other small planets where he met other adults who were very strange. These men were busy, serious, drunk, and other adult things that the Prince did not like or understand. Adults often miss the most important things. On the eighth day after his plane crash, the pilot ran out of water. He and the Prince go looking for a well, and fate gives them one at daybreak. The Prince stays near the well because it is near the spot where he fell to earth on his journey and it is one night until the anniversary of his fall. The pilot returns to his plane, fixes his engine, and returns to the well one last time where he says goodbye to the Prince. The pilot is forever changed by his days in the desert with his Little Prince. This story grew on me as I reread it and understood it better. The illustrated Kindle version was a much better translation.


This is for littles and adults needing to remember where the most important things are. 

(Rated G, Score 9/10, audiobook read by Richard Gere, 0:44, ebook, 84p.)


Moon Rising by Tui T. Sutherland (Wings of Fire #6)

This is the beginning of the second set of prophecy dragon books. The title character, Moon, a NightWing with mind-reading and prophecy powers, starts school at Jade Mountain. The Jade Mountain school is designed to mix dragons from all the tribes together in a safe (war-free) environment so they can learn about the other tribes and build relationships with dragons from around the world. But, this is a Wings of Fire book so the war-free bit doesn’t last very long. Each of the students is placed in a winglet, which is a group of dragons with one from each tribe (MudWing, RainWing, NightWing, SkyWing, IceWing, SeaWings, and SandWing). Moon is convinced that if the other dragons find out that she can read their minds they will hate her or fear her so she keeps her powers secret as long as she can. DarkStalker, an ancient magical dragon finds Moon and her powers allow her to talk to him. DarkStalker is the bad thing the dragons tell their kids about to keep them in line. He’s supposed to be super evil and dangerous, so of course Moon is reluctant to help him. As the story progresses, the young dragons at the school begin classes and try to learn about all the other tribes. The peace is shattered when an explosion tears through one of the school rooms, killing and injuring several dragons. Moon’s prophecy power allows her to save some dragons from the explosion, but it exposes her powers to the others. Her winglet freaks out when they learn that Moon can read their minds. As the dragons work to find out who the bomber is they discover that Skyfire prevents Moon from being able to read a dragon’s thoughts when they carry or touch it. This allows her friends the privacy of thought they need to trust her more. Moon and her friends discover who the dangerous dragon is in time to save other dragons from harm. At the end of the book, Moon goes into a trance and makes an ominous prophecy which leads her and her winglet into their next adventure in Book 7. This book was pretty cleverly written. I’m sure it was a challenge to write each dragon’s thoughts being read by Moon. It was done well enough to allow the story to flow and not bog down the reader trying to understand what was going on. 


This is for mind readers and little dragons getting out of their comfort zones.

(Rated PG, Score 8/10, audiobook read by Shannon McManus, 7:30)


The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

It’s been a very long time since I first read this book. I think I read it in 10th grade which was several lifetimes ago. I remembered the end, but a lot of the middle of the story was long gone. The story is about a man named Nick Carraway. Okay, it’s not really about Nick. It’s told from Nick’s perspective. The story is really about this fascinating, larger-than-life character named Jay Gatsby. The story is set in the 1920s in New York. Gatsby and the other characters are coming out of World War I and living during prohibition, though alcohol features heavily in the story. Gatsby buys up a huge manor across the way from Nick and spends extravagant amounts of money hosting large parties for just about anyone willing to show up. Eventually, Nick is invited to one of the parties where he gets to know Gatsby a bit better and they start hanging out more. Gatsby turns out to be a bizarre character, prone to being moody, and is often called away from conversations to take calls from cities all over the place. Nick tries to understand Gatsby until finally, Gatsby asks Nick to arrange for a meeting between him and Nick’s friend Daisy. It turns out that Gatsby was in love with Daisy and had been for five years. The parties he had been throwing were supposed to be a way for Gatsby to meet Daisy by chance, but that had failed. So Nick sets up the meeting, and in so doing, he lights the fuse on the relational bomb that explodes the end of the story. I’m not sure I fully understand what the author was trying to explain through the story, but it feels like a warning tale about the human ability to protect its own interests at all costs. Or maybe it’s a warning about trying to win love with parties and alcohol. Or maybe it’s a warning about the dangers of automobiles and guns. 


This is for high schoolers, flappers, and bootleggers. 

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by William Hope, 5:38, Hardback, 216p.)


The Hawthorne Legacy by Jennifer Lynn Barnes (Inheritance Games #2)

Book 2 picks up right after book 1, with the new billionaire heiress Avery Grambs trying to figure out what she got thrown into when she inherited a Texas Billionaire’s entire estate. The drama continues with more puzzles to solve and more clues going all the way back to a devastating fire that was supposed to have killed four young people including Toby Hawthorne- Son of the late Tobias Hawthorne. The big mystery of the book is to find Toby, who Avery knows is alive because he was her friend Harry who she thought was homeless and who she used to play chess with before school. The Hawthornes dig into the mystery using clues from the old will of Tobias. They travel to Colorado and other properties now owned by Avery. They wiggle through legal issues dealing with Avery’s guardianship and dead-beat dad who shows up looking for a piece of the fortune. During the adventures, Avery becomes “one of them”. The boys, specifically Jameson and Grayson accept Avery as part of their family and start acting to protect her. As Avery searches for Toby, she upsets several people, some who desperately want Toby to be alive, others who want to make sure he’s dead. Avery is beginning to step into the power and truth of her new fortune and learn about the weight it carries both in financial responsibility and in threats or headaches that come with such wealth. As the book wraps up, Avery comes face to face with Toby and some of her enemies. She learns some hard truths and Toby leaves her with another mystery to chase in book 3. I like the puzzles and mysteries. I could do without the teenage romance bits. (Like Fred Savage in The Princess Bride). But I imagine that’s a fair portion of the appeal for the target audience of these books. 


This is for lost daughters and puzzle hunters.

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Christie Moreau, 10:24


Winter Turning by Tui T. Sutherland (Wings of Fire #7)

Winter is an IceWing. He is the nephew of Queen Glacier which has loaded him up with expectations for performance and perfection. The IceWings tribe structure is one of constant ranking and competition. All actions are judged and result in the raising or lowering of each dragon in the system. It’s ugly and not healthy. The story picks up at the end of book six with the winglet of dragons setting out to the Rainforest to stop Icicle from killing Queen Glory. In the Rainforest, they meet Glory and many other dragons and eventually, they capture Icicle, who is still trying to kill Glory to save her brother Hailstorm from Queen Scarlet who holds him hostage. Winter and the other dragons get a glimpse of where Queen Scarlet is hiding so they go hunting for her and Hailstorm. On the way they meet the Talons of Peace and hire Pyrite, a SkyWing guide to show them where Queen Scarlet is. Queen Scarlet makes a mistake by invading Winter’s dreams during their hunt because he realizes she must be close enough to see him. Using Moon’s powers they find Queen Scarlet and hear her order Hailstorm’s execution. They fight an extraordinarily strong NightWing who hurts Kinkajou, but eventually, they escape and discover that Pyrite is Hailstorm wearing a necklace with an enchanted piece of scroll. Winter and Hailstorm return to the Ice Kingdom. Their father arranges for Winter and Hailstorm to be entered into the Diamond Challenge which will allow Hailstorm to win back his rank and honor, and rid the tribe of Winter (who is supposed to be killed in the challenge). In the challenge, they meet an ancient NightWing named FoeSlayer who is cursed to fight and die in each challenge because of past atrocities. Winter allows Hailstorm to win the challenge, electing to run and be exiled from the IceWings instead of being killed. He rescues FoeSlayer from her torture and they go blasting into the next book. Jet’s favorite part was the end where they figured out the truth about the ancient dragons Prince Arctic and FoeSlayer because it explained some things that were not true and answered other questions he had. I liked the twist and redemption of Winter in the face of family pressure and all his history in his tribe. 


This is for IceWings, military brats, and explorers. 

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Shannon McManus, 7:30)


Non-Fiction Books

Becoming a King by Morgan Snyder

This book is written by a friend of one of my favorite authors, John Eldredge. John wrote the foreword explaining some of the process Snyder went through to write this book. In the introduction, Snyder explains how he wrote letters to men asking for wisdom and guidance on his path to becoming a better man. These letters and ten years of living life as a student and diving deep into what it means to walk the ancient paths hand in hand with the Father have led to this book. Here are the chapter headings which outline the journey each man has before him. 

Becoming Powerful

Becoming a Son

Becoming True

Becoming the Man You Were Born to Be

Becoming a Generalist

Becoming a Warrior

Becoming Good Soil

Becoming Deep Roots

Becoming Like-Hearted

As I listened to the book, here are some of the ideas that resonated with me.

1-Becoming powerful. A kingdom is defined by the range of your effective will. The power entrusted to most men often brings harm. Many powerful men destroy or harm those they should be protecting. How can we become powerful and use our power to protect and grow rather than to harm? 

2-Becoming a son. This is about understanding who we are in relation to the Father and allowing that relationship to grow properly. 

5- Becoming a generalist. This section spoke deeply to my soul as a man. It is about learning all kinds of skills, working with your hands, being brave, trying new things, and becoming more useful as a man. Some days I feel like I can do anything. Other days I feel like an imposter. This was a challenge to lean into problems with curiosity, courage, and a willingness to learn, grow and be challenged. 

7- Becoming good soil- opening our hearts to what God is trying to do in our lives. 

8- Becoming deep roots. There are many practices we can choose to help our roots go down deep into the peace, power, and stability of the Father. Practice of engagement. Practice of play. Choose play. Laugh. Be present. The practice of defiant joy. Joy is the direct defiance of the kingdom of darkness. The practice of worship. The practice of adventure. Practices of abstinence. I chose to abstain from sugar during Lent this year. There were some dark days when all I wanted to do was eat all the sugar, but I managed to be disciplined. As a result, I am healthier, calmer, thinner, and stronger mentally. Practices of being weird. My friend Phil does weird things for his own reasons like wearing bright and fun shoes when he runs training classes at work. I love this example. It allows me to do weird things too for the sake of my own joy and freedom. 

9- Becoming like-hearted. This is about surrounding yourself with men who are aiming at the same goals and growing together. Building your tribe. Sign treaties with men you love and respect- when they are at war, you are at war. Here are some questions to ponder about your direction for the next ten years: Who will carry my casket? What are my questions? Who am I asking them? Where do I need to say No? Who do I want to become? What takes men out of the fight?

10- Becoming a king.  Like God asked Adam in the garden, where are you? God knew where Adam was. The question was relational. God wanted Adam to realize he was far from God and needed to turn his heart toward the Father and seek the healing of their relationship. Go listen to the stories of older, wiser men. I got a ton of value and encouragement from this book. Each section is filled with ideas, questions, prayers and wisdom that could be pondered long and incorporated well into a man’s life. This book has a study guide and a video study which I also intend to dig into. Let me know if you want to join me. Eddie, thank you for being part of my tribe, going to war when I am at war, and for being a man of power, honor, and generosity in my life. Also, thank you for recommending this book.


This is for men seeking to grow closer to the Father to be better kings in His Kingdom.

(Rated PG, Score 10/10, audiobook read by the author, 10:06)


Preview/Currently Reading-

The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene

Life to the Fullest by Bryant Westbrook

The Final Gambit by Jennifer Lynn Barnes (Inheritance Games #3)


I track my books in a database called Goodreads. You might find it helpful in managing your reading lists. 


Final Thoughts- 

This was a really hard month. Here are some things that helped me in dark places. Sun- sometimes you just need to sit in the sun and soak up the warmth and light. Vitamin D- turns out we need this to feel stable and positive and to fend off depression. Hugs- being unable to drive and being sick means I have been isolated from a lot of my friends, so I have been trying to give good hugs to my family to share warmth, kindness, connection, and hope. Crying- there are only two ways your body can get rid of cortisol (stress chemicals): sweating and crying. I haven’t figured out how to exercise hard enough to sweat while I have been forced to use crutches, so that has left me only crying to offload stress. Crying isn’t a super popular thing for grown men to do, so it’s taken some patience and grace for myself to learn how to properly process the big emotions and chemicals I have been dealing with in new ways. 

It’s a crazy world out there. Take care of each other. 


Thanks for adventuring with me. 


Joshua

PS. Instagram: Fromthespine

PPS. Please feel free to forward this to your reading friends. If they want to be on my email list, let me know. 

PPPS. Send me book ideas, brand ideas, or questions. I love the feedback.

Thursday, February 29, 2024

FROM THE SPINE - FEBRUARY 2024 BOOK REVIEWS

February 2024

February is usually colder, but I guess we got most of our winter early this year. The first couple of weeks were dark and cloudy but the sun came out and warmed up and that helped my attitude. We did have some sickness in the house, but I think we are past that. My sister, Charity was diagnosed with Leukemia, so she has been working through aggressive treatment. I think she is responding well physically. She’s very tough. Continued prayers for her recovery would be appreciated. I was able to take a road trip and spend time with her and my family. Sometimes all you can do is show up and give hugs. 


Anyway, here are the books I finished and my reviews of them:


Fiction Books

Columbus Day by Craig Alanson

Joe Bishop is just an Army soldier on leave in a sleepy town in Northern Maine until an alien ship crashes into his hometown and he goes to work trying to do something to help. He rallies a team of civilians and plans an assault on the alien Hamsters (Ruhar) and they manage to subdue and capture one of the aliens. Bishop treats the alien as humanely as possible, treating its wounds and giving it food and water. After the Ruhar are driven away from Earth by another alien race of giant lizards (Kristang), the humans join the space wars ground troops fighting for the lizards. Bishop joins up and gets shipped off-planet to Alpha Base for training, then to a planet called Paradise where the humans are ordered to manage a Hamster evacuation. Bishop meets a mayor of the Hamsters who begins to teach him the truth about the war the humans have been unlucky enough to be drawn into. The Hamster Mayor confides in Bishop because of the way he handled the Hamster on Earth. The Hamster tells Bishop that the Lizards are lying to the humans, abusing them, and planning to destroy Earth. Bishop passes the intel up the chain of command, but the humans on Paradise are reluctant to turn against the Lizards who are supposed to be their allies and their only ride back to Earth. Bishop earns a field promotion to Colonel when he takes command of a small team of soldiers, leads them to a strategic position, and launches an attack that destroys two troop carriers of Hamsters. As the situation in Paradise declines for the Lizards and Humans, Bishop is arrested for refusing to execute civilian Hamsters. In jail, Bishop finds an ancient Super AI who he calls Skippy. Skippy is hilarious (and a bit mad). Skippy helps Bishop escape, steal a drop ship, recruit a pirate crew of humans, steal a starship, and head out into the galaxy looking for ancient tech designed to control wormholes. The team aims to save Earth from the Lizards by shutting down the wormhole near Earth. After capturing the wormhole tech, Bishop, Skippy, and their pirate crew warp into the solar system, destroy the Lizard army, and save the humans. Back on Earth, the team has one month to report to their leaders, restock, and get ready for the next adventure. The AI- Skippy is a lot like the AI Shipment from the Murderbot books called ART. Both are snarky, rude, and funny. I liked the way Bishop just does the best he can in each situation even if the odds are against him or he is defying authority. Thanks, Lucas for recommending this book.


This is for warriors, poets, and dreamers. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 9/10, Kindle ebook, 369p.)


The Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes (Inheritance Games #1)

Avery is a sharp teenager dealing with some tough circumstances life has thrown her way. Both of her parents are dead so her step-sister Libby is her legal guardian. Libby has an abusive boyfriend, Drake, who doesn’t like Avery, so when he is around, Avery leaves and ends up sleeping in her car. Everything changes when Avery gets a summons to fly to Texas for the reading of a billionaire’s will. In two days, Avery goes from sleeping in her car orphan to billionaire heiress. During the reading of the will, she learns that Hawthorne has disinherited his family and left everything to her. The only stipulation is that she must live in the giant estate called Hawthorne House for one year or the fortune defaults and goes to charity. Each of the four Hawthorne grandsons is given letters from the old man. Avery gets one too. The letters are clues. The clues are part of the old man Hawthorn’s last contest for his grandsons. They have spent years learning about his games, riddles, puzzles, and challenges. Each of them reacts differently. As Avery starts to work out some of the clues, she faces new challenges of the mega-rich like lawyers, security detail, media problems, new enemies, and even attempted murder. Libby’s ex-boyfriend turns into a big problem when he learns of the money. He sells details to the press and makes a scene outside the mansion in front of the media and police. As Avery explores her new castle and navigates the crazy new relationships she is thrown into, she learns quickly. She wins some friends and banishes some enemies. More than anything she remains true to herself. She doesn’t lose her head. She plays to win. I’m looking forward to book 2 (along with several others judging by the hold time at the library). One big idea that stuck with me was that the old man insisted that his four grandsons learn to invest, cultivate (skills and talents), and create. I am going to work on being more deliberate about teaching my kids these things and executing them myself. My beautiful wife read all these books in like 3 days so I had to check them out.


This is for anyone looking for a page-turner, the loyalists, and the puzzle-solvers. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 8/10, audiobook read by Christie Moreau, 10:45)


The Hidden Kingdom by Tui T. Sutherland (Wings of Fire #3)

There are five dragonettes in the prophecy, and each of the first five books in the series highlights a different dragonette. Book 3 is written about Glory, the Rainwing. After leaving the Tsunami’s family, the five dragons decide to head to the rainforest to see if they can find a way to heal Webs who was poisoned by sandwing venom. The Rainwings are not like the other types of dragons. They are very zen. They spend a lot of time sleeping in the sun. They primarily eat fruit, and they have five rotating queens. Glory spends time learning about her clan, their strengths and weaknesses, and the different dragons involved in running the rainforest. The dragonettes learn that several Rainwings are missing from the rainforest including one of the queens. Glory is incensed that no one is worried about the missing dragons and gets assigned/volunteered to investigate. During the investigation, they find two creepy magical warp tunnels in the rainforest- one to the desert and one to the Nightwing’s secret island. Glory finds out that the Nightwings have been kidnapping her people. When the current Rainwing queens won’t put together a rescue operation to save kidnapped Rainwings, Glory challenges them for the throne. After a dramatic set of competitions, Glory wins the crown and begins training the bravest Rainwings to go on the rescue mission. Jet has been using the graphic novel versions of these books to follow along with the audiobooks. It helps to picture the characters and settings. I liked this booklet better than the first two. It had more clever plot points, better dialogue, and less random death. 


This is for people who like siestas, camo, and cuddly sloths.

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Shannon McManus, 7:34)


The Dark Secret by Tui T. Sutherland (Wings of Fire #4)

Between books 3 and 4 Starflight is captured while he is standing guard at the tunnel between the rainforest and the Nightwing’s volcano island. He is reunited with his clan, the Nightwings, and this book is his story. On the island, Starflight meets many new Nightwings and a group of dragons that he learns are the backup dragonettes of the prophecy. Starflight begins to suspect that his sheltered ideas of how the world and the prophecy should be are not really as set in stone (or scroll) as he had believed. Morrowseer, the giant leader Nightwing forces Starflight and the other dragonettes through tests, battles, and dangers, trying to teach them how to follow orders. Starflight meets his father, Mastermind, who is a Nightwing scientist, but he also learns that his father is responsible for the Rainwings who have been kidnapped from the rainforest. The Rainwings are being held prisoner and Mastermind is running experiments on them and their venom. Starflight learns that the Nightwings are planning on taking over the Rainforest because their volcano island home is running out of food, making them sick, and working its way toward an eruption. Starflight works to rescue his friends from invasion, his people from doom and homelessness, and himself from his feelings of cowardice. Starflight turns out to be much more powerful and brave than he thought. I like his character evolution throughout the book. The volcano forces the Nightwings to choose between serving Glory as their new queen or running to the mainland and making their fortunes abroad and leaderless.


This is for little dragons hoping to find their powers and bravery. 

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Shannon McManus, 7:35)


The Brightest Night by Tui T. Sutherland (Wings of Fire #5)

This book does a fun job of bringing all five books of the prophecy together. It features everyone’s favorite brave little dragonette, Sunny, the Sandwing. When the volcano explodes at the end of book 4 and the Rainwings and Nightwings are trying to sort out how to handle their new, forced alliance, three Nightwings kidnap Sunny with plans to sell her to one of the rival Sandwing queens. Sunny escapes, steals their magic mirror, and tracks them to the Scorpion Den. Thorne is the leader of the Outclaws, a band of Sandwings who look out for each other and protect the Scorpion Den. Sunny learns that Thorne is her mother before a different group of thugs takes her hostage and flies her off to Burn’s stronghold. There, Sunny meets Smoulder (who I keep imagining looks like Flynn Rider from Tangled) and faces Scarlet (former queen of the Skywings). Thorne and some other Outclaws come to rescue Sunny from Burn. Sunny learns that her father is a Nightwing named Stonemover, who is an animus dragon who magicked the warp tunnels in the rainforest. Sunny visits him on her way to warn her friends that Scarlet and other scary dragons are hunting for them and now know they are hiding in the rainforest. Sunny also finds a Dreamvisitor gem and develops a plan to fulfill the prophecy and end the war. Together the dragonettes of destiny draw Burn, Blister, and Blaze to a meeting, where the prophecy comes true and the war ends. I liked the way Sutherland wrapped up the story pulling all the right pieces together to satisfy the prophecy, which was intended to be fake and ended up coming true. 


This is for peacemakers and brave little dragons.

(Rated PG, Score 8/10, audiobook read by Shannon McManus,  8:04)


The Chaos Agent by Mark Greaney (Gray Man #13) 

This book came out at just the right time for my road trip to New Mexico. The book starts with Court and Zoya on the run from the CIA and SVR in South America. They are out to lunch when Zoya is approached by an old friend who asks her to help save a software programmer in Mexico. The incident puts Zoya and Court at odds until they are united by an attacking force. The pair escape and continue to run, but they end up in a trap at a roadside checkpoint. After fighting their way out of an attempted execution, they decide to go on the offensive. They reach out to an old friend, Sir Donald Fitzroy, who puts together a meeting in Mexico with the handler running Lancer, the hitman who attacked them and killed the programmer in Mexico. During the meeting, Court and Zoya learn just how far down the rabbit hole they are falling when the Mexican compound is attacked by a swarm of robots being controlled by AI. There are three types of robots working together- Drones for targeting, helicopters with explosives that act as suicide bombers, and greyhound robots which are like dogs with sniper rifles on their backs. Court and Zoya manage to defeat the swarm, but just barely. The implications of fully autonomous weapons platforms terrify them. Their story continues and wraps into a global story of tech experts being systemically murdered around the world. The people at the cutting edge of AI, electronics, and robotics are being killed by a person named Cyrus. The hunt for Cyrus takes Court, Zoya, and others from the CIA and Ground Branch to Cuba, where they discover a massive operation built by a billionaire weirdo named Anton Hinton. Hinton and his colleagues have built and released an AI named Cyrus, who has been learning and growing for several days operating in the real world at machine speed manipulating humans and robots to do its bidding as it seeks to eliminate any threats to its existence. Like all Gray Man books, this one is filled with action, explosions, ninja stuff, and fantastic banter. I know the idea of an AI taking over weapons and then teaching itself to kill all humans is terrifying, but my experiments with AI chatbots make me think we still have quite a ways to go. 


This is for futurists, techies, and anyone who liked The Terminator. 

(Rated R, Score 9/10, audiobook read by Jay Snyder, 17:35)


Transfer of Power by Vince Flynn (Mitch Ramp #3)

I don’t know for sure, but it feels like someone stole the plot of this book and used it to make White House Down and Olympus Has Fallen. I’m revisiting the Mitch Ramp books because they are quick and easy and I wasn’t writing book reviews for them when I first read them. The book starts with Mitch Rapp leading a group of Navy Seals on a mission to snatch a terrorist leader. During the interrogation of that leader, the CIA learns that there is an attack planned for that day against the White House. They notify the Secret Service, who intervene just in time to escort the POTUS out of danger and into his secure bunker under the White House. Mitch Rapp has been hunting Rafique Aziz, the lead terrorist in the attack, for almost ten years, and now Aziz has control of the White House, which means Rapp doesn’t have to find him. He just has to figure out how to get to Aziz. The terrorists take control of the White House, take over 70 hostages, and wire all the access points with enough explosives to level the whole building. Aziz is a careful planner, so he knows how the Americans will react to each of his demands, and plays them accordingly. What he has not planned for is Rapp, who finds a salty old soldier who knows all the secrets of the White House including hidden elevators, safe rooms, and air ducts. Rapp gets clearance to sneak into the building through the air system and to start figuring out how to take down the terrorists. Eventually, Rapp learns that Aziz has brought in a safe cracker who is working to defeat the bunker doors to capture the President. The trick almost works, but Rapp and the Navy Seals and Delta Force raid the building, free the hostages, and kill the terrorists. Pulling one last trick out of his bag, Aziz escapes in the chaos, by dressing as an FBI agent and pretending to rescue one of the hostages. But you can’t run from Rapp forever, and Aziz’s luck runs out shortly after his escape.


This is for spies and action junkies. 

(Rated R, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Nick Sullivan, 16:43)


Non-Fiction Books

Mind Shift by Erwin Raphael McManus

McManus has a fascinating story. He has amazing experience in a variety of fields. He’s tough, and passionate, and a little bit crazy. In this book he tries to outline the strategies and shifts that he uses to coach people to their full potential. The following chapters outline each psychological shift needed to think like a genius: 

1- It’s all about people.

2- You don’t need an audience. 

3- You can’t take everyone with you.

4- They won’t believe you until they see you do it. 

5- You are your own ceiling.

6- Talent is a hallucinogen.

7- No one knows what they are doing. What matters most is to start. 

8- Bitterness and other poisons that will kill you. Forgiveness is the antidote. 

9- You find what you are. 

10- Be average…at almost everything. 

11- Success weighs more than failure.

12- There is no such thing as too much of a good thing.  

My favorite chapters were 5, 6, and 12. In chapter 5 McManus talks about taking responsibility for your life and how owning your choices gives you incredible power. In chapter 6 he talked about how having a strong character keeps it real vs talent can give you the illusion that you are successful until life tests you. Real success comes out of hard work. In chapter 12, McManus describes how we need more of the good things like love and mercy and justice. It is not possible to have too much of these things in our world and we should strive to increase them all the time. Some of these mind shifts resonated with me. Some I’ve squared with. Others don’t seem to apply to me yet. Maybe I’ll figure them out later in my leadership journey. 


This is for anyone struggling to find some new perspectives and growing leaders.

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by the author, 3:07)



The Wisdom of the Bullfrog by William H. McRaven

It turns out the Bullfrog is what they call the leader of the Frogmen (Navy Seals). This book is a short collection of sayings and the wisdom they represent as collected and presented by McRaven in his years of service and leading in the military. Here they are in order: 

1- Death Before Dishonor

2- You Can’t Surge Trust

3- When in Command, Command

4- We All Have Our Frog Floats

5- The Only Easy Day Was Yesterday

6- Run to the Sound of the Guns

7- Sua Sponte

8- Who Dares Wins

9- Hope is Not a Strategy

10- No Plan Survives First Contact With the Enemy

11- It Pays To Be a Winner

12- A Shepherd Should Smell Like His Sheep

13- Troop The Line

14- Expect What You Inspect

15- Communicate, Communicate, Communicate

16- When In Doubt, Overload

17- Can You Stand Before The Long Green Table? 

18- Always Have a Swim Buddy

Each saying is the foundation of a chapter in the book. I had heard many of them before. A couple were new. My favorite new one was Sua Sponte which is Latin for “of your own accord”. It’s a term for describing initiative. The ability or will to fix something when you see that it needs to be done, without needing an order to do it. Sua Sponte is a superpower that can be learned and strengthened but only through hard work, grit, and will. Another chapter that resonated with me was the one about trust. Trust cannot be forced all of a sudden. It must be cultivated over years. It is deeply relational. You must build solid relationships by being reliable in the good times so that you have a strong foundation of trust to lean on in times of chaos and crisis. Finally, always have a swim buddy. I have reflected on this idea lately. Over the years, I have had some great swim buddies to bail me out of tight spots and hold me accountable. We are not meant to brave this world on our own. Make sure you have a swim buddy you can trust. Don’t go it alone. My wife is my forever swim buddy and over the past four months, she has proven to be the best partner I could imagine in the face of tons of extra stress. She’s been amazing. I love her. This is a short and inspiring book. I enjoyed it for the lessons, inspiration, and stories. 


This is for any leader looking for wisdom to get better. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 9/10, audiobook read by the author, 3:44)


Preview/Currently Reading-

Becoming a King by Morgan Snyder

The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene


I track my books in a database called Goodreads. You might find it helpful in managing your reading lists. 


Final Thoughts- 

My dad sent me this short philosophical video about Shopping carts. It is very interesting. We grew up learning how to be contributing members of society. We learned how to work hard, how to take pride in cleaning up after ourselves (like putting away shopping carts), doing good things for people who can’t pay you back, and generally being good to people. These are lessons I have been trying to pass down to my kids. I want them to be givers and not takers. I want them to think of ways they can contribute instead of always consuming selfishly. 


I read a lot this month. It feels like getting back to normal… just in time to have another surgery. My ACL is still busted so I’m going to get it fixed on March 13th. Prayers (mostly for Aubrey) would be appreciated. 


Thanks for adventuring with me. 


Joshua

PS. Instagram: Fromthespine

PPS. Please feel free to forward this to your reading friends. If they want to be on my email list, let me know. 

PPPS. Send me book ideas, brand ideas, or questions. I love the feedback.