Sunday, October 31, 2021

FROM THE SPINE - OCTOBER 2021 BOOK REVIEWS

 October 2021

This year is flying by. I can’t believe we are already through ten months. We are getting close to the holidays, colder weather, and according to the squirrels, it’s bulking season! That’s what you say to people who are overly concerned about your caloric intake. You are welcome. Also, bulking season lasts till about March. What are your favorite bulking snacks? 


Here are the books I finished in October 2021 and my short reviews of them:


Fiction Books

Artificial Condition by Martha Wells (Murderbot #2)

In book two, murderbot (MB) is wandering around space, trying to find some answers about his past. Traveling on transports by bargaining with the bots or constructs in charge of the ships. One ship computer it nicknames ART helps MB to adjust its behavior, movement, and even physical appearance so it wouldn’t be immediately recognizable as a Security Construct. MB acts as a security consultant for a group of researchers who are being scammed by their employer. While protecting and advising the researchers, MB uncovers critical details from the incident where it got its nickname (murderbot). It turns out that MB was not to blame for the mass murder that happened in the past. The internal dialog that MB records on these adventures is an interesting balance of snark, humor, irony, tech, and emotions. Despite not understanding or liking humans, MB does an excellent job protecting his clients. 


This book is for sci-fi fans, short-book readers, and socially awkward humans. 

(Rated R, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Kevin R. Free, 3:21)


Blood of Elves by Andrzej Sapkowski (Witcher #1) 

I know it says Witcher Book #1, but it’s more like Witcher #4 or #3.5. The order is a bit lost on me. I’m just running down the chronological list I got from my friend Neale. This book is the story of a young orphan princess named Ciri, who is the Witcher’s destiny. Geralt (The Witcher) finds and rescues Ciri after her home and family are destroyed by the Nilfgaardians. Geralt and the other witchers adopt Ciri at Kaer Morhen- their stronghold. Not knowing much about young girls, the witchers (all male) go with what they know- witcher training for the young girl. Eventually, they reach out to a sorceress, Triss Merigold, for help handling the young lady. Triss stays with the witchers and helps them to raise and care for Ciri. In the spring, Geralt and Triss take Ciri to Ellander, where she is trained in magic by Yennefer while Geralt tries to find a mysterious magician who seeks the orphaned princess. There is an undertone of political strife throughout the book and a lot less battling monsters than the other books so far. It doesn’t take much imagination to see the political jargon between dwarves, humans, and elves could be aimed at us today. If you like the complexities of war strategy and kings like Game of Thrones, you would probably appreciate this book more than I did. So far, this isn’t my favorite Witcher book. Hopefully the next one is better. 


This book is for the strategists and the activists. 

(Rated R, Score 5/10, audiobook read by Peter Kenny, 10:55)


Rogue Protocol by Martha Wells (Murderbot #3)

In book three, murderbot (MB) develops a theory about GrayCris, the corporation involved in the scandal from book one and the massacre MB investigates in book two. The theory leads him to an abandoned terraforming facility in orbit over the planet Milu. MB thinks that there could be evidence that GrayCris is illegally and craftily digging into alien ruins on planets like Milu. To get onto the facility MB befriends a humanoid bot named Miki. MB pretends to be a hired SecUnit on the facility to help secure Miki’s humans. The humans fall into a trap that is set to send the facility crashing to the planet to destroy evidence that GrayCris is hiding. MB finds himself saving another set of humans from imminent death. Evidence in hand, MB decides to visit Dr. Mensah, the person who freed him in book one. She’ll know what to do with the data. 


This book is for techies, sci-fi fans, and adventurers. 

(Rated R, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Kevin R. Free, 3:46)


Taran Wanderer by Lloyd Alexander (The Chronicles of Prydain #4)

True to the title, in this book, Taran- Assistant Pig-Keeper goes wandering. His goal is to determine who his parents are. He wishes to determine if he has royal blood so that he might be worthy of asking Princess Eilonwy to marry him. He journeys to the Marshes of Morva to consult with the three witches. They send him looking for the Mirror of Llunet. Taran meets many people on his journey to find the mirror. He provides wise counsel to King Smite and almost becomes his heir, but presses on. Taran and his companions battle a sorcerer who is bent on ruling the dwarves. Taran finds an old sheepherder who claims to be his father. Taran is devastated by this news and yet, he honors the man by helping him prepare for winter. Taran learns the man had lied only after better understanding himself. Taran works as a sword-smith, a weaver, and a potter, but these trades do not hold his heart. Eventually, Taran finds the Mirror of Llunet and learns that it has been the journey and the lessons along the way that have made him who he is. They have proven his character. 


This book is for the wanderers, the seekers, the dreamers, and the craftsmen. 

(Rated PG, Score 8/10, audiobook read by James Langton, 6:19) 


The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving 

I try to pull in seasonal reads from time to time and now is the time for ghost stories like this one.  The legend is quite a bit shorter and less dramatic than the 1999 movie starring Johnny Depp. Ichabod Crane is the local schoolmaster in a 1790 small Dutch settlement called Tarry Town. He is leading a lovely life making the rounds, living with the families of the students he teaches, sharing music, food, news, and a bit of celebrity in the small town near Sleepy Hollow. That is until he falls in love with a girl, Katrina Van Tassel. Ichabod finds himself rival to a younger, manlier Brom Bones, who wants to fight for the girl. Following a harvest party and dashed hopes of proposing to Katrina, Ichabod runs into the Headless Horseman who chases the poor schoolmaster on his huge stallion. Finally, the horseman flings his flaming head at the fleeing Ichabod. Ichabod was never seen again. 


This legend is for the Halloween season and those who like clever humor.

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Anthony Heald, 1:17)


The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis

This is a fantasy story, written to describe the great separation between heaven and hell. The story is a dream and the dreamer becomes aware in a gray town (hell) and finds himself joining a bus queue. The omnibus takes the dreamer and other passengers up and out of the town to a bright sunny meadow. The folks of the gray town are ghostly and not as solid as the bright country. (This aspect of mater is a very interesting literary mechanism). The grass hurts their feet because it is more solid (real) than them and they aren’t substantive enough to even carry a leaf. Each ghost is met by a native of the solid land who tries to help them enter into joy or to fully abandon the gray town and seek love (God). The dreamer meets George MacDonald who teaches him what he is seeing, and how each of the ghosts are either saved or lost back to the gray town. In the end, the dreamer awakes and knows that the bridge of death is still ahead of him in his journey. This is a powerful story if you wish to better understand the dynamics between heaven and hell. The characters and dialogue make the theological debate accessible in a unique way. This story makes my heart yearn for heaven. 


This book is for dreamers, seekers, and ghosts. 

(Rated PG, Score 10/10, audiobook read by Robert Whitfield, 2:53)


Kill Shot by Vince Flynn (Mitch Rapp #2)

Mitch Rapp is on a roll. He’s killing terrorists and working his way down a list. But then the bad guys get the list. On a relatively easy hit in Paris, France, Rapp finds himself in a trap. He shoots his way out but gets shot in the process. So now you have the most dangerous assassin in the world, wounded and angry because someone set him up. The folks back home at Langley are torn. Half believe Rapp blew the op. Half believe something went wrong. The cranky old guy who trained Rapp, Stan Hurley, takes a big thug named Victor to figure out what happened, but Victor is a shoot first, lie his way out of it type. So Rapp is forced to shoot his way out of another situation in Paris. Eventually, with Irene Kennedy’s help, Mitch finds the men who sold him out and leaves a new trail of bad guy bodies. This book will keep you up past your bedtime. 


This book is for hunters, spies, and action junkies. 

(Rated R, Score 7/10, ebook, 400p., and audiobook read by George Guidall, 10:49)


Artemis by Andy Weir

Jazz Bashara is a smuggler- on the moon. She should have been so many other things, but she wasn’t properly motivated. When she is properly motivated by a job for a million slugs (moon currency) she turns into a saboteur. The sabotage job doesn’t go to plan and Jazz finds herself being hunted by a Brazilian mobster who kills her employer. Taking the sabotage a step further becomes the only option for Jazz to stay on the moon. She recruits a group of friends, enemies, and family to pull off the job. She needs to blow up the aluminum smelter on the moon to keep the Brazilian mob from taking over the small lunar community. In the process of blowing up the smelter, she accidentally pollutes the air in all the lunar environments with chloroform, knocking the whole city out. How will she refresh the air before she kills the whole settlement?


This book is for welders, street rats, and space junkies. 

(Rated R, Score 8/10, audiobook performed by Rosario Dawson, 8:57)


Non-Fiction Books

Limitless by Jim Kwik

Jim Kwik suffered a brain injury as a child. He was known as the boy with a broken brain. Now he teaches people how to learn better for a living. His challenges, torments, and trauma fueled his mission to figure out how to learn. This is his story and his life’s work. Limitless is broken up into four parts: 1- Free your mind. 2- Limitless Mindset: The What. 3- Limitless Motivation: The Why. 4-Limitless Methods: The How. Part one is his story. Part two addresses belief systems and the seven lies of learning. Part three gets into purpose, energy, small simple steps, and flow. Part four breaks down practical learning methods: Focus, Study, Memory, Speed Reading, and Thinking. I am a lifelong learner, so I didn’t need to be sold on the back story or benefits of learning. I enjoyed the second half of the book more and found much more useful ideas in the How parts. I intend to get a hard copy of the book and do the many quick start exercises that Kwik puts in to help solidify the principles. One of the exercises I did do was to measure my reading speed. I read hard copy at somewhere around 200 words per minute. I’d like to be closer to 400 words per minute, so I’ll work on reading faster. Thanks, Mike, for the recommendation.


This book is for anyone wanting to learn how to learn.

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by the author, 12:58)


One Minute Manager 

This is a short management book suggesting three tactics for being a better manager: 1. Set One Minute Goals. 2. Give One Minute Praisings. 3. Use One Minute Redirects. These practical tools/secrets allow managers to engage with their employees in ways that emphasize clear expectations while valuing the employees as people. One minute goals should be clear and fit on one page. They should be agreed on between the employees and the manager so that both people clearly understand what success looks like and what should be the priority. Managers should catch their employees doing things right and praise those employees at that time. By praising right and good behavior early and often, managers reinforce the behaviors that they want. This saves managers from storing up praise or criticism for performance reviews where the feedback is less effective. When managers catch mistakes their employees make, these should be immediately addressed by a one minute redirect where the manager explains the mistake, tells the employee how that makes the manager feel, then reaffirms the value the employee has as a person (tough first, then kind). By setting clear expectations, praising good behavior, and redirecting bad behavior, managers can be results-oriented while investing in their employees’ success.

 

This book is for current and aspiring managers, leaders, and

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Dan Woren, 1:27)



Preview/Currently Reading-

Here are the books I am currently working through:

Can’t Hurt Me by David Goggins

Winning the War In Your Mind by Craig Groeschel

Ballistic by Mark Greaney (Gray Man #3)

Exit Strategy by Martha Wells (Murderbot #4)

The Grasshopper Trap by Patrick F. McManus

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


Final Thoughts- 

In a lot of ways, October is a mix of celebrations and sorrows. Aubrey and I celebrated our tenth wedding anniversary this month. It’s amazing how much changes in ten years. We have two beautiful children now and a house full of messes and projects and potential. The weather changes in October and the green things die or go into hibernation. I am reminded of the cycle of life; of death; of resting. 


Last month I wrote about the passing of my friend Beau Cline. I was able to attend the services for him in California. It was a very hard trip, but I think it was deeply healing. There were many people in attendance at the graveside service; more than any other I have ever been to. Most people there were visibly upset and emotional. Everyone stayed and paid their respects even though it was windy and cold. The coffin was fabricated by Beau’s close friend and it suited him perfectly. All these things are a testament to how well Beau was loved, and how well he loved others. Words fail me in expressing how much he will be missed. 


Here is a tribute page set up for Beau with the American Brain Tumor Association. Stop by and donate a few $$. This is tax-deductible and might be an opportunity for charitable gift matching from your employer. Brain cancer has taken two of my closest people, so this cause is important to me.


Beau loved Halloween. He always had a costume. Most of them he made himself. What are you going to be for Halloween? 


Thanks for adventuring with me. 


Joshua

PS. Past emails can be found on my blog here

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Friday, October 1, 2021

FROM THE SPINE - SEPTEMBER 2021 BOOK REVIEWS

 September 2021

September is by us already. This year is flying by. I started the month by getting my gallbladder removed. I learned I am a terrible patient. I have no idea how to sit still and recover properly. Also, I have had a lot of family time lately, due to some covid quarantines. Millie and Jet both tested positive for the virus, which nuked all our social plans, but since Millie only had minimal symptoms, and Jet, Aubrey, and I had none at all, we’ve been just fine. We’ll get back in the school groove in October. 


Here are the books I finished in September 2021 and my short reviews of them:


Fiction Books

All Systems Red (Murderbot Diaries Book 1) by Martha Wells

Murderbot is a human/machine hybrid in charge of security for a survey team on a distant planet. It struggles with human interactions/emotions, preferring the humans in its’ charge to perceive him as a robot rather than a person. Murderbot has to step up its security game once its team is attacked by violent predators on the planet, then by an unknown, rogue team of surveyors with hacked security bots. The bad guys wipe out a different survey team and try to hijack Murderbot when it investigates the other team’s habitat. Murderbot’s team rescues him and together they work their way off of the planet to safety. Thanks, Lucas, for the recommendation. Now I need to find the prequel to learn how Murderbot got that nickname. 


This book is for sci-fi fans and socially awkward humans. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Kevin R. Free, 3:17)


The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck

Man, this was a tough book for me. One of my core fears is a scarcity mentality, and this story about the Okies during the dustbowl/great depression woke up some of those fears for me. The main character Tom gets paroled from prison and heads home to reunite with his family. But, when he finds them, they are packing up to leave their Oklahoma farmland and head to California. They have been told that there is plenty of work and fruit in California, so everyone is leaving the dusty mid-west for the golden coast in search of work. The family makes the crazy trek across the nation in an old truck that they do some creative packing/refitting to carry everything they own. As the trip progresses the family splinters- some can’t handle the hard journey, some can’t take the mental stress, others make sacrifices to keep the family safe. Steinbeck doesn’t hand out answers in the end. He does, throughout the book though, paint a message of hope in this idea: only together can we survive. It’s when the “I” changes to “we” that we have community, and sacrifice, and hope for something bigger. Thanks, Aunt Sandra, for the recommendation. 


This book is for history walkers, workers, and leaders. 

(Rated R, Score 8/10, audiobook read by Dylan Baker, 20:59)


Little Lord Fauntleroy by Frances Hodgson Burnett

Cedric Errol is a clever, kind, thoughtful boy of seven years who steals your heart in this funny little story. Cedric lives in New York with his widow mother. He spends his time with a bootblack and a grocery store owner talking politics and life and generally being a typical grade-school boy. His world gets flipped when his uncles die and Cedric becomes the heir to the Earl of Dorincourt (inheriting the title Lord Fauntleroy). The old Earl is a miserable, cranky, mean, old man before the little boy melts his heart. This is a story of how kindness, generosity, and selflessness can restore broken relationships and people. I can see many of the qualities of Cedric in my seven-year-old Jet, and I hope to encourage him to be brave, generous, and kind like Cedric. Thanks, Mom, for the recommendation.

 

This book is for anyone in need of a cheerful boost or a good laugh.

(Rated G, Score 9/10, ebook and audiobook read by Virginia Leishman, 6:17)


Neuromancer by William Gibson

If you ever wondered where the terms cyberspace or the matrix came from, this book is it. Gibson invented and envisioned some of the tech we have today way back in 1984. This is the story of Case, a cyber cowboy, or hacker back before they were called that. Case gets dragged along on a job to free/hack an AI entity called Wintermute and its counterpart Neuromancer. The two AI’s have been plotting this mission for decades. Case and Molly (the muscle) work on laying the foundations for the job that will go down in space in the lair of the ancient family that created the two AI’s. All along the way Case is haunted by the AI’s and helped by a construct of an old dead hacker friend.  The writing is fast and creative. You have to use your imagination fast to keep up. And even though it was written almost forty years ago, Gibson seems to have had a pretty good idea where all the tech is headed. Thanks, Phil, for the recommendation. 


This book is for sci-fi fans, tech cowboys, and hackers. 

(Rated R, Score 8/10, ebook and audiobook read by Robertson Dean, 10:31)


Stardust by Neil Gaiman

This is a Faerie (fairy) story where a young man named Tristran Thorn goes on a quest to find a fallen star to earn the affection of the beauty, Victoria Forester. He leaves his village on the wall between the normal world and Faerie, and as he travels he discovers he has the power to find things in Faerie. Tristran leans on his luck, the friends he meets along the way, and eventually the star herself to accomplish his quest. The star is knocked out of her place in the sky and falls into Faerie. She finds herself hunted by several people- a pair of witches, a would-be king, and the boy from Wall. Gaiman masterfully weaves the stories and characters together and like all good fairytales, they live happily ever after, sort of. 


This book is for the finders, the fallen, and anyone in need of a Faerie tale. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 9/10, audiobook read by the author, 6:13) 


Non-Fiction Books

The Captain Class by Sam Walker

Walker’s goal for this book was to find the greatest sports teams in human history, then to compare them to see what, if anything, they had in common. He wanted to know if there’s a common theme or formula or cause. And if there was, how could we use that to be successful? First, he systematically studied and sorted thousands of teams down to Tier 1 teams- the best 16 teams of all-time ever. Now, what do they have in common? Great coaching? No. Great management? No. Great superstars? No again. Unmatched resources ($$$)? No. Turns out they have nothing in common except for one remarkable thing- they all had a very specific advantage- Tier 1 captains. These captains were not flashy or media darlings; they were the opposite. They avoided attention. They put in the hard work behind the scenes. They united their teams. They put the team first in ways that forged unity. Here are the seven traits of Walker’s elite captains: 1- Extreme doggedness and focus in competition. 2- Aggressive play that tests the limits of the rules. 3- A willingness to do the thankless jobs in the shadows. 4-A low-key, practical, and democratic communication style. 5-Motivates others with passionate nonverbal displays. 6- Strong convictions and courage to stand apart. 7- Ironclad emotional control. These traits are not super sexy or glamorous, so they are not being sought in today’s tv-contract driven world of sports. So, if you want to have a winning team, you need to find a person who exemplifies these traits, put them in the lead and get out of the way. And if you are struggling on your team because you don’t have a big enough budget, management is blocking you, or maybe you don’t feel talented enough, take heart. Success comes through hard work, communication, sticking with your crew, and being willing to stand out. A note on the style of this book: Walker is a sports writer, so he throws in lots of statistics and stories. I found his style to be extremely intelligent without being overly intellectual. I dig it. Thanks, Adrian, for this excellent recommendation. 


This book is for servant leaders and brave souls seeking to get better. 

(Rated R, Score 10/10, hardcopy, audiobook read by Keith Szarabajka, 9:24) 


The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the Second World War by Malcolm Gladwell 

Unlike most books which start in a print version and then get recorded into audiobooks, this book started as an audio production and then was translated into print. It contains many short audio recordings from interviews and historical works like war films, training videos, and news broadcasts. This is the story of the evolution of the US Air Force, and the minds that dreamed of how air power could change the way we fight modern wars. This is the dark side of the story about how we defeated the Japanese in World War II. I found this story to be fascinating in its telling. Gladwell weaves together the philosophy, the tech, the politics, and the big picture war schemes in a way that helped me to understand the history in many new ways. This is the story of two very different Air Force leaders (Curtis LeMay and General Hayward Hansell) and how they approached the moral dilemma that is war. Gladwell asks hard questions about war and our approach to it, without preaching any answers. I found the story to be compelling and well-told. 


This book is for historians, students of war, and pilots. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 9/10, audiobook read by the author, 5:14) 


Preview/Currently Reading-

Here are the books I am currently working through:

Can’t Hurt Me by David Goggins

Limitless

Winning the War In Your Mind

Artificial Condition


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


Final Thoughts- 

I lost one of my biggest supporters last week. My very good friend, adopted big brother, and creative conspirator Beau Cline passed away after a struggle with a brain tumor. Beau was an artist and a creator. He was always building, painting, drawing, imagining, playing music. He taught me how to be more comfortable being me. He provided a lot of feedback when I started writing these reviews last year. He designed my logo and pitched several ideas for naming this thing. From The Spine is a Beau name. I’m so sad that he is gone and I am so proud to have been able to share so many adventures with him. We will go and honor him next week, and try to hold each other up as we grieve. Thanks, Beau, for always having my back. For pushing me to be better. For all the wisdom you poured into me in the most unorthodox ways. 


Thanks for adventuring with me. 


Joshua

PS. Comment with book ideas, brand ideas, or questions. I love the feedback.