Last update: Oct 8 1997

So, I've read the stuff below, and much more that I've overlooked or forgotten. Everything's mixed - fiction, nonfiction, biography, history, all hodgepodge. Give me credit for including the embarassing stuff.

This page gets frequent small updates, but it's long - I have to figure out a way to shorten it - maybe put the reviews behind links? If you have ideas, send them to me.

Meanwhile, try this


My Rating System             Book Resources Links             Contributions Welcome
Change Log & current reading


List of Authors
Index by Author

  • Adams, Douglas
  • *** 
    SciFi
    Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy 
    This is a very funny book. It's short, maybe a 2-hour read. The author's style of humor is a major factor, as is the inventiveness of some of the absurdity. 

    Many friends of mine also liked it a lot. However, I have met those who simply don't get it. I think you can tell in one chapter if you will hate it. Adams has a lot to say and he gets a lot of it into this book. It's mostly comedy laced with social commentary in a scifi setting; I don't care much for scifi as a class, but I liked this a lot. 

    * 
    SciFi
    Others 
    Everything I read which came after the Hitchhiker's Guide was pretty lame. You have to be fairly die-hard Adams fan to like them. It seemed to me the books were written because a deadline had to met, or some such; Hitchhiker's Guide is clearly not like that. I quit fairly early; it's possible that recent publications may be better. 
  • Adams, Richard
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Watership Down 
    This is an adventure story where the characters are rabbits trying to live and establish themselves in the presence of all sorts of adversity. They think and talk, but are otherwise rabbits with all sorts of rabbitisms. The story is pleasant and engaging, but it doesn't really leave you pondering much afterwards. The writing is good, solid, no complaints, but nothing to get excited about. 
  • Alfau
  • ** 
    Fiction
    Shorts
    Locos: A Comedy of Gestures 
    This is a collection of short stories which are OK-ish, but not very compelling. Very slightly interesting: the spanish background and the unusualness of the stories. 
  • Austen, Jane
  • These books are pretty similar in description. They're about some well-raised young women (and their families and friends, of course) in early 19th-century England, trying to get married and juggle men and propriety and manners and such. They're full of dialogue and personal interactions, and are wonderful period pieces. Austen writes extremely well, but the matters at hand are consistent and can get tedious if you're not really into the manners of the day. There's tons of stuff about Austen and her books behind the links - go check them out. 
    **** Fiction Emma 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Pride and Prejudice 
    See also plain text
    **** Fiction Sense and Sensibility 
  • Bligh, William
  • ** 
    NonFic
    Hist
    The Mutiny on HMS Bounty 
    Nonfiction by Bligh; heavily flavored to his point of view. If you have historical interest in the mutiny or in the period, this can be a good read. I certainly got into it, but I wouldn't urge just anyone to read it. See the Nordhoff & Hall version
  • Bowles, Paul
  • **** 
    Fiction
    The Sheltering Sky 
    Just after WWII, an apparently well-funded American couple and an acquaintance zip off to North Africa to travel around for an indefinite period. Via their encounters with the comparatively primitive (but most importantly foreign) culture, conditions, and accomodations, we are exposed to their thoughts, emotions, and psyches. We are shown that realities are just views, that our hold on these realities may be quite tenuous, and that we never really know. I suspect this is a book which will mean very different things to different people. 

    It's engrossing, but not a page-turner. Read it when you have emotional and mental cycles available. 

  • Boyle, T. Coraghessan
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Shorts
    Without a Hero 
    Modern short stories - some very good. Some are a little hairy; they bring up day-to-day unpleasantries of life I'd rather left unnoticed for the nonce. Others are quirky; all expose some aspect of American life in the modern era. They're quite good but somehow uncompelling. 
  • Bulgakov, Mikhail
  • **** 
    Fiction
    Novella
    Heart of a Dog 
    Short (90pp?) fantasy about a dog who becomes a man for a while in postrevolution Moscow. Kind of a strange version of Flowers for Algernon... very well done. 
    ***** 
    Fiction
    Unusual
    The Master and Margarita 
    Considered by many a masterpiece, this is a darkly humorous and very unusual book. Satan shows up in postrevolution Moscow, and some very weird things happen. Flashbacks to Pilate & Jesus are tossed in and the whole thing is quite unlike anything else I've ever read. There's an essay on the web by Dave Parrish

    Get the translation by Mirra Ginsburg. 

  • Cahill, Thomas
  • **** 
    Hist
    How the Irish Saved Civilization 
    When Rome fell, most of Europe was taken over by various types of supposed barbarians who did burn or otherwise destroy much of the records of Greek and Roman culture and civilization; this pretty much led to the Dark Ages and the thousand years of stagnation, superstition, and the system of princes and clergy which ruled the continent. But wait, Ireland was moving the other way - from barbarism to civilization, thanks to Patrick and others. Records and other forms of knowledge were saved from oblivion by the Irish' comparatively tolerant thirst for knowledge, literature, whatever, and their tireless copying and development of anything they could find from the old days. 

    Effortlessly presented, engaging, and interesting. 

  • Camus
  • ***** 
    Fiction
    The Stranger 
    A very short, very good book about an ordinary man who doesn't think or react like normal people (you know - like those who write laws and administer justice), and some effects of that difference. Takes place in Algeria. 
  • Capote, Truman
  • **** 
    NonFic
    In Cold Blood 
  • Card, Orson Scott
  • *** 
    SciFi
    Ender's Game 
    Gee, why is it that any 12-year-old can whip any adult at Nintendo? Well, then why not use that ability to let the kids pilot space warcraft? This is a story about using games to train kids for interstellar combat. 

    The story is good, Card doesn't waste time on parenthetical crap, and the writing is fair. Scifi fans shouldn't miss it. For others, I'd recommend it if you are up for a dose of 

  • Carroll, Lewis
  • **** Fiction Alice's Adventures in Wonderland 
    *** Fiction Through the Looking-Glass 
  • Cervantes, Miguel
  • ** 
    Fiction
    Don Quixote 
    Overrated story about a man in love with chivalric notions who bops about trying to be a Knight. The whole world thinks this is one of the all-time best books. OK, give Cervantes full marks for inventing the western novel, I guess, and writing one skillion pages without a word processor even though he wasn't Russian, but I didn't like the read like I expected to. So sneer at me. More info? Go look at this
  • Chekhov, Anton
  • *** 
    Drama
    Plays 
    These are good, but I don't like reading plays. The Cherry Orchard is OK, as is The Seagull, but I'll take performances any time. 
    ***** 
    Shorts
    Fiction
    Shorts 
    Chekhov's short stories are magnificent. They're usually about ordinary people in almost ordinary situations, but he extracts the essence of some aspect of human nature and suddenly ordinariness is fascinating. He knows people, he takes you to times and places, and he writes simply and effortlessley. Contrary to popular belief, he is often funny. I was once reading Chekhov while eating alone in a pub in Winchester when I busted up laughing. The pub guy clearly thought I was one strange American to be laughing out loud at dreary serious dull Russian literature. Well, maybe I am strange. 

    Most of my reading has been in Penguin editions; I can't speak about various translators. 

  • Cheng, Nien
  • **** 
    NonFic
    Life and Death in Shanghai 
    Nonfiction account of Cheng's tribulations during the Cultural Revolution in China. High quality writing, engrossing. 
  • Christie, Agatha
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Mysteries 
  • Clancy, Tom
  • **** 
    Fiction
    The Hunt for Red October 
    Soviets and Americans chasing each other around in submarines and so forth, this is way better than the movie, and way better than Clancy's other books. He errs only a little in explaining too much (unlike his later stuff, which is full of "Gee, see what I learned yesterday?") In this book, there's lots of technostuff, but the presentation is comparatively seamless. One of the strengths is how well he makes the whole thing believable; his characters just seem real, like someone you know. Great story, spotty but decent writing. 
    * 
    Fiction
    Red Storm Rising 
    Didn't like it. Story is OK; Clancy still makes the characters seem real - you get sympathetic with a senior Soviet general, for example - but the overall effect doesn't work. Too much failed detail - he gives lots of detail you don't want or care about and all his strategies and tactical operations seem directly derived from board games. 
  • Clavell
  • OK, I admit it, I like this guy's work. The stuff is long, in some cases too long, and sometimes too forced to fit some bookseller's idea of mass marketability. So, I feel like I should dislike Clavell and his overproductive word processor and his mass-market output. But for some reason, probably the settings (time and location) and the decent human interplay, I eat this stuff up. Clavell can get you to dislike putting the book down. 

    These are an ongoing saga of westerners in Asia. They're listed in the chronological order of the stories. 

    ** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Gai Jin 
    Weakest of the lot, this is after Japan reopened to the west in the late 19th century. The westerners are establishing their settlement in Yokohama; the Japanese and Westerners are trying to comprehend ech other. Clavell seemed to have no story burning to get out; the whole thing seems forced and somewhat hollow. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    King Rat 
    POW camp in Singapore in WWII, some character overlap with Noble House. The story is interesting; it's about pure capitalism and personal power in a very artificial environment- those who can adapt to take advantage of the system can win big; those who cannot (even those in power) lose. And among winners and losers there are different ways of looking at it. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Noble House 
    1970s Hong Kong, the Noble House still in competitive war, going public, M&A worries, fighting off the other trading houses and dealing with the Americans. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Shogun 
    Japan, 1600, just as Tokugawa Ieyasu is about to re-unify Japan. An English pilot (Will Adams) is shipwrecked in Japan and gets involved with the samurai culture and Ieyasu's civil war. All the names are changed; this allows Clavell to take some pretty loose liberties with the history, especially an impossible love affair between a Japanese Lady and Adams. You do get a decent glimpse into the times, and the story is certainly fun. 

    Better, in a way, is Yoshioka's Musashi

    **** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Tai-Pan 
    19th century founding of Hong Kong by the British. Opium trade and so forth. The protagonist's tradng house is the Noble House of the later book. Hardest to put down of the lot. 
  • Clemens, Samuel
  • -  See Twain, Mark 
  • Conan-Doyle, Arthur
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Sherlock Holmes 
    aka (many titles) 
    The Sherlock stories are short stories, like 15-20 pages, usually written in the 1st person "by" Watson, the assistant. They are not mysteries for you to figure out so much as they are for you to wonder at Holmes' abilities. They're great as period pieces, great as short diversions, and interesting as a delivery vehicle for the kinds of arcana that Conan-Doyle uses to show us how brilliant Holmes is. They're pretty much the same. Read one - if you like that you'll like them all; if not, forget it. 
    * 
    Fiction
    When the World Screamed 
    Sheesh, this from the guy who brought us Sherlock? Give it a miss; third rate crud. 
  • Confucius
  • ****  Analects 
  • Conrad, Joseph
  • ** Fiction The Secret Agent 
    ** Fiction Heart of Darkness 
    *** Fiction Lord Jim 
    ** Fiction The Secret Sharer 
  • Cooper, James Fenimore
  • **** 
    Fiction
    The Last of the Mohicans 
    You probably know the story, if you've seen the movie at least. This is a story of Hawkeye and his Mohican family in pre-revolutionary American times. The Brits are fighting the French, there's a Huron Bad Guy, plenty of action and texture and a girl, of course. There's not much complexity here, and a 5th grader could zip through this and enjoy it, but it's fun. I liked the movie too. 
  • Crichton, Michael
  • ** 
    Fiction
    Jurassic Park 
    Great story; exceptionally unimpressive writing. Even though, as usual, the book's story is better, see the movie. 
    ** 
    Fiction
    Rising Sun 
    See above. 
  • Cringely, Robert X
  • ** 
    NonFic
    Accidental Empires 
  • Dahl, Roald
  • **** 
    Fiction
    Shorts
    The collected short stories of Roald Dahl 
    Called by the publisher an omnibus volume containing Kiss, Kiss, Over To You, Switch Bitch, Someone Like You, and eight further tales of the unexpected

    Great stuff, sometimes fairly dark. War's impact on Dahl is quite present, but mostly just people stories. Quite English, quite good, never pretentious. 

    *** 
    Fiction
    Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life 
    This is a 160-page collection of short stories, set in postwar rural England. The same likable characters appear throughout, in various aspects of village life which (by 1950) hadn't changed much for centuries. Poaching, farm life, scheming a la Fred Flintstone or Ralph Kramden but (!) believable - it's a good bet these stories aren't far from some actual truths. Some of them are very good. The style is similar to Mortimer's
  • Dana, Richard Henry
  • **** 
    NonFic
    Hist
    Two Years Before the Mast 
    Early 19th century Harvard student gets sick and goes to sea for two years as a foremast jack, and keeps a journal, which is turned into a book. He tells of sailing around the Americas to trade at length in California, and gives the only written account of that area which predates the gold rush and the development of population centers. Great stuff. 
  • Danziger
  • *** 
    Travel
    Danziger's Travels 
  • Darwin, Charles
  • ** 
    NonFic
    Origin of Species 
  • Dexter, Colin
  • ** 
    Fiction
    Oxford (Morse) Mysteries 
    Dexter is famous for a series of mystery detective novels which take place in modern Oxford. Chief Inspector Morse is middle aged, drinks a lot, has as many vices as virtues, is revered by most and always gets his man. Smarter than Mycroft, etc. The stories are OK, but the writing is too contrived, too patently revealing clues on a schedule, and too stilted. Also, Dexter gets downright insulting as he brags about his ability to spell correctly, to use proper grammar, and to quote accurately. There is the thinnest of veils covering his sneers in which (for example) he dares the reader to catch the three misspellings in the victim's note. You're expected to be impressed, I guess, by an author who knows the difference between their, they're, and there. 

    And that's not all. Another disappointment is the awkward presentation of Oxford, its environs, and its people. Dexter's opinion of detail is apparently to describe the plaque on the side of some actual door, or to explain in detail which street intersects with which. He completely misses conveying the sense that you've been there. Furthermore Dexter overdoes it when establishing Morse's rare and admirable qualities. It's as if he thinks that he can boast more if he only remembers to point out weaknesses as well. Enough, enough, enough. 

    I read two or three of these in situations when anything would do for a read. They were so well recommended. Well, I'll save the rest for another hard up moment. 

  • Dickens, Charles
  • *** 
    Fiction
    A Christmas Carol 
    It's Dickens, which is not a good thing, but the story is so classic, and it happens to be short, I like it anyway. 
    * 
    Fiction
    A Tale of Two Cities 
    The whole English-speaking world loves Dickens, except me. He's full of himself and boring. Yawn. 
    * 
    Fiction
    Oliver Twist 
    As above. 
  • Dumas, Alexandre
  • ** 
    Fiction
    Twenty Years After 
    The three musketeers, much later. Uncompelling. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    The Count of Monte Cristo 
    Good stuff, but Dumas tries a bit too hard; the story is a bit forced, or contrived, and this permeates the writing. 
    ** 
    Fiction
    The Man in the Iron Mask 
    **** 
    Fiction
    The Three Musketeers 
    A really wonderful item from the father of the modern historical novel. Adventure, romance, treachery, intelligence, swashbuckling, the works. A good choice for people to find out if they care a whit for historical novels, unless you're a confirmed Asiaphile; in that case, consider Yoshioka's Musashi or Clavell

    If you see the movie, my clear choice is the pair with Michael York, Oliver Reed, Raquel Welch, Charlton Heston, et al, from the '70s. It takes both movies to cover this book. 

  • Eco, Umberto
  • Well, some people like Eco, but I don't. To me, his stuff is egotistical showboating of historical and literary arcana. The works are long, pointless and actually quite unsophisticated considering their academic credentials. I don't find depth, purpose, wisdom, insight, fun, or any other reason to find my way back to his works. 
    ** 
    Fiction
    Foucault's Pendulum 
    Longwinded uncompelling pointless mystery takes modern academic back to the middle ages and byzantine medeieval conspiracy theories. There's no there there, and I felt I wasted my time with this one. 
    * 
    Fiction
    The Name of the Rose 
    Overlong overslow overdetailed mystery in a middle-age monastery. Eco just puts all kinds of stuff in you don't care about. Give it a miss. 
  • Einstein, Albert
  • *** 
    NonFic
    Essays
    Thoughts and Ideas 
    Collection of short essays and so forth. Pretty good, though often dry, Einstein's opinions on a very broad array of subjects are included. 
  • Erdman, Paul
  • Erdman's works fit into my overgeneral category spy books (described in the section on Ludlum), but with a significant twist: his intrigues are all financial. Erdman has some kind of world-class high finance background, and his stories all revolve about some gigantic international plot to cripple the world's financial markets to bring about some end. Enter a hero in a banker's suit who displays financial and political brilliance, saves the world, and wins the girl. Who says bankers are boring? 
    *** 
    Fiction
    The Billion Dollar Sure Thing 
    Light read, unless international finance hurts your brain. The finance is really pretty simple: the US decides it needs to return to the gold standard, but in order to do so, it must put a reasonable dollar price on gold, and that price is going to be a huge leap from current prices. It's going to happen in a couple of days and it's top top secret. However, a Swiss banker finds out, and a Soviet finance minister, and some people have been betting ont this all along, and.... 
    *** 
    Fiction
    The Panic of '89 
    If the above generic description sounds interesting, you should really like this book. A quick read, maybe 3 hours. The idea is that Latin America decides to default on all its debt to the US, crushing the dollar and shutting the Americans up once and for all. They can do this if they have help from Europe (more US-haters) and if they can get the Russians to agree to the accompanying management of oil and gold markets. Oops, can't forget Carlos and the Palestinian terrorists who aim to maximize the fear at just the right moment.... Whee! 
  • Feynman Richard
  • *** 
    NonFic
    Surely You're Joking, Mr Feynman 
    Feynman was a Nobel-winning physicist renowned for being wacky, in and out of his discipline. This is a collection of anecdotes from his memoirs. It's a little self-serving, but entertaining. 
  • Fielding
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Tom Jones 
  • Fitzgerald, F. Scott
  • ***** 
    Fiction
    The Great Gatsby 
    A young man starting out in what should lead to a upper-middle class career hangs out on the fringe of a crowd with serious money and serious roaring 20's lifestyles. He has a chance to get in on it, but maybe it's dirty money? That issue isn't really what this book is about - it's a portrait of the times and those kinds of social circles. Some have it, others don't, people are people. Frighteningly current. The book is very short, very clean. Tragedy that Fitzgerald couldn't continue to crank this kind of material out. 
  • Fleming, Ian
  • *** 
    Fiction
    James Bond books 
    Don't be misled by the books and the movies having the same titles. With few exceptions, the stories in the books are entirely different. In some cases, there's some sort of common theme, but it doesn't matter. In only one or two cases, the movie is close enough to give some of the story away. 

    Fleming was a bit of a jerk, IMHO - he was really into brand names, status symbols, and such. (Look at his author's picture - gun, cigarette, pose - blech.) But the idea of a postwar spy guy who doesn't really care much about living, and who therefore gets life's relish by living on the edge all the time - this works well. Some of the books are really well done. 

  • Flexner
  • ** 
    Bio
    Washington: The Indispensable Man 
    An acceptable but uninspiring biography of George Washington. 
  • Forester, Cecil Scott
  • *** Fiction The African Queen 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Hornblower series 
    Until Patrick O'Brian came about, Forester's Hornblower was the nonpareil of historical fiction covering the Royal Navy in the Napoleonic era. Forester's Hornblower was so good, and the field so rich (even when based on actual events), that others wanted to write similar stuff. But they had terrible shoes to fill; all but O'Brian are well back in the pack. You don't have to be militaristic or an Anglophile (I'm neither) to be fascinated by the stuff the Royal Navy would go through to get things done back then. 
  • Fowles, John
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Unusual
    The Magus 
    Another very unusual one. A young Englishman schoolteacher takes a job teaching English at a school on a Greek island. When he gets there, he meets a very strange (and very rich) man, and his life then gets very very strange. Nobody forces him to do anything; he makes his own decisions - or does he? Then there's a couple of gorgeous young women, some wacky history, and you end up in a bizarre psychomystery. 

    If that sounds interesting, go read this. If you're wondering "why would I be interested in stuff like that?" then give it a miss. The writing is pretty good. 

  • Franklin, Benjamin
  • ** 
    Bio
    Autobiography 
  • Fry, Stephen
  • Both these books are British social comedy, taking place in more or less modern times. Both have enough touches of mystery to make the endings compelling. They're not really suspenseful, but they do leave you wanting to see how it turns out. 

    Both books start out needlessly coarse and vulgar. It just isn't needed and the artifice makes it unpleasant. I'm no prude, but I know excess when I read it, and it's here. This was surprising, coming from Fry. Maybe it shouldn't have been, I don't know, but it was. 

    So, these are good though bad. Maybe I ought to give them one less star, but in truth I would recommend them to certain people, so given my rating system, I have to give them 3. 

    *** 
    Fiction
    The Hippopotamus 
    This praises certain qualities and mocks others, but is not preachy and is certainly more than tolerant of the human frailties it exposes. As such it is quite nice, well written (except for the abundance of linguistic showboating and the coarseness mentioned above), and in the end, a good story. 

    As far as the linguistic showboating is concerned, I think we have some unintentional hypocrisy on Fry's part. He bemoans our current inability to make even tolerable use of our language, then goes on to overexercise a rather esoteric vocabulary. I share his unhappiness over the widespread poor use of language in writing as well as discourse, but I think better-chosen ordinary words are far preferable to the arcana employed in this book. 

    *** 
    Fiction
    The Liar 
    This starts out as a standard school story, boys in a public school, doing the things they do. Ultimately the title character gets in trouble, finds himself in the resulting walk of life, and struggles to find his place in society. Fry's Professor Trefusis plays a role. 
  • Fulghum
  • *** 
    Essays
    Everything I Need To Know,I Learned In Kindergarten 
    This is a collection of short essays about life in general. Re the title, those lessons are: share, put things back, don't hit, that kind of stuff. 

    It's pretty much what you think, but less hokey than you might suspect. Not a bad thing to leave by the bed. 

  • Fussell, Scott
  • ** 
    NonFic
    Class 
    This is pseudoscientific hooey about classes in the US. Fussell claims there is a strong class structure in the US, then goes so far as to describe the classless class and guess what: it's huge. Given the US has so far less class orientation than anywhere else on this planet, this book is a stretch. On the other hand, if you want one man's views on this kind of stuff, it's not terribly authored. Give this a miss unless you have some reason to want to read on the subject material. If you want some fun dabbling in this area, try Mayle's Acquired Tastes first. 
  • Gray, Spalding
  • * 
    Fiction
    Impossible Vacation 
    Gray's monologues and Swimming to Cambodia made me buy this book. Error. The book isn't very good, and I was really turned off by what I felt was unnecessary vulgarity. There wasn't anything there to make it worthwhile. 
  • Grimm, Jacob and Wilhelm
  • **** 
    Fiction
    Shorts
    Fairy Tales 
    You know, most people think they know these stories, but reading them in their actual form, as an adult, can be really rewarding. I found a volume of these and Andersen's and some fables and it was great. 
  • Heimel, Cynthia
  • Heimel writes a column about women for Playboy, or did, and these are collections of them. At their best, they're witty, insightful, and illuminating. At their worst, some of them are a touch repetitive and some are a touch dry. Overall, she's fun. 
    **** 
    Essays
    If You Can't Live Without Me, Why Aren't You Dead Yet? 
    * 
    Essays
    Sex Tips for Girls 
    *** 
    Essays
    Get Your Tongue Out of My Mouth; I'm Kissing You Goodbye 
    *** 
    Essays
    If You Leave Me, Can I Come Too? 
    aka When Your Phone Doesn't Ring, It'll Be Me 
    These two titles are the same book; Leave Me is in hardback and Doesn't Ring is the paperback. I think I'll keep a strong prejudice against the publishers from here on. 
  • Heller, Joseph
  • ***** 
    Fiction
    Catch 22 
    A satirical masterpiece set in WWII. Yossarian is in the army and is upset that so many people are trying to kill him. Explanations that they're the enemy and this is war don't change the fact that people are trying to kill him and this bothers him a great deal. So he tries to get out, and can, because he is, as everyone agrees, completely bonkers. But there's always a Catch, and in this case it's a really good one: Catch-22. You can get out if you're crazy; all you have to do is ask. But if you ask, you're clearly not crazy. 

    This is brilliant satire, frighteningly funny situational concoctions, a wonderful world of personalities. 

    ** 
    Fiction
    Good as Gold 
    Not so good; Heller seems to have shot his wad in Catch-22. 
    ** 
    Fiction
    Something Happened 
    See above. 
  • Helprin, Mark
  • ***** 
    Fiction
    Unusual
    Winter's Tale 
    Very unusual, very very nice. It's hard to describe, so here are some features: it's funny, warm, interesting, absorbing, and extremely well written. This is a story about a man and a horse and people and New York City. It's almost fantasy, but there's no wizards or elves or such - just NYC and snow and dazzling language. It's light without being superficial, meaningful without being heavy, fantastic without being silly or syrupy. Destined to be a classic. 

    Helprin manages to pour out all sorts of comedic comments on the random sillinesses of people and life, intertwined with a good yarn. 

  • Hemingway, Ernest
  • *** Fiction Death in the Afternoon 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Farewell to Arms 
    Hemingway was an ambulance driver in WWI in Italy. This story is about an ambulance driver who isn't into the war very much, who gets wounded, and then falls in love with one of the nurses in the hospital. An easy read, I zipped through it, and then it haunted me later. 
    ** 
    Fiction
    The Old Man and the Sea 
    Fairly boring to me; an old man is out in a small boat and catches the great fish and doesn't have anything left by the time he gets it in to shore. Yeah, so what? English teachers all over will hate me for this. 
    ***** 
    Fiction
    The Sun Also Rises 
    A few American expats in Paris have too much time on their hands socialize, travel, and drink far too much. We follow their exploits in bars, in Paris and in Spain, and we get surprisingly intimate views into who and what they are. It would be difficult to pinpoint a wasted word in this book. 
    ***** 
    Fiction
    The Snows of Kilimanjaro & Stories 
    Wonderful short stories. The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber alone is worth the price of admission. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    For Whom the Bell Tolls 
  • O. Henry
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Stories 
    These are a bunch of short stories written, if I recall, in the early 1900s or so. They're fairly popular for the twists in the end & overall they're not bad, but not great. Well, some are great; A Retrieved Reformation is a classic. 
  • Herbert, Frank
  • *** 
    SciFi
    Dune 
    A really great story in a scifi setting. The story is really pretty much timeless and the science fiction does not get in the way. The tale and plotting and interactions are very good; unfortunately the writing is not. Herbert spells it all out for you, line by line, as if you cannot figure anything out for yourself. It is actually trying. On the other hand, a sixth grader could do well with it. 
    :-( 
    SciFi
    Others 
    Nothing else I read of Herbert's was above abysmal. 
  • Higgins, Tom
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Spotted Dick, S'il Vous Plait 
    aka An English Restaurant in France 
    English couple start English restaurant in Lyon, gastronomic capital of France. We all know about grey boiled flavorless English food, right? We hear about starting a restaurant, refurbing the buildings, dealing with vendors, local hoods, an initially incredulous clientele, the difficulties of success, etc. Compared by many to Mayle's A Year in Provence, it too is a memoir of an Englishman who moved to France. But the topic and tone are very different. Mayle's a better writer, but this book is somehow more real. The restaurant is Mr. Higgins in the Croix Rousse district in Lyon. I've never been there. 
  • Hitler, Adolf
  • ** 
    AutoBio
    Mein Kampf 
    Interesting in that it tells you in advance what Hitler was going to try to do with his life, including his attempt to obliterate jews. Otherwise dry. If Hitler hadn't become the leader he was, this would be forever forgotten. 
  • Homer
  • The deal with reading Homer for pleasure, as opposed to class assignments, is to get a good translation. Academic translations of Homer can make the stuff terribly distasteful. Forget poetry or fidelity to Greek. Get one which has interesting writing in English. Grab a few, open them up, and check out the beginning of a few chapters. If you get flowery pseudopoetry, or verse, forget it. If you get something that reads like decent storytelling, grab it. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Iliad 
    This is a war story: the Trojan horse, Achilles versus Hector, intervening Gods, Paris, the golden apple, etc. I prefer this to Odyssey
    *** 
    Fiction
    Odyssey 
    Adventure story, lots of subtales of wacky adventures in wacky places dealing with wacky critters like Cyclops and his buddies. Most people prefer this to Iliad, below, but I didn't. 
  • Hrabal
  • **** 
    Fiction
    I Served the King of England 
    This is sort of a mood book a la Remains of the Day by Ishiguro, except this is far more upbeat. This guy works in Hotels in various positions and builds a self-worth system based on service, etc, and finally has to deal with the fact that it, like any self-worth system, is simultaneously valuable and futile. Worth checking out. 
  • Hubbard, L. Ron
  • ** 
    SciFi
    Battlefield Earth 
    I admit it: I read this. I was standing in a bookshop in Heathrow not finding anything and the guy next to me recommended it. He emphasized there's nothing even remotely related to or suggestive of scientology in it; it's just sci fi. I don't know much about scientology, but I can corroborate the "just sci fi" part. Anyway, I needed something for some long flights, so I took it. 

    It's a 3000-page pulp scifi monster. Fortunately, the pages go fast, very fast. It's Earth, much later, and the Bad Guys have taken over and Our Hero has to get the Earth back for the natives, overcoming the most powerful race in the galaxy. Stuff happens. You get the idea. 

  • Irving, Washington
  • **** 
    Fiction
    The Legend of Sleepy Hollow 
    Fun to read. It hasn't lost anything. If anything, the legend of the legend is overdone, but it's still good. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Rip Van Winkle 
    Much the same comment as Sleepy Hollow, above. 
  • Ishiguro, Kazuo
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Artist of a Floating World 
    This is a pretty quiet tale of a man who feels guilty about supporting the Japanese regime which took Japan into WWII. The man is an artist who helped with propaganda posters and now has serious misgivings about his success, but has no clue how to get past his past. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    The Remains of the Day 
    An English butler wraps his entire self into being a perfect butler and inadvertently forgets to have a life while pursuing his life. Along the way, he is tested by having to support and serve (without question or doubt) a lord who advocates what would be disastrous policies for Britain. Quiet, slow, like the movie. A mood book. Well written. 
  • Iyer, Pico
  • *** 
    NonFic
    Travel
    Falling Off the Map 
    Well, Iyer is still good, but this time, it isn't a labor of love. Maybe he signed a deal, went on his trip(s) and set out to write the book, and turned the crank. Yeah, OK. With Video Night (above), it's as if he had to write it in order to get it out of himself, and thank God someone was smart enough to publish it. This time it's good, but not as scintillating as before. 
    **** 
    NonFic
    Travel
    The Lady and the Monk 
    Well, Iyer is still good, but this time, it isn't a labor of love. Maybe he signed a deal, went on his trip(s) and set out to write the book, and turned the crank. Yeah, OK. With Video Night (above), it's as if he had to write it in order to get it out of himself, and thank God someone was smart enough to publish it. This time it's good, but not as scintillating as before. 
    ***** 
    NonFic
    Travel
    Essays
    Video Night in Kathmandu 
    An extremely well done and well integrated collection of snapshots of southeast Asia. The writing, the insights, and the choice of focus all excel. I like to travel in ways similar to the kind Iyer uses as a medium and I've never read any sort of travel essay to touch this. 

    How good is it? Go to the store or library, grab a copy, open anywhere, and read a paragraph or two. That should be more than enough - Iyer's talent is obvious on every page. 

  • Janowitz, Tama
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Shorts
    Slaves of New York 
    I was lucky to pick this up before the Janowitz hype hit. It's a pleasant enough read, just some shorts about modern young folks in NYC struggling with roommates, friends, paying the rent, etc, etc. Considered very hip at the time, this kind of stuff abounds now. It probably appeals most to people who never had roommates and the who's-sleeping-where-tonight lifestyle. 
  • Kafka, Franz
  • *** 
    Fiction
    The Metamorphosis 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Das Urteil (The Judgment) 
    I read this to bone up on my German. I'm sorry, but I just don't see what is so incredibly great about Kafka. Not bad, but no big whoop. 
  • Kant, Immanuel
  • *** 
    Phil
    Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals 
    ** 
    Phil
    The Critique of Pure Reason 
  • Karr, Mary
  • *** 
    AutoBio
    The Liars Club 
    This is a memoir of a few years in Karr's childhood mostly in Texas. She had a pretty rough childhood, with a hard-drinking mother who was a misplaced would-be cultured cosmopolite and a rough (though loving and, apparently intelligent) father, and not a lot of money. There's mom getting sent to the mental hospital and a horrible grandmother and plenty of childhood terrors familiar and not. 

    Karr remains upbeat throughout, like a child might, and has a nice attitude through it all. Some people claim this makes the book "funny" but I couldn't disagree more. No matter how I slice it, it's a downer. Though very well written, sometimes lyrical, I just don't think it was worth it. It's like a picture of an accident. OK, clear enough, but did I have to see that? What for? 

  • Kennedy, Paul
  • *** 
    Hist
    The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers 
  • Kent, Alexander
  • Etc 
    Kent's works are also-rans to O'Brian's and Forester's. Read them first. If you must have more, try these, Parkinson's, or Pope's
  • Kesey, Ken
  • *** 
    Fiction
    One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest 
  • LeCarre
  • ** 
    Fiction
    The Spy Who Came In From the Cold 
    But, I liked the movie.... 
    * 
    Fiction
    A Perfect Spy 
    Why did I finish this? Why did Le Carre? Completely uncompelling. 
    * Fiction Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy 
  • Lewis, Michael
  • *** 
    NonFic
    Liar's Poker 
    Lewis joined Salomon Brothers in the early eighties and was there for the great bond boom and Salomon Brothers was Bond Central. Remember the S&L crisis, leveraged buyouts, the junk bonds of Drexel's Michael Milken, the 1987 crash, etc? Well, Lewis saw it all, and the whole time, he was a moonlighting journalist and presumably therefore kept notes, etc, and we get this 1989 book. 

    This is fast reading though rich, believable though fantastic, good though profane, entertaining though distressing. I laughed a lot, though maybe I should have cried. Read anecdote after anecdote about boorish foulmouthed egomaniac gluttons who, apparently awash with adrenaline and testosterone, daily juggle hundreds of millions of dollars in pursuit of keeping their cut. 

    The title comes form one of the anecdotes regarding Gutfreund, chairman of Salomon Brothers, and Meriwether, one of his chief lieutenants and the best "trader" Lewis ever saw. Apologies for imperfect recall: 

    [G walks up to M]
    
            G: One hand, one million dollars, no tears.
    
    [pause]
    
            M: If we're going to play, let's play for real money.
    
               Ten million.
    
    [G's turn to pause]
    
            G: [turns and walks away] You're crazy
  • Loh, Sandra
  • *** 
    Essays
    Depth Takes a Holiday 
    aka Essays from Lesser Los Angeles 
    Loh is a sharp and witty everylateboomer in LA. She observes the quintessential LA lifestyle - the gifted-child artistic type who remains just outside The Industry and therefore justifies doing what it takes to get by. She willingly admits her down to earth opinions- $8.99 represents a fabulously expensive bottle of wine, IKEA furniture is rapture, Nintendo is great fun, etc. I got a slight sense that the self deprecations were artificial, but no matter - the book is quite good. 
  • London, Jack
  • *** 
    Fiction
    The Call of the Wild 
  • Ludlum, Robert
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Whatever 
    Ludlum wrote a pile of what I call "spy books" even if there's no spy. The general plot is: Joe Normal gets accidentally swept up into incredibly fast-paced world of high-stakes international intrigue. People shoot at him; people leave him strange messages; his past or ancestry suddenly becomes relevant. He meets the gorgeous rocket scientist woman and they become a team. Somehow living by wits and outdoing the incredibly resourceful and well-funded pros, Joe saves the world. 

    But Ludlum created a style. He writes very fast tense action, often in one word sentences. Many people claim that Ludlum costs them way too much sleep - they cannot put the books down. So, go try The Bourne Identity and if you like it, you'll be in hog heaven for awhile. If you don't, well, you don't like this kind of stuff. 

  • Maloney, Don
  • I searched Amazon and the IBS and couldn't find these books, even when I supplied the ISBN. They're published by
          Japan Times Ltd ;       5-4 Shibaura 4-chome, Minato-ku ;       Tokyo 108 Japan 
    **** 
    Travel
    NonFic
    Japan: It Isn't All Raw Fish 
    Maloney was a Gaijin businessman assigned to Tokyo for his firm. He wrote a humor column for the Japan Times detailing all sorts of trials, tribulations, and conditions of foreigners in Japan; this is a collection. He's really very funny, so long as you have any amount of interest in things Japanese. These books are hard to find, but can be found in English bookshops in Tokyo and Kinokinuya and such. 

    This book is a perfect gift for someone going to (or recently gone to) Japan. Some help in locating:
    ISBN 4-7890-0028-1 ; Library of Congress Catalog Card no. is 75-319087 ; Published 1975. 

    **** 
    NonFic
    Travel
    Son of Raw Fish 
    More of the above, ending with the Maloney's transfer back to the states, alas. 
  • Markham, Felix
  • ** 
    Bio
    Napoleon 
    A short biography of Napoleon - it's a pretty good overview, and includes data not found until this century. If you don't want the standard 5-inch thick history of Napoleon, this is great. If you want all the detail, this isn't your book. 
  • Marx, Karl
  • *** 
    Phil
    The Communist Manifesto 
  • Mayle, Peter
  • Everything I've read of Mayle's - fiction and nonfiction alike - is very very close to the same central theme of expats' lives in Provence. 

    This stuff is enjoyable, but it's too selfsimilar to take in gulps. Spread it out and let a year go by between doses of Mayle and you'll like it more (or tire of it less). 

    *** 
    Fiction
    Anything Considered 
    More galavanting about southern France with money. Englishman takes ad in Herald Tribune and ends up housesitting in a fabulous apartment in Monte Carlo with instructions to spend plenty of money. Hmmm. You betcha, we got intrigue: international truffle cartel, a beautiful Israeli ex-commando spy, a Japanese superbodyguard, various mafias, etc ad gigglum. 

    The tale is brain candy and the money-is-cool thing is a bit overdone, but overall a decided thumbs-up. 

    *** 
    Fiction
    Hotel Pastis 
    Englishman sets up a hotel in rural Provence, finds lots of things to worry about (so we can laugh about) when dealing with locals and English expat community. 

    Like Anything Considered, this is brain candy. But so what. The story is pleasant enough, and has enough local quirkery to remain interesting. 

    *** 
    NonFic
    Acquired Tastes 
    Mayle sorts through a collection of things you get when you're rolling in it: servants, private jets, exotic clothiers accomodations and foods, etc. Overall spotty, but I'd say he just barely brings it off. Interestingly, he doesn't tell you how much the really expensive stuff actually costs. 
    ** 
    NonFic
    Toujours, Provence 
    Sequel to A Year in Provence. Uninspired, but Mayle's good enough to make it readable. 
    **** 
    NonFic
    A Year in Provence 
    British ad exec takes early retirement; he and his wife move to inland Provence, take an old farmhouse, and set out to establish a life there. This book chronicles one calendar year in which the couple settles in, discovers the environs, and deals with a host of wacky contractors whose missions don't seem to include completing their work. 

    By far Mayle's best, this is charming, funny, and fun throughout. 

  • McMurtry, Larry
  • :-( 
    Fiction
    Lonesome Dove 
    A guy I like recommended this and I hated it and he said "It gets good" so I kept reading. Finally, I asked "When does it get good?" and when I told him how far in I was, he was flummoxed that I wasn't completely in love with it. I have no idea what the appeal here is. Neither the story nor the writing drew me in. 
  • Melville, Herman
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Moby Dick 
  • Mishima, Yukio
  • **** 
    Fiction
    The Sailor Who Fell From Grace with the Sea 
    Dark and disturbing, this is a story about a boy, his mother, and her boyfriend (the sailor). People can be cruel, and life can be harsh. This is a short book, written simply, and I still get the willies when I think of it. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    The Temple of the Golden Pavilion 
  • Mortimer, John
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Like Men Betrayed 
    A novel from the 50s, quite good, about a solicitor and his relationship with his grown (and gone) son and his wife. A little quiet, clearly postwar. I liked it. 
    *** 
    AutoBio
    Clinging to the Wreckage 
    Story of earlier part of Moritmer's adult life. Insightful, pleasant. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Summer's Lease 
    This is a sort of mystery masquerading as a social novel. An English family zips off to Tuscany for three weeks and discovers all sorts of local intrigue there - some of it real and lots of red herrings. If you're a Mortimer fan, read this - it's kind of a cross between Paradise Postponed and Mayle's A Year in Provence. The writing is quite nice, but the story is uncompelling. 
    *** 
    AutoBio
    Murderers and Other Friends 
    Story of Mortimer's "second chance" - new career, new wife. Better than Clinging, quite well done. I'm not sure why I don't give these 4 stars, but if I did, I wouldn't be sure why they got them. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Paradise Postponed 
    Well, I'll quote some: steers delicateley between satire and sentiment and an eddy of wisdom and comic resignation and then words like wry and eccentric are used a lot. 

    So, this is social comedy, a little mystery, and lots of use, misuse, and abuse of English country life. I had a little bit of a hard time getting going, then couldn't put it down. 

    **** 
    Fiction
    Rumpole 
    This refers to a bunch of books about a British barrister who's unimpressed by artificial status or pomp. He likes to defend criminals in the Old Bailey, and you encounter plenty of that, but the real value of the stories is Mortimer's acute perception of human nature - the criminals, the other lawyers, the judges, his wife ("She Who Must Be Obeyed"), and, notably, himself. The writing itself is good as well. I became convinced that Rumpole is Mortimer, BTW. The stories are set in the time of writing - late 1980's more or less. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    The Narrowing Stream 
    An early work of Mortimer's, from the 50s I think. An English couple encounters some questions and possibly strife in the marriage when a local tart is found dead. The story is about people's thoughts and relationships and the impact of social rules or boundaries we maintain in our lives - it includes a segment where a fellow shows up as asks the wrong questions and tells the wrong truths and makes people uncomfortable for example - but doesn't judge them very much. I wouldn't recommend this as a first taste of Mortimer. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Titmuss Regained 
    A sequel to Paradise Postponed (above) and not as good. 
  • Munthe, Axel
  • *** 
    AutoBio
    The Story of San Michele 
    A memoir of a Doctor in late 19th to early 20th centuries, this tells of interactions with his fashionable, rich, titled clientele in Paris, then Rome, with some excursions intermixed. Munthe comes across as someone with keen insight into human nature, with a overriding love for animals, and with a strong sense of morality and conscience. As such, he is quite politically correct, and the book is from the 1930s. The title refers to the house he built on Capri. Munthe and his book were quite celebrated there, even among the barons and duchesses, and San Michele and other Munthe residue can still be viewed there. 

    The style is a bit pedantic and sometimes a touch preachy or self-indulgent, but not so far as to ruin the book. 

  • Murakami, Harumi
  • Murakami is a modern Japanese writer; the genre involves detailed descriptions of everyday life, almost a celebration of the ordinary. This kind of writing creates a comfy mood, even when the tale is tense. Well, you'll see. Anyway, his books are all offbeat and slightly pleasant. 

    Murakami's work is blessed by translation which is simply outstanding. 

    **** 
    Fiction
    Dance, Dance, Dance 
    This is a sequel to A Wild Sheep Chase, and better. Our hero is called back to Sapporo and more times of bizarreness. There's a good dose of mystery, plenty of strangeness, and plenty of intrigue to keep you interested. However, what makes this great is the extremely effective way Murakami creates a mood. Reading this is simultaneously exciting and peaceful, busy and calm. Nice. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Unusual
    The Elephant Vanishes 
    This is a collection of short stories. They're nice, well written of course, and full of the Murakami mood, but short stories don't allow for the wackiness of his novels. There's a couple of stories here I didn't care for, but most of them are very good, and the book is getting. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Unusual
    Wild Sheep Chase 
    This is a funny quirky modern tale where a young Japanese guy gets swept up in a vision of a sheep - a particular sheep that is, and next thing there's bad guys telling him to back off. This is a well-written story, and is very pleasant in its differences from normal western fare. Consider it quirky, offbeat, interesting, and decidedly a change of pace. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Unusual
    Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World 
    A wacky one. Here we have touches of scifi to show how a man manages to eliminate emotional troughs at the expense of the peaks, and the age-old question of the advisability of this. Well done and quite original, the book uses two parallel stories with chapters interleaved - and of course they're the same story. 
  • Murakami, Ryu
  • ** 
    Fiction
    Novella
    An Almost Transparent Blue 
    I think this book is too well done for me. Vivid and occasionally grusome, it's a first-person account of some fairly intense days for a small mixed-sex squad of student buddies in Tokyo. They are into hard drugs and group sex and you get the idea that the only thing repulsive to them is the idea of not experiencing everything possible. 

    Well paced and delivered, it is possibly a confession but never an apology. I actually wish I hadn't stumbled onto this one - it was pretty disturbing.... 

  • Lady Murasaki
  • *** 
    Fiction
    The Tale of Genji 
    The first Japanese novel, this is about court manners and such. Interesting as a period piece. 
  • Musashi
  • *** 
    Phil
    A Book of Five Rings 
    Musashi is Japan's most famous swordsman, from the peak of the Samurai era (early 1600's). His life is chronicled very well by Yoshioka. There are some good notes in Victor Harris' introduction. Anyway, when he got old, he went and lived in a cave, and wrote this classic book of strategy, which every Japanese businessman allegedly reads all the time. It's full of esoteric advice like (paraphrased) assume the position and don't let your enemy beat you and keep your mind where it should be and practice hard

    I probably need to check this out again now that I'm older and wiser. Maybe I'm smart enough now that I'll find it better. 

  • Newsham, Brad
  • ** 
    NonFic
    Travel
    All the right places 
    Pretty poor entrant in the backpacker's travel essay sweepstakes. Try Iyer first, or Danziger if you've already read Iyer. 
  • Nietzsche, Friedrich
  • *** 
    Phil
    A Nietzsche Reader (Penguin) 
    Collected writings, most short enough to take in small doses. 
    *** 
    Phil
    Thus Spake Zarathustra 
    Nietzsche's masterpiece and though incomplete, a fairly complete presentation of his philosophy. The delivery is prose, having Zarathustra coming down off the mountain to be guru to the world. God is dead, (often miscontrued) will to power, and Ubermensch (superman), are all here. 
  • Nordhoff and Hall
  • *** 
    Hist
    NonFic
    Mutiny on the Bounty 
    An account of the infamous mutiny based on the journal of a foremast jack. As such, it offers a very interesting contrast to Bligh's account. 
  • O'Brian, Patrick
  • See WW Norton's newsletter and get on the mailing list). 
    ***** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Aubrey/Maturin series 
    Every member of this long (18 so far) series is magnificent; you may savor every word. The setting is Royal Navy, early 1800s. 

    O'Brian's prose and dialog are amazing. His characters are diverse, complete, real, and engaging. They succeed and fail, win and lose. Some describe O'Brian as a masculine Jane Austen (with a bigger dose of intelligent humor added) ... these works are incredible period pieces, taking you completely to a time and place without artifice of any kind. You certainly don't have to care a whit about naval history to adore these books. On the other hand, if that's all you are interested in, you won't find anything better. 

    These books comprise a long tale around two men. One is Jack Aubrey of the Navy. He's not an atypical Post Captain of 1810. The other is Stephen Maturin, a Dublin physician of mixed Catalan descent who volunteers as an agent in order to assist in the overthrow of Bonaparte (Stephen loves France, hates Napoleon), Stephen signs on as Ship's Surgeon as a way to see the world (he's an ardent and somewhat known natural philosopher), and the two form a friendship which yields to O'Brian infinite material. 

    If you didn't already know it, the things the Royal Navy went through between, say, 1750 and 1812 are entirely amazing. There's no need to invent incredible accomplishments, feats, attempts, or situations because the history provides circumstances which, if not documented, would be beyond belief. If O'Brian's stories weren't available (with different names) in contemporary news, letters, etc, we might find his tales pretty well beyond the limits of credible fiction. 

    There are other authors who have attempted this kind of work. O'Brian is by far the best. Forester is very good in a distant second; everyone else is behind in the pack. 

    Here are the titles: 
    1. Master and Commander 
    2. Post Captain 
    3. H.M.S. Surprise 
    4. The Mauritius Command 
    5. Desolation Island 
    6. The Fortune of War 
    1. The Surgeon's Mate 
    2. The Ionian Mission 
    3. Treason's Harbour 
    4. The Far Side of the World 
    5. The Reverse of the Medal 
    6. The Letter of Marque 
    1. The Thirteen-gun Salute 
    2. The Nutmeg of Consolation 
    3. Clarissa Oakes (in USA: The Truelove
    4. The Wine-dark Sea 
    5. The Commodore 
    6. The Yellow Admiral 
     

    ***** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    The Golden Ocean 
    Based-on-fact story about Commodore Anson's mid 1700's circumnavigation in which his squadron took one skillion pieces of gold from the Spanish. In this precursor to the Aubrey/Maturin series, O'Brian is just finding his legs. You kind of wish he'd taken his time and maybe made this a much longer work. Anyway, it's very good - a stupendous sea story told very well. 
    *** 
    Bio
    Picasso 
    Biography of Pablo Picasso. Evidently O'Brian knew him, but not much of that comes across in the book. The book carries a bit too much sterile recording of just the facts, ma'am, for me - I'm addicted to O'Brian's passion, and it doesn't come through in this book. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Testimonies 
    Well done, but you should be in the mood for this book. It's a quiet, slow, detailed story about a man and a woman in a Welsh valley populated by a few poor farming families who know each other altogether too well, yet sometimes painfully superficially. The heroes fall in love, but this is a time and place where people can get in trouble for a smile - forget sleeping around and stuff. If you're new to O'Brian, this isn't what I'd start with. If you don't want to dive into the Aubrey/Maturin series, try The Golden Ocean
    **** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    The Unknown Shore 
    Another ship in Anson's squadron encounters difficulty at sea and goes its own way. Still early O'Brian, here we see the formation of Maturin, and the foundation of the Aubrey/Maturin series. 
  • Parkinson, C Northcote
  • Etc 
    Parkinson's works are also-rans to O'Brian's and Forester's. Read them first. If you must have more, try these, Kent's, or Pope's
  • Pavic
  • ***  Landscape Painted with Tea 
  • Pirsig, Robert
  • *** 
    Phil
    Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance 
    aka An Inquiry into Values 
    This book is sometimes found in one of: Biography, Philosophy, Self-help, New-Age (though published in 1974), or unclassified nonfiction. When I went to school at CU in Boulder, you had to have read this or you were just not hip. 

    This guy and his son are out on a cross-country motorcycle trip. The guy is really into understanding why everything is, and how and why he and others value everything they see and do. He quietly yet compellingly talks of simple things as simple things, yet seems to lay great import on them. He uses the motorcycle's state and maintainance along the way as metaphor for all sorts of life situations: care for the machine: it works; disregard or abuse it: it fails. Etc. 

    This book is 25% tale, 75% analysis. It's very interesting, but for some reason I never went back to reread even parts of it, and I never tried to follow up with similar works. Maybe it's a bit too new-age for me. Even so, it's far less self-serving than other stuff I've seen in the genre. 

  • Plutarch
  • **** 
    Hist
    The Age of Alexander 
    The Penguin version is a very readable collection of chapters of Greek history and biographical sketches and anecdotes. Pretty good. 
  • Poe, Edgar Allen
  • **** 
    Fiction
    Stories 
  • Pope, Dudley
  • Etc 
    Pope's works are also-rans to O'Brian's and Forester's. Read them first. If you must have more, try these, Kent's, or Parkinson's
  • Proulx, E. Anne
  • *** 
    Fiction
    The Shipping News 
    Quoyle is a large ugly clumsy oaf leading a miserable life in nowehere, New York. Of course, he's nothing but good, and we like him. He manages two daughters with a harlot who hurts him and dies. So, it's off to the ancestral lands in Newfoundland where he discovers a new way of life and a new kind of people. He encounters newfies, boats, fish, ice, isolation: think Northern Exposure with poverty. The bizzare mingling of modern life and ancient ways makes the setting interesting. 

    This is a mood book, essentially another view of the modern American family and life and love. I didn't like certain style effects: in the beginning there are a lot of (too many) non-sentences. Sentences without verbs. Or: Reading sentences without a subject. Happily, Proulx gets over these about 1/3 of the way through and you're left with headlines as the only literary weirdness, and the headlines work fine. Headline Style OK By Reader

    This book won the National Book Award ('93) and the Pulitzer Prize ('94). I dunno - it seems they could have done better. It's really not bad; it's even good, but it's hardly my idea of a must-read. 

  • Radakovich, Anka
  • *** 
    NonFic
    Essays
    The Wild Girls Club 
    Another collection of articles on Women's issues from a Men's magazine. I bought this on a recommendation. Anka is younger, coarser, and more hip than Heimel, but I can't really say one is better than the other. In small doses, this is good stuff. I'd start with this one or Heimel's ... Dead Yet?
  • Rand, Ayn
  • **** 
    Fiction
    Atlas Shrugged 
    Hoo boy. This monster book is the manifesto of the philosophy which Rand calls "objectivism" and which is hard to summarize, but let's say: reason and competence should defeat all else. Objectivism's politics are therefore not too distant from modern Libertarianism. The premise of the book is that the looters leech off those who are capable and/or hard-working, and the reason the looters get away with it is because we let them. Well, we can't let them starve can we? So we feed them. Thus, to get free food, simply don't buy it yourself. Meanwhile, government is all set up to maximize its ability to live off its consituents, etc, etc. Soooo, what to do? Easy: get the capable and hardworking people to just quit. Don't bust your butt trying to make their broken system work - that just gives them more to leech off of. So, one by one, the essential people who really make the world go round stop playing, and of course, the world falls to its knees - Atlas shrugs and the whole world shakes. 

    There's all sorts of things here which go a bit far, and some extremely preachy chapters (eg This is John Galt Speaking, and see "So you think that money is the root of all evil?" ), but I think this is a worthwhile read. Even if you disagree with some or all of Rand's conclusions, there's some good stuff here and at least you'll get insight into the other side. I think this is really good for people in their early 20s. 

  • Robbins, Rob
  • * 
    Fiction
    Even Cowgirls Get the Blues 
    I could not get into it; this book seemed entirely pointless to me. 
    * 
    Fiction
    Still Life with Woodpecker 
    Same as Cowgirls
  • Salinger, JD
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Shorts
    Nine Stories 
    Nine short stories (surprise!) having to do with the human condition. 
    ***** 
    Fiction
    The Catcher in the Rye 
    Magnificent character work. Written in first person, Holden Caulfield is a privileged kid who can't quite put up with the manifold phoniness of society and people and ends up always in trouble and ultimately in some undefined funny farm after yet another expulsion from a prep school. 
  • Saroyan, William
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Shorts
    My Name is Aram 
    A shortish collection of short stories about boyhood in the earlier 20th century. The boy and his extended family are poor Armenian immigrants in California's San Joaquin valley. They are poor but proud and eccentric, and the boys are all-boy, a laTom Saywer. The quite short stories are well written, often charming, sometimes brilliant, and usually insightful. Consider what you'd get if Steinbeck tried to imitate Twain and you get an idea of the style and tone. 
  • Scott, Walter
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Ivanhoe 
    The original historical novel, so they say. Except for the anti semitism and other signs of Scott's times, this is pretty much standard knights and damsels stuff. The Black Knight stuff is predictable but it really doesn't matter. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Rob Roy 
    Good Guy commoner landowner leads common Scots against nobility and evil and (surprise) English. 
  • Shakespeare, William
  • Drama

    Plays 
    Shakespeare's plays deserve their fame, but are much better performed than read. For a first encounter with any given play, I got the most out of them by listening to a tape and reading simultaneously. This slows it down but the value was greatly increased. With familiarity, this is hardly necessary. 

    Poetry

    Sonnets 
    Call me a cretin. I couldn't get into these without someone else carrying the interest. 
  • Shirer, William
  • **** 
    Hist
    The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich 
    Here's the thing: Shirer was there. He was there for the buildup, when Churchill was the only guy saying Hitler was a menace, when the buildup was in full swing, when the Nazis took Austria, then Czechoslovakia, then Poland. Shirer was all over the Third Reich. 

    I was in study hall in high school once, bored, and I blindly reached behind me and grabbed a book. It was this behemoth and I groaned but opened it anyway, and I fell into the part where two generals come to Rommel's house in order to force him to kill himself (or face a state trial for treason). Rommel tells his son "I've just told your mother I'll be dead in a quarter of an hour." and I was hooked. 

  • Simmons, Dan
  • ** 
    SciFi
    Hyperion 
    Six "pilgrims" are on their way to see the Shrike, terror of the universe, who is beyond the understanding of even the incredible (yawn) technological prowess of the future. On the way we hear each of the pilgrims' stories. These yarns are good enough to get you through the book, but even the bright spots are disappointing. 

    The story has promise, but it isn't delivered on: it's intentionally terminated just before the climax in order to force you to buy the sequel. A dirty trick, but somehow I can live without continuing on. Another big problem is that the book is full of heard-it, seen-it, read-it scifi, assumptions that the whizziest technology of 1996 is indicative of 2700, other abundant anachronisms, and very many stumbles through too-easy conditions or Earth references. All we're missing is the inevitable incipient armageddon with a superenemy threatening the very survival of all humankind. Oops, we have that, too! But maybe the Shrike can help us? Whatever. Prose: fair. Dialog: weak. 

    I've been told a lot of Sci Fi fans love this. Hmmm. This makes me think they're an easy sell. 

  • Sinclair, Upton
  • ** 
    Fiction
    The Jungle 
    In early 1900s Sinclair wrote this protest about the conditions of immigrants and their housing and employment and those who set out to take advantage of them. This is the kind of stuff that led to trade unions here and communism elsewhere. 

    The story is overdone, and severely dated. Sinclair was annoyed he missed a Nobel for this, but I agree with the Nobel people. 

  • Smith, Hedrick
  • *** 
    NonFic
    The Russians 
    Smith was the Moscow bureau chief for the New York Times, and this is an explanation of how things really worked in Russia in the 70s. The style is pure expository - like a long article. I suppose the whole thing is dated such that this is historical. I've heard that a sequel is out, but it seems you could only keep up with today's Russia with a monthly. 

    There's a new one out called The New Russians but I haven't checked it out yet. 

  • Smullyan, Raymond
  • *** 
    NonFic
    What is the Name of this Book? 
    A book on logic and logic puzzles by a well-known Professor. 
  • Sobel, Dava
  • **** 
    Hist
    Bio
    Longitude 
    This is the story of John Harrison, who dedicated his life to solving (and solved) the scientific question of his age - finding longitude at sea. In doing so, Harrison made several fundamental technological leaps and devised many landmark inventions. To win British Parliament's enormous prize, however, technical prowess seemed less important than navigating the political waters of the jealous power brokers of the day. 

    This short, easy-to-read history is a gem. 

  • Steinbeck, John
  • Steinbeck's stories are about people and how they deal with each other. They almost all take place somewhere near the Salinas Valley in California, in the early 20th century. 
    ***** 
    Fiction
    Cannery Row 
    Cannery Row was a seedy part of Monterrey, CA. This is a book of characters who live there (most ne-er do wells) and how they relate to each other. The book is very short and the style is very simple, almost elegant. There is almost a complete lack of tone, which is oddly inviting. 
    ** Fiction East of Eden 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Novella
    Of Mice and Men 
    Short, harsh, tale of reality. Lenny is the big lovable stupid ox and George is his thinking, caring friend. They struggle through life always dreaming of better times, which don't come. Life isn't fair, and sometimes doing the Right Thing is hard, and in real life, being noble just slides on by. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Sweet Thursday 
    Sequel to Cannery Row. The character development isn't as good, but the story content and character interactions are better. (In Cannery Row, the story itself isn't very important.) 
  • Stevenson, Robert Louis
  • *** 
    Fiction
    The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde 
    The well-known tale of the scientist who invents a formula which turns him into a monster, and what he does about it. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Kidnapped 
    This is a more adult book, and the heroes are quite real and likable, but the story itself is a bit slow and the Scottish dialog a bit tiring. It's 1750's, Scotland, and we get a view of life in that place in those times. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Treasure Island 
    Adventure story suitable for youngsters. Pirates, ships, swashbuckling, Long John Silver, intrigue, the works. Light and short. 
  • Stoker, Bram
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Dracula 
    The original. Dated, to me. 
  • Stone, Irving
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Bio
    The Agony and the Ecstasy 
    Fictional biography of Michelangelo. Denies his homosexuality, deals with his important creations, avoids all controversy. This needed to be written, but I wish Stone had been more honest, or straightforward. His protectionism puts a veneer over the whole thing and makes it too unreal. 
  • Tan, Amy
  • **** 
    Fiction
    The Joy Luck Club 
    Four Chinese mother-and-daughter pairs in San Francisco, their interactions, hopes, fears, jealousies, joys. Very very well done. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    The Kitchen God's Wife 
    Nowhere near as good as Joy Luck
  • Thompson, Hunter S.
  • *** 
    Hist
    NonFic
    Hell's Angels 
    This is a good read and a great snapshot of a part of 60's Americana. 

    A young Thompson hangs out with Hell's Angels back when they were new and untethered. He encounters very rough stuff and writes fairly straight stuff about it. Thompson can sling it with the best of them, but here he hasn't really gone overboard yet. 

    ** 
    NonFic
    Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas 
    Wild drugs, wilder behavior, complete absence of control in Las Vegas. Much of this is invented tripe, but this is definitive gonzo journalism. If you want to know who is Hunter Thompson, or who is Duke in Doonesbury, this is the one to read. 
  • Thoreau
  • *** 
    Phil
    Civil Disobedience 
    ***  Walden 
  • Thucidydes
  • *** 
    Hist
    The Pelopponesian War 
  • Tolkien
  • Pretty much the granddaddy of fantasy. Elves, Ogres, Wizards, Drawfs, Trolls, the works; even a genuine Dragon. Lots of magic. The made really bad movies out of these books. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    The Hobbit 
    Furry small manlike critter (Hobbit) is shorter than elegant elf, more refined than blue-collar drawf, distict from large number of other kinds of "people" you'd find in such places. Hobbit likes to sit at home in front of a comfortable fire, yet ends up running all around Middle Earth having terribly exciting adventures and being the accidental hero. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    The Lord of the Rings 
    Trilogy continues from The Hobbit. Our hero goes on a much bigger adventure this time, intent on the moral equivalent of saving the world. Involves original cast and much more, and expands the landscape considerably. 
  • Trevanian
  • *** 
    Fiction
    The Eiger Sanction 
    Another spy book, known for the movie with Clint Eastwood. Our hero, the retired assassin, has to find/kill the bad guy, conquer the mountain (and the women), and go back to being a good guy. Remarkably, the movie may be better than the book. 
    ** 
    Fiction
    Shibumi 
    A spy book a la Ludlum. Mostly fair, but some very memorable parts, especially the section on Volvo-bashing. 
  • Twain, Mark
  • **** 
    Fiction
    Huckleberry Finn 
    Fun and frolic with an all-boy kid in a small town in mid 19th-century USA. A classic, and deservedly so. 
    ***** 
    Fiction
    Prince and the Pauper 
    Another attack on prejudice, Twain has a pauper show up at Buckingham Palace who is a dead ringer for Edward, Prince of Wales, Henry VIII's son. They get switched. Edward is treated like a dog, and the pauper is treated like royalty, and we see that both are silly. Henry dies, the pauper is about to be crowned Edward VI, and it all comes together. A good tale told well. Even without the moral, this is Twain's best, IMHO. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Tom Sawyer 
    See Huck Finn, above. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court 
    Modern (late 1800s) man somehow ends up in King Arthur's Court. His knowledge of science and engineering should make him the most powerful man of the times, but there's this nasty concept of nobility and birth and stuff always getting in the way. How could we possibly put you (or your best students) in charge, when men of higher birth are all over the place? This is a criticism of prejudice hidden in an interesting concept and quality writing. 
  • Tzu, Sun
  • **** 
    Phil
    The Art of War 
    Sun Tzu was this old Chinese strategic genius. Absolutely nobody who is anybody in China or Japan (and practically nobody in the West) is ignorant of Sun Tzu. His tenet is something like "the battle is won or lost before the fighting begins" based mostly on planning and understanding your adversary, and having honest assessments of them and yourself. This short ancient classic is frighteningly relevant today. Better than, but see also The Book of Five Rings
  • Van Gulik
  • Van Gulik was a Dutch diplomat who liked 18th century popular Chinese detective novels. He chose Judge Dee, a real but legendary magistrate from about a thousand years earlier as his chief good-guy. These period pieces all involve detective storytelling in the older Chinese style. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Dee Goong An 
    This book is longer than most (they're all short) and relfects van Gulik's talent in a slightly raw state. BTW I think most of this work is gone over in the others. It's the only such case. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Chinese Mysteries 
    aka (various titles) 
    The mysteries are fine, but I'm not really a mystery buff - I like these for the storytelling and the period/culture work. If you don't like one, don't try the rest - they're pretty similar. 

    My recommendation: don't read them all at once. Save them and spread them out - and read them in chronological order. 

  • Verne, Jules
  • Verne is considered by most to be the father of Science Fiction. He wrote in the 19th century. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Travel
    Around the World in 80 Days 
    Phileas Fogg bets his clubfellows he can circumnavigate the globe in 80 days. He sets out with his valet Passepartout and cross oceans and continents via every conveyance imaginable, facing all sorts of hurdles and delays. Meanwhile he's being chased by a detective who thinks he's a bank robber. A classic adventure. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    SciFi
    20,000 Leagues Under the Sea 
    Science Fiction from 1870. A fantastic submarine, Nautilus, commanded by mad and villainous Captain Nemo, goes on an underwater odyssey. We face exotic sea monsters, strange sights, and adventure galore. 
  • Voltaire
  • ***** 
    Fiction
    Novella
    Candide 
    Very short, very funny, very very good tale about Candide, a young gentleman of Voltaire's time who bops about the globe getting into all sorts of horrible trouble, having to escape, and always saying "well, it's for the best." This is satire trying to convince people: it's not always for the best, please stop using that wimpy way out and take responsibility for making things better. 
  • Vonnegut, Kurt
  • I think I must have read Vonnegut when I was too young - I really didn't like him much, but I keep telling myself to try him again. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Slaughterhouse Five 
    This is a strange novel on the horror of war. It delivers a strong message, but to me that's its only really strong point. 
    *** 
    SciFi
    The Sirens of Titan 
    Social commentary set amidst interplanetary revolution and intrigue. 
  • Wilde, Oscar
  • **** 
    Fiction
    The Picture of Dorian Gray 
    A man makes a deal with the devil in which he remains forever young, but the image of him in his portrait ages as the man should. Guess what? Deals with the devil don't work out. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Play
    An Ideal Husband 
    British social comedy from near 1900. A very good play, but I'm not very happy merely reading plays. 
  • Wodehouse, P.G.
  • P.G. Wodehouse was an extremely prolific writer of very English comedy. Most of his stories are period pieces as well. He is most famopus for Jeeves and Wooseter, but I also like his short stories, his school stories, and the random doings of various Britons in the early 20th century. 

    There is nobody quite like Wodehouse. Give him a try. 

    **** 
    Fiction
    Blandings 
    Blandings refers to a bunch of stories and novels which are set at Blandings Castle with mostly the same set of characters. Wodehouse settled into a crowd here; I find these stories good but seldom of his best. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    Etc 
    There are scores or hundreds of Wodehouse books. Go check out the Wodehouse shelf at any good bookstore and see. If you do a search on Wodehouse at Amazon's search page, you'll get pages of entries, 100 entries per page. 
    ***** 
    Fiction
    Jeeves 
    Jeeves and Wooster are paired up in many short stories and novels. Jeeves is the perfect butler who is also a genius as well as an infallible judge of people and character. He furthermore seems to posess a crystal ball or some such. Bertie Wooster is a not-so-bright member of the aristocracy. He and his idly rich buddies (from the Drones Club, usually) are constantly in trouble, trying to avoid marriage, or somehow or other in perpetual need of Jeeves saving assistance. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Shorts
    Mulliner 
    Mr. Mulliner has countless relatives, all of whom seem to have zany lives full of merry mix-ups. Mr. Mulliner tells you about them. 
    **** 
    Fiction
    School Stories 
    Wodehouse's early writings were about a few boys at English public schools. There are The Pothunters, The Gold Bat, Mike at Wrykyn, and we might as well include any story with Psmith in it. 

    The comedy is more subtle but the human angles more true. I liked all of these. 

  • Xueqin, Cao
  • See my note on Chinese classics 
    *** 
    Fiction
    The Dream of the Red Mansions 
    aka The Story of the Stone
    aka A Dream of the Red Chamber
    aka (or some perturbation thereof) 
    One of the all-time great Chinese classics, this is like Chinese Shakespeare. You have two very wealthy and powerful families living in splendor in the capital. They appear to have it all in a very sophisticated and rich culture. No struggles for survival here - the daily grind is manners, style, subtle inclinations, peaks of ecstasy and oceans of tears over incomprehensibly irrelevant minutae - the struggles of the very rich. 

    The story involves tons of Chinese period detail which is nice. You see again that times and places are different, but people aren't, via star-crossed lovers, family politics, successes and failures, hopes realized and dashed, and lots of dialog and personal interactions. In short, there are about a dozen tear-jerker movies in here. 

    This story is very long. (Penguin does this in five paperback volumes.) You can do very well to get an abridgement. This will give you the story and more than enough detail. Remember that, as Shakespeare's characters come primarily from the most upper classes, so do these, and you get the same sort of limited view. But so what. 

  • Yoshimoto, Banana
  • *** 
    Fiction
    Novella
    Kitchen 
    A nice simple story of emotions and interactions. It's short, maybe a novella. Young woman lives her life in Tokyo. There's a lot of the emotions of death and loneliness and what draws people together. The translation is evident - nowhere near as seamless as Birnbaum's treatment of Murakami's books, for example - but it doesn't really ruin things. 

    Ms. Yoshimoto released this at age 24 and was immediately covered with accolades in Japan. The volume I have has three pages of rave comments from English sources. I dunno. It was quite good, but not earth-shaking. Probably really good marketing. 

    *** 
    Fiction
    Shorts
    Lizard 
    Short stories, same genre, but a bit more diverse than the other stuff from Banana. A good place to start if you don't know her work... I probably liked this more than the other two books. 
    *** 
    Fiction
    Novella
    N.P. 
    Well, Banana has improved. Here is another novella of personal relationships among broken or unusual family situations and plenty of death or expected death. And, again, her heroine is happy in such situations. The tale here is pretty weak, but you're not supposed to care - it's just a vehicle for a stream of mood and thoughts. This is pulled off pretty well. Also, the translation is better than Kitchen's, which helps a bit. 
  • Yoshioka
  • **** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Musashi 
    Musashi was Japan's most famous samurai swordsman, from the time of Bushido. He is legendary in Japan for a large number of exploits. This book (or series of five if you get the paperbacks) is a telling of the (legendary) biography. It is authentically Japanese, and makes a dramatic contrast to Clavell's Shogun. (The timeframes overlap; Musashi actually fought (losing side) at the battle of Sekigahara, which ends Shogun.) If there's a better samurai story, I don't know of it, and the Musashi legend is as good as any western. 

    This reads fast and fun. The writing is fairly plain (very well could be the translation) but the story is so good, it just doesn't matter. Give this a go. 

    Note Musashi himself wrote a book on strategy, called Book of Five Rings

    *** 
    Fiction
    Hist
    Taiko 
    This is another semi-biography, semi-fictional account. Taiko was the ugly peasant who rose through the Japanese aristocracy and temporarily unified Japan through guile, intelligence, wit, and courage. 

    This book is not as compelling to the westerner as Musashi. It is good, but it's length and detail get to be a bit much. Read it if you have interest in the topic, but not if you expect it to suck you in from an ignorant stance. 

  • Zukav
  • * 
    NonFic
    The Dancing Wu Li Masters 
    This is an account of a physicists' conference which apparently included much new-age thinking or style. Not horrible, but not much there there.