Category: Book Reviews

The Gulag Archipelago

The Gulag Archipelago: 1918 – 1956 by Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn, authorized abridgement with a new introduction by Edward E. Ericson, Jr., 4/5

Only post-apocalyptic fantasy novels could come close to the otherworldly horror that Solzhenitsyn writes about.  This is the kind of work that inspires both thankfulness and watchfulness in the reader – there is something chilling but deeply relatable about the outrageous, disbelieving silence that surrounded the ongoing atrocity of the Russian prison camps.  Despite the language barrier, grim subject matter and frequent use of sarcasm, the whole work is suffused with gentleness, humanity, depth and insight, the product of a spirit made beautiful through the tempering of much suffering.  I feel the need to read the complete, 3-volume work, since the abridgment felt awkward and cut out an extremely impactful section that I remembered from a previous encounter with a different version of the book, leading me to wonder what else has been sacrificed to the short attention span of the Westerner.

The Apollo Adventure

The Apollo Adventure: The Making of the Apollo Space Program and the Movie Apollo 13 by Jeffrey Kluger, 3/5

I expected this book to focus on the Apollo 13 incident and the making of the movie, so I was disappointed that Kluger spent most of it discussing less interesting (though undeniably historical) Apollo missions.  There was an absolute minimum of entertaining anecdotes sprinkled throughout, and hardly any insightful  info about the making of the movie.  I felt that, in an honest attempt to avoid retreading ground already covered in his book Apollo 13, Kluger stoops to using filler material and milking the franchise.

Mogworld

Mogworld by Yahtzee Croshaw, 5/5

A hilarious and well-crafted story, but somewhat tiresome in its unrelenting hatred and mockery of organized religion (though I must admit, I did chuckle at Croshaw taking the piss out of SDAism with his “Seventh Day Advent Hedge Devolutionists”).  Overall, the tone reminded me a lot of Terry Pratchett’s writing, but was more adult, less satirical and with fewer funny bits.  Nonetheless, I am looking forward to reading Croshaw’s next novel, Jam.

The Art of Raising a Puppy

The Art of Raising a Puppy by The Monks of New Skete, 3/5

Perhaps I’m just a bit jaded from reading two other puppy books, but I felt this one could have been a little more practical and a little less touchy-feely

For the Love of Physics

For the Love of Physics: From the End of the Rainbow to the Edge of Time – A Journey Through the Wonders of Physics by Walter Lewin, 5/5

This is a simple and delightful presentation of a variety of basic physics concepts.  I think every field of study needs a Walter Lewin – someone brilliant, positive and passionate, who is equally skilled both in his own field and as a teacher.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Traffic

Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do (and What It Says About Us) by Tom Vanderbilt, 2/5

To put it bluntly, this book has no point.  The topic is interesting enough to sustain the first half tolerably well, but overall, it reads like a research paper whose author had a great brainstorm in the shower but subsequently forgot to form a thesis.  This means that, while many individual issues are addressed, no meaningful connections are made between them, leading to lots of cognitive dissonance (such as when one chapter’s claims clash with the evidence provided by the next chapter).  Mutant statistics are a concern, as Vanderbilt has no problem with drawing his own conclusions from complicated studies and statistics, though he is in no way qualified to do so.

Though the excessive end notes take up 1/4 of the book, unsourced claims still slip through.  Some are absolutely ridiculous, such as “We do not let children walk to school even though driving in a car presents a greater hazard” (275).

One last issue that I feel deserves mention: Vanderbilt states that, since traffic accidents kill more people than 9-11 did,  Americans are inconsistent for submitting to increased anti-terrorism measures while resisting increased traffic safety measures.  I found this to be an incredibly (almost unbelievably) tasteless, offensive and illogical statement.  Surely Vanderbilt is aware that traffic laws affect more people’s lives more directly and often than anti-terrorism procedures do.  Surely it is obvious that there are a multitude of logical reasons why people would be willing to accept, for example, increased airport security, but traffic changes he suggests, such as lowering the speed limit (Vanderbilt later praises Bermuda for its 22mph, island-wide speed limit) and installing more red-light cameras (whose expense and efficiency are controversial) might be unsuited for nation-wide institution and require more discussion.

Rotting in the Bangkok Hilton

Rotting in the Bangkok Hilton: The Gruesome True Story of a Man Who Survived Thailand’s Deadliest Prison by T.M. Hoy, 4/5

This was much better written and less sensationalistic than the title (and especially, subtitle) led me to expect.  It was unusual in that it was not at all biographical or agenda-driven, but consisted of a short selection of powerful and insightful essays focusing on specific happenings, individual people the author encountered and aspects of prison life.

What the Hell are You Doing?

What the Hell are You Doing? The Essential David Shrigley by David Shrigley, 5/5

Shrigley’s cartoons are like nothing else I’ve ever seen.  There is an otherworldliness to their intrinsic funniness; they somehow had me laughing out loud almost before I could process the content on the page.  In many of them, it is the things suggested or left completely unsaid that are the funniest.  However, Shrigley’s surreal morbidness is not for everyone and I would love to meet some people who didn’t “get” it and just stare at them for a while.

Tracking the Chupacabra

Tracking the Chupacabra by Benjamin Radford, 3/5

Basically, Chupacabras don’t exist, but I wish they did so they could drain the blood of all the incredibly stupid people who believe that they do.