Saturday, July 16, 2022
The Church of Baseball: The Making of Bull Durham
Friday, June 24, 2022
A Prayer for the City by Buzz Bissinger
In addition to the specifics of what was happening in Philadelphia, there is an analysis of the state of the American city, the flight to the suburbs and all the implications of the loss of manufacturing jobs and how that had vast implications for social conditions and the consequences that were involved. This is woven into the larger picture of the Clinton era and how this affected many people.
This is also told from the perspective of many people, not just the mayor, but average people, some who worked for the city, inner city residents of various socio-economic backgrounds, professions from lawyers to clergy to long shoremen.
Friday, June 10, 2022
The Palace Papers
But Tina Brown is an excellent writer, and I was at times amazed by her vocabulary. This does not happen often with modern writers. In all I was really left with the 'what happens after she is gone', which is a major theme of the book.
Friday, May 6, 2022
In the Hurricane’s Eye
There is a lot in the book about the relationship between the French and Americans. At least according to this author, without the French we never would have won the revolution, but mostly they fought since they were under orders, they really thought us a bunch of backwoods hicks. Which is probably not too far off.
Wednesday, April 20, 2022
It Was Vulgar and It Was Beautiful How AIDS Activists Used Art to Fight a Pandemic by Jack Lowery
The second half bogs down as the story just starts to document who was fighting with whom and who was dating who and the story, as with the people, lose their edge. But all in all an original way to look at activists. There is some information about earlier activists movement like the civil rights movement and Vietnam war protesting, and movements that came later like Occupy Wall Street and Me Too.
Friday, April 15, 2022
Riverman by Ben McGrath
Saturday, April 2, 2022
Ways and Means
Not having any knowledge of this subject, I found the first part of the book fascinating as it is described how Chase and Lincoln tried to figure out how to finance the growing civil war. The author does a great job of comparing the financing of the Union, with that of the Confederacy. This goes to the funamental differences of the Union being a centralized government of the states, and the confederacy being a collection of states with a weak central government. According to the author it was really the Civil War that created the country that is now the US, and solidified the national government as an entity that would influence all aspects of life.
One of the many aspects that is described is the liberation of the slaves and what their fate would be. The author anchors all aspects of this book with the impacts of the economics involved.
The book does get bogged down in some of the details of various aspects, as he tracks the entire path of the civil war. Railroads play prominently in this narrative and the expansion of the US. Lincoln's interest in the railroads goes back to his days as a lawyer, and he was instrumental in making sure the Union Pacific railroad was established to make the US a two ocean country. One sad aspect is the idea that Lincoln wanted to move to California after leaving the presidency.