Another last Friday of the month and another scramble to present ourselves as citizens of the world: growing intellectually and emotionally by exposing ourselves to the ideas and experiences of others to better understand that which exists outside of ourselves and empathize with those who think, feel and live differently than we do…and also a lot of genre fiction, mostly because of Brett.
SP
So I picked up Dark Matter and the Dinosaurs: The Astounding Interconnectedness of the Universe by Lisa Randall. With a title and subtitle like that, one might think this is going to contain groundbreaking research. This is, after all, written by someone who, “studies theoretical particle physics and cosmology at Harvard University.”
Well, here is what the author says just two pages in: “This book explores a speculative scenario in which my collaborators and I suggest that dark matter might ultimately (and indirectly) have been responsible for the extinction of the dinosaur.”
You know WHO ELSE had collaborators!
OMWC
Unpacking our books, I ran across one I hadn’t read in decades, Carl Sagan’s The Demon-Haunted World: Science As A Candle In The Dark. In theory, this is a book about critical thinking, examining people’s beliefs regarding alien abductions, faith healing, ESP, spirit mediums, “recovered memory” as part of the Satanic Panic of that time, and many more. Sagan’s continuing theme is that we do not educate our kids well enough for them to develop an effective bullshit filter, and that they don’t learn science properly, it being taught as a collection of facts rather than as a process of arriving at truth (or at least a better approximation of truth). There’s a lot of good stuff packed in there, but it’s difficult to resist yelling and throwing the book across the room since it assumes that teaching must be done by government schools staffed by highly paid government indoctrinators. If only he had examined THAT assumption critically… Lot of gratuitous swiping at religion, much of it deserved, much of it just for effect and moral preening. And somehow, he skims over the evil Janet Reno’s role in sending innocent parents and teachers to jail for secret child sex rituals. Bleh. Read James Randi’s Flim Flam instead.
Twenty years ago, when Food Network was actually about cooking and teaching, there was a wonderful show called Taste, hosted by David Rosengarten. Each week, Rosengarten would take a single ingredient, teach about it, and demonstrate several dishes to feature it. It was stark, simple, no bullshit, and a delight to watch if you were serious about upping your cooking game. I bought his Dean & Deluca Cookbook, and it rapidly became of one of my go-to books when tackling something new. Something bad must have happened because Taste vanished without a trace. Rosengarten hasn’t, though, and I have been reading It’s All American Food for pleasure and to get ideas on things to cook and how to cook them. Like me, it’s divided into two main sections, the first being American takes on ethnic cuisines (where we twist, bend, and blend dishes into something unrecognizable to its native land, but somehow even more delicious because of the mixing of influences- appropriation, if you will), and the second being regional American cuisines, a concept foreign to non-Americans, who generally don’t understand the rich variety of our geographically diverse foods and cooking methods. Well fuck those Euro-weenie snobs, America is a food paradise, and this book is a celebration of that.
jesse.in.mb
Morieux and Tollman – Six Simple Rules: How to Manage Complexiy without Getting Complicated: Part of my friend’s “Ha, you’re in charge of people…well, let’s fix you” series. Six Simple Rules is short but dense and occasionally feels obtuse, but the ideas that landed have provided immediate paths forward for problems I’d thought were intractable. I see myself referencing the concluding chapter and the rule summaries repeatedly while I struggle through the implications of some of the denser sections.
Patterson, Grenny, McMillan, Switzler – Crucial Conversations I have mixed feelings about this one. It starts off overly self-helpy and frequently praises its own efficacy as part of the way it describes thinking about how you enter into necessarily intense conversations with others. I probably would not have read it if my friend (who has trained with this group professionally) had not pushed it as hard as she did (still trying to fix me), but I’m also glad that I did. It’s helped me avoid the Scylla and Charybdis of saying nothing to avoid conflict and being pushy when I think I’m right in both my personal and professional life and I’ve passed it on to a few friends and coworkers where appropriate. (I was almost done with this one last month but not quite there).
Recipes for the Cuisinart: Food Processor by James Beard: So I was trying to track down a brioche loaf recipe that I used to make when I first started baking. Everything goes in the food processor, rise, punch down, shape into a loaf and let it rise again. Apparently this recipe was ultimately James Beard’s fault from a midcentury cookbooks put out by Cuisinart. I had to have it. While I was messing around on this front I also picked up America’s Test Kitchen – Food Processor Perfection. I’d recommend the latter over the former although the recipes look solid in the Beard one, they’re also largely midcentury. The best bit was Beard takes a bunch of standard recipes and shows how the device can be more effectively used to speed it up rather than following the recipe as linearly. The ATK one seemed a bit obvious until I started hitting how to effectively slice and grind meat. The BF and I have done bulgogi from thinly shaved tritip, meatballs from short ribs and flap meat and a chuck roast lasagna that have each been spectacular. The food processor managed to steal precious counter space from the Kitchenaid this month.
Kevin Panetta (author) and Savanna Ganucheau (Illustrator) – Bloom: Cute gay bildungsroman centered on a family bakery in a small east coast town.
JW
Genji Monogatari by Murasaki Shikibu. Riven promised tentacles and busty women in school uniforms, but this is just an erudite exploration of the psychology of characters who are both alien in their setting, but contemporary and fresh in the way that the author addresses them as fully realized players in their world. While I’d conten-Oh! Beach volleyball. Later gators.
SugarFree
I read a lot of things here and there this month, but the highlight was definitely Charlotte Roche’s Wetlands, a novel that contains all the fluids a body can produce, and in excessive amounts. Either a brilliant dissection of the constraints patriarchy places of women’s bodies or a disgusto-porn novel put out by a respectable publisher, it is a pretty wild ride; Walt Whitman taken to the logical extreme:
Having pried through the strata, analyzed to a hair, counsel’d with
doctors and calculated close,
I find no sweeter fat than sticks to my own bones.
Riven
Well, I didn’t manage to get to the books I said I’d hoped to read this month in our last “What Are We Reading.” Wah wah. But it was tax season! And my birthday! And other excuses! Also, I had some personality conflicts at work, which I complained about at length to jesse.in.mb. He said he had been reading this one book, and it had been really helpful for him. So, I also have been reading Crucial Conversations. I have not yet finished it but I’ve tried to using some of the things I have read about at work, and it has been massively helpful. I agree with jesse.in.mb’s thinking above: pretty self-helpy and self-congratulatory so far. I am hoping to actually finish it in May, but even if I don’t, I’m pleased with what I have taken away from it up to this point.
Can you believe JW believed me? I’m always promising tentacles and busty women in school uniforms–you’d think he would have learned by now.
mexican sharpshooter
This month the best book I read was about a cat named Pete, or Pete the Cat if you will. Today he made a big lunch. Most people think Pete is a child–he’s not. He’s a total stoner and if you need proof, here is a photo of the stoned kitty.
Now Pete was hungry for lunch, and he discovered the sandwich he made was far too large for even Pete with the munchies. He just kept adding things between two slices of bread until he realized he just had a giant stack of food between two pieces of bread.
So he invited a couple buddies over, and they each got a piece of the sandwich.
Still working my way through the new European Medical Devices Regulation.
2.7.1 Rev 4? It’s coming down like a guillotine on medical device companies.
It’s gonna hurt, yeah.
Read that as European Medieval Devices Regulation, which made sense until the last word.
Prelude to Foundation Asimov I got like 90% of the way done before my library loan expired a few months ago. Finished it this month. Recommended.
White Fang Jack London He is a good doge. Recommended.
Protector Larry Niven I asked in an afternoon thread why this is a popular book but I don’t like it. Someone said it is Good Science, Bad Fiction because I thought that all the people where interchangeable automata. I think that’s right. Not Recommended.
Atomic Habits James Clear Fuck. I thought this was a popular-science book about human behavior. Nope, its self-help shit. There are a few good ideas surrounded by Shit Basic Bitches Like like quotes from Dale Carnegie or whatever. Not Recommended.
Wizard of Oz L Frank Baum This is a competent children’s story with no underlying morality or meaning. Maybe nice for normies, but in the world with CS Lewis, Ursula K Le Guin, and Madeleine L’Engle who each 1) wrote better stories and 2) did so with human depth and moral gravity, I can’t find anything good to say about this book and I can’t be rousted to say anything bad. It is the literary equivalent of a celery stick. Not Recommended.
The Memory of Earth by Noted Shitlord Orson Scot Card Speaking of human depth and moral gravity wrapped up in a well-written story, this one is one of those. It is supposedly a sci-fi retelling of the Book of Mormon, which I can’t speak to. In fact, I was having dinner with two close friends’ families, both families Mormon, both families go through 100+ books a year with lots of genre gutter trash in their reading list, and they never read this one either. Which we all agree is weird. But in any case, if you are familiar with the Old Testament, that’s all the background you need. It’s a great book. It has all the wife coveting, betrayal, and short-sighted stupidity that really bring a family drama together. Recommended.
Currently Reading Galaxy’s Edge Part 5 aka Part 9 aka Retribution by Jason Anspach and Nick Cole Amazon tells me this is the “exciting conclusion of Galaxy’s Edge Season One.” I’m like 66% of the way done and it doesn’t feel like any kind of conclusion is on the way. We’ll see.
It is the literary equivalent of a celery stick.
I am so stealing that.
For your audio reviews – “It is the sonic (or maybe ‘electronic’) equivalent of a celery stick”
I really enjoyed the Homecoming series as a teenager. I heard about the Mormon connection later, but it didn’t come across in the text. (At least, not for someone who didn’t know to look for it/what to look for.)
The Homecoming series is really just part of the story that’s in The Book of Mormon written in modern English with a sci-fi setting. I haven’t read it in a while, but I remember it being pretty good.
Niven has a tendency to focus more on place development than character development. Destiny’s Road is a good example. It is more of a bizarre travelogue. I get the style, others dont.
I kind of agree on the 2nd half of Protector, but the first half is amazing, IMO.
You (and Carl) will be glad to know that this is changing. The vogue now is to teach the scientific method and critical thinking, and leave the trivia for reading class. My son was able to assemble, test, and reject a hypotheses in 3rd grade, but didn’t know what the “water cycle” was or what the “core/mantle/crust” was. My conversations with a bunch of high-school teachers says that this is the direction of scientific education these days.
Not so for my high school age son. It’s disconnected facts and political indoctrination. The last homework assignment we worked on together, he was supposed to put together an “eco-cookie,” following the assignment directions.
That is pathetic.
That’s too bad.
My son’s science class only runs about half the school year, but its all scientific method, all the time.
He spends about 1/3 of every day on reading and 1/3 on math. The reading often does double duty as social studies or science-trivia (he’s was always reading The Big Picture Book of 752 Fish That Will Fuck You Up or something like that a few years ago.) The last third rotates to various stuff like science, history, social studies, geography, etc.
The Big Picture Book of 752 Fish That Will Fuck You Up
I would like to read this book.
South Park has swallowed the Kool-Aid. They had a couple episodes in season 22 where they said Al Gore was right, and ManBearPig was real.
Too bad.
But (assuming they were really endorsing it) the plot thread ended with everyone realizing that no one would actually do what it would take to stop so they chose to just live with it.
Agreed, but they seemed to approach it without any skepticism, even while acknowledging Gore was wrong on pretty much all his predictions.
We’ve had enough Paul Erlichs doing “science”.
I’m still holding out hope that that last season was a big troll.
True. My wife did her PhD thesis on implementing constructivist pedagogy in elementary schools, focusing on STEM, and a lot of what she’s done since has been in that vein. There’s a big push to essentially train students to teach themselves, which I think is laudable. That’s not to say there isn’t value in learning facts, but I think the most important thing you can learn is _how_ to learn.
I’m on Goosebumps #12, getting closer to The Werewolf of Fever Swamp.
SOON
1970s penthouse forum letters. I never thought it’d be me reading this but…
Ah, the classics…
I managed to read a book this month! Not only that, but it was PAPER! (Prompted by jury duty and the admonition not to bring cell phones into the courthouse (FALSE).)
Dirty Jobs by Christopher Moore. It seemed vaguely like an homage to hospice workers as I was reading (they do God’s work), and I wasn’t surprised to find out in the acknowledgments that it kind of was.
Great book. His are kind of hit-or-miss, but overall I really like his humor.
And Minty Fresh is a terrific character.
I am jealous of his suit.
Yes, the humor makes up for the herky-jerkiness in some sections.
Try Coyote Blue and Fool. Both excellent.
Rereading “Explaining Postmodernism” by Hicks. Recommended as it helps elucidate the sometimes unfathomable insanity of the modern left.
This month the best book I read was about a cat named Pete, or Pete the Cat if you will.
Pete is one cool cat!!?
He’s the kitty in the middle.
I’d like a stoner cat.
I thought that was Cat Pierre?
I’m listening toMedieval Europe by Chris Wickham.
It’s a 10,000 foot view primer on the middle ages. It’s amazing how much more there was to it than torture, knights, plagues, and a domineering catholic church, as was taught in public school.
To me the most interesting thing is how much was going on and how much *wasn’t* lost. I remember so much emphasis on how much was lacking from the Roman Imperial era and how many things improved during the Renaissance, but not much focus (or interest, apparently) on everything that was happening in the Middle Ages. I don’t recall where I saw it but I read a quote from a historian to the effect that even the term “Renaissance” isn’t really accurate, because what’s usually meant by that is really just some interesting things that happened in a few Italian cities thanks to a whole hell of a lot of stuff that had been building and building throughout the Western world for hundreds of years. Like referring to the period before the iPhone 5 as the Dark Ages, as if we went from carrier pigeons and telegraphs to smart phones in a decade.
It’s interesting to hear about a lot of the experimentation that went on in relation to society and governance. In some places at some times, they were quite beholden to Roman laws and traditions. Sometimes they were extremely Christian and pious. Sometimes they were overtly corrupt.
The author makes a fairly tight connection between taxation and social progress, which I’m skeptical of. Granted, seizing land from the peasants and essentially enslaving them isn’t a better system.
I suppose if the Confederacy were to have freed the slaves but charged them an annual fee that would have been progress away from slavery, in a sense.
Thank you for the reminder of how little I get to read anymore… I used to fly through a book every three days, now, I haven’t cracked a page in over a year!
That’s where I’m at. I need to break my new non-reading habit but I just haven’t been able to. And I certainly won’t during the summer. Will have to try again next winter.
Lot’s of biz travel this month, including right now. So details are lacking on some decent reads that are at home. But:
“The Fall of Rome and the end of civilization” by Bryan Ward-Perkins. W-P takes his lectures at Oxford and expands and builds upon them. He is not of the school of “Rome didn’t fall it just peacefully became the Gaulic and Germanic micro-states.” He lays out that the empire did fall and the lives of people were worse because of it. A good read at only 183 pages.
“The Last Valley” on the battle of Dien Bien Phu and the defeat of the French in Indo-China. I finished this just a few days ago and wow it was fantastic. Well researched, amazingly presented and in sufficient detail to keep the interest of those well versed in military art and science. It may even replace Bernard Falls’s “Hell in a Very Small Place” as THE study of that campaign. Taken together you will have that bit of war well understood. Not fun fact: The Viet Minh took between 9-10,000 POW’s. When most of the Europeans were released 4 months later only 4000 were still alive. I recommend both books.
Several books on long range sailing and ocean navigation. Still might have a trip to Tahiti coming up.
There would have been more but the airline I flew out here had “Bohemian Rhapsody” and “The First Man” which killed my reading.
“Several books on long range sailing and ocean navigation. Still might have a trip to Tahiti coming up.”
How about New Orleans to Seattle via Panama… Sail out, sometime next week?
It’s finally spring, so of course I’ve been reading this quite extensively.
A good read, if a little dry (except where the Spitfire leaked on it, naturally).
Last month, The Hyperbole reminded us that Alistair Maclean wrote some good stuff, so I read The Way to Dusty Death (awesome), Night Without End (excellent), Ice Station Zebra (awesome), Bear Island (very good) and Athabasca (good). The final four were part of an “Arctic Chillers” Kindle compilation. He’s formulaic, sure, but it’s a damn good formula.
I also readThe Night Bird, by Brian Freeman. It’s a good story, well told. And free for Prime customers!
Finally I read a shit-ton of boring patents. *barf*
Taste, hosted by David Rosengarten
One of my favorite shows. I used to enjoy Food Network back when it was more about serious cooking.
Charlotte Roche’s Wetlands, a novel that contains all the fluids a body can produce, and in excessive amounts
– SugarFree
Why am I not surprised?
Hadn’t heard of it until now; the book sounds… interesting.
The author, OTOH, sounds like a tedious, radfem cliché.
It features that SF would recommend Wetlands. That shit is disgusting, dude. I’d read a few synopsis and saw it on the “Librarians recommend” shelf and just shuddered.
I recently was gifted an Instant Pot, so I have been perusing the Instant Pot Bible for recipes.
America’s Test Kitchen has a Pressure Cooker Perfection which helped get my stove-top pressure cooker into more regular rotation. They have additional notes for using “counter top electric models” or something. I had a bizarre interaction with my boyfriend when I found out he was buying chicken stock. “What, why? If you need more chicken stock… wait there’s still a bunch in the freezer.” “Oh I know, it’s too rich and flavorful, I’m watering it down with the store-bought.”
Thanks, I’ll have to check out Pressure Cooker Perfection, America’s Test Kitchen usually has pretty good recipes.
“Oh I know, it’s too rich and flavorful, I’m watering it down with the store-bought.”
Oh, dear God…
To be fair. I just thin mine out with water. I pressure cook chicken bits and veg for an hour on high (I think over 45 minutes is just gilding the lily, but I like to be thorough), and then strain it and cook it down to half the volume I started with. Freeze two cup containers and pack those away, and then the remainder goes in ice cube trays which can be thrown in the rice cooker or into dishes that don’t necessarily call for stock, but could do with a bump of flavor.
Ah, that does seem as though it would make a pretty concentrated stock. I did something similar with shrimp stock, but instead of freezing it I canned it in 1-pint Mason jars. I do have to dilute it in most uses.
“Oh I know, it’s too rich and flavorful, I’m watering it down with the store-bought.”
To be fair your super powerful chicken stock gives him a bad case of halitosis. No one likes talking to someone with bad cock broth.
*calls a fowl*
Sorry to go off topic… but, I went through and picked out some of the pictures from Viva Las Vegas from this past year. I did watch the video posted yesterday, and did not see myself in the background. I do remember that guy walking around filming though. If you want to look for me, I’m the guy in his 40’s with a beard, a hat, a bowling shirt, and sunglasses. That should narrow it down a bit.
Unfortunately, lighting and distance caused most of the Burlesque show pictures to be bad, and I wasn’t able to get any good pictures of the pin ups (we were grabbing a bite when they were mingling).
Cool photos, love the cars!
I did galactic bowling in that bowling alley.
Thanks, Neph!
Great pics – some of those hot rods are amazing!
There’s several for sale each year, some as low as $3,000 for a running classic. On the flight out, we met a guy who’s planning on driving his classic car to the show next year from Cleveland. And if you want some more detail, blighted_non_millenial linked this yesterday morning.
If I ever win the big lottery, I am going to have a car collection like Jay Leno.
What could be more American than a hot rod with four (four!) supercharged engines?
Yet it draws people from all over the world. And damn that beast was loud.
People from all over the world find America and American culture fascinating.
How opportune. I just got Sowell’s The Vision of the Anointed in the mail this morning.
You can still get actual real books in the mail? The kind that get bound? The kind you put on the coffee table? Hmm, I thought you just download that stuff to your reading tablet. Real books, how archaic, how quaint.
I actually prefer real books. I like the feel, the printed pages, etc.
Yup. Had a Kindle for awhile. Gave it away.
I like both, but since I do most of my reading at night in bed in the dark I find the Kindle Paperwhite with a backlight invaluable.
I like physically flipping back when I need to and the version I had was shit for footnotes and such.
That’s a fine book. I’ve given away several copies.
I’m not a book collector, read and pass on, I like Sowell, read 3-4 or more. Vision was one that I read, gave away. Only books I keep are reloading manuals, ’cause I could never remember all the tables.
I’ve been reading some of the stuff I find in Elder Scrolls online. Don’t have time to read books because I’m always either playing that game, walking, or molesting the wife. Except for when I’m on here shit posting with ya’ll shitlords. Except for work, I still have to do that much to my displeasure. Damn clients, can’t stand them, can’t shoot them.
Elder Scrolls Online? That’s still a thing?
Absolutely, and it’s a great game.
Gerry Spence’s “Police State”. First chapter is the take down of Randy Weaver and family. I’ve been sick to my stomach just reading that far. I think it gets far scarier as I get to the Davidians and more. We are truly living in scary times. Makes Noor’s trial seem like play time at a nursery school.
Fun trivia: when my stepson was charged with a totally bullshit “possession of a banned firearm,” Spence was the consulting attorney. Still alive, still sharp. Not only did the kid get off, the judge wrote a scathing opinion about the law.
The scary thing is that I took the “officials” at their word when that shit was going down. Hindsight is a bitch.
I was in that same camp with you, Festus. Too old too soon and smart too late.
Columbine by Dave Cullen.
What do you think about it? I was in high school when it happened, and I’m sure I don’t have a very clear picture of what went on then.
And by in high school, I mean I was a malcontent, trench coat and black clothing wearing, KMFDM blasting socially isolated malcontent when it happened.
It’s really good. Doesn’t turn it into a political screed, just reporting what happened and the facts and background. It’s fairly depressing, but you know how it ends.
I’d recommend.
Still working my way through the Dresden Files and Destroyermen series. Also reading stuff about Agile for boring work crap.
Agile: Business mangers caught on to our goldbricking, let’s figure out a way to blame them for being the bottleneck, while guilting our devs into regular overtime.
Sounds like it will come in handy when managing orphans at the factory.
OT: It’s so great that we sell these guys so much armament.
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/8926874/saudi-arabia-teenager-16-beheaded-protests-whatsapp/
They are also the purveyors of the radical Wahabbi Islamism that is at the root of most Islamic terrorism.
I’m a little over half way through How to Make Every Woman Love You by Hugh Jorgen.
So, only half the women love you?
The real question is if they will love him long time….
Or just leave when it’s convenient for him. (Pro-tip) You don’t get that from book learnin’.
I have almost finished (96% according to Kindle) with The Elven which was recommended last month. The style took my a bit to get into. It is cliched at points. And the short chapters reminds me of Dan Brown only not quite that bad.
I have downloaded Animal Farm (which I havent read in 35 years) and The Day the World Came to Town, about Gander, Newfoundland on 9/11. I have started it. I did not know that when built (1938) the Gander airport was the largest in the world.
I’m reading about idiots.
“Two days of action while Donald Trump spews his harmful rhetoric at the N.R.A. convention in Indianapolis. The purpose of this grand event is to bring awareness to the NRA that their policies and practices are not welcomed here in the city of Indianapolis,” the Facebook group announced. “This protest will cover 2 days and incorporate different tactics of protest.”
Oh, I’m sure. But I’d recommend you tread lightly on this one.
The group is planning to march from the statehouse to Lucas Stadium during Trump’s speech on Friday. “We are encouraging signage, banners, noisemakers to use. The Baby Trump balloon is going to be deployed on the 26th at a undisclosed location,” the group declared. “TBA please join us in decrying this unholy union between the Trump Pence regime and the juggernaut NRA.” The group plans to sell miniature “Baby Trump” balloons for five bucks each.
I still don’t get the baby Trump thing. Anyway, you mean to tell me that I have to pay for a miniature one if I want it? I thought capitalism was teh evul.
Protesting for days on end is so easy when you:
1. Don’t have a job or
2. Are being paid by a Soros front group
Normal people have real lives.
People with jobs can’t astroturf…
Those hookers and blow don’t come cheap even for a cult leader, Son.
“the NRA that their policies and practices are not welcomed here in the city of Indianapolis”
They’re still chasing that NRA strawman, I see.
Isn’t Indiana where Chicago gets all of their murder-guns?
This weekend I might get in to Hamilton’s Curse.
I finished “The Things They Carried” by Tim O’Brien for a book club. It was…interesting. I had a hard time getting into it, but several others in the club really liked it and mentioned that it was one of the must reads on the Vietnam War. I don’t know if I really want to know more.
“Conspiracy” by Ryan Holiday was a little more gripping. Dealing with the Hulk Hogan lawsuit against Gawker and the machinations behind it, it tried to paint Gawker and Nick Denton as being better than they were, or at least deserving of sympathy. I still think they deserved everything they got, or rather lost.
“The Things They Carried” by Tim O’Brien
I’ve probably read 50 books on VN but not that one. Hmmm
Been reading Epictetus’ Dissertations. Slow going but good stuff for a budding Stoic. For dessert, Gordon Dickson’s Dragon series. The Gordfather doesn’t disappoint.
I’ve mentioned this before, but don’t remember if it was to you, but Tom Wolfe’s A Man in Full is a good read. I believe OMWC has said it’s his favorite book.
Thanks, MO; I’ll put it on the list. Been awhile since I read any Wolfe.
A few different books on guitar finishing and general lutherie. It’s been 25+ years since I built one from the ground up, so I got a Chinese kit (actually really decent) clone of a ’59 Les Paul. Only hand tools on this one. It is turning out well, and I have a detailed pictorial build log going on. May be able to do an article on it if there is any interest.
Doooo Eeeeeet!
Consider me 1) interested and 2) unable to come up with a sufficiently subtle pun about wood, arousal, interest etc.
PBB working his wood arouses your interest?
And you would call this “sufficiently subtle?”
I don’t really do “subtle”.
Something something stroking the wood with sandpaper?
May be able to do an article on it if there is any interest.
Please do!
Link? I used to regularly play one of those (an original) and it was spectacularly good. And so beyond anything I could ever hope to afford.
OMWC, I’ve been hankering to build a 59 LP body, thinner so more carve, chambered with the Fender 25.5″ scale. ATX has tons of working musicians, and I can make a better guitar than Gibson’s custom shop for way less. It will cost me about a grand for the wood for neck and body blanks rough shaped and delivered to me. Scrimping and saving now. Totally bootstrapping this.
Want the article.
Want the chance to play it when you’re done.
If you decide to do something non-copy for the electronics end of it, ping me, that’s the end of things I know reasonably well.
Yeah, I did a David Gilmour black strat a few years ago, stayed with the rosewood fretboard and upgraded everything, Duncan ssl1 in neck and middle, salt bridge. Added the neck p/u switch etc.
Salt bridge = ssl5
Honduran mahogany and Brazilian rosewood be expensive. Grade 5 flame maple cap thick enough to carve be really expensive…
Ever consider Pau Ferro for the neck?
Sorry, for the fretboard
Yes, but I am waiting for the farm that my sister and I inherited last year to sell so I can pay off the mortgage in NC for her and my nieces, then Mrs Bum and I can buy a house toward Bastrop and I can set up a proper shop. Cheaper to buy it as lumber and bandsaw and plane it, and I’m without shop tools until then.
Please do. I would love to try that.
You can really build a nice, very playable instrument from the kits. Precision in Canadia has really top end bodies and necks, and has a CNC setup so you have very little prep. Setup cost for a custom design is spendy. The Chinese kits have decent to really good bodies and necks, but everything else re hardware is total shyte.
Not much reading lately. But I did revisit A Way to Get Wealth by Gervase Markham last night to redact a recipe for Ordinary Beer.
So no one is interested in medieval beer recipes.
Are you making and then pouring??
yes
I am, but then I was pulled into three needy tickets in a row. I’m still waiting on one of the people to get back to me to close it all out.
So you get three hogsheads of beer from a quarter of malt. And you use 1 1/2 pounds of hops for each quarter of malt. You do a single infusion mash with all the brewing water (no sparging in 17th century England). Drain the wort in to a big vat and then boil for an hour; put all the hops in at the beginning of the boil. Then transfer the wort to a cooling vat and let it drip into a fermentation vat overnight where the fermentation vat has a bowl of yeast in it. Ferment for a couple of days in the vat, then complete the fermentation in the barrels. You can also rinse the grains a second time with 1/3rd of the original volume of water to make a small beer. You also reuse the hops a second time when you boil the small beer.
Easy peasy.
So a quarter is 8 bushels which are 8 corn (dry) gallons where each corn gallon is 272 cubic inches (no that ain’t close to a US liquid gallon). The density of malted barley (loose) is 30 lbs per cubic foot. Do the math and it’s 302 lbs of malt.
And we’re making beer so we need a beer hogshead (54 beer gallons), not an ale hogshead (45 ale gallons), nor a wine hogshead (fuck I don’t remember). And a beer gallon is not equal to an ale gallon is not equal to a wine gallon. A beer gallon (288 cubic inches) is close to a modern imperial gallon and a wine gallon is basically the same as a US liquid gallon (amazing). At any rate, it’s about 265 US gallons into the fermenter.
So we have about 1.52 lbs of malt per gallon going into the fermentor.
As for pounds, hey it’s the same: both a modern pound and a medieval pound are 7000 grains (although there are a couple of other pounds used in other applications).
So we have about 0.122 oz of hops per falling into the fermentor.
Five gallons going into the fermentor uses 7.6 lbs of malt and .61 ounces of hops.
My brewing calculator says 3.8% ABV and 12 IBUs — an average ordinary session beer.
Gave my wife a copy of 1984, since she gives me blank looks when I mention contempory versions of the Two Minutes Hate and telescreens and whatnot.
Sitting unopened on her nightstand so far.
Tell her there’s a love story in it.
That ends tragically and the woman has a giant 1940’s bush.
Better yet, say there’s a story of forbidden love.
It’s a true statement.
Orwell wasn’t Diana Galbadon so she’s bound to be disappointed.
Maybe I’ll cut out the picture from the cover of a romance novel with the bare chested hunk holding the swooning maiden, and paste it on the cover of her 1984 copy.
Careful… I heard that is how so many lefties ended up reading it and thinking it was a “How to” manual….
Historical romance at this point
Finished Devil In The Grove recently.
Also, related to my above comments, I’ve been reading Dumb Energy by Norman Rogers. It’s useful, and well argued, but it seems like a self-published book that could have really used professional editing. Many of the points he makes are echoed in this Manhattan Institute article that was posted here yesterday or the day before. (Sorry, don’t remember who).
One thing that wasn’t mentioned in either source, (to my dismay) was that both wind and solar require large amounts of rare earth metals, which are almost entirely sourced from China. China is not a ‘green’ country, and has no problem dumping the (toxic) tailings from the mining operations in Inner Mongolia or Tibet.
But let’s not talk about that, right? GREEN NEW DEAL!
I’ve read crucial conversations over 10 years ago and took a training class based on it. Overall I still use a lot of the techniques. Some of it is too touchy freely for my liking, but there are good tips and approaches to use when dealing with conflict and resolution in the workplace.
One of the things I stress with my staff is being respectful and professional when interacting and discussing co-workers behaviors and their work. Always critique the work and not the person if possible and be sure to use the shit sandwich method when discussing a difficult subject.
Shit sandwich method: for a head strong and driven project manager that is asking his team to work an unreasonable amount of overtime on his project and has many team members pissed off about the extra work load.
The bread: Jane, you have been doing a great job organizing the new project and the team really respects and appreciates you leadership.
The Shit: I do have some concerns with the approach taken with defining the project schedule and deadlines. The schedule dates would require all of the team members to work 20 hours of overtime to ensure each phase is completed on time. This could lead to future conflicts with the team and likely a slip in the schedule if there are any unforeseen issues. How can you, and I and the team work together to make sure this doesn’t happen.
Discussion ensues with a focus on the resource problem and solving it, not just the negative feelings about the leader who is being a bit of a slave driver, from his team. Also discuss alternative methods of project planning and resource sharing with other groups for critical path tasks for example.
The Bread: I appreciate trying to get the project done as fast as possible using the resources we have, but we need to make sure our team members are not going to get burned out or make mistakes that could make the project delayed or fail. Your still on track, but lets get this issue addressed and make this project a success, so think about alternatives for the required overtime and my schedule concerns with your team, and we can review them next week. . Thanks a lot Jane.
Poor Jane…
OT: I’m guessing this had more to do with cocaine than sex.
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/columbian-woman-32-dies-after-14164649
Related:
https://www.foxnews.com/story/man-28-dies-after-guzzling-viagra-during-12-hour-romp
If you’ve gotta choose a way to go…
That was a C.S.I. plot device.
If you’re gonna die, die with your pants off.
Does it matter if you are the pitcher or the catcher? What if you are not a catcher but go while catching?
Paging Sam Kinison!
and your boots on?
Dealer’s choice.
I’ve been listening to Mises’ socialism.
OT:
If you have an hour, this Matt Kibbe interview of Thomas Massie is excellent.
He’s funny as hell.
Krugman was his Macro professor. Lol.
Wait until you get to the part about cattle.
Just got to “budget dust”, now I want to nuke a certain district city, based on the existence of that term alone.
I really enjoy that he is perfectly comfortable slamming the shit out of his co-workers. It is important to know how things actually happen out there.
His point about the constituents being the problem was an interesting one. Free shit demand is almost limitless.
Still reading The Bible–I’ve made it I think halfway through 1 Kings; they’re going on about Solomon building stuff, and I believe the Queen of Sheba just rolled into town.
Sefira and Other Betrayals by John Langan. I’m a big fan of his, although I still think his best work is The Wide Carnivorous Sky and Other Monstrous Geographies. Langan’s big thing is that he’s a horror author that writes a lot of literary stuff. He’s at his best when he pulls both off at the same time. Fairly often he’ll nail one or the other. Sometimes he’ll swing for both and miss, but that’s unusual. He’s easily one of my favorite horror authors.
De Rerum Natura by Lucretius. A long poem that apparently explains Epicureanism to the author’s patron in part to persuade him to not fear death. Fuzzy on the background, frankly, but it’s fascinating to see a contemporary of Caesar reasoning his way to fairly modern understandings of how stuff works based on even older ideas. It’s a good illustration of the fact that we’re certainly not smarter as a species than our ancient forebears.
“It’s a good illustration of the fact that we’re certainly not smarter as a species than our ancient forebears.”
Based on Twitter and Facebook, I think we must have been way smarter in the past, or we never would have survived until now.
>Still reading The Bible
I’ve been reading that book a little at a time every week for like the last two decades and I’m still not done yet.
I read that. They changed protagonists halfway through!
It was the sequel!
I feel like it jumped the shark when the author was like “What’s hot these days? Pirates? Cthulhu? No? Oh, it’s zombies this year?” and then they shoe-horned int this zombie plot line and I was like “WTF I just want to read about really muscly dudes and the cast-iron hotties that betray them.”
Oh, dude, they do this Rashomon thing at one point where they have four guys tell the same story, as if that hasn’t been done a million times. I don’t know, then there’s some weird like epistolary meta-narrative…it’s just kind of all over the place.
I did the “read in a year thing” multiple times. About two I made it thru, but it took about 1.5 years each time.
I’ve tried a few times, but I have yet to find a decent companion book/devo/commentary to get me through it. If I’m gonna read it cover to cover, it’s gonna result in 10 notebooks’ worth of impressions, interpretations, references, etc. I want to buy catena aurea and a few other similarly deep commentaries, and work from there.
I’m doing the NKJV with the idea of just doing a straight WYSIWYG read through and seeing what I come away with reading it as a novel and taking it more-or-less at face value. I’m pretty much content to handle analysis of some troublesome bits by searching DuckDuckGo with “Jacob is a dick” or “WTF Jepthah daughter God is an [unpleasant person]”.
I’m tempted to do it that way, just to hit the parts that I haven’t yet seen. I always feel a bit guilty reading it like a novel, because I don’t retain very much.
This is my first run through, and it’s honestly equal parts a desire to come away with a general sense of the thing and sort of a test to see if I come away with some sort of deeper religious feeling or spiritual insight afterwards. I’m approaching it as someone from a vaguely Christian background with a kind of vague idea that there’s more to all this than meets the eye and it may very well be God, and so I’m willing to be sold, but I need to be convinced. Also, of course, it’s a literary work as well as a religious text, and there’s a hell of a lot of Western culture that is inspired by the literal content of the thing.
I highly, HIGHLY, recommend doing this. I did this once when I was like 19 and again like 2 decades later, and I really got a lot out of it. I went in with the mindset that I was going to try to take away lessons and impressions like I was reading any other novel, and I really got a deeper appreciation for a number of aspects. My big three take aways:
1) Don’t be a dick. Yes, this is hard.
2) The state is bad, but it can’t do really bad shit without the support of the slope-browed basic bitches who don’t think.
3) A very long and convoluted interpretation where we (as all humanity) have a relationship with God that is very akin to the way that kids have an evolving relationship with their parent that changes as they age. Garden of Eden is infant-hood. Bad-old-fire-and-brimstone God is the parent of a toddler that has to enforce the rules with 0 deviation from the letter of the law. The New Covenant is like the coming of age, when we expect a kid to know *why* they right thing is the right thing, and the post-enlightenment is humanity in it’s I’m-a-19-year-old-Trotskyite-and-this-is-very-deep phase.
Strangely enough, I was explaining my interpretation of #3 with a friend at lunch today. Small world.
I’ve never made it through. Perhaps I will try this. Is there a version you like best?
The World English Bible – its Free as in the kind that doesn’t have copyright so you can load it up on your kindle or whatever and not have to pay for it. (Seriously, why would you translate the Bible and keep it under copyright?)
I’ve found the translation to be in line with my (rudimentary) understanding of linguistics, and its very readable. Its what I read out loud to my kids, and being a dyslexic, I have a very very hard time reading out loud. I was somehow once placed in both remedial reading and advanced at the same time in elementary school.
Thanks, Leap.
NIV is appropriate for the Lake Woebegone reading level crowd.
Actually, just saw a chart looking it up and NIV is higher up than I would have thought, its at 7-8 grade level.
Linky: https://keithferrin.com/favorite-bible-translations-reading-levels-major-translations/
The Old Testament can be a doozy coming from a moral background derived from the Enlightenment, humanism, even just a cursory kid’s Sunday School understanding of the New Testament, but I found a couple of interesting perspectives that have helped so far.
1. People have free will, and a lot of the Bible is meant as “history”, not a guide. God exists outside of time and knows what will happen, but doesn’t intervene in terms of human choice. So just because Samuel was chosen by God and then went on to be a shit doesn’t mean that his behavior was endorsed by God or anyone else, it’s just a record of things that happened. Going back to my Jepthah bit, just because he swore a stupid oath doesn’t mean God made him do it or even wanted him to.
2. There’s a lot of genocide, but there are also a lot of cultures in the early Biblical world who as an entire society seem to embrace really horrible things. Child sacrifice, for instance. Casual murder, rape, the works. When God orders the Israelites to whack an entire other tribe and take their land, the implication is that they’re killing off those ideas as well, preventing them from spreading. Yes, killing their children is cruel, but if the alternative is that those children perpetuate the values of that tribe in some fashion, then it’s a kill-Hitler-in-the-crib situation.
3. God’s big into covenants, and the biggest one is that he knows you’re going to fuck up and will punish you for it, but will also forgive you if you straighten up and fly right, without holding a grudge.
And to follow thru on the insult, NIV is my go to choice.
And if you are going to read on your phone/tablet/etc, get an app like Bible Gateway and switch versions around on the fly.
I think you meant Saul, not Samuel, that became a shit.
The OT Saul, not the NT Saul.
Well, the NT one was a shit too, but he turned it around with the name change thing.
I think I read it straight through once, this must have been around the time the movie 300 came out, because I thought the story of Sampson would be a great candidate for that style and thought about pitching it to some church group just so I could get some funding and make an actual feature length film.
Still reading The Bible–I’ve made it I think halfway through 1 Kings; they’re going on about Solomon building stuff, and I believe the Queen of Sheba just rolled into town.
Relevant
Possibly relevant
Solomon was interesting. It’s like the Jews went through all the stages of empire – which usually take 10 generations – in 3. Solomon was supposedly wise and just – but also decadent and disobeyed God’s laws. It was the peak of the united Israel, and all the seeds of their destruction were starting to sprout.
Ditto Samuel and David. Really, Joseph is alright, and Moses is ok, and I guess Joshua is alright, but then they all go to pot. I mean, Samuel, for one. Then David, who’s supposed to be the best of the bunch, he sends a guy to get killed so he can bang his wife. The Solomon, of course.
I think that’s one of the best parts. Noah drunkenly fucked two of his daughters. David killed a dude to bone his wife. Moses killed a dude because he was harassing a Jew. Saul likely sent more than a few Christians to their tortuous deaths.
In the end, God’s like “well, you done fucked up… real bad. Alright, genuinely change your life and apologize for being an asshole, and you will become one of the legendary good guys in my holy book”
It’s a good illustration of the fact that we’re certainly not smarter as a species than our ancient forebears
I’d suggest that, over the last fifty years or so, our educated classes have gotten appreciably dumber. I think it owes mostly to the “democratization” of higher education and the resulting need to funnel almost everybody through college or university. Prior to that, the university was more of a place where people went if they were genuinely academically inclined and genuinely interested in ideas. Pushing a much larger portion of the population into college meant the colleges and universities had to adjust their curriculum accordingly. So, out went Classics and in came Oppression Studies.
I don’t think it was catering to the masses, but changing generations. Baby boomers that had successfully challenged the previous administrations and more anti-Western in feeling if not thought, took over. Rinse, lather, repeat.
Here’s the thing, though. I genuinely believe that it was the early stages of the democratization of the academy that led to the baby boomers’ challenge to the establishment. You had a significant number of people in the academy, not out of deep and abiding love of knowledge, but to avoid having to go to Vietnam. The radicalism of the Baby Boomers didn’t infect the colleges. It spread out from them.
Well sure. I’d rather loaf about and pork hotties rather than have a leg blown off in a pointless war. It led to the nihilism that we see in nearly every facet of our society.
I’d rather loaf about and pork hotties rather than have a leg blown off in a pointless war
As would any sane man. And, logically, that should have been all the justification that was necessary. But, people aren’t always logical. And college leftism was all too prepared to provide them with the salve that they could turn their draft avoidance from something they might feel moral ambivalency about into an act of moral courage. If the Viet Cong were the heroes and the United States was the premier purveyor of global villainy, not serving becomes an act of moral justice. And that hatred became an all-encompassing creed. Because anything else would entail coming to terms with worries about your own cowardice.
re: The Wizard of Oz,
IIRC, that was a fairly specific political allegory with each of the color groups representing a political faction.
1) Even if that was true, it still fails to have any depth to the allegory. They are all very surface level. Compare that with, for example, the Black Thing’s anti-love that embodies the nihilism of the Adversary without invoking the surface-level imagery of the Adversary, or with defeat of Ged’s Shadow embodying the Taoist dualology and Ged’s coming of age.
Those feel a lot more visceral than a possible wink-wink-nudge-nudge fiat currency is folly on Oz.
2) I don’t think that is true. Baum explicitly refutes that, and in some of his other versions of the story he throws in some catty and topical call-outs to the current day fixations of the chattering classes. But if you read those, you can see he’s going for ultra-topical-ultra-in-the-moment Daily Show Barking Seal applause from room-temp IQ readers made to make them clap and say “HAR HAR I KNOW WHAT YOU JUST SAID,” not to think. Giving each faction a deeper connection to a political seems out of line with that.
I just finished “Hail to the Chin”. It’s a Bruce Campbell autobiography. I felt like it lost it’s pacing towards the end, but overall it was enjoyable.
His fictional “Make Love The Bruce Campbell Way” is superior, AND the audio book is done like a radio play.
I’m looking forward to getting the audio version.
JW – are you trolling us here? “Tales of the Genji”. And you’re linking to a modern Japanese translation.
I like the cut of your jib! Outside of the academia I don’t think I know how much western interest there is in this work. Most Japanese folk haven’t fully read it and only know “of it” or modern adaptions in movie and TV.
My interest in the work approaches zero.
I tried reading that ages ago; Waley’s English translation. It was a slog. I should dig it out, now that I’m well past my teenage years I probably have the patience to make it all the way trough.
Genki I – just got to Chapter 6. Vocab includes… kekkou desu.
Various Cisco cert treekillers
At least you properly romanized it! 😉
I find that studying Japanese has killed my reading for pleasure unfortunately. Currently on Chapter 47 of Minna no Nihongo.
Whoa, poking the bear with a stick! Super Golden Showers Week just started. straff won’t have to be sober for 10 days.
I can’t remember if you were in one of the morning links. He responded to me that he did it intentionally as he finds that people mispronounce it as “you” as it sounds in English.
I think he is probably correct, but this being Glibs some other people were giving him a hard time.
I think I saw that, and make sense. And expected from someone living in Toukyou.
Ugh… I should stick myself back into the Cisco cert blender again. It just annoys me that I need to get a networking cert to move onto the VOIP certs.
Only need ICND1 for Security & CCDA. No prereq for Collaboration track, although I’d agree that a basic foundation of knowledge equivalent to ICND1 would be useful for any of the tracks.
I haven’t had much time for reading, but I’ve been doing a lot of driving recently. I finally finished listening to “the not so civil war” by profcj. It s very good and I’d recommend it to anyone with 28 or so hours to kill.
Well good to see you here. Last I remember you were getting thumped on the head due to contract negotiations*.
*may be conjoining separate events just a tad
That is still ongoing. We have come to something of a delay for the time being and I am back at the mill after being out for a month and a half.
In all honesty, it’s good to be back. Contract negotiations are stressful as fuck. I like my regular job better.
https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/2019/04/led-coalition-killed-1600-civilians-syria-raqqa-190425135739616.html
I read this today. Good thing trump followed through with his plan to get U.S. troops out of Syria.
Stymied by his erstwhile allies. Never-Trumper is a thing.
Marina Butina, the Russian non spy and gun enthusiast, sentenced to 18 months for a bunch of bullshit:
https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-04-26/accused-russian-spy-marina-butina-sentenced-18-months-prison
I haven’t seen evidence of actual wrongdoing. This really does seem like Federal shitbirds got her in a room and threatened her to take a plea deal.
She was a red-headed Russian, ergo res ferre de.
If she was any other nationality she would have just been deported. It’s not a good time to be a Russian in the good old US of A.
Biden stumbles out of the gate. Jk, most *left-leaning voters couldn’t give less of a fuck.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=soGNIATFDvs
*to be fair, most voters are unprincipled hacks, regardless the political affiliation.
Up-thread we were discussing how our beliefs were molded by the media just a couple of decades ago. I think that’s gone out the window now with the advent of the “new media” and people aren’t falling for the boilerplate answers anymore. Everyone has a super computer at their beck and call and fact-checking is something that savvy people do almost automatically. More and more I see smahrt folks abiding with the 48 hour rule before passing judgement. If the big tech firms and the government can keep their shit-stained fingers out of this we’d be a healthier and happier society.
Conveyance 178 p 140 in the Clerk’s office. Exciting stuff.
Harry James Krebs Vengeance is Mine * Quite possibly the worst book I have ever finished
W. Michael Gear Abandoned ***½ Part two of a Sci-fi trilogy, lots of libertarian issues as the abandoned colonists figure out how to organize a free society on a hostile planet.
Alan Glynn Receptor ***½ Sorta but not really a sequel to Limitless which was made into a fairly successful movie so I can see why Alan went back to that particular well.
Geoff Williams CNC Robotics Build Your Own Workshop Bot No rating, just started. I have concerns it may be geared towards folks with more background in electronics and engineering then I, might have to do a lot of googling to get up to speed.
Late to the party, as always. Too bad for me, I was looking forward to this article.
Got mired around Night 975 or so. I need to make one last push.
In the meantime I’ve picked up some novels to fill in the time.
Tyrannosaur Canyon by Douglas Preston. I got the copy that my late uncle had annotated. Fun read for me as everything takes place just north of here, a place called Viejas Mesa.
Jurrasic Park. Re-read it in a couple of days inspired by an article on FEE.org.
Currently about 10% through my re-read of Shogun. I’ve always been impressed with Clavell’s writing style.
OMWC, if you’re still around, have you ever read Sagan’s Dragons of Eden?
I’ve read shogun 3 times now. I love that book. It’s one of my favorites.