Thursday, March 29, 2007
Scarthin Books
Sunday, March 25, 2007
Karl Rove
So what book was Mr. Rove reading?
Khrushchev's Cold War: The Inside Story of an American Adversary
by Aleksandr Fursenko, Timothy Naftali
I have not read this book myself but given the political crisis that Mr. Rove is buried in regarding the selective firing of 8 of 93 US Attorneys which the US Congress is reviewing I thought this was an interesting book to read at this time for these reasons:
1.) Khrushchev presided over a crumbling empire - although he never admitted it publicly
2.) If Mr. Rove is forced to testify before Congress will he beat his shoe on the table? :-)
3.) Will this book remind Mr. Rove that a centrally planned economy does not work thus leading him to advise President Bush to bring us a new era of federalism by phasing out entire federal departments coupled with returning the money to taxpayers at the state level leaving them to decide if they want their state legislators to take the money via tax increase for "worthwhile" programs................
Okay, my day dreaming is over!! Yes, that is my personal utopia but one worth promoting I believe.
Ideas have consequences,
Todd
The "k-word"
As I noted in my original posting -- this type of censorship destroys the opportunity that Twain provided us to mock the racists in our world, yes the "n-word" is used extensively in this book but if people like Mr. Gilbert solely focus on that fact then they miss the entire point of the book.
No racism is never a good thing but black/African-Americans are not the only victims as noted in this story regarding how German immigrants were called "krauts" which was the k-word/n-word of the day so this racism inspired them to learn English --
http://www.cleveland.com/printer/printer.ssf?/base/opinion/1160555732105360.xml&coll=2
Now my German ancestors and I were never enslaved like black Americans but I feel no offense when I hear the word "kraut" used today so the evolution of this term into a "neutral', even archaic one is encouraging. As Bill Cosby has said repeatedly today's black youths need to speak English not "ebonics" so perhaps the German experience in the USA is a lesson to consider -- if only HISTORY not Social Studies was taught in our public schools.
Todd
Book Swapping
www.readitswapit.co.uk
When I checked it out today they offered about 105,000 book titles available for book swapping. Unless I missed it this service is solely focused on the United Kingdom so I probably won't utilize it since sending a book from the USA to UK can be cost prohibitive not only due to shipping costs but due to Customs charges and delays.
Regardless I am intrigued by this service since it allows book lovers to swap with each other at no cost so I contacted them to ask about their plans for the USA market.
Recycle,
Todd
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
Blurbarians
www.blurb.com
thus its clients are known to Ms. Gittins as "Blurbarians".
Blurbs self-published books start at only $18.95 for a 40 page softcover and $29.95 for a hardcover. Based on the article I read about this company in USA Today this week it appears the most common type of book created by blurbarians are "photo books" since it is relatively easy to assemble a collection of photographs thus producing a gift book for friends and family.
This looks like an ideal tool for the biography I plan to author.
Promote thyself,
Todd
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Presidential Library
Mr. Fox's presidential library and study center will be located on his ranch in the central Mexican state of Guanajuato. He also announced that he is recruiting scholars from the USA to serve as advisers to this facility. Personally I love this project - not because it is a library with BOOKS of course - but because it will showcase the Office of President of Mexico in a way that has never been done before plus with USA scholars involved it presents an opportunity to study the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in much greater detail to show the economic benefits that Mexico, Canada, and the USA have enjoyed simply by opening their borders to trade.
For more details on this exciting project please visit --
http://www.mexidata.info/id1221.html
I look forward to visiting this library one day.
Todd
China
Chris Patten – the last British Governor of Hong Kong who provided his six favorite books on China which included:
“The Analects” by Confucius
“Emperor of China” by Jonathan Spence
“Mao: The Unknown Story” by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday
“Mr. China” by Tim Cissold
“The Collision of Two Civilizations” by Alain Peyrefitte
“Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress” by Dai Siijie
Now Mr. Patten was the Governor of Hong Kong so he knows China better than I ever will but I do hope he considered including these books in his list --
- “One Billion Customers” by James McGregor, which provides solid Chinese business insights from a journalist’s perspective, and
- "The Art of War" by Sun Tzu which I hope every US military leader has read as we assess whether China is friend or foe in military terms. In fact I am surprised Mr. Patten omitted this book from his list.
Todd
Thursday, March 15, 2007
Iraq
If you love reading books, appreciate their role in dispensing knowledge, and believe in their power to generate creative thinking please take the time to read the Raychaudhuri/Das op-ed at:
http://www.sltrib.com/opinion/ci_5419763
Since I always love a good quote let me share this one that the authors use in their op-ed which summarizes the tone of their message:
Wednesday, March 7, 2007
Book Reviews
While these book reviews will likely be laid to rest in the near future let me offer a potential business partnership to fill the vacuum left by the demise of these reviews. Perhaps the USA Today newspaper (the nation's only national newspaper) and Amazon.com (the world's supermarket for books) should partner with each other to produce their own "book review" thus combining their audience reach to promote literacy and book sales at the same time.
Change presents opportunities,
Todd
Eric Foner
- "The Making of the English Working Class" by E.P. Thompson
- "Black Reconstruction in America" by W.E.B. DuBois
- "Waiting for the Barbarians" by J. M. Coetzee
- "History of the Siege of Lisbon" by Jose Saramago (a novel)
- "The Lord of the Rings" by J.R.R. Tolkein
Of these books I have only read one half of EP Thompson's book so I clearly have some catching up to do on Mr. Foner's list. Saramago's novel seems to be an interesting read.
Asked "what important book that you admit you have never read" Mr. Foner replied - "Moby Dick" because it is "just too long".
I agree with Mr. Foner -- but Moby Dick is not only too long it struggles to flow as a compelling story which really makes me wonder why so many critics consider it to be a key work of literature.
Consider your own "Five Most Important",
Todd
Jenna Bush
I do hope this book sells well -- Harper Collins has committed to publish 500,000 in a first printing -- and that Ms. Bush's message helps thousands of children. However, there is a "but" here because Ms. Bush has announced that she will donate her earnings from this book to UNICEF -- the United Nation's entity which is focused on children.
Perhaps Ms. Bush feels obligated to help UNICEF because she is completing an internship with UNICEF but as I have noted on my flag ship blog (http://spacebeaglenotes.blogspot.com) UNICEF has historically used a form of child slavery that they call -- "Trick or Treat for UNICEF" which forced/coerced young children like I was years ago to carry little orange boxes during Halloween asking our neighbors to contribute money (not caramel apples!!) to UNICEF.
To this day I resent this exploitation by UNICEF so I continue my campaign to zero fund them. Ms. Bush -- if you want to help children around the world do NOT give your money to UNICEF. Please consider non-profit/private entities such as Room to Read (www.roomtoread.org) or Habitat for Humanity (www.habitat.org) who have truly made lives better versus enriching UNICEF-bureaucrats.
Donate wisely,
Todd
Hats off to the Cat!!
For more information on this wonderful children's book please visit -- www.catinthehat.com -- from which I copied the following excerpt regarding "Dr. Seuss'" writing success which I feel readers of this blog would be interested in knowing --
"At the time of his death on September 24, 1991, Ted had written and illustrated 44 children's books, including such all-time favorites as Green Eggs and Ham, Oh, the Places You'll Go, Fox in Socks, and How the Grinch Stole Christmas. His books had been translated into more than 15 languages. Over 200 million copies had found their way into homes and hearts around the world."
So nearly 16 years has passed since we lost Dr. Seuss but his books have clearly taken on immortal characteristics.
Oh the books you'll read,
Todd
Statistics
- Leisure Activities (percentage of adults who participated at least once in the previous 12 months) -- 35% cited "Reading Books" while the number one choice was "Dining Out" with 48% of adults, and
- Percentage of children ages 3 to 5 who were read to every day in the previous week by a family member -- 52.8% in 1993 and 60.3% in 2005
Now this is rather encouraging!! Over 1/3 of American adults are reading books regularly and 60% of young American children have a family member reading to them. There is always room for improvement but these are good results especially since "book reading " must compete with 24 hour shopping, the 500 TV channel world, computer games, Internet surfing, and MP3 listening just to name a few alternative uses of our leisure time.
Go to bed early and read,
Todd