Ringworld - Larry Niven
I loved this book. The characters, the consistent framework, the majestic premise of the ringworld itself. The scientific underpinning of the book didn't overwhelm my feeble understanding of astrophysics and (with the following exception) kept me firmly immersed in the Ringworld universe.
I get that the genetic luck stuff was a fundamental part of the plot, but I just couldn't suspend disbelief enough to buy it. I can buy FTL drives, transmutation and Scrith, but I just couldn't buy the Luck of Teela Brown. According to Larry Niven:
Stories about infinitely lucky people tend to be dull.
Yep. I agree.
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Vietnam : The Australian War - Paul Ham
Vivid, chilling and desperately sad account of a war that seems to have been simplified and abstracted in our national memory. The book presents a fascinating and uniquely Australian perspective of the conflict, without neglecting the international context of war.
Once again, I find my pre-conceptions torn away.
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The Graveyard Book - Neil Gaiman
Everything you would expect from a Neil Gaiman novel. Quirky, unexpected, satisfying.
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Naked - David Sedaris
A collection of autobiographical essays by American humorist David Sedaris. I listened to the abridged audio. I am tempted to get the book to read the gaps.
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Reappraisals: Reflections on the Forgotten Twentieth Century - Tony Judt
A collection of essays and book reviews on a variety of 20th century places, events and personalities. This book emphasizes the importance of remembering the lessons of that century, that might otherwise be forgotten.
While my lack of philosophical and historical vocabulary limited my understanding and enjoyment of the earlier essays on European intellectuals, I found the later parts Lost in transition, places and memories and The American half-century fascinating.
Without anything more insightful to say than can't be found elsewhere, I made a note of a few quotes from the later essays that struck me particularly:
The country that wouldn't grow up (Israel Liberal Daily Haaretz - May 2006)
Seen from the outside Israel still comports itself like an adolescent, consumed by a brittle confidence in it's own uniqueness, certain that no one understands it and everyone is against it, full of wounded amour-propre. Quick to take offense and quick to give it.
The Crisis, Kennedy, Khrushchev and Cuba
With hindsight, we can see that Kennedy managed to obtain the best possible outcome in the circumstances, he was not just lucky either, he was consistent. In rejecting the advise he was offered in hundreds of hours of secret meetings, he ran serious risks too. As he remarked to the assembled senior congressmen on the day of his press conference revealing the crisis:
"The people who are the best off are the people whos advise is not taken, because whatever we do is filled with hazards."
Of course Kennedy's motives were never unmixed and like any politician he sought to turn his management of the affair into a political asset.
The Illusionist - Henry Kissinger and American foreign policy
The years 1968 to 75 were the hinge on which the second half of our century turned.
Richard Nixon was, in one respect, a fortunate man. Felled by Watergate he has been resurrected, in some quarters, as an unlikely tragic hero. The greatest foreign policy president we nearly had, as it were ... Anyone tempted to give credit to such claims, should read William Bundy's book which anticipates what, one must hope, will be the considered judgment of history upon a troubled and troubling era in American public affairs.
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