This is a big book with a long title, but I ended up plowing through it pretty fast. Although I have a Master’s degree in immunology, the science has changed rapidly, and this book refreshed my memory on the basics and also got me caught up on some of the newer developments in the field. Using real people as examples,…
This novel recounts the life of Little Dog, the son of Vietnamese immigrants, and his experiences growing up in the US. The author is an award-winning poet, and he certainly deserves the accolades. Nearly every sentence is dripping with perfect, beautiful wordplay. Sometimes I found myself stopping and re-reading some of the sentences simply because the words were amazing. For…
Although I’m not a parent and have no desire to be, I saw this book in the library and found it intriguing. One morning, the author was driving with her four-year old son in the car. She stopped to run into the store to get something, leaving the kid in the car for five minutes. Someone called the police to…
This was a really good, practical book. I go through phases where I meditate regularly, and when I do, my life is much better. But I sometimes let my travel schedule distract me from the practice, and I forget to do it on the weekends, and before I realize it, I’ve let the practice of meditation fall by the wayside. …
An oral history of Jethro Tull, put together by Ian Anderson, with commentary from the dozens of band members who have come and gone over the years. The book is in coffee table format, with big, excellent photos throughout. It’s a chronological account, with lots of artifacts from the early days. Jethro Tull was my favorite band in high school. …
This book attempts to cover the entirety of LGBT history from before 1492 to the present day. The first two thirds of the book didn’t feel very much like a history book. It tried to cover about 500 years of LGBT history in 300 pages, which was a formidable task, and most of the time it just came off as…
Although I didn’t like seeing neurology cases as a veterinarian, I seem to have a penchant for reading books about human neurology. This one started out slow, but got better and better as it went along. Filled with clear descriptions of how the neurological system works (kinda basic for me, but probably very lucid for laypeople), the book follows up…
I’ve been accumulating books for years, waiting for retirement to finally hunker down and start reading them. In 2018, I made a good dent in them, reading 39 books. In 2019, I made the big breakthrough, I went nuts. With a book going simultaneously at the gym, on the subway, in parks, and by the side of the bed, and…
A short book written by a talented music writer and major Bowie fan. It’s not just a biography, but a major tribute to one of the most creative musicians/artists of the past century. The author goes through every phase of Bowie’s career, describing with encyclopedic knowledge everything you might want to know about the music, and Bowie’s motivation behind it. …
An autobiographical novel that recounts the days when a generation of young people dared to dream of a better world, and sought that world by throwing their stuff in a backpack and traveling the world, with the journey being more important than the destination. In this book, the author recounts the story of how he met the beautiful Karla in…
A very dense, but enlightening book that discusses the difficulties gay men have faced, and still face, trying to live their lives productively and authentically in the face of intense trauma and discrimination. He focuses on the stigmatization that gay men experience early in life, and the shame, self-doubt, and isolation that results from being seen as different from the…
This is the seventh book of Eggers’s that I’ve read over the years. Like most of his recent books, it takes place in some unnamed, mysterious war-torn country. Two men, using the pseudonyms Four and Nine, are assigned to build a highway using new, very high-tech paving machines. The highway will connect the needy villages with the country’s capital. Four…
This is really a book about pop culture, and the author has made a pretty good career as a writer on the topic. Addressing pop culture through these music rivalries was very entertaining. As a fan of classic rock and alternative music, I really enjoyed the chapters on Oasis vs. Blur, Nirvana vs. Pearl Jam, Eric Clapton vs. Jimmy Hendrix,…
Quick Book Review: “The Girl at the Baggage Claim: Explaining the East-West Culture Gap” by Gish Jen
The author is better known as a novelist, but she’s written this non-fiction exploration of the divide between Western and Eastern culture. She basically divides West from East by how the self is seen. Western people are characterized by individualism and self-esteem, compared to Eastern people, who are flexible and interdependent. In the West we value uniqueness, while in the…
A long, detailed autobiography by a performer I’ve always liked, even though I haven’t kept up with his career. Elvis’s father was a very accomplished musician, and I enjoyed hearing about Elvis’s musical upbringing, and his early years at Stiff Records and on the punk scene. Elvis has very broad musical tastes, and he describes encounters and collaborations with George…