July 30, 2023

Recent Reads 7.30.2023

 On the Rocketeer: The Complete Adventures

 

I got this because I have vague positive memories of the movie, especially the gritty steam punk art deco vibe they had going on. I barely remember the plot except for the rocket pack and German bad guys. I have to say in reading it, it makes sense that the style is what I remember since neither of the two main plot lines make a lot of sense and are full of holes and coincidences. What’s more interesting to me is that the art is more cartoonish than I would have thought based on the movie. The one thing of note is that the artist really likes drawing the female form in sheer fabrics – that’s where he goes for the “realism.” It’s an adventure comic studded with pinup girls.

 

 

On The Wages of Destruction by Adam Tooze.

 

Years ago, I read Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World, by Liaquat Ahamed. Afte reading that, I was interested in finding a good English language biography of Hjalmar Schacht because I was interested in seeing how the German War Machine ticked at a financial level. I didn’t find it then, but I came across this, and it was better than what I thought I wanted. Tooze goes into great detail about the war and how much the need for materials and food and hard currency really shaped the decisions the Nazi leadership were making about the war effort.

 

On a side note, reading this made me realize why reading about WWII or the Civil War is so appealing. You already know the outlines, but different histories just focus on different details. You know how it ends though. The bad guys lost. It’s a great feeling and not something you can guarantee with anything more contemporary.

 

On The Spy and the Traitor by Ben Macintyre.

 

This is one of those books that I normally wouldn’t have picked up, but I got it as a gift. I’m glad I read it though, as it was an intriguing look at the cold war and the espionage on both sides. It’s mainly the story of a KGB officer who moved up the ranks and spied for British intelligence. There’s also a bit about Aldrich Ames, but that part is not as developed and he’s not as interesting a character in the text. It’s a fast-paced read I couldn’t put down and it was enjoyable.

 

Structurally, there are a couple of places in the book that sort of give away the ending, which isn’t great since it is a thriller and if you don’t know the case, you don’t know how it’s going to end. Weirdly, though you’re in the spy world, there was something about it that felt both high and low stakes to me. It was like everyone involved was children playing high stakes games. The other thing is that the whole thing is biased to a western reader – with Gordievsky being on the side of the good (327) – when things really feel more ambiguous than that black and white reading.

 

Chantal Mouffe: Towards a Green Democratic Revolution

 

Verso has been putting out some of these thin books that are essays, and they are nice because they are a quick read in the afternoon. The problem is that they have to really grab you to be memorable, and Mouffe’s text did not do that for me.

 

Nature’s Metropolis

 

Look. There’s a lot of ways to do economic history. A lot of them are bad. Many are good. But there’s only one Nature’s Metropolis. It’s the story of Chicago. But it is more than that, it is the tale of the growth of the Republic in the nineteenth century. You will learn more about grain and trees and railroads than you thought you wanted to know and be thirsting for more.

 

On Managing & Using Information Systems: Pearlson et al.

 

This was the textbook for an entry-level MIS class in my data analytics course progression. Overall, I liked the text. The chapters were well laid out with well developed examples of the chapters’ main ideas that carried though the whole chapter. Each of the thirteen chapters could easily be a course in itself, but in paring down each topic to the most pertinent details, not much is lost in the legibility of the topic. The only thing I didn’t like was partially structural with my course. There are case studies at the end and the answers are hosted in various places online. My instructor used these as discussion prompts and it was clear a quarter of my peers just copied the answers and ran them through a remix software. 

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