Sunday, March 31, 2019

Finished CHARLATANS

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Saturday morning I woke up because of a nightmare in which I was the protagonist in this story and was in a situation that was quite possible when I left it.  It was early, but I knew I wasn't going to sleep well until I finished the book.  Luckily, I was close.  The theme of the book has to do with the effect of the internet on our lives in general and medicine in particular.  The author leaves it up to us to decide if that effect is to our benefit or our detriment.

I have now started Isaac's Storm, A Man, A Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History, a non-fiction account by Erik Larson.  The title may not be entirely accurate since it is about the 1900 Galveston Hurricane of September 8.  This was the deadliest in American history (killed 6000 people) but maybe not in world history.  Part of the problem was the United States Weather Bureau was in it's infancy.  Isaac Cline had come to Galveston only two years before to set up the first weather station there.  It looks to be pretty exciting.

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Monday, March 25, 2019

Finished LITTLE MEN

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The protagonist in this book (Jo March Bhaer) and that of The Number 1 Women's Detective Agency (Precious Ramotswe) both have a gentle wisdom that creates a gentle world around them.  It is lovely to visit these worlds every so often.

I have now gone from the sublime to the scary: Charlatans by Robin Cook.  So far it seems to be about the entitled attitude of some doctors...we will see.  A patient has died in the operating room.  The cause is a famous doctor who is trying to do three operations at once, demands that the anesthesia is started before he gets there, gets there 40 minutes after the anesthesia is started, and has obviously not prepared his patient we since the patient ate breakfast and then lied about it.  He also obviously didn't examine him well before the operation because the problem was worse than he was prepared for.  All of which it appears he is going to blame the anesthesiologist for.

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Sunday, March 17, 2019

Finished DWARFS

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Another of the beautiful books of this series, Dwarfs starts us out with their protrayal in Norse legend, and then walks us through the great kingdoms of magical and highly skilled miners and metal crafters, to leprechans, house and farm elves, dangerously alienated dwarfs, and finally their leaving us because of their disillusionment.  Beautifully illustrated and told.

I have now started Dragons in this series.  It begins with a tale that reads very much like Bilbo's trek through the tunnel into Smaug's lair and ends much the same as well.  But, instead of Bard the hero, the hero here is a very much aged Beowulf.  How great!  This book promises to be as delightful as the others in this series.

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Finished THE WARMTH OF OTHER SUNS and THE WITCHES

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By following three people through their migration from the South to Chicago, New York, and Los Angeles, Isabel Wilkerson writes very readably in this well researched non-fiction piece.  We here stories of other people as we move through the narrative.  Though I certainly knew of this migration, my knowledge and understanding of it is much clearer now.  These struggles are probably not much different from those of modern day migrants, escaping persecution and death.

Then I went back to The Witches, Suspicion, Betrayal, and Hysteria in 1692 Salem.  Unusual, I know, for me to read two non-fiction books in a row.  They just kind of fell that way.  This last section of the book mostly told what happened to the principles after "spectral evidence" lost favor and was outlawed in the courts of Massachusetts.  The time became a euphemism ("the time of tragedy and confusion,"  "the recent unfortunate time," etc.)  The judges were never blamed by the populace, who believed them above reproach.  But even they seemed not to fair well.  I hadn't expected this section to be as interesting as the rest of the book, but it certainly was.  However, the book suffers from being dry, and often prodigious, which explains why I took so long to read it.

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I have now started Little Men by Louisa May Alcott.  Again, I don't know how I escaped reading this at a much earlier age, but I find I am enjoying at at 73, so I guess that can prove these books are timeless.  Jo and the Professor have now settled into their boys' home and are enjoying raising and educating 12 boys, when another arrives, dirty and hungry and forlorn.  We see the Bhaers, the other boys, and staff take him in, make him feel welcome, clean him up, feed him, and then discover his wonderful talent that will enrich their lives.

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