Back in the Saddle
After much delay (about three and a half months according to my Movable Type logs! :-/), I'm planning on actively posting again. Major and minor events of the last few months:
- Visited grandparents in Orlando
- Vacation/Karina's wedding in Miami
- Got engaged!
- Vacation/Shawn and Stacey's wedding in Playa del Carmen, Mexico
- The Death and Life of Great American Cities, by Jane Jacobs
A fantastic book, even over 40 years after it's original publication. The best book I've read on city life. - The Man Who Ate Everything, by Jeffrey Steingarten
A great book about food by the most interesting food critic writing today. I heard of this book via Meg and I'm better of because of it. - Invisible Cities, by Italo Calvino
A cool little novel of dream-like descriptions of many fantastical cities. Strong Borgesian overtones. - Hooking Up, by Tom Wolfe
- Sustainable Cuisine White Papers
Very nicely packaged, and some interesting ideas presented here, but the white paper format quickly exposed its weaknesses. A few pages isn't really enough to generate a substantial argument, and some of the papers contradicted others outright in their prescriptions for sustainable cuisine. Too light for my tastes. - Small Pieces Loosely Joined, by David Weinberger
- The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, by Tom Wolfe
This has been on my "to read" list for some time, and a week on the beach in Mexico is what it took for me to finally read it. A fascinating account of the birth of the psychedelic revolution. Made me realize that some extraordinarily interesting people were involved in Ken Kesey's loose circle in the 60's, like Stewart Brand and Paul Hawken, both great writers in their own rights. - Natural Capitalism, by Paul Hawken (see above), and Amory and Hunter Lovins
Oustanding, the best book on how to begin reversing the damage we've done to the environment, and one of the most inspirational books I've ever read. - Human Natures, by Paul Ehrlich
A great book about a great many things, mostly surrounding gene/culture coevolution in humans. Similar to Jared Diamond's book Guns, Germs, and Steel, but with more focus on culture and stronger social proscriptions. Highly recommended.
