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Monthly Archives: August 2012
The Wild Life of Our Bodies
The Wild Life of Our Bodies: Predators, Parasides, and Partners that Shape Who We Are Today© 2011 Rob Dunn290 pages You can take the man out of the jungle, but not the jungle out of the man. Such is the … Continue reading
Book Confessions
This week the Broke and the Bookish are asking for bookish confessions. I think I already confessed to some of my more egregious book-related actions, like ruining my middle-school library’s copy of For Whom the Bell Tolls by spilling milk on … Continue reading
Posted in General
12 Comments
A Man on the Moon
A Man on the Moon: the Voyages of the Apollo Astronauts © 1994 Andrew Chaikin670 pages Yet a higher goal was calling, and we vowed to reach it soon So we gave ourselves a decade to put fire on the moon … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews, science
Tagged adventure, history, human space flight, planetary science, science, technology, Technology and Society
5 Comments
They Eat Puppies, Don’t They?
They Eat Puppies, Don’t They? © 2012 Christopher Buckley335 pages They Eat Puppies, Don’t They? is a satirical novel about the power of the military-industrial congress, its lead character undertaking a mission to pose as a lobbyist to whip up anti-China … Continue reading
This Week at the Library (20 August)
Reviews are pending for A Man on the Moon, by Neil Chaikan as well as The Wild Life of Our Bodies by Rob Dunn. (Pending, as in, “I meant to finish them on Sunday, but some friends invited me to … Continue reading
John Adams
John Adams© 2001 David McCullough751 pages The memory of some American presidents looms over the national mind like their monuments tower above the landscape. But John Adams has no monument on the National Mall: his face does not stare down … Continue reading
Coup d’Etat
The War that Came Early: Coup d’Etat© 2012 Harry Turtledove416 pages Coup d’Etat is the fourth book in Turtledove’s War that Came Early series, in which World War 2 begins at the 1938 Munich Conference when the Allies call Hitler’s … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews
Tagged alt-history, Harry Turtledove, military, The War that Came Early
2 Comments
This Week at the Library (6 August)
Aside from special occasions like Independence Day, I don’t plan my reading. I tend to follow whatever ensnares my interest, though this tends to result in my gorging on a particular topic, sometimes to the point that I get sick … Continue reading
Lost Moon
Lost Moon: the Perilous Voyage of Apollo 13© 1994 Jim Lovell, Jeffrey Kluger368 pages No one wants to hear ominous noises coming from their car in the middle of a road trip, especially if they’re in the middle of nowhere. … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged disaster, history, human space flight, memoir, technology, Technology and Society
6 Comments