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Book: Breach of Trust: How Americans Failed Their Soldiers and Their Country


An absolutely searing indictment of the US citizenry’s relationship to the US Army. Bacevich accuses the US population of what could probably be described as malign neglect of its professional soldier class while papering over any lingering guilt with a shallow form of patriotism. He traces the neglect to the post-Vietnam decision to eliminate the draft and create an all-volunteer professional force. This move disconnected US society at large from its armed forces and allowed each to drift apart from the other. Once that was accomplished, the malignity of endless overseas conflict with a force too small to sustain it could now begin, because policy-makers were free to start wars without the need to convince the public at large that the conflicts were worth dying for. Further evils, like the use of modern mercenaries, followed from there. Highly recommended.

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Book: Intuition Pumps And Other Tools for Thinking


How do you think about complicated things systematically? You need some thinking tools! Dennett provides a tour of his favorites, some of which he invented. You also get an overview of the philosophical problems of free will and consciousness via Dennett’s approach to them. I think Dennett is one of a relatively small number of people thinking really clearly about these problems and articulating them in a clear way. Highly recommended.

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Book: Mencken Chrestomathy


Mencken is a curious figure. He was an unabashed elitist with an absolute disdain for much of humanity. He was also a lover of civilization, or at least certain of civilization’s highest accomplishments like classical music, literature, and science. He was a devout classist, sometimes marking nine or more gradations of men (usually men) from the first-rate (a very, very select few) down through the ninth-raters and beyond. Mencken’s humanity was a pyramid and for him only the tip-top really mattered at all. But he could see Mark Twain was one of America’s most significant artists, an artist for the ages, when many others could not, or could not see past Twain’s public shtick. But jazz went right over his head, he could not hear it at all. I think perhaps he loved the past so much he was in some ways simply blind to the future, and thus by his own standards he was not a first-rate man. But he’s still worth reading anyway.

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Book: PostgreSQL 9.0 High Performance


All about making Postgres go fast, everything from low-level disk I/O to query optimization and more. The chapter on using EXPLAIN was worth the price of the book.

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Book: The Ocean at the End of the Lane


Gaiman is such a good storyteller, I read this one practically straight through.

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Book: A Moveable Feast: The Restored Edition


Hemingway’s memoir of his early Paris years. I found it enjoyable, but not captivating. But it’s a good read for aspiring writers. The numerous alternative drafts included at the end make it clear how devoted he was to the craft, and how time-consuming it is to write well.

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Book: Damn A Book of Calumny


Maybe the crankiest capable writer in American history?

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Book: You Are Not So Smart


Just how stupid am I? Let me count the ways…oh wait that requires math. Let’s just agree it’s a lot of ways. But I don’t feel too bad because, not to put too fine a point on it, you’re stupid, too. Read this book and find out just how stupid you are!

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Book: The Yearling (50th Anniversary Edition)


A coming of age story set in post-Civil War rural Florida. I found it absorbing and quite moving, though at the end I couldn’t help but think they could have saved themselves a lot of trouble if they had just gotten the kid a dog instead. Parents take note!

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Book: Mary Bennet and the Bloomsbury Coven (Regency Magic)


My wife Beth’s first novel, it’s a period fantasy piece set in the world of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice with Mary Bennet as the protagonist. It’s a fun read I think Austen fans will enjoy.