A lot of books get published each year. A few get read while the others are ignored. In this blog I would like to present some book reviews of books I have read and feel are important enough for you to read also. Feel free to suggest books which you feel I should review for you. I will consider them.
Wednesday, December 26, 2018
Russian Roulette by Michael Isikoff and David Corn
It is a very current event. It concerns a larger radius of personal than we are being told.
It is the current subject of Russia and the tampering with the 2016 election for President of the United States.
A book like this covering the subject in a calm journalistic way is needed. Years from now when the historian looks back to see what legacy has been left by Trump, he will need this.
Putin did attack and try to influence the outcome of the election. But he did not do it directly or through his business relationship with Trump.
It is true, Trump needed Putin when it came to access to real estate in Moscow. Trump Towers was expanding. To let you know, Trump did not get his Moscow location.
Meanwhile, elections were coming up. The DNC started a file on Trump and how to exploit him. Clinton's E-mail files were attached. Even cyberspace was searched to keep up with the information.
And through malware released by the Russians and downloaded by one of the handlers of Hilary Clinton the files were duped into the Russian data base.
You may think I am making this up to excuse Trump. No. It is detailed in this investigative book.
Also recorded in this report is the part Obama had in not protecting our elective system from being tampered with.
It was a pure case of political espionage. In essence no one has clean hands.
It is subtitled, The Inside Story of Putin's War on America and the Election of Donald Trump.
I recommend this book . It is an interesting tale that held my interest and I am sure will hold yours. I don't know the investigative reporters but am informed that Isikoff has worked for the Washington Post and NBC News. Corn is the Washington bureau chief of Mother Jones magazine and an analyst for MSNBC.
Stay informed by reading. Maybe if you don't want this in your permanent collection, you can find it in your local library. But do read it.
Saturday, November 24, 2018
The President is Missing by Bill Clinton & James Patterson
You just knew soon or later a former president would try to write a fiction story using the fate of the nation in the balance.
If it wasn't for the name of James Patterson who's books offer some form of escape, I would not have pick it up. It would not be because Clinton used to be president.
So, how did he do?
I felt there was too much plot--that is--too much was introduced ad later quickly resolved. Tension was followed by wrap up before fully playing out
The false promise of impeachment was no doubt heavy in his mind since he had gone through the impeachment process directly during his term. But that is not the thread that runs through the story.
A terror involving a cyber virus pulls one through the story. How to stop it? Can it be stopped? Who put it there?
The president has a blood condition and must take medication. This is one of the tensions running through the book.
Clinton tries too hard to tell a story and therefore, if it wasn't for Patterson, I feel, this book would never have see the light of day. It was a nice try.
It is too long for the story line. But Clinton had to try.
It can be found in a local library and at a book store if you can find one. Amazon has it and Barnes and Noble.
Thursday, November 8, 2018
The Shadow President by Michael D' Antonio
Everyone who
gets into politics sooner or later gets a book written about them. Since Pence
is vice president at the moment it is time for him to start to get his anal
exam.
It is very
important that we know just who it is we have in office. Politics is not an
easy profession to do. There are thankless hours and tedious events. Most
politicians you never hear about. I mean, how many vice presidents can you
name? Not too many, I would venture.
I have heard
someone say a person doesn’t enter politics because they love it. They enter
politics to make a difference. When it comes to Mike Pence, I am sure, it is something
he feels would make a difference doing.
He didn’t
start out seeking political office. “Radio was Pence’s medium and as soon as he
had arrived in Washington, he made sure he would some presence on the airwaves,”
records D’ Antonio.
He sought to live a lifestyle that was compatible
with his Christian values and at the same time a life marked by aggression.
Being third born in a family of six children he needed to be different from
those who were born before him. A typical trait of middle children. In other
words, he became, a person more complex than we know.
Which is one
reason we need books such as this one.
D’ Antonio
puts forth that Pence may be leaning toward a future role as president. Underneath
what we see could very well be a striving for power.
It is not easy
being a vice president. You must appear to agree with your mate and at the same
time be your own person. That is the game plan for each person that gets this
place on the ticket. Expediency finds members
of a party embracing programs to solve problems they should stay away from, he has
once put forth.
Pence in the
past has called for immigrants to be treated with compassion but now serving
under Trump, Pence has become branded a hypocrite. Yet if he is seeking to move
into the office of president he must act as Trump’s surrogate. Trump, as you
know, has a record of firing people who don’t agree with him, so Pence has to
play the part.
If this is
so than this book is a good start to understand the person. In fact, I would highly
recommend a person first understand what they are ranting against, so they act
with knowledge.
It is
published by St. Martins Press and retails for $28.99. It could also be found
in your local library. Read it and be informed.
Thursday, October 18, 2018
Pandemic 1918 by Cathrine Arnold
One hundred
years ago we faced an epidemic that was just as bad if not worst than our
present- day HIV or Ebola. And since it was 1918 we had not yet discovered
through research exactly what it was.
It seemed a
flu. But a flu, or influenza, would only last a few days. But this new disease took
twenty-four hours incubation and appeared up to four or five days later. It would bring about headaches, chills,
dry cough, fever, weakness and loss of appetite. You would experience fatigue and,
in some cases, bronchitis and pneumonia.
This new
strain also caused people to collapse in the streets, hemorrhaging from lungs
and nose. The person may also go blue because of oxygen failure. Pus would
gather in the lungs.
It became
known as the Spanish flu, but it was worldwide.
“It was the
H1N1 influenza virus and it inflicted higher casualties than the war itself,
from Europe to Africa, from the Pacific to the Arctic, from India to Norway.
Ten to 20 per cent of those inflected died, a third of the world’s population.
As many as 2.5 million are believed to have perished during the first
twenty-four weeks of the epidemic.”, Arnold reports.
It was
thought of as a plague.
Some names
you may recognize who survived this disease are John Steinbeck, Lloyd George, Mahatma
Gandhi, Katherine Anne Porter.
Arnold details
the story using eyewitness accounts. It must not have been an easy time to live
through.
It is easy
reading. I like her writing style. You can see she did her research.
Yes, I recommend
this book for those who want to have an account of the time covered.
It is
published by St. Martin’s Press and sells for the retail price of $27.99. I am
sure you can purchase it from Amazon, but it is better you support your local
book store.
Tuesday, September 25, 2018
Open to the Spirit by Scot McKnight
The Trinity
is a hard subject to handle. You know. Three in one. One in three. Father. Son.
Holy Spirit. Each a person. But one in essence.
Each has his
own role in the Godhead. The Father creates. He begets the Son. Begets in the same sense we beget children.
The Son reveals in Human flesh. The Spirit comforts us and reveals the Son.
McKnight
claims that we don’t allow ourselves to be open to the Holy Spirit as we should.
Since, he contends, not many Christians understand the work of the Holy Spirit, they don’t completely know how to handle being open to Him. Thus, he has written
this short 204-page book. It has the footnotes following the text and this adds
thirteen more pages. He divides it into five parts.
It is easy
reading and compels you to keep reading and interacting with the areas spoken of
(new creation, the people, the virtues, the victory). As you read, you find
yourself involving yourself in a safe non-threatening way.
In some of
his illustrations used to clarify what to him are important aspects, he gets
away from what is written in the Bible as the basis for our belief. He does differentiate
between Pentecostals and Charismatics, but then quotes a Monica A. Coleman, professor
of Constructive Theology and American religion at Claremont School of Theology
in Southern California. She fellowships at an African Methodist Episcopal
Church. In her book named “Bi-polar Faith: A Black Woman’s journey with Depression
and Faith “, on the subject of the gift of tongues, having prayed in tongues
with her friend Cynthia and a minister from a Harvard doctrinal program to each
other, standing in a corner talking to each other in tongues.
That is not
found in the Bible. In fact, in 1 Corinthians we are told tongues does not
edify the body but is a sign for the unsaved. He slips here.
His
background is Anglican with a leaning toward Anabaptist. His profession is that
of a Professor of New Testament at Northern Baptist Theological Seminary at
Lombard, Il. And that should be considered while reading this book.
Still, it is
well done and, yes, I would say it is one I would consider looking at. It is
important to be open to the Spirit
It is
published by WaterBrook, Penguin Random House.. It retails for $15.99.
Saturday, September 22, 2018
A Measure of Darkness by Jonathan Kellerman & Jesse Kellerman.
Here once
again we have the team of father and son writing another
mystery. Both
Kellerman men write well separately and when writing together they add extra
depth to the tale.

I guess what
I am saying is, I enjoyed it very much and look forward to their presentations
as co-authors. I major in reading Jonathan’s tales when they appear since he
has a psychologist/sleuth as a major character in his stories, but from time to
time I pick up and read Jesse’s. It is just a preference.
I guess if
you were to ask a mystery reader why they read mysteries they would answer ‘for
the thrill of the chase.” This genre needs a victim, a person who solves the
puzzle, and one who commits the crime. Basic plot and red herrings help in the
story.
When two
authors come together and write a book together they must bind their styles
into one unified voice. The Kellermans seem able to do this.
People are throwing
a party. Gunshots are fired. Chaos follows. Bodies are found. One body is
unidentified., A female. Who is she? Why was she murdered? What is the story
this female has to tell?
This
question leads our sleuth-- a coroner—along with a young female officer to seek
answers in the past. Soon other incidents crop up. A cult is found, or maybe a
different type of educating kids. What is Jane Does link to this school?
Along with
this case, our hero must deal also with his brother who is trying to fit back
into society after a period in prison.
It is purely
plot driven. Characters are only there to keep the story moving forward. The
police are police. Our hero is a coroner, but we don’t spend any time in a coroner’s
theatre as you would if you were reading a Patricia Cornwell story with Dr. Key
Scarpetta. Our victim is not anything but a body.

Wednesday, September 5, 2018
The Outsider by Stephen King
Once again,
he is on the best sellers list. If you are looking for a good read, you can’t go
too wrong by picking up a novel by this writer. Sure, there have been a few
that are a bit disappointing, but this one is worthy of his skills.
All writers
worth their salt, so to speak, seem to slow down as they age and put out a few
books to keep their name before the public. That is especially true of those
the world deems authors of best sellers.
King likes
to write in the genre of horror. That is, mostly. He has also written in the
mystery realm (End of Watch, Finders Keepers, and Mr. Mercedes) as well as the
western realm (The Dark Tower trilogy). But he seems to be more at home in the
horror realm.
He has tried
to make a statement about the environment (Under the Dome) using the horror
motif. He has lots of short story anthologies in print of his works. So, we
know he can produce.
This story
starts with an arrest. Did they arrest the right person? What are the
repercussions of that event? Who gets hurt? Is it possible there is a
supernatural element at work? What is going on?
Kings use of
senses and his use of words, not large or complicated, move the tale along. He
has control, as he should after writing all these years. It is something to
admire his craft about. You can sense the rewrites to find just the right verbiage.
He has said
in the past in his book ‘Danse Macabre’, a book explaining this writing
technique, he likes to shock people. In this book, as the reader gets involved
in the flow and texture of the tale, he is pleasantly rewarded by spurts of
uneasiness.
King is weaving his magic.
I enjoy finding
out in each book what kind of monster it contains. In Cujo it was a rabid dog.
In Misery it was a zealous fan. In this one; No, I will not do a spoiler.
When you
finish this book, you are satisfied. And isn’t that why you read books?
It is
published by Simon & Schuster, Inc and can be found at your local bookstore
or online. It may even be in your local library. That way you can save some
money and enjoy the tale at the same time.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)