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Books I've Read Recently

Neuromancer

Neuromancer
Neuromancer

This is the cyberpunk book that started it all, or at least that's what people say. It is rather dark and full of cool technology, but as to whether it was the first, I couldn't really say. Nevertheless, it is a good read. If you enjoy cyberpunk at all, take it for a spin.
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The Difference Engine

The Difference Engine
The Difference Engine

This book is by two authors. Two well known science fiction writers. It was pretty good. The first 2/3rds of the book are fun, but it kind of tapers off on a tangent at the end. Rather good up until that point, though. So if you can put up with weird endings, give it a shot. Otherwise keep your money.
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Virtual Light

Virtual Light
Virtual Light

I've tried to start reading this book three times now. I always get interrupted, or forget it when I'm leaving for a flight, etc. What I have read of it is good, so far. One of the things I like about cyberpunk books is that the characters are never helpless. They can always figure out how to exist no matter what type of situation they're in, as long as they happen to be alive. This is an interesting book about a future world where hackers live as gods (interesting, although not the main thrust of the book) and the mafia can do what it wants to do because the police are in on it all of the time. Prejudice, technology, romance, and a dog eat dog future make this a worthwhile read.
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Thud!

Thud!
Thud!

Terry Pratchett is a rather well-known author. I've never read any of his stuff. Now I can no longer say that. Thud! is a fun book written with a fair bit of eccentricity with some interesting lessons to be learned, both by the characters (and races) involved, as well as a nice beginning to the many Terry Pratchett books I'll be reading. With an enjoyable mix of the absurd and the it-could-happen (minus the ogres, I guess), this is definitely a good read, funny and insightful at the same time.
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Tyrannosaur Canyon

Tyrannosaur Canyon
Tyrannosaur Canyon

This book caught my eye in an airport bookstore. It looked just exciting enough to keep me awake, and it was! This book is an amusing mix of geology, the perils of tenure, the CIA, Delta Force, and action/adventure. The premise is fun, and the characters are well done. Recommended for a bit of fun.
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Citizen of the Galaxy

Citizen of the Galaxy
Citizen of the Galaxy

This is the first Robert Heinlein book I've read. It comes recommended by an email list I'm a member of. Well, not the book specifically, mostly just the author in general. It's a fun book, set in a future where interstellar travel is commonplace. The character progression is set up quite like it would be in a video game, actually, and this book would make a fun video game. More after I finish it! This book was quite the planet-hopper. It changes gears a few times, and although the end is satisfying, it's not the most fun or interesting part of the book. All in all, a good book, though.
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The Real Lincoln

The Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War
The Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War

A book that is sure to be extremely controversial, The Real Lincoln touches on some of the most taboo issues of our time, and re-examines Lincoln as one of the great presidents of the United States, stripping away the mythology that has accumulated over the years.
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Voice of the Whirlwind

Voice of the Whirlwind
Voice of the Whirlwind

Comes highly recommended by a friend as "the best cyberpunk book evar". It is a really good book. In a future world full of highly dynamic nation-state entities, aliens, human clones, interstellar space travel, and high-tech espionage, the man Steward must find his place in the world, again. This is a really fun journey through an alternate future which I hope never comes to pass, for many reasons. This book is out of print, but I was able to find it used from Powell's, and it appears to be generally available. If you can find a copy or borrow mine, you should give it a whirl.
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Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep

This was a quick read. My first Philip K. Dick novel. The basis for Blade Runner, which I've only seen once. I think the book does a better job of making you identify with the characters, incidentally. Recommended (and loaned) to me by Brian the phycist. I think the best way to describe Dick's style of writing is how the guy who wrote the intro does (paraphrased): "Mr. Dick takes a premise that another author would build a novel around and mentions it in passing..." Definitely a fun book. Give it a whirl.
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King of the Vagabonds

King of the Vagabonds: Volume Two of the Baroque Cycle
King of the Vagabonds: Volume Two of the Baroque Cycle

This is the second book in Neal Stephenson's Baroque Cycle. Except not really. It's the second part of the first book re-released as a Mass Market Paperback. The first full edition is called Quicksilver and the second full edition is called The Confusion. However, The Confusion is also labelled the second book in The Baroque Cycle... It took me and the guy I finally asked in Barnes and Noble a while to figure that out. I think I actually figured it out before he did. Ha HA! Small victories. Right, the book. It was an exciting read. Half-Cocked Jack definitely stole the show with his insane (sometimes, literally) antics. There's a good deal of historical intrigue with the main characters weaved into it, and I'm not enough of a historian to tell where he got it wrong, although there is a rather comprehensive Dramatis Personae listing at the back, if you're bored enough to read it. I wasn't. It kept me entertained and kept me chuckling. Now that's a good book.
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Another Roadside Attraction

Another Roadside Attraction
Another Roadside Attraction

This is a bizarre book. I'm enjoying it. It was pretty silly, and I'm not really sure what I took away from it... It's described as "promiscuous hippie chick philosophy" in one of the Amazon reviews, and that's definitely one way to describe it, but it's also quite a bit of bashing the crap out of religion and government authority figures. I liked the characters, they were all pretty cool, but I found myself caring more about what happened to some of the less main characters than the sort of obnoxiously funny main ones. All in all a fun read.
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The Kite Runner

The Kite Runner
The Kite Runner

This is a very raw book. Any book played out against a backdrop of war and betrayal will deal with heavy issues, but this book is a really heavy book. I thought it was really enlightening to hear the voices of different types of people in Afghanistan through this book than we in America usually hear through the mainstream news media, etc. Racism is everywhere, religion twisted to justify the ends and desires of certain people is everywhere, but there are also those people everywhere who challenge these specific types of deliberate ignorance and do their part to make their little corner of the globe a more tolerant and just place. There are so many stories of horrible betrayal, great courage, and shades of redemption in this book. It is a very touching slice of life in Afghanistan. Recommended for people who like their truth raw and uncut.
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The Diamond Age

The Diamond Age: Or, A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer
The Diamond Age: Or, A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer

This book is about nanotechnology, the education of little girls, and subversion (no, not the version control software). It's quite entertaining. And at the same time, it's a thought-provoking look at the future. As in Snow Crash, the world is divided up in ways that seem rather strange, not in countries, but divided on idealogical and racial boundaries. The characters are very well developed, the story is intriguing, and the details seem well thought out across the board. Definitely recommended for anyone who has a clue what nanotechnology is or likes a good cyberpunk action story.
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Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius

Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius

This book is the memoirs of Dave Eggers. It's about his parents dying and him and his siblings dealing with that. Somehow it manages to keep a mostly lighthearted tone throughout. I'm enjoying this book. (Afterwards) It's a very real story. Throughout the book, there are these matter-of-fact statements that, I assume, come directly from thoughts or feelings and are very easy to identify with. I think my favorite idea from the book is how he's special and owed and deserves all sorts of things. I think every child feels that way, and it seems healthy to look back and admit that and think about why that was and perhaps still is.
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Quicksilver

Quicksilver: Volume One of The Baroque Cycle
Quicksilver: Volume One of The Baroque Cycle

This book had a pretty slow start, but it's picking up now. It's set in the past, with characters that have the same surnames as the characters from Cryptonomicon. It's a pretty nerdy book, with some of the main characters being Isaac Newton and Leibnitz. Religion, sex, pirates, war, kings looting banks, and an epic sea battle round out this book nicely if you can get past the slooooow beginning.
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Hackers and Painters

Hackers and Painters: Big Ideas from the Computer Age
Hackers and Painters: Big Ideas from the Computer Age

This is a collection of Paul Grahm's essays, in addition to some other stuff probably not found on his website. It's pretty good so far, I really enjoyed the first chapter which basically answers why Nerds are unpopular. Cool (except not). This was a good read, but can get a bit preachy in places.
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Blood and Gold

Blood and Gold
Blood and Gold

The story of the vampire Marius. A good story, but to get the full effect, I would recommend reading some of the other books in Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles first. This book has lots of one of my favorite things about Anne Rice's writing, which is historical contrast between different periods of time and places. It's an extremely engaging book, and left me wanting to know more about the characters whose backstories we don't know very much of. To summarize, a must-read for Anne Rice fans, and recommended after reading some other works if you haven't read her other work.
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Freakonomics

Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything
Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything

This was a great book. If the attitude of the authors of this book were more widespread, the human race would make leaps and bounds of progress towards a perfect society. Ok, less fellatio. This book employs very scientific methods, mostly economic, to tackle some very difficult (to quantify) questions. The language is clear, the points are interesting, and it was a quick read. Definitely recommended.
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Pandora

Pandora: (New Tales of the Vampires)
Pandora: (New Tales of the Vampires)

This book should be a nice change after reading The Vampire Armand. Less hot vampire on pre-pubescent action. (Time passes, as I read the book...) And it was. Pandora is (obviously) a woman, so there wasn't any man-boy pedophilia, but there was one gay male character, as there always is in any Anne Rice book. He didn't get to get it on, though. Too bad for him. This book was an interesting foray into ancient Rome and then Antioch, where Pandora is at first a Roman Senator's daughter and then a fugitive, and also a quick glimpse or two into some more ancient vampire history. After reading this, I'm really looking forward to Blood & Gold, which is Marius' story. Although this book is a decent read by itself, like The Vampire Armand, it's so much better if you've read at least the first couple books in The Vampire Chronicles. This book felt kind of rushed, to be honest, and I was left wanting more detail about, for instance, what happend between her and the "fierce Asian vampire" that she travelled with for a while who, I'm guessing, is the same one that shows up as associated with Pandora in Queen of the Damned. A fun read, not one of her best, but still good.
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The Vampire Armand

The Vampire Armand: (New Tales of the Vampires)
The Vampire Armand: (New Tales of the Vampires)

I'm about to start this book. Here's an excerpt from the bn.com review:
With The Vampire Armand, Rice has now written what may be her most lush and moving novel. By concentrating solely on Armand, the eternal teenager with the wisdom of the ages, she has excavated one of the most fascinating characters in the literature of dark fantasy. Armand first appeared in Interview with the Vampire, as the emotional center of the frenzied Parisian vampires whom Louis encounters on his search for both his supernatural kin and his own lost soul. Armand was even then one of the intriguing ones, a child-man who understood Louis's dilemma but had given himself over to a period of debauchery and sadism. But later, in Rice's Memnoch the Devil, which often read — delightfully so — as Rice's stab at understanding a religious model of the universe, Armand took on a supplicant's role beneath the Vampire Lestat who sought the ultimate knowledge of the Divine. Now Anne Rice treats us to the life and times of Armand, from his origins onward. The conceit here is the same as in Pandora. David Talbot, the psychic detective member of the Talamasca, wants to write Armand's tale down so others will know his legacy.
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Fermat's Enigma

Fermat's Enigma: The Epic Quest to Solve the World's Greatest Mathematical Problem
Fermat's Enigma: The Epic Quest to Solve the World's Greatest Mathematical Problem

Yay math. This is a book about mathematics and one of the hardest mathematical problems to date, Fermat's Last Theorem, and the people who have contributed to its solution. While you don't have to know much math to understand what's going on in this book, it certainly helps. The author explains some of the less complicated concepts inline, and leaves the more involved stuff to appendixes. I enjoyed this book because I am a geek. I also enjoyed it because one of my favorite classes in college was CMSC 150: Discrete Math With Applications. The people described in this book are also interesting, from Pythagoras to Andrew Wiles, the 20th-century mathematical hermit who finally was able to prove the theorem. As a footnote, one of the more interesting (to me) tidbits in the book was that Aristotle argued against the concept of zero, "the number zero should be outlawed because it disrupted the consistency of the other numbers—dividing any ordinary number by zero led to an incomprehensible result" (infinity). (quote is from the book, not directly from Aristotle)
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The Tale of the Body Thief

The Tale of the Body Thief: (The Vampire Chronicles #4)
The Tale of the Body Thief: (The Vampire Chronicles #4)

This book is Anne Rice's 4th installment of The Vampire Chronicles. I read them somewhat out of order, having finished Memnoch the Devil (#5) before this one. One thing that I like about Rice's books is that she makes a valiant effort to make her books work by themselves, without having read any of the others in the series. While you obviously don't the full experience, she does a decent job of this. Anyway, I enjoyed this book. It's quite a different type of story from the ones before it. The basic premise is that a human is able to switch bodies with a vampire. It's quite an amusing account on the vampire's end, experiencing everything from a human's perspective again.
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Harry Potter (#6) and the Half-Blood Prince

Harry Potter (#6) and the Half-Blood Prince
Harry Potter (#6) and the Half-Blood Prince

J.K. Rowling's sixth book is finished and published. People everywhere are scrambling for a copy, although Target still had about 20 copies when I checked (I ordered mine online from bn.com). Just like in the last one, this book is thinly veiled social commentary. I'm still reading, but it's completely obvious that Rowling is going to address "freedom vs. security" in this book. Another thing I'm sort of disappointed about is that she seems to be telegraphing a lot of the plot in advance. Or maybe I'm just really smart and pick up on things that other people don't. I'm enjoying the book so far, even though I'm picking it apart at the same time.
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Maestro

Maestro: Greenspan's Fed and the American Boom
Maestro: Greenspan's Fed and the American Boom

Maestro is not a biography of Greenspan so much as a history of the economy and markets during the period of his stewardship. The book's tentative working title was Boom, and the book focuses on how Greenspan engineered the great U.S. economic resurgence of the 1990s. In researching his book, Woodward interviewed not only Greenspan but nearly every important member of Washington's economic elite. The testimonies of people like Alice Rivlin, Robert Rubin, and Lawrence Summers lend weight to his analyses. And though Woodward is a journalist, not an economist, he has a strong grasp of economic theory and terminology. This proves both a strength and a weakness, as certain passages are often hard to understand, even for someone who has studied economics. However, for the most part, Woodward is very good at translating economic jargon into clear journalistic prose.
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We the People

We the People: A Call to Take Back America
We the People: A Call to Take Back America

Thom Hartmann, the acclaimed author of Unequal Protection and The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight, tells a compelling story -- of how a government of, by, and for the people has been replaced by corporate domination. Through brilliant analysis and imaginative illustrations, this fully graphic book illuminates the central dynamics of American politics. Some of Hartmann’s op-ed pieces from CommonDreams.org have been turned into a 216-page comic book...for adults and older teenagers. The illustrations really open up the content -- the profound, existing dangers and several critical steps for reversing course. The thrust of the book is towards creating a grassroots progressive movement and transforming the Democratic Party. It lays out why the threats to democracy are so great and the stakes so high, as “America faces its greatest challenge since the Civil War.”
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"Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!"

"Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!": Adventures of a Curious Character

Richard Feynman was a great scientist, a winner of the Nobel Prize, remembered equally for his laboratory work on liquid helium and his wonderful, unquenchable vitality and sense of humor. His lighthearted approach to life made his lectures a delight and his scientific accomplishments all the more intriguing. Feynman was interested in everything. He painted, traded ideas with Einstein and Bohr, calculated odds with Nick the Greek, accompanied ballet on the bongos. Here is Feynman's astonishing life story -- a combustible mixture of high intelligence, unlimited curiosity, eternal skepticism, and raging chutzpah.
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Radioactive Boy Scout

Radioactive Boy Scout: The True Story of a Boy and His Backyard Nuclear Reactor
Radioactive Boy Scout: The True Story of a Boy and His Backyard Nuclear Reactor

"Growing up in suburban Detroit, David Hahn was fascinated by science, and his basement experiments - building homemade fireworks, brewing moonshine, and concocting his own self-tanning lotion - were more ambitious than those of other boys. While working on his Atomic Energy badge for the Boy Scouts, David's obsessive attention turned to nuclear energy. Throwing caution to the wind, he plunged into a new project: building a nuclear breeder reactor in his backyard garden shed." In The Radioactive Boy Scout, veteran journalist Ken Silverstein re-creates in brilliant detail the months of David's improbable nuclear quest. Posing as a physics professor, David solicited information on reactor design from the U.S. government and from industry experts. (Ironically, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission was his number one source of information.) Scavenging antiques stores and junkyards for old-fashioned smoke detectors and gas lanterns - both of which contain small amounts of radioactive material - and following blueprints he found in an outdated physics textbook, David cobbled together a crude device that threw off toxic levels of radiation. His unsanctioned and wholly unsupervised project finally sparked an environmental catastrophe that put his town's forty thousand residents at risk and caused the EPA to shut down his lab and bury it at a radioactive dumpsite in Utah.
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The Vampire Chronicles

The Vampire Chronicles: Volume 1
The Vampire Chronicles: Volume 1

This book is a collection of the first three books in Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles: Interview with the Vampire, The Vampire Lestat, and The Queen of the Damned. Although these books are about vampires, there are a lot of things about them that are completely unrelated to blood-sucking that are good. There are in-depth explanations and explorations of relationships between different types of characters; there are situations where two eras are compared by way of vampire(s) who lived in one or both; there are engaging environments that any Hollywood set designer would love to be able to re-create. The setup for all three books is quite good too, all three of them having been written or dictated by a vampire. I guess what I'm saying is if the vampire theme bothers you but you can get past it, there is some good stuff there.
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Deception Point

Deception Point
Deception Point

This is the most recent Dan Brown book I've read. What I've said about his writing in the past holds true for this book too. While definitely an interesting read, this book used exactly the same plot devices as in his THREE OTHER BOOKS. So be prepared to anticipate every single plot twist in the book. The subject material is interesting, though, and Mr. Brown would make an excellent screenwriter. He has a talent for creating intriguing atmospheres and characters that you care about, even if only just enough to want to read the next page. If I had to recommend one Dan Brown book right now, it would be Angels & Demons, since everyone's got papacy on the brain, and that book has quite a bit of interesting info about that whole thing.
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A Bell for Adano

A Bell for Adano
A Bell for Adano

Reading this book is the first step towards reaching my goal of reading every work of fiction that has won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. It was also a fun read for me because it has to do with some of my pet interests: Military operations and the concept of human connections subverting command-and-control top-down authority structures. The premise for this book is that an Italian-American (Major Joppolo) is put in charge of a town in Italy recently occupied by American troops in WWII. Recently freed from Fascist control, the townspeople are slow to accept that the Americans (at least some of them) have Italian best interests at heart. This book was referenced in some other book about Special Forces soldiers I read a while ago: "We need more Major Joppolos".
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Memnoch the Devil

Memnoch the Devil
Memnoch the Devil

Anne Rice books come recommended to me very highly by a friend of mine whose taste in books I largely share. At least he hasn't recommended something that's turned out to be crap, yet. Although I read this (#5 in the Vampire Chronicles) before any of the other ones in the series, I thought it stood alone very well. This is a book with very deep religious and spiritual themes, so if that's not something that interests you, don't waste your time. This book is not really about vampires. It's about exploring alternate histories based in a religious context.
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More than Complete Hitchhiker's Guide

More than Complete Hitchhiker's Guide: Complete and Unabridged
More than Complete Hitchhiker's Guide: Complete and Unabridged

I <3 the Hitchhiker's Guide books. Before I read this book, though, I'd only read the first in the series. This book is awesome. It has gilded edges and a cloth bookmark like a Bible. It has 6 separate books in it, combined into one volume. Pan-Galactic Gargle Blasters all around! If you don't like these books, you suck and I probably hate you.
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What Went Wrong?

What Went Wrong?: The Clash Between Islam and Modernity in the Middle East
What Went Wrong?: The Clash Between Islam and Modernity in the Middle East

For those of us out there who were disillusioned by the boring, sanitized, and inconclusive versions of history taught in public schools, Bernard Lewis does a great job of approaching this question from all angles including linguistics, psychology, and economics. His analyses are, well, anal. In a good way. Like the several times throughout the text where he points out mistranslations of historical documents that have skewed their meaning in important ways. If you're a history, linguistics, or general Middle East dork, this book is highly recommended. It can get a bit dry in some places if you're not dragged along by interest in the subject matter, but is nonetheless a worthwhile read.
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Prelude to Foundation

Prelude to Foundation
Prelude to Foundation

Prequels, as they go, are hit or miss. I think a good prequel can make or break an entire franchise, because if it blows, then the whole story is based on something that nobody wants to see, and that undermines its popularity. But, this prequel is cool. If you don't know the much about the Foundation series, the basic premise is that a mathemetician develops a way to statistically model the future based on the actions of large groups of people. So, every couple hundred years, a holographic recording of him shows up in Galactic City Hall, or whatever, and tells everyone exactly what they're doing. So yeah, this book is all about that guy and how he came up with this sort of precise science. Kind of weird, and a good book when judged by itself as well.
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Foundation's Edge

Foundation's Edge
Foundation's Edge

Asimov's Foundation series turned out to not be what I expected at all when I first started reading it. They are about humans and human interaction on a very basic level, and I think he does a great job of weaving his different storylines together, bringing the human interaction to the forefront with the futuristic reality his characters live in serving only as a backdrop for his heroes and heroines to meet and fulfill their destinies. What? Oh, this book. Asimov's choice of characters to highlight in this particular book addresses some important social issues and gets the reader thinking critically about the status quo, once it's clear that this book is not just about spaceships and laser guns. From the Hamish neanderthalesque companion of one of the book's protagonists to the geopolitical structure of planetary systems, Asimov raises and usually tackles quite skillfully questions that most political scientists would despair to answer or even confront in the wild.
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Cryptonomicon

Cryptonomicon
Cryptonomicon

This book was the first novel I had read in quite a while, after several much less riveting political, historical, or technical books. I really enjoyed the writing style and the subject matter, which was distinctively geeky (the book includes a cryptography-related perl script) while never straying too far from the main stories to completely disillusion the casual reader expecting a techno-thriller. The characters were also developed quite well, I thought—I actually ended up caring what happened to them. The last action scene was a bit over the top though. Those of you who have read it know what I'm talking about. All in all a great and definitely recommended read.
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Of Paradise and Power

Of Paradise and Power: America and Europe in the New World Order
Of Paradise and Power: America and Europe in the New World Order

I became aware of this book's existence after reading this article, which draped itself lovingly all over Robert Kagan. I can't say that I disagree too much, though. By applying principles of psychology on the national level, Kagan is able to make generalizations that do not hold up in the specific case, but nonetheless reflect reality. Several of my favorite passages from the book will speak for themselves: "When Europeans wept and waved American flags after September 11th, it was out of genuine human sympathy. It was an expression of sorrow and affection for Americans. For better or for worse, European displays of solidarity were a product more of fellow feeling than of careful calculations of self-interest. Europeans' heartfelt sympathy, unaccompanied by a sense of shared risk and common responsibility, did not draw Europeans and American together in strategic partnership. On the contrary, as soon as Americans began looking beyond the immediate task of finding and destroying Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda to broader strategic goals in the "war on terrorism," Europeans recoiled."
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Digital Fortress

Digital Fortress
Digital Fortress

Techno-thrillers (like Swordfish, for example) tend to be a bit unbelievable, and even just frickin' stupid sometimes, especially on the technical end. Digital Fortress doesn't suffer from this tendency. While the premise might seem ridiculous to experienced cryptographers to begin with, the book is a fun read, the characters are interesting, and the story is addicting. In the end, the story has several (I think) clever and realistic twists to tie things up nicely. Digital Fortress is the third book I've read by Dan Brown. I read them in reverse chronological order: The DaVinci Code, Angels & Demons, and Digital Fortress. In retrospect, I think I would have appreciated all three books more if I had gone in chronological order. Going backwards, it's just as easy to see his evolution as a writer, but the complexity and scale of the storylines goes down as you get into the earlier books. Still, one of my favorite books (Without Remorse, by Tom Clancy) is under par for the course (author) when it comes to complexity and scale, yet stands up against any of Tom's more epic and ambitious books, in my opinion. Same goes for this book, but fair warning. If you're looking for a globe-trotting adventure like The DaVinci Code, Digital Fortress isn't quite that. Anyway, this is a good book, even if you're not a techno-weenie. Danny-boy goes to the trouble to give sufficient explanations of the more obscure topics, so that the less cryptographically-aware among us can still enjoy the story.
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Learning Python

Learning Python
Learning Python

Python is "that language with the whitespace rules." In particular, what that means is that code blocks are defined by indentation. Which seems weird and annoying, until you try to read somebody else's program and the meaning just slides quite painlessly right on into your cerebral cortex, almost effortlessly. So yeah. And, to quote Bruce Eckel,
With Python, it has always felt like the designers were saying, "We're trying to make your life easier, and that's it. Making your life easier is the thing that we're not compromising on."
That's why I'm learning Python, because most of what I (and probably most programmers today) do is edit other people's code. I want that to be as easy as possible.
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Drinking, Smoking and Screwing

Drinking, Smoking and Screwing: Great Writers on Good Times
Drinking, Smoking and Screwing: Great Writers on Good Times

Such a good book. A celebration of vices (if you choose to label them as such), and the people who enjoy them. My favorite quote from the book:
"What's your name?"
"Laura."
"I'm going to call you Katherine."
"Ok."
[And then the author proceeds to refer to this person as Katherine for the rest of the story, to the point where you forget what the character's real name was.]
So hard to choose a favorite, though. It's just filled with great stories, engaging environments, and interesting people.
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The ACME Novelty Datebook

The ACME Novelty Datebook: 1986-1995, Vol. 1
The ACME Novelty Datebook: 1986-1995, Vol. 1

The ACME Novelty Datebook. This is a random fun collection of weird drawings. It's like a diary in pictures. I enjoyed it.
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Hire Me, Dumbass!

Hire Me, Dumbass!: Serious Inquiries Only
Hire Me, Dumbass!: Serious Inquiries Only

This book is a gem. It had me laughing out loud almost the whole time I had it open. It's a very simple concept, but executed extremely well. Quotes from the publisher's description of the book: Dear Pepsi Human Resource Department, I love Coke... Dear Playboy Human Resource Department, Why do I want to work at Playboy? Two words: naked women... Dear Solomon Smith Barney's Human Resources Department, You are no doubt looking for candidates with intelligence, dedication, ambition and drive. That's great, but what about the rest of us... Dear UPS Human Resources Manager, You are probably wondering why this letter was sent via Federal Express... Dear Fruit of the Loom Human Resources Manager, I go through underwear like crazy. It's gotten so bad I just throw them away after each use. That stated, I would like to be considered for a key marketing position within your organization...
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The One Minute Bureaucrat

The One Minute Bureaucrat: A Nightmare in Four Fits
The One Minute Bureaucrat: A Nightmare in Four Fits

My Uncle Jim wrote this book a couple years ago. It's a quick read; I read the whole thing while I was sitting in a Starbucks in Whistler in January 2004. I remember enjoying it, but I don't remember any specifics, so I'm re-reading it right now. He also self-published another (Bush Almighty! An Extraterrestrial Critique) last year that I just found out about while trying to link to the publisher of the first one without going through Amazon... I ordered my copy by sending a $15 check directly to the publisher. I just had to dig through a crapton of old check copies to get that number. You're welcome. The snail mail address for the publisher of this book is:
Serendipity Suite 530 37 Store Street Bloomsbury London
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Fahrenheit 451

Fahrenheit 451
Fahrenheit 451

"Internationally acclaimed with more than five million copies in print, Fahrenheit 451 is Ray Bradbury's classic novel of censorship and defiance, as resonant today as it was when it was first published nearly fifty years ago." I enjoyed this book. It reminded me of Atlas Shrugged in a couple ways, and of We The Living in other ways. It's about the transformation of a man who sort of fell into his oppressive occupation without thinking about it. In fact, the entire society of his time seems not to think. His transformation begins when his mind is woken up by a chance meeting and he begins to see more clearly what is happening around him. While this is definitely an inspiring novel about the evils of censorship, the protagonist's philosophy strikes me as rather defeatist for my taste. To paraphrase: "Do no provable 'wrong', stay passively on the sidelines until the dust clears, then re-enter the picture when they know they need you." That philosophy doesn't sufficiently punish willful ignorance in the face of the truth.
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Second Foundation

Second Foundation
Second Foundation

The Mule (guy with mind-control powers) is back, and he's up against the Second Foundation! Looks like an epic battle not seen since Scanners!!!1 I've just noticed that I didn't write any more about this book after I finished it. So I'll try to do that now, several months after I finished the book. It's a good book. The title makes it sound like the entire book is about the Second Foundation, but the book is really about the search for the Second Foundation. The Mule is looking for the Second Foundation so he can destroy it, and some members of the original Foundation are looking for it to save them (the Second Foundation) from the Mule. I can't really say too much more without ruining the plot (or does he just not remember...? mystery and intrigue!), but I liked it enough to read the third part of the trilogy. There you go.
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Foundation and Empire

Foundation and Empire
Foundation and Empire

As time passes during the fall of the great Galactic Empire, tales of technology past become miracles performed by magicians. The Foundation is ruled by hereditary kings with near-absolute power. But then the balance is upset by a mutant calling himself the Mule, with mind control powers! He takes lots of stuff over, and starts looking for the Second Foundation (from the first book). This book is about that search. There are lots of neat gadgets and the plot hides universal political and social themes just waiting to be discovered.
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Database Design for Mere Mortals

Database Design for Mere Mortals: A Hands-On Guide to Relational Database Design
Database Design for Mere Mortals: A Hands-On Guide to Relational Database Design

This book is only ostensibly about database design, at least with respect to the more technical aspects of that process. It is primarily about how to accurately and efficiently provide what an organization needs, especially if they don't really know what they want either. That wasn't really what I was looking for, so I found myself skipping chapters. There is some good content in the book, but there is also a lot of repeated content. I could pick that out even though I only read I'd say 40% of the book while skipping over the less technical fluff.
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Own Your Own Corporation

Own Your Own Corporation: Why the Rich Own Their Own Companies and Everyone Else Works for Them
Own Your Own Corporation: Why the Rich Own Their Own Companies and Everyone Else Works for Them

The only real way to be financially independent in this day and age is to own a corporation and provide value to the marketplace. This book describes the differences between the different types of corporate entities that can be formed and discusses their advantages for different types of businesses. I found this book really useful and plan to re-read it so I can speak intelligently with my lawyer.
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Design Patterns

Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software
Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software

Design Patterns is by many accounts as close as you can get to Object Oriented Programming's Bible... I'm not an avid user of the languages that these patterns are designed for, so I didn't really "get" the advantages that using these types of patterns give, since I can just take them for granted in most cases. Nonetheless, it was a good read overall.
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Foundation

Foundation
Foundation

I've heard the name Isaac Asimov sporadically over my reading career, always as synonymous with "science fiction." Although the link goes to a different edition than I have, I'm sure they haven't screwed it up too bad. Looks like the one I have is an '83 vintage! So yeah, the Foundation trilogy won the Hugo award for *ahem* Best. Trilogy Ever. It's quite good. Isaac manages to slip a lot of social commentary into a book I always assumed was about light sabers and photon torpedoes. WTG Isaac! The book is divided into a couple sections, each dealing with a different type of power wielded over the masses. First comes blind academia, then fabricated religion, then greed and trade. It's a very thought-provoking book, as I would expect any book that deals with distribution of and shifts of power as well as consequences of people's actions on such an enormous scale to be.
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Jefferson's War

Jefferson's War: America's First War on Terror 1801-1805
Jefferson's War: America's First War on Terror 1801-1805

I'm interested in military history, especially American foreign policy and how it has changed over the years, and this book looks like a good place to get insight into how America has responded to terrorism in the past and how that stance has changed over the years, since the Founding Fathers were in control of the government. This is more of a history book than I expected, but it's also an area of history not a lot of people are familiar with, from what I've seen. It's interesting to look at the methods and motives of the players in this collection of stories about how the young nation America (and the rest of the world) deals with the Barbary States. While the motives on each side differ considerably from today's war on terror(ism?), many of the situations and reactions described provide valuable lessons in international relations.
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Corporate Warriors

Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry
Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry

Just the concept of privatizing America's military seems very irrational to me. The fist of the government should be owned and controlled by the government. What will happen when this is not the case? That's what this book is about. (from Sep. 2003) (Feb. 2004): After reading the preface to this book, I realize that I misinterpreted what it was about. Or at least miscategorized it as less of an impartial fact-finding mission than it appears to be. (Mar. 2004): After finishing this book, I've learned a lot about the history of armies with relation to state organizations, the more recent history of the effects of nationalism on military trends and actors, and the rise and current silent ubiquity of the private military firm (PMF). To sum up one of the main points of the book, armies tied directly to the state are extremely rare in recorded history and have only become prevalent relatively recently. As the United States government becomes more and more reliant on PMFs to support its forces (Bosnia, Afghanistan, Iraq, etc.) and carry out foreign policy discreetly with little fear of public backlash (Colombia is the most telling example), the power of the PMFs grows by leaps and bounds, as they quickly become TBTF. This is a must-read for anyone in the army or anyone involved in public service, especially politicians, as it covers many potential problems (and/or benefits) that could arise from the widespread adoption of PMFs as they exist today.
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Crisis of Islam

Crisis of Islam: Holy War and Unholy Terror
Crisis of Islam: Holy War and Unholy Terror

After reading Sleeping With the Devil, this book was a nice intro to the history behind how things are today in Saudi Arabia and the Islamic world in general. It talks a lot about the history of Islam from a political perspective, and particularly Wahhabism, the radical Islamic sect flourishing mainly in Saudi Arabia, but being spread all over the Islamic world sponsored by Saudi oil money. One of the main points of this book is that Islam is fundamentally incompatible with democracy because Muslims are not tolerant of other religions at all when they come to political power because, like Christians, they are always right. Historically, the Islamic identity has not been defined or restricted specifically by nationality, but rather as a collective of all the countries in which Islam is the dominant political force. Also, Islam in and of itself is more of a plan for running a country than a religion. I'm definitely going to read this book again, probably along side Sleeping With the Devil.
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The Mission

The Mission: America's Military in the Twenty-First Century
The Mission: America's Military in the Twenty-First Century

What does the military do when they're not fighting? The author of this book suggests that they become "de facto rulers" abroad, something that they are not trained or even authorized to do. I enjoyed this book. It is a bit harsh on civilian officials with regard to military policy, and I think that is much deserved. The military's job is to fix problems. They have a "can do" attitude and approach problems very pragmatically. Politicians, on the other hand, try to make themselves look good. Full stop. The range of stories portrayed is quite engaging as well. The author follows several different people through their daily routines, from regional CinCs with their private jets and armies of aides to an Albanian translator returning to her ethnic home, dodging mortars and enduring racism while trying to help the soldiers around her understand the culture of the region. I found this book to be an interesting glimpse into the future for a country that is still young. America is struggling with political correctness, frivolous lawsuits and racial discrimination (to name a few) at the moment, and it doesn't take much extrapolation to imagine what the future holds. Albanians and Serbs have an extremely deep-seated hatred for one another, based on events in the past that were perpetuated by both sides. There is no right answer to how to stop the cycle, but I think a little understanding and truth from both sides of any conflict can go a long way to stopping cycles of hatred and violence before they start.
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Balkan Ghosts

Balkan Ghosts: A Journey through History
Balkan Ghosts: A Journey through History

This book delves very deeply into the psychological and socioeconomical factors and influences surrounding events in the Balkans. It covers a lot of the history of the area, which is essential to understanding a lot of the unrest in the area. There is an amazing amount of ethnic hatred and just plain racism in that area of the world. A lot of it stems from the fact that every country claims all the land it held at the peak of its power as rightfully its own, which creates many conflicting claims. Overall a very enlightening book, it describes the great importance of the Balkans and their influence on the headlines of today. From Balkan nations aiding and receiving aid from extremist Middle Eastern regimes to Greece as the West's gateway to the East, there are many important and thought-provoking points brought up in this book.
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Angels & Demons

Angels & Demons
Angels & Demons

Dan Brown became one of my new favorite authors with The DaVinci Code, and he continues that trend with Angels & Demons. His style is a refreshingly realistic fiction based on historical fact coming to life in the present. The Illuminati, the Vatican, particle physics, ambigrams... Even though this book takes place over a relatively short period of time and the action gets quite intense, this is a fun read. The generalities of the plot and the author's tricks are quite the same as in The DaVinci Code, though. There are implied villians and last-minute surprise 180-degree turns. Dan Brown definitely knows what he likes, in that he uses the same literary devices in this book as in the Code, but I think he pulls it off.
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Dynamic HTML

Dynamic HTML: The Definitive Reference, Second Edition
Dynamic HTML: The Definitive Reference, Second Edition

There's so much in this book. It's the most comprehensive front-end web developer's reference I've found. From HTML to CSS to JavaScript and DOM, it's got everything you could possibly need to look up while designing a website.
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We the Living

We the Living
We the Living

Life in the USSR sucked, as Ayn Rand describes in this book, which she describes as "as near to an autobiography as I will ever write." Revolution, power, exploitation, all bring out the most basic values that every human being holds dear. This book tells the story of several Russian young people in the wake of the Red October revolution. The conflict in this book is between two different ideals which are very simply represented by the two words "I" and "We." The beliefs of those who believe in "We" are practiced publicly but not privately, leading to exploitable hypocricy by those who would wield power for themselves. At one point in the book, the heroine promises her uncle that she will get out and tell the world what is really happening in Russia. This book is Ayn Rand fulfilling that promise.
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A Man, A Can, A Grill

A Man, A Can, A Grill: 50 No-Sweat Meals You Can Fire Up Fast
A Man, A Can, A Grill: 50 No-Sweat Meals You Can Fire Up Fast

Almost all of the recipes in this book look really good, and they are relatively simple, although not as simple as the description might lead you to believe. There are definitely a lot of ingredients listed that a normal person would not have in their kitchen.
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Tao of Gung Fu

Tao of Gung Fu: A Study in the Way of Chinese Martial Art
Tao of Gung Fu: A Study in the Way of Chinese Martial Art

I'd like to learn a martial art at some point, preferably sooner rather than later, and I think reading some of Bruce Lee's writings is probably a good starting point. This book is a bit of a history of the Chinese art of gung fu, a bit of a basic instruction manual. While it's definitely not a standalone reference, or enough to make you into a martial arts expert, it's a great introductory source of information about all sorts of different kinds of martial arts.
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Dilbert and the Way of the Weasel

Dilbert and the Way of the Weasel: A Guide to Outwitting Your Boss, Your Coworkers, and the Other Pants-Wearing Ferrets in Your Life
Dilbert and the Way of the Weasel: A Guide to Outwitting Your Boss, Your Coworkers, and the Other Pants-Wearing Ferrets in Your Life

Weaseling on many levels and in many different ways is the topic of this book, from singing weasels who thwart enjoyment of favorite songs by singing along to malevolent manager weasels who shuffle their least competent employees around to "help" with other tasks, thus leaving the best resources for themselves. There is also a helpful discussion about an audio visual gesture to indicate that somebody is being a weasel, in much the same fashion as the "thumb-and-index-finger" loser gesture. Enjoyable reading.
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Games, Diversions & Perl Culture

Games, Diversions & Perl Culture: Best of the Perl Journal
Games, Diversions & Perl Culture: Best of the Perl Journal

Although it's self-described as "useless" from a technical standpoint (which I don't entirely agree with), it's also described as entertaining, and the best of the Best of the Perl Journal series at "captur[ing] the spirit of Perl."
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The Dilbert Future

The Dilbert Future: Thriving on Stupidity in the 21st Century
The Dilbert Future: Thriving on Stupidity in the 21st Century

I like Scott Adams' writing style. It's a very encouraging, self-deprecating style that makes me wonder why exactly I'm not writing books. He makes intelligent arguments for things that are decidedly not intelligent. He plays devil's advocate for the express purpose of pissing people off. Pissed off people pay attention to you and might buy your books! More than anything, I respect the fact that he will admit when he doesn't know about something instead of trying to act like he does. Now, of course, playing devil's advocate to piss people off is still possible when you don't know about something, and that's always funny.
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The Dilbert Principle

The Dilbert Principle: A Cubicle's-Eye View of Bosses, Meetings, Management Fads and Other Workplace Afflictions
The Dilbert Principle: A Cubicle's-Eye View of Bosses, Meetings, Management Fads and Other Workplace Afflictions

Dilbert on management strategy. This Principle is strongly satirical and mentally deadly to those without a stomach for direct speech. Adams' writing style is very enjoyable, addictively honest, and fun to read. It's amazing how much common sense can be ignored by people who are supposedly smarter than Joe Worker.
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To Begin The World Anew

To Begin The World Anew: The Genius and Ambiguities of the American Founders
To Begin The World Anew: The Genius and Ambiguities of the American Founders

Political science and history can be heavy and/or boring topics. The wide influence of currently accepted political thought and also the requirement of political scientists to clearly state their ideas with the possibility of being called wrong has scared many people away from challenging the status quo. Not so with this book. The author is not afraid to state his interpretation of the intentions of America's founding fathers, and is qualified to do so. The book is not meant to be a critique of today's political climate with regard to the founders' intentions. However, the contrast is more glaring when the criticism, or even the implication of a contrast is omitted. This is not a book about politicians. This is a book about ordinary people attempting to legitimize a revolution, to establish the credibility and feasibility of a country, and devising ways to force government to be "by the people," not just "of the people."
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Talk of the Devil

Talk of the Devil: Encounters with Seven Dictators
Talk of the Devil: Encounters with Seven Dictators

Fallen and disgraced dictators are the focus of this book. This is another book I read to inform myself about recent military history. I heard about the book from an interview on NPR with the author, Ricardo Orizio. It presents information in a very interesting way, first describing the author's trips to the places where he would eventually meet the former leaders, and then the disposition and mannerisms of the interviewee along with their responses to his questions, contrasted with historical facts so as to preserve both points of view intact.
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The Da Vinci Code

The Da Vinci Code
The Da Vinci Code

Mystery, adventure, brain teasers, riddles, and a history lesson. As if that weren't enough, the motives and practices of the Catholic church and one of its more extreme branches, the Opus Dei, come under scrutiny. The Da Vinci Code makes clever use of little-known facts and historical happenings and weaves them all together into a global conspiracy that is frighteningly believable. The characters are realistic, the plot very addictive, and the author pulls no punches when describing each and every character's true motives.
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Checked and Balanced

Checked and Balanced: How Ticket-Splitters Are Shaping the New Balance of Power in American Politics
Checked and Balanced: How Ticket-Splitters Are Shaping the New Balance of Power in American Politics

Does the party system circumvent the checks and balances written into the Constitution? Do voters trust political parties? What do the current political trends indicate? All of these questions and more are brought up in this book about the political phenomenon of "ticket splitting," or voting for a Presidential candidate from one party and a House or Senate representative from the opposing party. That this practice is common enough to have a book written about it says a lot about trust of the parties by itself, IMHO.
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Harry Potter (5) and the Order of the Phoenix

Harry Potter (5) and the Order of the Phoenix
Harry Potter (5) and the Order of the Phoenix

Corruption and ineptitude in the government is one of the main themes in this book, along with the power of the media to influence the masses. J.K. Rowling disguises a harsh education about the real world as a children's book quite well. Many new characters are introduced, we learn more about familiar ones, and main characters shine in their own peculiar ways. She's had a lot of time to work on this one, and it's got a lot of pages, but they turn easily as her dry humor lightens even the heaviest of topics.
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Reefer Madness

Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs, and Cheap Labor in the American Black Market
Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs, and Cheap Labor in the American Black Market

Reefer Madness really makes you think. And not just about marijuana. That the black market has grown even as much as the most modest estimates assume is staggering. Black markets emerge on such a large scale when the laws or taxes they avoid are disregarded or considered unnecessary on a similar scale. "Let the punishment fit the crime." I agree wholeheartedly. Something is definitely wrong when someone can serve more time in prison for selling weed than for killing another human being. The two other topics covered, black market labor and pornography, are also very interesting.
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Sleeping with the Devil

Sleeping with the Devil: How Washington Sold Our Soul for Saudi Crude
Sleeping with the Devil: How Washington Sold Our Soul for Saudi Crude

International terrorism, economies addicted to oil, and violently fanatical religious fundamentalism. Former CIA operative Richard Baer shows us his interpretation of the incestuous political and economic relationship between the United States and Saudi Arabia. He describes how the Saudi royal family grooms and babysits our politicians, how they siphon off enormous sums of money from arms deals that are kept off the books, and how they support islamic jihad against the West because if they did not, it would be directed at them full-force. This book is a must-read for anyone considering an SUV purchase, or any entrepreneur considering delving into the largely untapped wealth of alternative energy sources.
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Shadow Warriors

Shadow Warriors: Inside the Special Forces
Shadow Warriors: Inside the Special Forces

Military history and the different forces, political and otherwise, at work in the military are very interesting to me. This book by Tom Clancy and retired General Carl Stiner is a crash course in the history of many overseas military conflicts, and the different ways they are handled and possibly resolved. Much of the book is about the development of the US military's special forces - units like the Green Berets, the Army Rangers, the Navy SEALs, etc. Clancy and Stiner trace the need for and use of these units over many decades, establishing sometimes disturbing patterns in miltary thought.
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Fast Food Nation

Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal
Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal

I, unfortunately, am a typical ignorant American. I eat too much fast food without knowing exactly how bad it is. Reading this book was the beginning of my efforts to educate myself about what I should and shouldn't eat. It provides a walkthrough of the entire fast food industry (including those that support it or depend on it), from the franchisor level all the way down to the slaughterhouse employee up to their ankles in blood. There are too many interesting points discussed to list here, but two topics I found highly enlightening were the sections about farmers and how they and their farming businesses are affected by the fast food industry and the sections about government regulation of low-income, high-turnover employment and food production.
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Atlas Shrugged

Atlas Shrugged
Atlas Shrugged

An old, tattered copy of Atlas Shrugged found its way into my hands earlier this year. I had read bits and pieces of the book before, but never cover to cover. I had a sneaking suspicion that the part I had read was the very end of the book, but didn't want to confirm that suspicion by definitely spoiling the end. (It turned out I had read a sort of depressing and frustrating part that was near the end of the book, after which it got better.)
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Proxies

Proxies
Proxies

I borrowed this book and ended up reading it on a transatlantic flight, which rekindled my interest in reading. It's an exciting sci fi adventure about the not too distant future where technology is developed that allows people to remotely control androids. The skills required to do this are hard to master, however, so a special institution is founded where children are trained to use these androids from birth. This book is about the physical and psychological effects of such an extreme form of out of body experiences, and it's a fun and exciting book too.
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Without Remorse

Without Remorse
Without Remorse

This is one of my favorite books. It's a very involved book, although on a much smaller scale than most of Tom Clancy's writing. It follows one man through a period of his life where he saves a hooker with a heart of gold, almost dies, and goes on a secret mission for the army. It's an origin story, if you will, for a character who shows up in some of Clancy's other books, and it works quite well as a standalone work too.
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