The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 by Lawrence Wright
New York : Vintage Books, 2007.
540 p. : ill., maps ; 21 cm.
I've read a lot about the Middle East, and about 9/11, but The Looming Tower is one of the best books to pull all the narrative threads together into an informative, compelling and stunning read.
There were several things I learned that surprised me. I didn't realize how central the Egyptian fundamentalist-jihad movement was to al-Qaeda. I had no idea that Bin Laden's time in Sudan was marked by his arriving a multimillionaire and leaving virtually broke. I didn't know that when he left Sudan for Afghanistan, he had no idea who the Taliban were and they were cautious about him, too. Probably the most painful revelations of the book are the several times that the CIA refused to share information with the FBI which almost surely would have lead to the uncovering and thwarting of the 9/11 plot. There is more to discover in Wright's definitive history.
I would definitely recommend this book to a student with a keen interest in the background of 9/11 or to a student working on a research project about 9/11. It is a fine book, one which won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction.
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Thursday, February 16, 2017
Big Ideas, Little Book
Seven Brief Lessons on Physics by Carlo Rovelli
New York, N.Y. : Riverhead Books, 2016.
86 p. : ill. ; 20 cm.
Seven Brief Lessons is one of those lovely little science books that is at once accessible to the lay reader, but also introduces concepts and ideas that leave you more curious (and perplexed even) than when you started. How confused or satisfied you are after finishing the book will somewhat depend on your knowledge of, and familiarity with scientific concepts. But even a science novice can come away with a lot to ponder after reading this book.
Rovelli wants to touch on some of the most astounding and important concepts in physics that have developed in the last 115 years. He starts out with Einstein by mentioning his "Special Theory of Relativity" which dealt with the fluid nature of time, and then proceeds to expound on what he considers one of science's preeminent masterpieces, Einstein's "General Theory of Relativity." It is this theory that establishes space as a field that is shaped by gravity.
Rovelli continues on in his lessons to discuss quanta, the nature of the cosmos, the search for a unifying theory that will connect the macro understanding of gravity and space to the nearly incomprehensible phenomena of quantum physics at the subatomic level. His book spirals off into ruminations on heat, time, and the "granular" nature of space itself.
He brings his book to a close with a meditation on the human condition and its place fully within the matrix of nature.
Less a book of answers - or even a summary of where physics stands - this book is more of a jumping off point for pondering the wondrous and nearly unbelievable nature of what humans know and still don't know about the universe we find ourselves in.
Wednesday, February 8, 2017
Money and Revenge
The Making of Donald Trump by David Cay Johnston
Brooklyn : Melville House, [2016]
xvi, 263 p. ; 24 cm.
I'm a pretty cynical person by nature, but this book is a very depressing summary of the life of Donald Trump, who is now President Donald Trump. David Cay Johnston is an investigative reporter who has been covering Trump since the late 1980s.
Probably what makes this book so stunning, is the unrelenting negatives that make up Trump's life. A reader hoping to find something redeeming in the actions of Donald Trump will come away with nothing. Instead what emerges is a person who is incredibly talented at skirting the edges of legality to make himself famous and - whether or not as wealthy as he claims - a conduit for the transactions of vast sums of loans, credits and money.
Sadly, what emerges is the portrait of a man who celebrates revenge and greed, and treats women as objects.
Johnston released his book in August of 2016, probably hoping that it would dissuade voters from supporting Trump. That, obviously, was not the case.
If a student is interested in a well researched, well documented accounting of the life of Donald Trump, this is a book to recommend. As for President Trump, we will have to wait several years at least, for a book that will provide an assessment of the life of President Trump and what the results of that will be.
Brooklyn : Melville House, [2016]
xvi, 263 p. ; 24 cm.
I'm a pretty cynical person by nature, but this book is a very depressing summary of the life of Donald Trump, who is now President Donald Trump. David Cay Johnston is an investigative reporter who has been covering Trump since the late 1980s.
Probably what makes this book so stunning, is the unrelenting negatives that make up Trump's life. A reader hoping to find something redeeming in the actions of Donald Trump will come away with nothing. Instead what emerges is a person who is incredibly talented at skirting the edges of legality to make himself famous and - whether or not as wealthy as he claims - a conduit for the transactions of vast sums of loans, credits and money.
Sadly, what emerges is the portrait of a man who celebrates revenge and greed, and treats women as objects.
Johnston released his book in August of 2016, probably hoping that it would dissuade voters from supporting Trump. That, obviously, was not the case.
If a student is interested in a well researched, well documented accounting of the life of Donald Trump, this is a book to recommend. As for President Trump, we will have to wait several years at least, for a book that will provide an assessment of the life of President Trump and what the results of that will be.
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