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A Year in Provence, Peter Mayle
The dis-oriented author is a Francophile. I made my first trip to France in 1978 with my high school French teacher. I was hooked. So it was a no-brainer that I would buy Peter Mayle's A Year in Provence. Mayle's is a British ex-pat and his book chronicles his first year in a rehabbed farmhouse in Provence.
Mayle makes the people and the culture of the region come alive.
Since that first trip, I have made another six trips to France. I have been to several different regions of France including Provence. And my daughter is planning to spend next year in Strasbourg. It is in our blood.
Mayle and his wife take the big step and buy an old Provencal farm house. The book is organized into twelve chapters, one for each month of their first year. Throughout the year they have to work with local craftsman to remodel the house. They also have to try to fit into the local community.
Mayle writes an often compelling and always witty account of coming to terms with life in Provence. It is not always wine and poolside parties but reading Mayle — I can feel the sunshine and smell the food.
After reading this book, I am planning my next trip to France.
| A year in Provence gets 5 of 5 dis-oriented smileys |
Purchase A Year in Provence from Amazon.com.
December 16, 2008 in Book Reviews | Permalink | Comments (0) | Top
Generation Kill, Evan Wright
The dis-oriented author has two boys serving on active duty in the US military. I am also a student of military history. I picked up Evan Wright's Generation Kill because while I have read a great deal about the American Revolution and the two World Wars, I have not really read anything about the modern military. Nothing about the types of experiences that my own sons could encounter.
This current generation of soldiers is not Brokaw's Greatest Generation — they are still a great generation.
Evan Wright is a journalist who was embedded with a Marine Recon unit in the Second Iraq War. In the beginning, Wright notes that in World War II it was often difficult to get new soldiers to actually open fire and kill the enemy. In Iraq, there seemed to be no difficulty at all. The modern American fighting man has grown up in an era of DVD's, cell phones, facebook and video games. The culture in which we live has an impact on the soldiers we send into battle.
The unit Wright is embedded with is mounted in HumVees. Even though they are a Marine Recon unit, in the Iraq conflict they are being used as a Calvary unit. Driving into towns ahead of the main invasion force and oding reconaissance by fire. This book paints a picture of US Marines in combat. It is crude and sometimes difficult, gritty but it feels real. This book is the basis for the HBO mini-series by the same name.
This book gives an intimate view of the modern US fighting man at war.
| Generation Kill gets 5 of 5 dis-oriented smileys |
Purchase Generation Kill from Amazon.com.
December 16, 2008 in Book Reviews | Permalink | Comments (0) | Top
Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001 by Steve Coll
The dis-oriented author has been reading about the conflict in Iraq. I recently read George Crile's Charlie Wilson's War. Steve Coll's Ghost Wars covers US involvement in Afghanistan from the time of the Soviet invasion to 9-11. This book addresses not only the war but its consequences leading up to the rise of Osama bin Ladin.
After winning World War II we rebuilt Japan and instituted the Marshall Plan in Europe. After winning the Cold War we created Al Qaeda.
It did not have to be this way.
The Cold War. The Cold War was the struggle between the US and the Soviet Union. Between the East and the West. It is called the Cold War because it never turned into a shooting war between the US and the Soviets. While there was never a direct shooting war it was still a war. A war of surrogates: Korea, Viet Nam, Afghanistan were all shooting wars. The Soviets baked North Korea and North Viet Nam against US troops. The US backed the Mujahedeen against Soviet troops.
The United States began arming the Mujahedeen indirectly through Pakistans security forces. Importantly the US provided Stinger surface to air missles to help counter the threat of Soviet aviation. Unfortunately, the distribution of US supplied arms to Islamic leaders became a power struggle in itself. Many fighters did not even know that the US was helping them.
After the Soviet withdrawal US attention turned elsewhere. The tribal rivalries that had lain dormant exploded into civil war. Rather than use our influence to stabilize the country, the US stayed hands off.
The Taliban eventually came to fill in the gap. They provided the vehicle for Osama bin Ladin to grow his nascent Al Qaeda. The eventual result was the twin towers.
Anyone who wants to understand Al Qaeda or Afghanistan should read this book.
| Ghost Wars gets 5 of 5 dis-oriented smileys |
Purchase Ghost Wars from Amazon.com.
December 16, 2008 in Book Reviews | Permalink | Comments (0) | Top
Charlie Wilson's War: The Extraordinary Story of How the Wildest Man in Congress and a Rogue CIA Agent Changed the History of Our Times, by George Crile
The dis-oriented author grew up during the Cold War. I remember Viet Nam and Afghanistan. I remember when the United States sided with Islamic militias to fight the Soviets. I remember Charlie Wilson's War. George Criles book, Charlie Wilson's War is a look at the Afghan war and how the United States came to side with people like Osama bin Ladin against the Soviet Union.
I remember these events as they unfolded but I never understood them until I read this book.
Charlie Wilson was a congressman from Texas. You might even say that Wilson was a caricature of a congressman from Texas. Handsome and charismatic, he was a bon-vivant and a rake to use the archaic terms. His congressional staffers were all attractive and female and were known on the Hill as Charlie's Angels.
Wilson was a sort of congressional slacker. But when Joanne Herring, a Dallas socialite, introduced him to the Afghan struggle agains the Soviets — Wilson became a man obsessed. Wilson worked both through and around the CIA to provide covert funds for the Mujahedeen. Ultimately Wilson saw the Soviets withdraw from Afghanistan. Unfortunately, the withdrawal came as a larger part of the collapse of the Soviet Empire. Afghanistan was eclipsed in the news by the Berlin Wall coming down.
As the Soviets left, so did US aid and interest. Afghanistan deteriorated into a bloody civil war. The collapse of Afghan institutions was a significant factor in the birth of Al Qaeda.
This book paints a tremendous picture of victory grasped and opportunity lost.
| Charlie Wilson's War gets 5 of 5 dis-oriented smileys |
Purchase Charlie Wilson's War from Amazon.com.
December 16, 2008 in Book Reviews | Permalink | Comments (0) | Top
21: Bringing Down the House: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T. Students Who Took Vegas for Millions, Ben Mezrich
The dis-oriented author is not a gambler. I did however major in mathematics, so I have an interest in numbers. After seeing previews for the movie based on the book, I decided to pick up Ben Mezrich's book, 21: Bringing Down the House. In the book, Mezrich tells the story of a group of MIT math whizzes who form a team to go to Las Vegas and beat the house at Blackjack.
This was a fascinating book.
Card counting. The system is deceptively simple. Keep track of the cards played. Not even the individual cards but their values. When the probabilities stack up against the house, signal another player to come in and start betting. It really is that easy. Except of course that the casinos are monitored 24/7 by video and both uniformed and undercover security.
As the name suggests, this book and the movie by the same name follow a crew of MIT students who take on the casinos and live the high life. All good things come to an end and this adventure is no exception.
I found this book hard to put down, and of course it is better than the movie.
| 21: Bringing Down the House gets 4 of 5 dis-oriented smileys |
Purchase 21: Bringing Down the House from Amazon.com.
December 16, 2008 in Book Reviews | Permalink | Comments (1) | Top
Washington's God, Religion, Liberty and the Father of our Country, Michael Novak and Jana Novak
The dis-oriented author has has been reading about the founding of our nation. I have been particularly interested in the religious underpinnings of our Republic. While the religious influence of the original settlers is unquestioned. The religious influences on the political founding of the country by the generation of 76 is not as clear. The Novacks' Washington's God makes a case for the religious faith of George Washington.
After reading this book I have more questions than answers.
Michael Novak is a religious Catholic. He and his daughter bring this background to this book. Defining Washington's faith is a difficult task for any historian.
While Washington quotes on faith abound, during his life he was at best, privately religious. Washington rarely attended church and was criticized by some of his contemporaries for not practicing the expressive sort of religion that exemplified the Great Awakening. In this modern era, many religious people are looking for religious clues in the lives of all the founders. While Washington might be the logical place to look — this book offers tenuous proof at best.
This is an interesting book but it does not provide any conclusive answers.
| Washington's God gets 2 of 5 dis-oriented smileys |
Purchase Washington's God from Amazon.com.
December 15, 2008 in Book Reviews | Permalink | Comments (0) | Top






