October 23rd 2008
Armageddon in Retrospect
I’ve read nearly everything Vonnegut has written, and haven’t come across a bad read yet. Normally, when one of the many book clubs wants to send me a book, I decline (which makes me wonder why I still maintain membership in them, but that’s another discussion). But when the Quality Paperback Book Club let me know about this gem, I told them, “Oh yeah! Bring it on!”
Here’s what they have to say about this fabulous little book:
True to form until the very end, Kurt Vonnegut concluded the last speech he ever wrote with the following no-nonsense declaration:
“And I thank you for your attention, and I am out of here.”
Fortunately, our own farewell to the late literary legend need not be nearly so abrupt. Vonnegut returns from beyond the grave (well, sorta) in Armageddon in Retrospect, his first and only posthumous collection of unpublished writings. Featuring an introduction by his son and fellow author Mark Vonnegut and tackling topics ranging from war to peace to the proper term for a shih tzu/poodle hybrid (we’ll leave that one a surprise, thanks), it’s a powerful, and powerfully funny, reminder of why we loved him so much in the first place.
This wide-ranging collection spans Vonnegut’s career from that final speech to the letter he wrote to his family after being freed from the Nazis during World War II, from harrowing meditations on the horrors of war to hilarious stories about its survivors. POW, painter, protester, parent, peacemaker: every side of this complex, brilliant thinker and writer—and the human comedy he so astutely chronicled—is on glorious display.
Now. YOU go read it. Because, seriously… it’s darn good.
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I must admit to being a fan of true crime stories. It doesn’t really matter who writes them, because they’re almost always the same. (That said, I do have a fondness for Ann Rule’s books… the criminals she writes about are somehow more interesting.)
This is the second of Clarke and Baxter’s Time Odyssey series.
For those of you who don’t know, John Scalzi has been writing a blog for ten years. Ten years! That’s pretty much forever in internet time.
This is the first book in a series by Arthur C. Clarke and Stephen Baxter. Because I found the second book in the series among the hundreds of books I own, and because I just can’t read a series of books out of order (well, except for J. D. Robb’s Eve Dallas stories), I requested this book from Booksfree.
Ho boy. Rachel is in all kinds of trouble in this book. A demon with Alzheimer’s shows up. She’s got another demon owing her a favor, which is definitely not as good as it sounds (and it doesn’t sound good). And good ol’ Al shows up again.
This book showed up in my mailbox last week. I don’t know why. It’s an advance reading copy, and I have no idea how I managed to get lucky enough to get one of these. Naturally, the book when right to the top of my To Be Read pile.
Dr. Braverman explains in great detail how the imbalance of four neurotransmitters in your brain (dopamine, acetylcholine, GABA and serotonin) cause pretty much everything that ails you. He’s got tests you can take to determine your dominant neurotransmitter and what deficiencies you might have. While he does lay out a plan for righting what’s wrong, it involves two aspects that I find difficult to live with. The first is getting your doctor on board in case you need a prescription drug of some sort. The second is a diet plan.