Reviews

  • Flight to Arras by Antoine de Saint-Exupery

    Flight to Arras

    Review: A superb memoir, highly detailed account of a single wartime flight in the last days of France in 1940 before she fell to Germany. Gets very philosophical in the last chapter, but it makes sense. Redefines what we think of as courage, heroism, perseverance, sacrifice. A short, fast, beautiful read. This book made me

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  • This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald

    This Side of Paradise

    Review: Another brilliant novel from FSF. Sad, poignant, and beautiful throughout. People that are young, do young people things. Now, then, way back, going forward, always. That damned war again. 1914 disillusioned the old world and alienated the new world. People drank a lot. Like, a lot. This book made me want to: eat a

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  • The Wasteland and Other Poems by T.S. Eliot

    The Wasteland, Prufrock, and Other Poems

    Review: Erudite to the point of superciliousness. Like a graffiti artist leaving tags to show their cleverness, the author dropping in an absurd amount of shout-outs to Donne, Spencer, Dante, even Shackleton. Prufrock was better: In the room the women come and goTalking of Michelangelo This book made me want to: drink bubble tea Overall

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  • Mr. Finchley Discovers his England by Victor Canning

    Mr. Finchley Discovers his England

    Review: A beautiful lighthearted romp through the England between the wars. Meet Mr. Finchley, a solicitor’s clerk who has never taken a holiday. Suddenly with three weeks vacation and 40 pounds in his pocket he embarks to the seaside but ends up having a series of of extraordinary adventures throughout the length and breadth of

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  • Holmes for the Holidays by Martin Greenberg, Jon L. Lellenberg, Carol-Lynn Waugh, ed.

    Holmes for the Holidays

    Review: Excellent volume of Holmesian Christmas fare. The usual blend of really good/good/just okay, but no real clunkers. Irene Adler, Moriarty, Scrooge, Cratchit, and even creepy Lewis Carroll make their obligatory appearances, but the quality is such that they can pull it off. Not great, but sort of obligatory in these pastiches. A good fast

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  • The Golden Age by Kenneth Grahame

    The Golden Age

    Review: A delightful romp through an English garden childhood. Lots of beautiful introspective moments, even though the protagonists would never admit they are introspective moments. Kaiser Wilhelm II had this book on his bedside table in the imperial yacht. This was the last age of childhood before the world changed forever in 1914. This book

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  • Neil Croll logo

    One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch

    Review: Read this in one day, just like the book is a journal of one day in the life of a Russian imprisoned under the Soviet regime in 1951. A brilliant, terrifying document, but captivating and gripping. I could relate to so many aspects of the prison experience, conditions for my incarceration were improved by

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  • The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman

    The Guns of August

    Review: An absolutely pivotal work of history. It won a Pulitzer and there is no doubt why. You feel engaged with the characters and involved in the action. While following all the military maneuvers can be confusing, the narrative drives you along past this. For students of the Great War this is considered a must

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  • Basic Documents in American History by Richard B. Morris

    Basic Documents in American History

    Review: An actual reading of the documents that so many Americans profess to “defend unto death”, which so few have ever actually read. Americans have a racist past built into their entire socio-political system. Dred Scott, good grief. Brown v. Board of Education – good grief in 1955. A well regulated militia is not the

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  • The Fabulous Riverboat by Philip Jose Farmer

    The Fabulous Riverboat

    Review: A wild ride down the amazing river of Riverworld. Thought provoking and disturbing in some aspects. Suspension of disbelief taken way too far. Imagine a resurrected Mark Twain going from stone age capabilities to full industrial manufacturing and 20th century technology in about 5 years. Nope. Good but not great, worth reading, but I

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