Category Archives: Books

Able Danger Mythmaking

I’m almost halfway through Bruce Schneier’s Beyond Fear, a book about security, and it’s already changing the way I think about security. When I read about Able Danger, I instantly thought, “But what about the trade-offs?” The pundits talks about the claim that Able Danger identified one of the 9/11 terrorists. They say it strengthens the case for data mining.

Now I see why after Beyond Fear, it says, “Thinking Sensibly About Security in an Uncertain World.” The Modern Mythocracy doesn’t know anything about Able Danger. The pundits have no idea how many non-terrorists Able Danger tagged. They have no idea what a rogue agent could do with this information. They have no idea what additional risks data mining could present. All they see is one bit of information. They don’t know if the trade-offs are worth it.

Instead of thinking sensibly about security, they spin a myth, telling us that data mining is the magical anti-terror panacaea that the government is hiding from us. Now, I don’t know anything about Able Danger myself. However, I’m not going to make up a myth about it. I’m not going to tell you that that particular venture in data mining is not worth it. I don’t know one way or the other.

You should read Beyond Fear, instead of the latest pundit’s myth on what they think will make the nation more secure.

Rule of 150 and Forensics

What I’ve read really does apply to real life! I was talking to Alaena today and she mentioned how forensics had gotten more clique-ish. Something clicked in my head. I asked her how many people were in it. She told me around 200, but before there was around 100.

When I read The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell, I came upon the Rule of 150. Apparently, when a group size becomes over 150, humans have a harder time interacting with people. The group breaks down. This website explains the Rule of 150 better than I can.

Ain’t it obvious? This was a real life application of the Rule of 150. What I’m really excited about is that something I read came in handy. I wonder how I’ll be able to apply all the other wonderful books I’ve read.

The Modern Mythocracy

I just picked up Why America’s Top Pundits Are Wrong from a bookstore in SF. I’ve only read the introduction, but so far it looks interesting.

The phrase in this entry’s title, the modern mythocracy, came to me when reading the book. The introduction posits that pundits are modern day mythmakers. It coins the term punditocracy. I, for one, find that mythocracy rolls more easily off the tongue. Also, I’ve such a penchant for alliterative phrases… it sounds so great with modern. Anyway, the modern mythocracy seems like a theme for future weblog entries.

By the way, tune in tomorrow for my favorite alliterative phrase I’ve come up with.

Manufactured Harry Potter Outrage

I heard on some news radio program a debate, if one could call it that, between some idiot who thinks that Harry Potter is preparing kids for the End of Times or whatever, and a normal person (I am calling him this because I don’t remember at all who he was). I have to say, the idiot should not have been given air time, and the normal person should not have wasted his breath. I wonder if the idiot actually believes what he’s saying? Even if he does, you know everyone in the news media knows that normal people don’t take them seriously. It’s a manufactured non-debate to promote Harry Potter because we’ve got no other newsworthy items (apparently, 7/7 is already stale).

As for what I think about the relationship between Harry Potter and Satanism: If you even acknowledge that there is a “debate,” the idiot has won.

Colons: The New Inescapable Part of Your Title

I swear, a colon has become a necessary part of every (non-fiction) book title these days. I looked down Discover Magazine’s top ten list or something or another, and all the science books had colons in their titles. Every single one. And here, I look around at some books lying around…

  • The Geography of Thought: How Asians and Westerners Think Differently… and Why
  • Faster: The Acceleration of Just About Everything
  • Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right
  • Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union
  • Beyond Fear: Thinking Sensibly About Security in an Uncertain World
  • Sneaking into the Flying Circus: How the Media Turn Our Presidential Campaigns into Freak Shows

And on and on and on and on: You can’t escape the colon! Everyone’s got their great tagline. Since when did the title become not enough; since when did every title need a little explanation with it?

Okay, I can understand the Henry Clay one, I guess. I mean, it makes sense to have the man’s name in the biography, with something else in it to differentiate it from the others.

But when I write a book, I’ll just cut out the middle man, the colon. No, no, even better yet! I’ll leave out the title completely! I’ll use the tagline. That’s the thing that makes sense anyway. Go back and look at my list and take out the colon and everything before it! It’s utterly amazing!

Oh how I long for the days when the title did not need a crutch!

Note: The 3rd book on that list is not mine.

Paradise Snooze?

Actually, call me a loser, but I really, really like Milton’s Paradise Lost. Despite the language, it’s fast-becoming one of my favorite books. Or rather, because of the language. Sure, it’s hard to get through, but some lines are just so beautiful that so much would be lost if it were written as prose. I’m especially fond of the chiasmi. The epic truly is a trascendent form of literature.

Milton has created so compelling a character in Satan. How can one not sympathize (to an extent, at least) with his jealousy and pride?Abdiel blunders in his argument to support God, while Satan is the epitome of eloquence. He’s so great that we know that humans will still eat from the Tree of Knowledge even after a warning from Raphael. I wonder how that happens; how can Satan be so convincing?

The Catcher in the Rye Part 1 Again

I never really said anything when I wrote my first two so-called reviews, so this time I’ll put a little more thought into it.

I don’t consider the book anything special. J.D. Salinger was not the first to write using the stream of consciousness-style narrative. He did not create the style. This means you can’t quite completely praise it for the original writing style. The book contains slang that a kid would use. So what? Is that supposed to be original and ground-breaking? Writing down what kids always use? Slang is a type of dialect for younger humans. Mark Twain was writing in different dialects long before Salinger.

In my opinion, I found the character to be whiny, not insightful. Just because he’s constantly depressed and a cynic doesn’t mean he represents a side of all of us. If there was a character who was completely happy, does that mean that he represents the happy side in all of us? Personally, I can’t relate to the character. Look at the origin of the title. He wants to preserve the innocence of children. I don’t like children. I don’t value innocence because it relates too much to ignorance.

Holden is not merely depressed because of the way the world is. He is depressed because his brother died. He praised Allie so much in the book. He wonders why Allie had to die, when Allie was so much better than himself. Again, I can’t quite relate to this.

I didn’t like the plot of the story, or lack thereof. I didn’t feel as if they were important. You can take out certain individual events and they have no effect whatsoever as to the progress of the story. I like action, rather than unimportant thought processes. That’s my opinion. I’ve expressed this opinion before when I said I don’t like writing about what I do in the day because I find it boring. I didn’t do anything exciting. Now, I know Holden gets beat up by a prostitute’s boss, but I still didn’t find it too exciting. The lack of purpose in the plot is exacerbated by a weak ending that doesn’t truly resolve, or give meaning to, the book.

Reiterating the valuing of actions over words, I’ll say that, as my personal preference, I did not like the book’s narrative style. Perhaps it’s a result of the years of drilling “show-not-tell” into my head from school. Perhaps it’s a result of the American shoot-em-up, bang-bang action culture.

Then again, you can still have action and delve deep into emotions. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (a book I enjoyed), deals with morality, yet has more “adventure” than The Catcher in the Rye. The Catcher in the Rye isn’t the final word on adolescence and cynicism.

Since I’m rather a cynic myself, maybe that’s why I didn’t find the book as funny as some people. Some observations are like my own. They aren’t anything new. Still, I find that the character meanders in his articulated thoughts, never making a point, which is different from my thinking style. I like to think in terms of cause and effect. So, there’s another point in which I can’t relate to the main character.

Just because a book decides to touch on those issues and has a touch of cynicism doesn’t make it an instant classic. I went too far in saying that I could write something similar, but compared to the plethora of books I have read, it didn’t rank well.

Maybe I’ll write a part 2, not sure.

The Catcher in the Rye review part 2

[EDIT: 08/01/04 – Yeah, this really sucks. I suggest you scroll to the bottom and click the link to the real review.]

[continued from part 1]

You’d think that since I’m so cynical, I would’ve liked the book, but no, I don’t. I didn’t think it was great that the kid was so negative, I thought it was annoying. Damn, kid, shut up and stop your whining.

The narrative style isn’t really that original. Check out Huckleberry Finn. Hell, I could write a book just like The Catcher in the Rye, easy. It didn’t exactly make any earth-shattering observations. All I have to do is write about a bunch of isolated incidents and then criticize everything. None of the events have to influence each other.

So, overall, I thought the book was boring and a waste of time. I have no idea how anyone got the idea that it was some classic novel.

And I just repeated what I said in part 1. I probably could write a better review, but I’m not up to it. Whatever.

[EDIT: 10/20/03 – I finally decided I was up to it, so read this entry, and disregard what you just read.]

The Catcher in the Rye review part 1

Don’t read it. I don’t know how they decide on what’s a “classic,” but I thought the book was boring. My main complaint is that the book is pointless. There’s no driving force behind the plot. None of the themes are truly addressed. The characters are quite forgettable.

Basically, the plot follows the meandering of this one kid. The events are disjointed. None really affect the other.

[to be continued tomorrow]

[EDIT: 10/20/03 – Instead of looking for part two, read this entry, instead.]

HP5

[may not get to writing today because I’m going somewhere]

No limit Texas Hold’em is the best card game ever.

WARNING: SPOILERS.

I have to say, Harry Potter #5 was not as good as the others. Rowling put a lot of emphasis on the characters, which is good, but hardly enough emphasis on plot. The book really ambled along in the beginning. The course of one day taking up how many pages? At least it begins to pick up a little halfway through the book. Oh wait, but halfway is over 400 pages into it.

Towards the beginning, Rowling talks about how the classes are boring. I get enough of how classes are boring at school. I don’t need chapters on it. You talk about boring things and you’re going to bore your readers.

I still don’t know what a Squib is. I wished Rowling had written a little more backstory, and filled in the readers. Not everyone has the previous books to use as reference. (And some people are just too lazy to look it up.)

Oh, about knowing that someone dies, for a while, I thought for sure it was going to be Hagrid, but it didn’t look like it towards the end. So points for Rowling for not making it obvious.

It wasn’t all bad. I enjoyed it towards the end. Especially the bit with the Weasley twins and the battle at the end. (But can never compare to epic Yoda vs. Dooku.) I just think the book would’ve been much better if Rowling had compressed it to about 400 pages. A tighter book would’ve made a better read.

One final comment: That Umbridge puts me in mind of teachers at school. *shiver*

Trust Us, We’re Experts

I just got a book titled Trust Us, We’re Experts!, and it’s by Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber. I’ve barely read anything, but it’s pretty interesting. It’s about how companies manipulate science to spin facts (and falses) to deceive the public. Good read.