Category Archives: Books

Jonathan Swift – Gulliver’s Travels

Jonathan Swift – Gulliver’s Travels

The classic satire holds up well. In the first of four parts, Gulliver visits the Lilliputians. Besides the obvious lessons about cultural differences, there is also some amusing ribaldry, as when Gulliver gets into legal trouble for putting out a Lilliputian fire by urinating on it, and flooding the tiny town as a result.

In part two he sees the opposite side of the coin with the Brobdingnagians, a race of giants, though mercifully minus the peeing. In part three he bounces around among several different nations, giving Swift the opportunity to poke fun at philosophers and other elites, and for some reason Japan, possibly because it is an actual place. Part four gives us the word “yahoo,” which gives Swift ample opportunity to make fun of ordinary people’s prejudices and habits. When Gulliver is briefly home between adventures, the casual dismissiveness with which he treats his wife and children is an early example of shock value humor. Gulliver barely acknowledges their existence beyond conceiving a new child on each return. Nobody is spared, and nobody is a saint, which is likely the source of Swift’s enduring appeal.

Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan – Comet

Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan – Comet

The first edition of this lavishly illustrated book coincided with Halley’s comet’s 1986 appearance, and the second edition was timed for 1994’s Hale-Bopp comet. A further 20 years of observation—not to mention landing freaking satellites on comets and returning samples to Earth—make some of the science here dated. But Sagan and Druyan’s book contains their trademark accessibility and sense of wonder, which will never be obsolete.

Stephen Davies – The Wealth Explosion: The Nature and Origins of Modernity

Stephen Davies – The Wealth Explosion: The Nature and Origins of Modernity

In some ways, I have been waiting on this book for 20 years. When I was college age, I saw Davies give several historical lectures at Cato University seminars, read numerous articles by him, and have met him a few times over the years at various events. This book captures his big-picture thoughts on world history. Why is the world so rich today compared to ancient or medieval times? Davies’ answer is similar to Deirdre McCloskey, but not quite the same: cultural attitudes towards openness and change, plus compatible politico-economic institutions are what did it.

But it’s not so simple as that. Nothing is in history. The arrow of causality runs in both directions. Guns, germs, and steel played a role, and so did geography. There are also several instances where a modern takeoff began, but couldn’t sustain itself. There were flowerings of various degrees in China, Japan, Peru, Africa, and Europe, but none of them stuck until 19th century England. Davies argues that there is nothing special about Europe or its people that made it destined to be the place where a modern wealth explosion first sustained itself and spread throughout the world. But Enlightenment ideas, in combination with the many, many other factors listed above, seem to be what did it.

Davies’ other contribution is a proper understanding of what modernity is. It is not a thing or a place, or even a certain set of technologies, or amount of wealth, or percentage of urban dwellers. Modernity is a process. Better players don’t make a better game; people are the same today as we were back in Caesar’s day. But better rules make a better game, as do the players respecting those rules and knowing their importance. Institutions, and the people working within them, need to prefer neophilia to neophobia. They need to be tolerant of people different from them, whether that’s religion, race, appearance, or numerous other characteristics. People who do not go along will not get along—and if political institutions do not encourage or allow people to act civilized, very often they will not.

Davies’ view of world history is unusually humble. He knows enough to know he doesn’t know everything. He doesn’t give a single magic bullet cause for modernity because there isn’t one. It is multicausal, and even then, modernity relies on having an ongoing process in place, not this or that outcome.

As important, he reminds the reader that the culture and institutions behind that process are fragile and reversible. They must be defended.

Brian Switek – Skeleton Keys: The Secret Life of Bone

Brian Switek – Skeleton Keys: The Secret Life of Bone

A history of bones that makes for a fun read. The stuff initially began as armored plating for fish nearly 500 million years ago. It also turned to be a good protector for the spinal cords that were starting to appear, and eventually became spines with separate vertebrae. Bones made possible complicated nervous systems, our sense of hearing (ears have bones to shape and conduct sound), and more. Ribcages guarded organs. Without them, lungs would never have evolved, and neither would air-breathing animals like us. Bones do not move, but they make movement possible. Bones gave structure to fins. Their radial structure turns out to also have been perfect for land-dwellers’ limbs, and fins gradually became feet with toes and hands with fingers and knuckles. The bone structure was already there in fins; they just needed to lose the webbing and add some new muscles to control the articulation points.

Switek also shows how much bones can tell us from both archaeological and paleontological finds, and even among the living. He also briefly discusses bones in literature in popular culture near the beginning. People associate bones and skeletons with death, and rightly do. Switek’s goal is to bring some life to the subject, and mostly succeeds.

Alec Nevala-Lee – Astounding: John W. Campbell, Isaac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein, L. Ron Hubbard, and the Golden Age of Science Fiction

Alec Nevala-Lee – Astounding: John W. Campbell, Isaac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein, L. Ron Hubbard, and the Golden Age of Science Fiction

Pairs well with Howe’s Marvel Comics: The Untold Story. This is the first proper biography of John W. Campbell, a publisher, editor, and sometimes writer during science fiction’s golden age. He was the glue that held together the various major personalities as they transitioned from fanboys to young pulp writers to major authors. Campbell mostly stayed in the background, which is why name is not well known, but he was an important figure in the genre. Asimov, Heinlein, and Hubbard also get the biographical treatment.

None of them come off well in their treatment of women, even by the standards of the time. Campbell was too hard-living for his own good, and his marriage and his life both ended before they should have. The young Asimov was shy and virginal, though by the time he reached middle age his grabby hands were so bad that even dedicated chauvinists had to give him multiple talking-tos about his behavior toward the few female fans sci-fi had at the time. Heinlein was the best of the lot, though even he had multiple marriages, including a distant and dysfunctional first marriage. He would improve his behavior and his matchmaking skills later in life. Hubbard was an all-around horrible human being, even leaving aside Scientology. He was sexually and physically abusive, and once kicked a pregnant girlfriend in the stomach with the worst of possible intentions. He was also an inveterate liar, making up both white lies and personal exaggerations even when he didn’t have to.

Science fiction didn’t have a dominant publisher or promoter the way comics did with Marvel and DC; its business model was much more individualistic, mirroring the ethos many of those authors promoted in their stories. Where Howe’s Marvel book is a story of ongoing evolution, Nevala-Lee’s story arc is more like an individual life, with youthful idealism and early success leading to excess, consequences, and a quieter final act.

Sean Howe – Marvel Comics: The Untold Story

Sean Howe – Marvel Comics: The Untold Story

I’ve been interested in corporate histories recently, from Ron Chernow’s books on Rockefeller and Morgan to modern biographies of Steve Jobs and Jeff Bezos. This is another one from that pile, though it also served the ulterior motive of familiarizing me with the Marvel Universe’s universe of characters in advance of seeing Avengers: Endgame. My Marvel fandom is decidedly casual, and I am unfamiliar with many of the characters’ origins and backstories. Adding to the confusion is that they are all interconnected in a larger universe.

This book also gives some background on just how much those characters and their universe reflect their time and place, from 1940s pulps to the national fascination with anything atomic in the 1950s and 1960s. The characters change and grow as the times do, and so does Marvel itself, which has frequently had to fend off bankruptcy as it periodically falls behind the times.

The company has been bought and sold several times over the years, and personalities clashes abound as art and commerce collide. Stan Lee turns his attention to Hollywood and being an ambassador of comics. Co-creator Jack Kirby gets nowhere near the credit he deserves, is stiffed financially, and leaves Marvel for its rival, DC Comics. Other writers also get screwed over, leading to a growing movement of independent companies.

As comics buyers grew up and had kids of their own, Marvel also had to add new titles, drop old ones, reboot stale characters that still had compelling attributes, and change its approach to hold onto its customers, and attract new ones. Progress is this department has been uneven at best; the comics world still isn’t exactly friendly territory for women or minorities, and some of the more hardcore fans are a little stunted—though they would likely still be that way had comic books never been invented. The companies slowly began to realize the goldmines they were ignoring, but many of their attempts are cringe-worthy. Things are better than they used to be, but this stunted male juvenile aspect of the business remains a work in progress.

This book is part business history, part explainer of the Marvel Universe, and part cultural history of 20th century America. That’s an ambitious scope for any book, but Howe pulls it off. He might have done a bit more on the business side, but this reader has no serious complaints. As with the best Marvel stories, I was entertained and educated at the same time.

A Yardstick for Reform

While recently revisiting my old friend the Export-Import Bank, which is up for reauthorization this September, I was reminded of a quote from Nobel laureate Ronald Coase’s 1975 essay “Economists and Public Policy,” which appears on p. 57 of 1995’s Essays on Economics and Economists:

An economist who, by his efforts, is able to postpone by a week a government program which wastes $100 million a year (which I would call a modest success) has, by his action, earned his salary for the whole of his life.

By this measure, the Ex-Im Bank controversy over the last several years was a success, though there is more work to be done. In 2014 the agency’s authorization lapsed for nearly a year, and after that it was limited to small transactions until May 2019. The total savings run into the tens of billions of dollars.

Venki Ramakrishnan – Gene Machine: The Race to Decipher the Secrets of the Ribosome

Venki Ramakrishnan – Gene Machine: The Race to Decipher the Secrets of the Ribosome

Ramakrishnan won the 2009 chemistry Nobel for figuring out the structure of ribosomes. DNA and RNA contain instructions for protein molecules; ribosomes use that information for actual protein assembly. Ribosomes are an organelle that exists in every cell. There are more than a trillion ribosomes in your body right now; they are not rare. But getting a handle on their structure and how they go about their work was a longstanding mystery. It took Tamakrishnan more than two decades to suss out. Along the way he pioneered the use of x-ray microscopy and crystallography. Some of the science went over my head, but this career autobiography still offers plenty for a layman. As I so often find with these sorts of books, it unintentionally confirms the arguments in the economist Gordon Tullock’s 1966 book The Organization of Inquiry (free PDF), a public choice analysis of professional scientific behavior.

Nasim Nicholas Taleb – Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder

Nasim Nicholas Taleb – Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder

Taleb, at least in his writing, has an off-putting personality. That is in full effect in Antifragile, moreso than in his other books. There is also plenty of counterintuitiveness-for-its-own-sake that make Taleb popular with people who like TED talks a little too much. But as with Taleb’s other books, there is still some good insights that make worth wading through the pretense and occasional New Age quackery.

As far as the title, something is fragile if stress makes it weaker. It is robust if stress doesn’t affect it. And something is anti-fragile is stress actually strengthens it; think of how muscles respond to weightlifting, or an immune system after learning how to fight a disease. Taleb’s goal is to find ways to make financial markets, technologies, and public policies anti-fragile, and not fragile or merely robust.

One insight is that market volatility can actually make financial markets anti-fragile. Suppose the stock market plummets and reaches a two-year low. This will scare some skittish investors out of the market altogether, leaving only hardier, usually more expert investors left to evaluate investments and drive their prices. In this way, policies designed to prevent market volatility can actually make financial markets more prone to crashes, not less.

There are also some things in Anti-Fragile that can be safely ignored. This includes Taleb’s workout and dietary recommendations, his inconsiderate habit of only scheduling appointments same-day, his fondness for running shoes with articulated toes, or his unsubtle bragging about speaking three languages, having homes in two countries, and being able to read an entire book on London-New York flights, which he is sure to let the reader know he takes regularly. This is a book that offers some food for thought, along with plenty of opportunities to practice eye-rolling.

Dan Jones – The Wars of the Roses: The Fall of the Plantagenets and the Rise of the Tudors

Dan Jones – The Wars of the Roses: The Fall of the Plantagenets and the Rise of the Tudors

An utterly conventional kings-and-battles account of the period. It’s a good survey of the period, but readers will have to go elsewhere if they want memorable portraits of the personalities involved, what everyday life was like in castle or court, or for the soldiers and their families, what the period’s economy and technology were like, what intellectual or religious life were like, or even the larger historical significance of the York-Lancaster rivalry.