Friday, May 30, 2025

Review 588: Two Old Women

Two Old Women: An Alaska Legend of Betrayal, Courage and Survival Two Old Women: An Alaska Legend of Betrayal, Courage and Survival by Velma Wallis
My rating: 4 of 5 stars



This oral story of the Gwich'in band, one of eleven groups in the Alsakan Athabaskan People. The story has been told for generation. Wallis felt the need to write it down and share with a larger audience. It was one story her mother told her of the many stories she shared. Wallis grew up as a Native person in the same area where this legend takes place.

The tale tells of a village of The People facing a particularly hard time of starvation and winter upon them. The chief makes the difficult decision to leave behind two old women while they move camp, leaving the women behind to die of starvation and cold. What the women do next perhaps surprises even themselves.

I've this print book for so long, over 20 years, that I’m not sure why I hadn’t read it until now. When I discovered my local library had an audio copy I decided to listen to it. Since it was originally an oral story I think this may have been the better way to read it. Except my print book did come with line drawings and a couple of maps that enhanced the text.

It is a short book, not much over two hours in audio and under 150 print pages. Again, I’m not sure why I overlooked this book on my shelves. Easily able to read this in one day, which I did. One thing the audio did not have was Editor’s note at the end. It shared briefly a little about the author but also explained how they had difficulty getting the book published in the late 1980s. One problem was the author was a women, the other that the native peoples thought the story made them look bad. Finally they were able to find funding to get the book published through a subscription model in 1993.

Review 587: The Changing Lives of Joe Hart

The Changing Lives of Joe Hart The Changing Lives of Joe Hart by Shawn Inmon
My rating: 3 of 5 stars



This is the sixth book in the Middle Falls Time Travel series. Each book addresses something slightly different. This time the main character, Joe Hart, tries to change history. First by trying to prevent his two friends deaths while young, more globally to prevent John Lennon's death in New York.

Another twist with this story is that when Joe Hart dies it is accidental and he is still “rebooted” like in a video game, In previous books this resetting of one’s life happens when the death was self-inflicted. The moment the character returns to is when they were on the cusp of making an important life choice.

This book fell a little into a pattern somewhat like the other books, despite the difference, which actually are quite small. One of the reasons I typically don’t read long series books is they do become somewhat formulaic. However, I did decide to continue on with these as they do tend to make one think about grander philosophic questions which makes them interesting.



Previously Read Middle Falls Time Travel Series books:

Thursday, May 29, 2025

Review 586: Wild Girls

Wild Girls: How the Outdoors Shaped the Women Who Challenged a Nation Wild Girls: How the Outdoors Shaped the Women Who Challenged a Nation by Tiya Miles
My rating: 3 of 5 stars



This is one of the first two books in a new series called Norton Shorts, by publisher W.W. Norton. They are calling it “Brilliance with Brevity”. Further description “Written by leading-edge scholars, these eye-opening books deliver bold thinking and fresh perspectives in under two hundred pages.”

For this book, and one of the inaugural books for the series, I think it missed the mark. It was short, and I think that was part of the problem with the book. It was even under 150 pages, it needed more length.

The author Miles focused only on a few women and it needed more depth to hold up to that subtitle. I don't think the author proved her thesis. Also, even with these few women it was occasionally a stretch in placing the outdoors with the women, although not for all of them.

The main subjects were: Harriot Tubman, Louisa May Alcott, and Genevieve Healy, Jane Johnson Schoolcraft and Mamie Gavin Fields get a few pages, along with mentions of Sakakawea. Miles also writes extensively about a girls basketball team of Native Americans. It was highly unusual for the time. I do appreciate the author finding some women who may have made a mark during their time, that are not well known. However, I was still wanting more.

The book contained some photos, all in black and white, and the back had an extensive section of notes on sources and quotations. Which then brings the text to 120 pages, yes, very short.



Friday, May 23, 2025

Review 585: Go

Go Go by Kazuki Kaneshiro
My rating: 3.5 of 5 stars



This was not an enjoyable book for me. I disliked the main character, Sugihara through much of the book. But I kept reading as I haven’t read many Japanese books, and none where the main character is considered Korean. It’s a different life to explore.

Why I didn’t like Sugihara is mainly due to all the fighting. I’m much more for peace than fistfights. And fighting scenes are not what I want to read. When the book shifted to the girl Sugihara dates it became more pleasant for me, less fighting. But the ending, I did not like.

The book highlights prejudice and assumptions. Sugihara was born and raised in Japan. His father, however, was born in Korea. He left and settled in Japan. Both of Sugihara’s parents retain North Korean passports. There was a choice but his father was somewhat idealistic and chose the north, so his son was raised in the North Korean schools.

When Sugihara was about to enter high school his father wanted to visit Hawaii, which was impossible to do with a North Korean passport so he just switched to South Korean and was able to visit. This was a revelation for Sugihara, as he realized you can just switch your nationality and it means nothing. You are who you are regardless of which passport you hold.

What Sugihara has difficulty in accepting is the harassments for Korean people in Japan. How is he different than a Japanese as he was born and raised there? Why does Japan treat him like a foreigner? Interesting questions.

Since this book became a success in Japan when it came out over 20 years ago, one may hope there has been some changes. Although racism is hard to overcome in any country. Glad I read this despite my somewhat lack of enjoyment, still got something out of the book.

Thursday, May 22, 2025

Review 584: Lost at Sea

Lost at Sea: Poverty and Paradise Collide at the Edge of America Lost at Sea: Poverty and Paradise Collide at the Edge of America by Joe Kloc
My rating: 3.75 of 5 stars

Just north of San Francisco in Marin County is Richardson Bay and the city of Sausalito. This location is where the book takes place, with stories and life experiences by a community of people called anchor-outs.

They live in the bay on boats not sanctioned by any government agency so the city and harbor master take to removing the boats. When someone isn’t living in one every day, the boat is impounded then destroyed. Although some called the people unhoused before they lost their boat, now they really are homeless.

This is a collection of stories but lacks solutions or other commentary than just stating what this community has experienced over the past ten years or so.

People have been living in boats for a long time, over a hundred years, since the time of the great earthquake in San Francisco in 1906. Some of the current community members have been living on their boats for decades. This is not a new community. Except the number of boats expanded by nearly doubled when the financial crisis hit.

Marin County is a wealthy community and some residents complained about their view. There were complaints about the anchor-outs polluting the waters, although no ecological testing proved this was an issue.

The author spent nearly ten years visiting these people, hearing their stories and at times living with them. When nearly all of the boats had been impounded and torn up a tent city erupted. Kloc slept in the tents for a few days as well, this being around the time of the pandemic.

Kloc and some of the anchor-outs attend city council meetings. It becomes very eye-opening when you realize a city, or other government agency is willing to spend thousands of dollars, in this case close to half a million dollars, on legal fees to evict and otherwise harass these unhoused individuals. None of this money is spent on providing any relief for these people.

Something missing from this book is more information on the house boats that are legally in the bay. They are mentioned very briefly but not deeply enough to provide context. How is it that there is a community of people living on boats in the bay accepted and others are not. It may just boil down to money, as usual, but this part of the story is lacking.

Unfortunately, there isn’t much of a conclusion to the book either. No solutions or options were provided, it really is just a collection of stories about some of the people’s lives who lived in the bay in unusual living conditions.




Thanks to Dey Street Books and NetGalley for an uncorrected electronic advance review copy of this book. However, I listened to a published audiobook copy of the book.


Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Review 583: Henry Thoreau as Remembered by a Young Friend

Henry Thoreau as Remembered by a Young Friend Henry Thoreau as Remembered by a Young Friend by Edward Waldo Emerson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars


This is a somewhat small book recounting the character and person of Henry David Thoreau. The author, Edward Emerson was a child growing up in Concord and knew Thoreau quite well being the son of Ralph Waldo Emerson.

Emerson does not rely solely on his own experiences and memories, he includes other people's remarks about Thoreau. There are also passages of Thoreau’s that were from his diary or other published works. He also has a few poems, or lines of poetry that is sprinkled throughout.

The book was published about 70 years after Thoreau's passing and is a response to those who criticized his character. Some of the townsfolk of Concord at that time thought he was lazy or didn’t do right by his family by spending time wandering around the woods. Emerson here points out how Thoreau was wisely spending his time. He also shows how Thoreau was ahead of his time. If that was noticeable in 1917 he is every more so now another 100 plus years later.


Friday, May 16, 2025

Review 582: The Ancients

The Ancients The Ancients by John Larison
My rating: 3 of 5 stars



This is quite an epic, but it didn't really wow me. It felt like one long fable almost. I see that many people are calling this science fiction and future looking, but it is the opposite, takes place in the very far past. The title says it all – the ancients.

These people are dealing with climate change, but don't understand it as such.

The story follows several characters, and some from peoples...they are enemies, likely only because they are other, different. We have a family, three siblings lost their parents. They do not know they were kidnapped, her mother survives. These three go in search of their auntie who a while before left to walk up and across the mountains.

There is also a noble, who has his own struggles, one being a lover of men in a world where it is unknown. He is a scholar, but only in his spare time. His father recently died and now he is in charge of the production of wool.

The noble lives in a grand city, while the family lives in a village, a small place. There are many adventures, of a sort that take place.

Throughout there is hope that conveyed. Your ancestors survived and so shall you. The author is telling us there has been climate change before, humans survived and we will again.

Wish I did enjoy it more. Maybe it’s a book to be reread and glean more out of it with a second reading.

Review 581: Old King

Old King Old King by Maxim Loskutoff
My rating: 4 of 5 stars



The book starts in 1976 from Salt Lake City and quickly moving to Lincoln, Nebraska where most of the book takes place. We follow mainly three men, Duane who had to leave SLC as he was broken from his wife giving him divorce papers. Then there is the hermit Ted Kaczynski, yeah that guy who builds bombs and mails them to people. And there is Nep, a Postal Service inspector trying to catch this bomber.

For most of the book it is told from Duane’s point of view. We get much shorter passages from the other two men. We also get the POV of other characters. Jackie is the lone female voice in this book. She’s divorced and a long time native of this place, while some of the others are more recent transplants, even if they arrived a decade ago. Lincoln is almost like another character, a very small town in the middle of the woods, some of which is being clear cut.

Menace is laced through the book with Ted’s nefarious actions. The book opens with a bomb that goes off when a security guard at a computer lab in a university campus goes off. It doesn’t kill him. Ted is intent in killing someone. It’s eerie. Never does he become a sympathetic character.

The timeline and how things move forward in the book is a bit confusing. It may say years later, then Duane had been here a year…something like that. I just decided to go with the flow and not pay much attention to it closely.

Overall this was a decent read.

Monday, May 12, 2025

Review 580: A California Bestiary

A California Bestiary A California Bestiary by Rebecca Solnit
My rating: 5 of 5 stars



A very small book showcasing 12 animals in California. A couple are now extinct, or nearly, while others have been close to extinction, yet rebounded successfully, such as the elephant seal. Then there are a few that are abundant.

Each animal is accompanied by a color image drawn by Mona Caron. The essays are short and informative. My only problem with the book is that it was entirely too short.

Friday, May 9, 2025

Review 579: When It All Burns

When It All Burns: Fighting Fire in a Transformed World When It All Burns: Fighting Fire in a Transformed World by Jordan Thomas
My rating: 4 of 5 stars



While working on a graduate degree Jordan Thomas takes a break from research to understand fire better and joins the hotshots and battles wildfires for a season. He didn't put it this way, others and himself questioned why he wanted to join this elite firefighting team. One of his explanations was simply he needed money. But there are a ton of ways to earn money. Thomas was also interested in fire and wanted to understand it more thoroughly, and why not experience it by fighting it.

The book is not only about working as a US Forest Service Hotshot, it also delves into the history of fire and environmental changes being seen due to the amount of carbon in the atmosphere.

The book was a blend of personal story, history and more, but it also felt somewhat uneven. The history aspect turned into outrage against corporations, while it may be understood, it changed the tenor of the overall book.

It was fascinating to get an inside look at this dangerous job, that is being even more necessary as more of these firestorms and super-heated wildfires will increase in the coming years.


I listened to the audiobook version of this book, which was narrated by the author. Oftentimes author narrators don’t do this very well, but this was an exception and was well done.


Thanks to Penguin Group Riverhead and NetGalley for an uncorrected electronic advance review copy of this book, and PRH Audio for advance access to the audiobook.

Friday, May 2, 2025

Brief Review 578: The Time Machine

The Time Machine The Time Machine by H.G. Wells
My rating: 5 of 5 stars



I saw a movie version of this years ago, so I knew the story line. Still I found myself enthralled. I listened to the audiobook version narrated by Scott Brick. One of the rare times I listened to the entirety in one go, without stopping. It's short enough you can do that. What a classic!

Review 577: Scotland: An Intimate Portrait

Scotland: An Intimate Portrait Scotland: An Intimate Portrait by Geddes MacGregor
My rating: 5 of 5 stars



This is a slightly dated book with the original copyright of 1980 and first published in 1985 under the name: Scotland Forever Home. This edition was published in 1990, but hard to say if anything was changed from the original. It reads like this was written in the 1980s.

The later chapter about Scottish politics and outlook on independence was where the age showed itself the most. As part travel guide it there may be some changes there. Then again, some buildings, castles, and bridges have been around for centuries so a few decades may not make much of a difference.

The book is partly history, partly travel guide, partly cultural guide and partly entertaining. MacGregor has a way of writing that made sure the book wasn’t dull. Peppered throughout were small vignettes, stories, or tales that would help give the flavor of the people of Scotland.
One I found hilarious, paraphrased here found in the description of Aberdeen and tradition of fishing. A “fishy story” of a fishwife and a man asking about the freshness, who also happened to be a ventriloquist. He asks if the large cod she was carrying around to be sold was fresh, of course she answered yes, “I’ve just brocht it in fae the sea.” The cod replied “Sh’es a lee-ar. I’ve been here for a week!”

Just about all aspects of Scotland was covered, although not thoroughly as that would be way too much to fit all in. Such as the section on islands, MacGregor had to pick some to describe and provide some information, but many of the 787 islands had be overlooked.

The book concludes with 9 appendices, two are for Scottish words, two for historic dates, one on cuisine, another on whisky and a few others. It does feel like MacGregor covers it all.

I would be remiss not to mention how MacGregor is writing this for the Scottish Diaspora, particularly the American with Scottish ancestry, which would mean myself. Several times he says you must visit the homeland, perhaps like a pilgrimage. I’ve had this book many years, perhaps since the mid-1990s and I’m not sure why I neglected to read before. It certainly would have been a good book to read before either of my visits to the homeland.

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