For those who are new ... we discuss books. I list what I'm reading, and people comment with what they're reading. Sometimes, on Sundays, I post a special edition on a particular genre or topic.
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Just finished
Blood, bones and butter: The inadvertent education of a reluctant chef by Gabrielle Hamilton. Until she was 13, Gabrielle Hamilton led a fairly idyllic life, growing up in what was then rural New Jersey with two loving if eccentric parents. She learned to cook from her French mother and from her father's parties which including roasted whole lamb. Then her parents divorced and abandoned her and her slightly older brother. As you can imagine, this was not salutatory. As the food ran down in the pantry, she wandered into town and got a job in a local restaurant. She's done everything in the restaurant world, from busing tables to owning and being chef in a successful restaurant (Prune, in New York City).
Hamilton is not only a good chef, she's a good writer, and she manages to tell her story without either mawkish sentimentality or self-congratulation. Recommended, especially for people who like food. One warning, she describes all the stages of cooking, including butchery, if that turns you off, parts of this book will turn you off.
Now reading
Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases ed. by Kahneman, Slovic and Tversky. A collection of now classic works on how people reason under uncertainty.
Washington: A life which I am reading on my new Kindle 2 (my old Kindle broke). So far, it's living up to the hugely favorable reviews, although the beginning was a bit repetitive about some aspects of Washington's personality. I've now been reading this again, and am impressed. It's still a bit repetitive (how many times do we need to read how big, tall, erect and strong Washington was?) but good. Chernow doesn't skip over the negative stuff, in particular how Washington dealt with slavery.
Charming Proofs. A book of beautiful (or charming) proofs in mathematics, nearly all of which require no advanced math.
The War Lovers: Roosevelt, Lodge, Hearst and the rush to empire, 1898 by Evan Thomas.
Very well written history covering the end of the 19th century in America and the Spanish-American war, which has parallels with the Iraq invasion (based on lies, led to torture, jingoistic .....). This is biography-history. It portrays three proponents of war: Theodore Roosevelt, William Randolph Hearst and Henry Cabot Lodge, and two opponents of the war: House Speaker Tom Reed and philosopher/psychologist William James. I love this way of writing history through biography, and Thomas has five excellent subject for biography. I knew next to nothing about Reed.
Just started
(restarted) The Best Writing on Mathematics: 2010 by Mircea Pitici. This is a collection of articles about mathematics: Mathematics education, philosophy of mathematics, the practice of mathematics, and so on. The articles are all good, your interest may vary.