Monday, March 3, 2025

Idea Man; Killer Story

 

After reading Bill Gates' autobiography, I thought it only fair to hear from his cofounder, Paul Allen, who sadly passed away in 2018. He wrote this book in 2011, and I was pretty impressed with how much he predicted, even back in the 70s: everyone carrying around their own calculator sized computer, AI, and streaming services surpassing cable TV. He was a bit off the mark about print books going away (he did say in 20 years, so he still has six years to go, but I don't think it's going to happen that soon). He truly was an idea man. 

Paul left Microsoft in 1983 after a health scare made him realize he wanted to live his life, not be cooped up in an office 20 hours a day having Bill yell at him. He had his issues with Bill but he also admitted that he brought out the best in him and he never had another partnership so successful. 

Paul wisely hung onto the majority of his Microsoft stock, so when it went public in 1986 he was a multi-millionaire overnight. Then a multi-billionaire. He used his wealth to enjoy his life, and even though it was short, it sounded like he really did pack the most into it that he could. He bought sports teams, yachts, and funded museums, charities, and commercial spacecraft. He seemed to have an interest in a million different things and spread his money around. It was a fascinating book. 

One might think, given my penchant for true crime books, that I also love true crime television. Not so. While I do occasionally enjoy a well made documentary on true crime, I find the TV shows so repetitive. It seems like it's always spouses cheating and killing each other. It depresses me that there are so many murders out there. 

At any rate, Claire was a producer for 48 Hours and hunted down stories for the show. She would attend trials and try to set up interviews with the main players, pitching it to the network. It sounds like a nightmare job to me, to be honest. Going up to complete strangers who are most likely grieving in some way and trying to set up an interview? No thank you.  

The cases she wrote about were interesting enough, but the real story was the behind the scenes details about how she researched and procured the interviews, pitched the show, and everything in between. It was interesting, but it didn't change my opinion about true crime TV. 


 

Monday, February 24, 2025

Source Code; People Pleaser

 

I have been obsessed with Bill Gates since I was a teenager. I have no idea why. I didn't have my first computer until I was in college many years later, we didn't have one when I was growing up. I had very limited experience using them at friends' houses. But in the early 90s, Bill Gates and Microsoft were everywhere. I was fascinated by this world I didn't understand in the slightest but was clearly groundbreaking. I went to the library and read everything I could find about Bill: magazine articles, newspapers, a few books (I distinctly remember two: one not very nice and the other one fawning). I read Bill's book "The Road Ahead" when it came out, again, not understanding much, but delighted to hear from such a genius. And he clearly is a genius, with an amazing brain. 

So to say I tore through his autobiography in record time is a bit of an understatement. He writes about his early years before Microsoft took off. Bill was an active kid: he was in the Boy Scouts and loved to camp and hike. From the beginning, his parents and teachers realized he was different. He said it himself in the end: had he been born today he would have been diagnosed with some form of autism, due to his hyperfocus on any one particular subject (in elementary school, he turned in a nearly 200 page report on the state of Delaware). Once he got started he couldn't stop until he learned everything there was to know (and, as I type this, it occurs to me that I share some of that trait as well. Too bad being obsessed with Richard III isn't a path to becoming a billionaire). Bill got hooked on computers early and learned to code at 13 while he was at Lakeside school. He and a core group of friends (including his future business partner Paul Allen) had access to a teletype machine that connected to a computer in California, where they could write simple codes and test them out. I think I understand computers a *smidge* more now than when I was 14, so even though he got pretty technical at times, I was able to keep up. And he did a great job of explaining things in layman's terms. 

I really hope he continues his autobiography. I would love to hear about the early days of Microsoft. What an amazing ride it must have been, to be on the cutting edge of something so important, something that changed our world. It's one of those books that I wish I could go back and reread for the first time. 


I'm not much of a people pleaser, honestly. I speak up for myself when I need to (in a completely nice, polite way, of course 😀). Jinger's advise was really aimed at people who never speak up for themselves, never express an opinion but just go along with whatever everyone else wants (also not me. But in my defense, I'm usually with a group of people who can't make a decision. Since making decisions is a big part of my job, I just do it). Still, there were some aspects I could relate to, such as being too hard on myself. I struggle with this one a lot. As she (and lots of others) have pointed out, would I talk to my friends the way I talk to myself? No, of course not. So why do I do it to myself? I need to work on that. And I do. Perpetually. 


Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Giant Love

 

I love the movie "Giant". What's not to love? Texas and horses and cattle and oil and James Dean. It's a great story. I read the book when I was a teenager (I have it around the house somewhere). I bought it at a used bookstore, and I was so excited to find it. My local library didn't have it, and none of the bookstores I went to had it, either. 

Which brings us to one of Gilbert's questions: why has everyone forgotten about Edna Ferber? She was an extraordinarily popular writer in her day. She won a Pulitzer for one of her first books. So what happened? It's hard to say. "Giant" is the only book of hers I've ever read, and while I really enjoyed it, I doubt I would have sought it out if I hadn't seen the movie first. 

"Giant Love" was divided into two sections: the book and the movie. Gilbert also sprinkled in lots of biographical details about her great-aunt. It was entertaining and fascinating, and I really wish I knew why her books aren't still popular today. 

Monday, February 3, 2025

Billy the Kid

 

A coworker saw this book on my desk and asked "Haven't you already read that?" and I said "No, I've read many books about Billy the Kid, but not *this* book". Honestly, I don't remember reading a fiction book about Billy before, it's all been biographies. (**checked my blog and I did read one fictional account back in 2017, so there you go). 

So it was fun! Coleman saw "Young Guns" around the same age I did, and he was (like me) inspired by Billy the Kid's story. I checked out and bought every used book I could find about him. Did Pat Garrett really kill him, or did he live on anonymously? That's a tough question. When I was younger, I was firmly in the "no way did Garrett kill him" camp, but now that I'm older, I think it's most likely that he did. I can't imagine Billy, barely twenty-two, going on to live a life of quiet solitude and never again causing any problems. From all accounts he killed recklessly and often without thinking. Coleman did a great job of humanizing Billy while also showing his more ruthless side. He did find himself in a lot of terrible situations where killing was the only way to survive, but he also killed because it was convenient. I really liked it, I couldn't put it down. 

Monday, January 27, 2025

Witchcraft for Wayward Girls; The Bookshop; The Sopranos Sessions; Blood and Ink

I was able to finish a few books this weekend that I was mostly done with, but this one I started reading on Friday and finished Saturday, because hey, it's Grady Hendrix and I love him. 

The book takes place in 1970 in Florida, at a home for teenage girls who are pregnant. They stay, have their babies, who are put up for adoption, and then go back home with the story of having visited a relative for a few months. Fairly common back then. 

Neva shows up at Wellwood House and is immediately renamed Fern and instructed not to talk about her former life with the other girls, they are all supposed to remain anonymous. Life at Wellwood House is monotonous: cleaning, lessons, eating, and watching TV (honestly, his descriptions of the food were some of the grossest things about this book, and there are graphic descriptions of childbirth). 

Then the bookmobile comes. Fern's a huge reader and she's very excited. The librarian gives her a special book and cautions her to keep it a secret: How to Be a Groovy Witch. Fern's intrigued, as are a few of the other girls. When the spell they try works, they start to dig deeper into the book, hoping it can fix some of their problems. 

It was fun and I enjoyed it, but if you're at all squeamish about pregnancy, spaghetti and tuna casserole, or projectile vomiting, this one probably isn't for you. 


A much less gross book, "The Bookshop", celebrates the American bookstore. He went back to the beginning of the nation and the various shops that sold books, to the current day and the juggernaut that is Amazon. Brick & mortar bookstores are making a comeback, though, because customers have discovered the community aspect isn't something they want to lose. 

I worked at a bookstore for five and half years when I was in college. Working there is how I decided to become a librarian: I loved being around books and the people who enjoyed them, but I hated the retail aspect of it. I sent so many customers to the library so they wouldn't waste money buying books for their school reports. I'm sure my bosses would have hated that if they'd known, but I just couldn't do it. I prefer buying from an actual bookstore when I do occasionally buy books rather than borrow them. I like browsing. It was an interesting look at how bookshops have survived and thrived.


Speaking of books I actually own--I finished one! Every year I try to read some of the books I've bought, but they always get shoved to the side by books with due dates. I was so excited to buy this book a few years ago, and then put it on the shelf and forgot about it until recently. 

The authors analyzed each episode and interviewed David Chase. They also included newspaper articles written about the show while it was on the air, and at the end they paid tribute to James Gandolfini. I still remember being stunned when I heard that he'd died so suddenly. 

I love "The Sopranos". I've watched it numerous times (it was HBO a few weekends ago and I sat and watched for hours). I own all of them on DVD (back when that was still a thing). It was wonderful to get a behind the scenes look at the show and to hear what Chase had to say. Very interesting. 


And finally, "Blood & Ink", a book about an unsolved murder in New Jersey (no connection to the Sopranos). 

In 1922, the Reverend Edward Hall and his mistress, choir member Eleanor Mills, were found murdered on an abandoned farm. Hall was married to a wealthy heiress, Frances. Frances was shocked and refused to believe her husband would be unfaithful. Eleanor's husband was less shocked. Their marriage was pretty unhappy. 

The crime scene was trampled on by curious onlookers, evidence was taken, and the police had no leads and no suspects. At one point they looked at Frances and her brother, Willy, but their case was flimsy. 

Interwoven with the tale of the murders was the rise of tabloid journalism. It was an interesting book, and I can honestly say I have no idea who killed them. There just wasn't enough evidence to point to anyone. 

 


 

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

If Something Happens to Me

 

This was a fun, twisty one that played with time, making you think everything was happening chronologically when it wasn't. 

Senior year, Ryan and Ali were dating when Ali is kidnapped one night from the local Lover's Lane and vanishes without a trace. Even though there's no evidence pointing to Ryan, suspicion lands squarely on him and he's convicted in the court of public opinion. After graduating, Ryan changes his last name and hopes to start over, attending law school after college. He's in Europe on a trip with some of his fellow law students when the news comes in from Kansas: Ali's father's car was found in a lake with two dead men inside, but no sign of Ali. Only a note in her bag, in a waterproof case labeled: if something happens to me. Inside is a coded message. Deputy Sheriff Poppy thinks Ryan might know how to break the code and help her find out what really happened to Ali. She just has to find him. 


Monday, January 13, 2025

Hero of the Realm

 

Young Winston Churchill was kind of a badass, a real life James Bond type, which I wasn't expecting. 

During the Boer War, he was a correspondent. As such, he wasn't allowed to be armed, and he was caught with a gun and thrown in prison. He protested all the while about being a journalist and how dare they and did they know who he was?! No, no they did not. Nor did they care. 

Churchill pulled off a daring escape and hid out in the mines nearby, and was able to enlist the help of fellow Englishman John Howard, who hid him in a shipment of wool and was able to smuggle Churchill out on the train. Churchill was hailed as a hero and won a seat in Parliament on his return to England. The rest, as they say, is history. No one would ever need to be told who he was ever again. It was a thrilling tale of real life heroism and an interesting read.