Sunday, July 22, 2007

Book: Small Wonder: Essays

Book cover: Small Wonder

Barbara Kingsolver is a lyrical writer with a musical voice. This book is a treat to listen to as an audio book. Listening to her read makes me at once sad, elated, quiet, and humble.

Here’s a beautiful quote from the first chapter:

“God is in the details, the completely unnecessary miracles some tossed up as stars to guide us. They are the promise of fortune in a cloudless day, and the animals in the clouds; look hard enough, and you’ll see them. Don’t ask if they’re real.”

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Monday, July 02, 2007

Movie: A Prairie Home Companion

Movie poster: A Prairie Home Companion Review: 2 stars Boring

I am not a huge fan of the Prairie Home Companion radio show, but I like it okay. If you are a fan and expect nothing more from the movie, then you might enjoy it. Otherwise, don’t bother. As mentioned by other reviewers, the movie was boring with no strong plot and not enough character development. The majority of the movie takes place during a single radio show and you just see little bits and pieces of what’s happening backstage.

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Book: Homeland and other stories

Book cover: Homeland and Other Stories Review: 3 stars Not good as an audio book

I listened to this book as a Chivers audio book and I didn’t think it was well-suited to listening. The short stories were fairly long, but since it was an audio book I had no sense of how long each story was and how far along I was in it. Also, there was no substantive pause between stories, so you didn’t get the natural resting period you would normally allow in a book of short stories. This was one audio book where I would have liked to have music between sections (and I don’t usually like that).

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Monday, May 14, 2007

Book: A Spot of Bother

Review: 3 stars Nothing special

This book pales in comparison to The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, also written by Mark Haddon. There’s really nothing alike about them. I found this book to be a largely pointless and rambling tale of a man struggling with retirement, his life, and hypochondriasis. The payoff wasn't worth the price for me on this one. It's not terrible, I just can't recommend it.

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Saturday, April 28, 2007

Book: Night Fall

Book cover: Night Fall Review: 3 stars Decent suspense story

This book is part of a series of mysteries starring the same detective. In that way, it’s formulaic and like many other mysteries. On the other hand, this book prominently features real facts from the TWA Flight 800 crash. It’s where fact meets fiction that’s sometimes unclear. I’m not sure how I feel about present-day novels that mix fact and fiction so freely. Somehow it seems less of an issue with historical fiction since history is somehow more fixed and known, but I think that’s just an illusion anyway. So, easy mystery to read and enjoy? Yes. Expose about TWA 800? No.

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Saturday, April 21, 2007

Book: Blink

Book cover: Blink Review: 5 stars Excellent read

Like James, I read this as an audio book and I agree Gladwell was a good reader. I also agree that it warranted all the attention I could give it, which can be difficult with audio books since I usually listen to them while multi-tasking or falling asleep. In fact, I might listen to the last chapter again since I was distracted.

Anyway, this book was fantastic. I even wished it was longer. The diversity of examples made it a really interesting read. The downside I guess is that there wasn’t a strong, cohesive takeaway (unlike The Long Tail). When the book is done, I know that intuition and thin-slicing are critical and can provide a much more reliable basis for decision-making than we give them credit form. But it’s clear that these techniques don’t apply in many, many cases and I’m not certain where to apply them. I guess what I know is that I should not apply them to the way people look and that thin-slicing is most valuable in an area where you are an expert, whether that’s professionally or personally.

Regardless of all that, Blink reaffirmed my need to consider intuition heavily in a decision I need to make this week. I am very happy about the timing of the read. :)

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Thursday, April 19, 2007

Book: Making and Breaking the Grid

Book Cover: Making and Breaking the Grid Review: 4 stars Excellent reference for designers

Caveat: I read this book in one afternoon at the hair salon, so I would have to say I perused it more than I read it. However, the book consists largely of a collection of visual examples and evaluations of grid types, so that was an effective way to consume the book.

I am not sure if this book is the best primer if you’ve never used or read about grids in graphic design before. But if you know how grids work, then this is an excellent way to expand your ideas about them and see real-world design examples of many grid types, along with their underlying structure and a discussion of their components.

This is a book I’ll consider buying as a reference for myself. I can imagine revisiting it periodically for inspiration and ideas when designing with (or without) grids.

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Book: Angels Fall

Book Cover: Angels Fall Review: 3 stars Entertaining fluff

This was an enjoyable novel without a ton of depth. It’s a typical Nora Roberts book—a mixture of intrigue and romance that is better than a typical romance novel, but is still fairly predictable. You can be sure that the romance will come to fruition eventually and that the heroine will prevail in the end. And yet, I enjoyed it. Sometimes my brain needs a break from stress and deep thought. ;-)

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Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Book: Before You Know Kindness

Review: 3 stars I'm indifferent, but I think it was pretty good

For some reason I believe this book was good even though I am somewhat indifferent to it. I think it’s trying to make a significant statement about veganism and animal rights, but it got lost for me. Or maybe it’s as simple as “don’t let your passion to protect animals or eat a certain way overshadow the needs of your loved ones and compassion for humankind.

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Monday, April 02, 2007

Book: Dirty Blonde

Book Cover: Dirty Blonde Review: 3 stars Decent little mystery

This wasn’t my favorite Scottoline mystery to date and hers aren’t the highest caliber to begin with. However, it was a brief entertainment and a nice break from my other reads. I like light mysteries and this fit the bill. It’s annoying that much of the mystery stemmed around her being a slut (sorry, but that’s how they make it out), but it’s not bad nonetheless.

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Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Book: Freakonomics

Book cover: Freakonomics Review: 4 stars Entertaining and informative

This book was very interesting to listen to and had a ton of great, unexpected information. In a few cases I wanted more supporting data to convince me of the argument or I wanted an argument taken to the next logical step (for example, adding a comparison of homes sold by the owner to the real estate agent section) but overall it was a very worthwhile read.

Oh. And by the way, I'm able to blog from All Consuming again. You can check out the books from the interim at http://www.allconsuming.net/person/StarGirl/.

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Friday, January 19, 2007

Book: Stop Stealing Sheep & Find Out How Type Works

Book Cover: Stop Stealing Sheep Review: 2 stars Why I gave up consuming this

My typography teacher LOVED this book. Most designers I know (that I’ve asked) think it’s a great book. I think one designer even told me that it helped him understand how to discuss design with non-designers. Whatever people.

I got to page 67 in this book, which is nearly half way, and I did it mostly in one sitting (at least half the book is images). After that I couldn’t motivate myself to go back and finish it. While the book contains good, albeit basic, information about typography, I couldn’t take the unending sweeping statements unsupported by anything other than the author’s high opinion of typography. Here’s an example from page 19: “Given the typographic choices available, there is no excuse for producing bad business forms, illegible invoices, awkward applications, ridiculous receipts, or bewildering ballots.”

That’s some cute alliteration and I agree with the sentiment that the user experience should be a top priority, but give me a freakin’ break. As is typography alone creates a good form, application, and ballot. Never mind the actual text, the layout, or any other usability concern or principle of good user experience design. Erik Spiekermann needs to learn that too much overstatement diminishes your credibility and eventually makes what you have to say meaningless. I have an acquaintance like that: everything is always horrible. Then nothing is really horrible.

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