Wednesday, November 30, 2016

The Snake Stone by Jason Goodwin

the snake stone jason goodwin

First heard of this guy because in Npr they reviewed a cookbook released of Turkish recipes by the author as though written by the character in his 19th century historic mystery novels.

The Snake Stone is the second in a series of detective novels by Jason Goodwin, featuring the eunuch Yashim. It is set in Constantinople / Istanbul in 1838. The library didn't have the first in the series so I jumped in on#2 not an issue.
I do enjoy historical fiction.

Having been to Istanbul made the book more lively and tangible for me ; though  I felt I had missed out somewhat not eating more by street food vendors - a caution always taken when traveling with a family group of eight, particularly with the odd digestive system I've inherited.

NYT makes the comparison to another. favored author  "The obvious and flattering point of comparison is Arturo PĂ©rez-Reverte’s Captain Alatriste novels, which dashingly incorporate 17th-century Spanish political machinations into the adventures of their dauntless hero. If Yashim’s era is a time of less swordplay, it is no less fraught with intrigue."

I quickly finished this novel, went back to the library , checked out another, out of sequence book entitled "An Evil Eye" and am devouring it.

A couple interesting side bars on 'new names' whispered to a child at birth, and 'how to shed your regrets and how to master your memories so you can hold yourself together as a man - living without bitterness and remorse.'   Not truly inspirational stuff but well crafted and engaging narrative.

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Icon by Frederick Forsyth

Icon by Frederick Forsyth

A good spy novel read that I should've read before I went to Russia last year. Having been to Russia it made the book - easy to visualize and project yourself into the scene. Nothing fancy about the book nothing great no great literature just a compelling story. Read it when you need a quick read for either a break in your reading schedule or before you head over to Moscow!

The hidden life of trees by Peter Wohlleben


The hidden life of trees what they feel, how they communicate, discoveries from a secret world. A bit pretentious for a title but a very ambitious book. I've always been interested in trees I delight in hiking in them looking at pictures of them

 studying unique ones. This book has been a top seller in Germany and was only recently translated.  So when I saw the title  I thought hmm might be interesting. It is. 

Perhaps a bit more than I wanted to know more details that were less compelling presented. Though in general I found it a non-stressfull, conversational type of presentation. I deep read about half of it and skimmed about half of it. But if you like trees it's an easy choice - read it. If you don't know trees this will introduce you to the fact that they are very much ALIVE . And perhaps make it feel not so far-fetched when you see the trees interacting as they do in Lord of the Rings or Pocahontis. 


Sent from tim

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Out Stealing Horses by Per Petterson

Out Stealing Horses by Per Petterson

An interesting coming of age story , two stories in fact, coming of age as a young man ( 15 yrs old in Norway 1948) and then coming of age again as an older man (Norway 2000)Both resolved by the insight of the protagonist 's experience "we do decide for ourselves when it will hurt." Loss is conveyed with all the intensity of a boy’s perception, but acquires new resonance in the brooding consciousness of the older man. 

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Carrying Albert Home by Homer Hickman

Homer Hickam, the author, upon hearing tall tales about his mother’s alligator, Albert; eventually sits down and captures them in writing. Labeled a novel, based upon near truth; the unreliability of memories and the way stories become stretched and exaggerated over time blend to tell his family history. He tells of Elsie Hickam, his mother, who “loved Albert more than just about anything in the whole world”, but Elsie’s new husband, Homer sr, finally issues an ultimatum: “‘Me or that alligator.'” After thinking it over, Elsie reluctantly agrees to give up her beloved pet, returning him to his native Florida. The young couple’s road trip from West Virginia to Florida involves more adventures than most people have in a lifetime – meeting John Steinbeck, witnessing industrial rebellions, joining the coast guard, starring in a movie, and experiencing a hurricane – are condensed into one epic journey.” It explores the ups and downs of love and marriage, and celebrating uniqueness and the real effort it takes to fall in love and make it stick. 
As a book, it a fun read. As a insight into love and devotion it a good read. It reminds one of the effort it takes to really get to know your life’s partner even after you commit to each other. And of the multiple dimensions of a relationship be they emotional, physical, social or otherwise. Not a deep philosophical solution to the world’s problems but an enjoyable palette cleanser between more serious fare. Just right for a road trip.

The almost nearly perfect people by Michael Booth

The almost nearly perfect people by Michael Booth 
A must read for the vacationing American heading to Scandinavia a corner of the globe oft over-looked, and over-glamorized (or someone trying to understand the inner workings of Minnesotans going beyond listening to A Prairie Home Companion).
The author is a Brit who marries a Dane and ultimately lives in Denmark and tries to capture his insights in this short overview / travel guide / analysis, an essentially observational discussion, of the Scandinavian experience. Scandinavian deep-rooted instinct for consensus of conformity, the democratic systems, universal free education, redistributive tax systems ensure they look at each other in the eyes as equals. Americans want the freedom ‘to do’ the swede the freedom ‘to be’. It is easier to be eccentric in a diverse society- strong sense of self, your own values - Scandinavia offers comfort in conformism , sameness but in a good way - benign totalitarianism.
.
I know the Christian orientation of all these countries has diminished in terms of active Christianity over time. It was particularly striking in Sweden how the state has replaced the church and the family, both find people go to the state for those historic value orientations and traditional supports. The author and Scandinavian society tend to express little remorse in this change. Finding it an appropriate evolution in becoming ‘modern’.
The book provides an interesting narrative of experience and research in delineating between Sweden Norway Finland Denmark and Iceland. Subtle differences (whether they be wealth well, heritage, population size, food, social interaction etc.) but differences nonetheless to make an interesting read.
[Editorial comment: that it's interesting when people compare America today & Scandinavian countries because theirs is such a small homogenous population (even with current immigration )swede being the biggest with 10 million Max and barely approach the population of United States trying to accomplish great things on a greater scale.]

Here is the review that captures the essence most succinctly - 
Bill Bryson goes to Scandinavia.” ―Christian Science Monitor
So if you find yourself as we did having lived a lifetime among the American version of Scandinavia – Minnesota; and taking a two week ground tour starting in Copenhagen, then nearby Federicksborg, heading to Oslo , up to Josetedal , over to Bergen, back to Oslo and down to Malmo cross back to Copenhagen and out; you will find yourself continually reading out loud factoids and short clips to the driver in competition with books on tape; and saying: ‘ ya yu bet’cha ’ that sound just like Ole and Sven that Tom Anderson told me about.


Saturday, September 3, 2016

The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt by Edmund Morris

The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt by Edmund Morris

I was looking for a biography somehow got pointed towards this. didn't quite realize I was jumping into eight hundred pages; nonetheless I quite enjoyed the book. I wasn't very current in my history of the late 1800s which was interesting I equally wasn't very current with my history of Theodore Roosevelt -a truly compelling individual. 
Roosevelt  was a man born to wealth, of status and position ; which he worked to optimize through doggedly trying to achieve and excellence. He overcame obstacles of bad health trying family times and premature death of his wife. He was comfortable to roam the halls of Harvard, hobnob with the wealthy in New York , ride the  range of the  Dakotas, know the cities of Europe,  a great nature conservationist who loved to hunt, and be a hero of the Spanish-American war in Cuba with the Roosevelt Roughriders. He was a prolific writer publishing dozens of books in his lifetime with a broad range of expertise and averaged reading a book a day throughout his life.

"He was a politician born to articulate the longings of the inarticulate; a scholar able to interpret current events in the light of ancient and modern history; a man of peculiar uprightness and abounding vitality and marvelous memory; who stuck to his policy with all the tenacity of a snapping turtle."
"Adams found Roosevelt repulsively fascinating ... His vitality was indecent, his finances ridiculous, and he was about as subtle culturally speaking as a Bullmoose . there's no denying his originality, his extraordinary ability to translate that into deed ...he was pure act."

“Spectacles glittering, teeth and temper flashing, high-pitched voice rasping and crackling, Roosevelt surges out of these pages with the force of a physical presence.” He is one of the most articulate most well read and written the most books of any of our presidents a truly extraordinary man.

"Selected by the Modern Library as one of the 100 best nonfiction books of all time " 
Reminds me of why I like a biography you can find great writing, a comprehensive look into history, insights into the making of people of strong character , and inspiration for yourself to improve.



Sent from tim wilson

Friday, August 26, 2016

How Children Succeed by Paul Tough

"Why do some children succeed while others fail? The story we usually tell about childhood and success is the one about intelligence. Paul Tough argues that the qualities that matter most have more to do with character: skills like perseverance, curiosity, conscientiousness, optimism, and self-control.”
That quick overview says it well. Its an interesting read in context of today’s world where there is affront on family and certainly the value of character om many sides. Key contributors and indicators of success in college and after-college life are basically maternal attachment and character development.
I frequently reflected, during my reading, on the scout law and its list of: Scout is trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent;And if ever young man between 11-16 was involved in scouting, what a difference it would make. Couple it with the core of self-control and willpower. (perhaps showing the video of the marshmallow test to discuss with kids self-control and will power would be a good thought starter)
Teenagers have an issue with “incentive processing system” which makes you more sensation seeking more emotional and reactive more attentive the social information works in conflict with cognitive control system allows you to regulate urges. Metacognitive substitute for willpower by making yourself a rule you can sidestep the painful internal conflict between your desire for and willful determinations to resist them. Provide structure preparing preparing us for encounters with tempting stimuli redirecting attention elsewhere (eg. sing a hymn when a bad thought arises -create a default response to ft do the good thing)
Optimism was identified as a critical attribute. Pessimist react to negative events by explaining them as permanent personal and pervasive Optimist look at them for the specific limited and short term
High-quality mothering connect a child to the powerful buffer against the damage that adversity and fix the child stress response system (maternal attachment). Parents can overcome histories of trauma and poor attachment they can change their approach to their children. Poor attachment can be broken because there's opportunity for growth and improvement.

Whether or not intelligences is malleable mindset certainly is-switch kids from a fixed mindset to a growth mindset -character attributes are equally Malleable. He cites multiple testing where character ratings are better indicator of college success than cognitive skill test such as SAT.
Critical component of college success non-cognitive academic skills during study skills including study skills,work habits, time management, help seeking behavior , social/academic problem solving skills-taught by emphasizing resourcefulness ambition Professionalism  resilience integrity -with work in character development destinies are malleable past performance is not indication of future results

Kids need the ability to manage failure. In fact they need the opportunity to fail to develop the life-long skill and coping devices. Need for a secure relationship with a care giver teaching them to manage stress. As such Family functioning matters! 
Character matters -GRIT, CONSCIENTIOUSNESS, RESILIENCE, PERSEVERANCE, OPTIMISM; add: curiosity, self-control, self-confidence, gratitude
Unfortunately society debates over character attributes being to value oriented. As for me I’m on the side of character development. I embrace the LDS Youth Program and the ideals of scouting: The mission of the Boy Scouts of America is to prepare young people to make ethical and moral choices over their lifetimes by instilling in them the values of the Scout Oath and Law”
There is a real necessity to help all youth, regardless of religious orientation, to get on the first wrung to the ladder of success; and it appears that family and character is a great place to begin. 

Monday, August 1, 2016

The Traveler's Gift - "7 decisions that determine personal success" by Andy Andrews


today I just happened to finish a book about dealing with lives challenges.  The Traveler's Gift by Andy Andrews , offers a modern day parable of one man's choices—and the attitudes that make the difference between failure and success. It's a quick and enjoyable read taking you through the protagonist 's interactions with several famous, and not so much , characters throughout history; and the life lesson they had to teach David Ponder. You can find it in the library - quickly read it -and come away with some added resolve and energy. I think you would like it.

A sneak peak into who you will meet and what they will say
The seven decisions that determine personal success :

THE BUCK Stops here    President Harry Truman
I WILL SEEK WISDOM: King solomon. 
I AM A PERSON OF ACTION:  Joshua Chamberlain
I HAVE A DECIDED HEART:  Christopher Columbus
TODAY I WILL CHOOSE TO BE HAPPY: Anne Frank.
I WILL GREET THIS DAY WITH A FORGIVING SPIRIT: Abraham Lincoln:.
I WILL PERSIST WITHOUT EXCEPTION:  Archangel Gabriel

Headlines are just that headlines. If you want the substance then read the book!

Saturday, July 30, 2016

Fish That Ate the Whale: The Life and Times of America’s Banana King by Rich Cohen

 Fish That Ate the Whale: The Life and Times of America’s Banana Kingby Rich Cohen X

 A book I recommend reading if you want to synthesize several pieces of history. This takes one part- history Central America , one part-  history banana industry, one part- history american Jewish immigrant , one part- history New Orleans , one part- history CIA and ties it all together through the life of Samuel ZeMurray.

He inserts the famous poem by Peablo Neruda, which cast a large shadow over the view of a well- doing America and instead shines a light on the growth and expansion at all cost realty of America at the turn of the century and into the wars.

"THE UNITED FRUIT CO."

When the trumpet sounded,
all was prepared on the earth

and Jehovah parceled out the world
to Coca-Cola Inc., Anaconda,
Ford Motors, and other entities:
the United Fruit Company Inc.
reserved for itself the juiciest bit
the central coast of my land,
the gentle waist of America.

It rebaptized these lands
as "Banana Republics,"and over the sleeping dead,
over the restless heroes,
who had conquered greatness,
liberty and flags,
The Company established a comic opera,
drove all free will insane,
handed out crowns of Caesar,
unsheathed greed, and attracted
the dictatorship of the flies,
Trujillo flies, Tacho flies,
CarĂ­as flies, MartĂ­nez flies,
Ubico flies, flies moistened
by humble blood and marmalade
drunken flies buzzingover the tombs of the common people,
circus flies, wise flies
well versed in tyranny.

Among the bloody flies,
The United Fruit Company steps ashore, 
devastating the coffee and the fruits,
in its ships that sail
like trays
taking away the treasure
of our drowning lands.
All the while, near the sugary deep of the harbors,
the Indians fell,
buried in the morning mists:
a corpse tumbles, a nameless thing,
a fallen number, a bunch of putrid fruit
thrown on the compost heap

Translation by Mac Williamson


tzedakah- Traditional Jews give at least ten percent of their income to charity. ... "Tzedakah" is the Hebrew word for the acts that we call "charity" in English: giving aid, assistance and money to the poor and needy or to other worthy causes. Very clearly Zemurray supports Jewish and Israeli causes and the author uses this is as an example of Zemurray's Jewishness.but it seems as though it's a force fit; none of his kids were Jewish kids they all became Christian; he wasn't a faithful attendee of synagogue nor a big reader of the Torah. This appears to be the authors agenda (early works include the title of Tough Jews) he wants to look backwards make them into looking forward. 

" By 1954 the network of connections had grown so  extensive it was I hard to tell where the government ended and the company began, 
Those who manipulate the unseen mechanism of society constantly invisible government which is truly is true ruling power - if you're not familiar with that part of American history might be a surprise to you that's the reality of expansionism and conquest through capitalism.

The lesson learned from the Guatemalan war - by Hunt the head of the CIA was the same lesson learned by Che Guevara revolutionary :compassion is weakness mercy a disease; you must be willing to go all the way. How sad both chose the bitter lesson as opposed to the better lesson from war - and demonstrated that , in the future.

ZeMurray would be "insane it's cheaper to buy a donkey than a colonel in Guatemala". He Measured everything in business assets. Zemurray was defined by his PR master -Edward Bernays Who believe the public must be controlled by manipulation supposed to governing. And people can be mean behaves you want them to behave as possible to control the masses according to our will without their knowing about it. 
Those who lived in the banana lands were ruled not by foreign nationals bringing civilization and the word of God but by businessman looked on the field with a cold moneymaking eye.   To some a business hero others it's a story of the pirate the conquistador who took without asking.  Sams defining characteristic was his belief in his own agency his refusal to despair. 

“If you want to understand the spirit of our nation, the good and bad, you can enroll in college, sign up for classes, take notes and pay tuition, or you can study the life of the banana man - you'll enjoy the read.

Monday, July 18, 2016

Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates: The Forgotten War That Changed American History. By Brian Kilmeade & Don Yaeger.

Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates: The Forgotten War That Changed American History.  By Brian Kilmeade & Don Yaeger.


A quick and easy history in narrative form that chronicles the early US strivings to protect its commerce and its citizens from pirates and the governments that supported said pirates along the north coast of Africa. In reading reviews of the book it appears that some of the research might be faulty but in whole it tells the right story . And yes, I had forgotten the details of the Barbary Wars, to which this is a good refresher. 


The Pirates Islamic credo that they called upon as justification of their actions, not too dissimilar to today's jihadist: "all nations which had not acknowledged the Prophet were sinners, whom it was the right and duty of the faithful to plunder and enslave" (today's version would include blowing them up). This is juxtaposed by Jeffersonian views of  all people were "endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights."


Kidnappings, ransoms, disguised bombs and vessels; it reads so much like today's headlines like the recent 'truck bomb' in Nice France. The Tripoli wars in fact never seem to have been won, nor finalized. Simply suspended while the sides regroup and the players shift chairs. It an enjoyable , quick read. Leaves the question unanswered - will there ever be reconciliation . If so how, if how, when?

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

An Amelia Peabody Novel of Suspense by Elizabeth Peters

An Amelia Peabody novel of Suspense .... By Elizabeth Peters

Peters had a PhD in Egyptology but her real  name is Barbara Mertz. The series of books written are an historical mystery series centered in Egyptology in the Middle East.  The books are a diversion  and fun to read. I think I've read all the books in the series a couple maybe twice.so quickly I digested " a river in the sky".   Set up in Jerusalem as opposed to the normal books in Egypt. the quick read with pseudo Egyptology in the Middle East studies making me think I'm traveling in the turn-of-the-century as an English explorer- not. My dad read "Cat who.."  by Lilian Jackson Braun and the "Cadfael Chronicles" by Ellis Peters (I think we got into them by mistake confusing I was Ellis peters with Elizabeth peters -both turned out to be winners )among others as his fun reads. I shared reading them with him. Interested in the series of Elizabeth peters ? start with "the crocodile on the sand bank"

Enjoy .


Monday, July 11, 2016

Understanding the Book of Mormon by Grant Hardy


A thoughtful book that examines the Book of Mormon as literature.

That being said, close examination of the manuscripts and various printed editions of the Book of Mormon help readers appreciate the true integrity of its text. This kind of scholarly examination of a text is called a “critical text” analysis(Rs)

Examples:
the first two-thirds of the book of Alma according to a series of parallels" (304). Alma 4-16 includes three sermons delivered to three different cities. Alma 36-42 includes Alma's three charges to three different sons (Alma 36-42). The sermons and charges overlap in theme, respective length, order, and source (primary documents are utilized in each case). This city/son parallel is even more interesting considering Alma preached in five cities but only three accounts are included in the narrative. Altogether, this indicates remarkable coincidence or deliberate construction: Zarahemla/Helaman (morally ambiguous), Gideon/Shiblon (clearly righteous, shortest), Ammonihah/Corianton (clearly wicked, longest)

In speaking of geographical details provided in the BOM (there are upwards of 1000 passages of potential geographic significance.[5]) Hardy finds"Amidst this dizzying array of details, the text’s demonstrable geographic consistency shines forth as a powerful witness to the sophistication and complexity of the Book of Mormon.[14] Upon careful inspection, Grant Hardy, a professor of history, has found, “It requires considerable patience to work out all the details of chronology, geography, genealogy, and source records, but the Book of Mormon is remarkably consistent on all of this.”[15] 

Royal Skousen in a recent  essay observed that: The Book of Mormon’s title page, translated by Joseph Smith,[i] ends with a rather intriguing disclaimer for a book of scripture: “And now if there be fault, it be the mistake of men. Wherefore condemn not the things of God, that ye may be found spotless at the judgment seat of Christ.”[ii]
By its own admission, the Book of Mormon is not a perfect text, something the book’s authors and compilers themselves frequently insisted (1 Nephi 19:6; Mormon 8:12, 16–17; Mormon 9:31; Ether 12:23–25).
Many have wondered how this could be if there were possible mistakes made in the book’s textual history. Latter-day Saint scholar Hugh Nibley answered this question by distinguishing between the message of the Book of Mormon and the “mechanical details” of its printing:
Joseph Smith . . . proclaimed [the Book of Mormon] the most correct book on earth. Most correct in what sense? . . . What is a “correct” book? One with properly cut margins, appropriate binding, a useful index, accurately numbered pages? Not at all; these are mere mechanical details, as are also punctuation, spelling, and even grammar—those matters about which the critics of the Book of Mormon have made such a to-do.[iv]

Scholarly study of the Book of Mormon and discovered Anachronisms in the Book of Mormon don't give me fear.  They give me further cause to study, pray and ponder. To seek out through the Spirit what I need to learn and live by. It seems clear that the Book of Mormon is the “most correct book on earth” because by living and applying its teachings one can come closer to God than by any other book. If you want food for thought - it's a good and meaningful read; if you are intellectually lazy or of faint heart - skip it.

Monday, July 4, 2016

In the light of what we know By zia haider Rahman

In the light of what we know
By zia haider Rahman 


An enjoyable book to read. I wasn't sure where it was heading and what I was to learn from it. And as such, the author invested 125 pages more in writing than I devices value from.  Rahman distracts us with a fair amount of material.

The  final few pages of the novel left me wanting for some closure on characters and situations that just didn't happen though  "the narrator reaches some easy metaphor about Kurt Godel’s Incompleteness Theorem and the nature of truth and friendship".

"The book is all about knowledge — who has access to it, who doesn’t, and how people who do have access use it. But it is equally about ignorance, and how people may, consciously or unconsciously, choose to shut out certain information so that they can go through life without questioning their perceptions of themselves
Sometimes a person will only  face the truth when The situation outside becomes so dire that the outside begins to notice." It is a story of classes, the stratification of society. As grandma Blair  use to say ' poor people have poor habits'' it's inverse is true ,and the book gives rise to the question can one migrate between the two. 

I was enjoying the book , just enveloping myself in the words; and for that reason was not going to pull quotes out. However,  there were enough that arrested my reading and we're giving me pause, and slowing my reading that I concluded I might as well pull some out.

"It is well to have a few memories of extravagance in store for hard times vs it is the memory of extravagance that makes the other times hard"


 "That one what one takes to be a change in another person is in fact only in improvement of one's own understanding of that person or that what we thought we knew is shown to be a false presumption of our own making
His personal tragedy was the tragedy of all men they cannot shake off the lives that might've been and the unlived lives that follow them"
"Evangelize by all means ,and if necessary use words"
 St. Francis of Assisib
"The best lessons have no teacher only a student...You"
Bad math teacher early  in one's life is devastating for all future math understanding 

"In Mathematics station ,position,  authority do not matter who you are counts for nothing"
"Answers can only begat questions- honesty commands declaration not of Faith but of ignorance"
"There are Different lights and different truths Depending on matters of simple caprice" 

"It is an obtuse notion that a given game of chess stands alone and apart, that is free of past and future an egoistic notion that the game at hand is that one game that matters. Only arrogance can allow such of view.  What matters is the beat and rhythm the heave and ho of game after game so in the cumulative history shows One the texture of what might be, what is inherent in the 32 pieces and the 64 squares and most of all the board..."
"take a real risk write it down on a piece of paper in a mind map redefine the situation"does free will really exist is choice an illusion "
Pgs 270-277

"A metaphor is useful only for transforming what happens in enriching it  in someway. it never tells you what exactly happened how it happened why it happened. ( interesting aside in 3nephi no parables are used just the straight doctrine ) Everything new is on the rim of our view, in the darkness, below the horizon so that nothing new is visible but. in the line of what we know.... We cannot see the light rays going across our field of vision and we are only seeing the impressions left by the dust particles fortuitously sent in the direction of our eyes . The conclusion of this is that if we look on a ray of light from the side and the air is free of dust , then the light will in fact be invisible!"
"Choices a trick of the light"
" Listening is hard as my friend once said because you run the risk of having to change the way you see the world."
"The world is mostly divided between mad men who remember and madmen who forget"
"His departure from the strange world a little ahead of me that means nothing press believing physicist distinction between past present and future is only a stubborn illusion" Einstein 
Ingredients to successful marriage trust and respect
"It was hard not having someone to talk about making decisions with something about doing it with someone else...and just talking about it something about I would leave to feeling afterward decisions seem lighter everything is lighter "
"There are those who do not talk because they have no one to talk to those who do not talk because they have nothing to say and those who did not talk because they hold their own hand to their mouth. talking is easier said than done."

Th book is a compelling read. However don't expect to walk away with all the answers. Though you should expect to add a few questions to the list.

Monday, June 13, 2016

The Light Between Oceans by L Stedman

….Knowing that the light will reappear
A powerful closing line to a moving book. What a love story! A story of pain, misdeeds and of redemption.
I struggled with the last third of the book, as the mire became deeper and muddier, for I did not foresee any resolution, any end of pain, any future, any redemption. So tonight since I couldn't sleep I decided to plunge forward, finish the read, even if it depressed me. 

I was surprised by the redemption of forgiving versus resenting, and seeing them be able to successfully find coping and a future in the midst of , or despite their pain and  through their trials. 
It's a hard , emotionally so, read. I'm surprised I did not bail and toss it - which would have been a shame?


Great quotes to ponder, all from the last 20 or so pages
"How can you just get over these things how do you do it ? I choose to he said. I can leave myself to rot in the past spend my time hating people for what happened , or I can forgive and forget. But it's not that easy; but it is so much less exhausting ;and you only have to forgive once to resent you have to do it all day every day. You have to keep remembering all the bad things.”  
“We always have a choice.”
“ There is no going back. There is no undoing what happened. I've learned the hard way that to have any kind of future you have to give up hope of ever changing your past.”
“ We put things right as well as we can that's all we can do. We have to live with things the way they are now”
“. .... A Droplet of nectar you taste for only a second...”
“ He watches the Ocean surrender to night , knowing that the light will reappear"

Worthy of the time spent reading and pondering its message.

Monday, June 6, 2016

The top five regrets of the dying by Bronnie Ware

The top five regrets of the dying by Bronnie Ware

The title does not attract me. My inclination would be to skip the book , however it came on recommendation -so . It is  a soft science self discovery look into finding meaning in life and in finding those key things one should take care of:
1-courage to live the life meant to have , not the life of others expections
-regardless of what others say or think
- it's about having the courage  to be you regardless

2-work with purpose and intent in simplicity not obsessive working hard
-The best way to make the most out of life is to appreciate the gift of it and not chose to be a victim

3- courage to express your real feelings no guilt

4-stay in touch with friends

5- Love myself to be happy find joy in the moment
- happiness is a choice
-in the freedom to choose what we focus on
-blessings come to me more when I'm in a place of gratitude and flow
- gratitude for every day along the way is the key to it acknowledging and enjoying happiness now . Not when the results come in or when you retire with this or that happens.
- have a heart that's open and smiling it's a good life
-cycles of life will bring challenging times
- need to find a place of self-love
- it is the heart that guides you to joy not the mind (Buddha commented "the mind knows no answers the heart knows no questions")

Finding joy

So how do you find joy in tumultuous and challenging times- when life happens:
Big view - those times when I am with Family- just one of them , or with several of them or with all of them . Each  of those are times when I find joy. I also find joy when my kids  getting together and they are  loving each other like recently in Wisconsin

In the temple - whether that's the weekly service as a worker or  when we attend the temple as patrons I find joy in the temple

Partaking of the  the sacrament - I know that should / can be weekly but in reality that just comes at times when I'm prepared to take the sacrament and I focus

Prayer again that could be daily but it is what happens when I focus and I ponder and I make it meaningful

Daily scripture study almost always is an  experience for me to find true joy

So even when things are hard I can find joy in a regular basis monthly weekly or daily. I can insert my day with joy of the spirit.

The book didn't go I there but my thoughts did . Life is a choice. It is YOUR life. Choose consciously, choose wisely, choose honestly. Choose happiness.






Sent from tim wilson

Friday, May 27, 2016

Transatlantic a novel by Colum McCann

Transatlantic a novel 
By Colum McCann


Lovely with the tapestry of life in crossing from Ireland to America to Ireland and in the lives of the people from the inconsequential to the larger than life. Book covers historical events as well as famous figures as well as every day people, as only an engaging historically bent novel can. McCann's ability to tell a story keeps you intrigued and hungry for more of their lives and of their trials of their victories.

"... three iconic crossings are connected by a series of remarkable women whose personal stories are caught up in the swells of history."
It Is the occasional very crisp sentence that pleases me most when read a book from a true craftsman. every once in while he comes up with just a splendid sentence such as:
"Everyone jumping off their own ledges, sailing out into the middle of the air, developing patterns a flight on the way down." These visually rich phrases deliver .

I'm unsure if the book has a definitive 'point' to it. Though it brings to mind the meaning found in understanding one's family stories in context of world events - even when it is only a note.

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

John Taylor biography by Francis Gibbons

Mormon philosopher , Prophet of God indeed encapsulates this powerful faithful man.
His biography is an interesting insight to the challenges of the early saints and growth of the church. I've grabbed a few quotes that provide some of the breadt h of his thought. He was an early embrace r of the philosophy of find what is good and true in the world and circle it within the gospel.


John Taylor
By Francis Gibbons

The kingdom of God or nothing

Unblemished record loyal obedience to prophetic direction and his conviction that exaltation  is to be found only in submissive obedience to all of God's Commandments receive through or interpreted by the living Oracle


It is for us his fathers and mothers to go before the Lord and all humility  and call upon him and his peace may be in our hearts wherein we have done wrong confess that wrong and run and repair it as far as we possibly can and forever cultivate the spirit of peace and love

When you allow everybody to worship as they please? Certainly. What? If you knew they were in error ? Certainly. I would not wish to control the human mind, I will not control the actions of men, God does not do it, he leaves them to their own agency to combat the trials, temptations, adversities and evils of every kind that are in the world to which humanity is or can be incident. He puts within their reach, however certain principles and would like to lead them to himself if they would be led. if not, then does the very best with them that he can.

Want to be alive in the cause of education. We are commanded of the Lord to obtain knowledge; both by study and by faith and seeking it out of the best books

I do not desire affliction ... But if earthquake bellows, the lightings flash the thunders roll, and the powers of darkness are let loose and the spirit of evil is permitted to rage , and an evil influence is brought to bear ... and my life is put to the test; let it come for we are the saints of the most high God all is well all is peace all is right and will be within time and in eternity 






Sent from tim wilson

Saturday, April 23, 2016

Orbiting the Giant Hairball

Orbiting the Giant Hairball A corporate fools guide to surviving with Grace
By Gordon Mackenzie

First the surprise as I go to write this review I look in the front of the book and find out when is printed in 1998. A new trend with me, that of reading older books never before read by me. Once again I find this book topical today as it was when is written. I'm feeling somewhat remorseful that I'm so late to coming to the reading.

David Baldwin has an apt summary, which I'm going to insert here, feeling lazy.
" could have been written yesterday. Its insights are timeless and always relevant.

This small volume is a roadmap for escaping the stifling bureaucracy of corporate
culture and achieving a state of creative achievement by “orbiting” the corporation.

As the author says himself, “hairball” is a disgusting term. But it is an appropriate
term for the mass of policies, procedures, rules, management layers, practices,
conformity, compliance and submission to the status quo that every organization
eventually and invariably becomes.

Every new policy or procedure or rule is a new hair in the hairball. Hairs in
organizations are never removed, they are always added. As the number of hairs
accumulates, so does the mass of the hairball. As in physics, as the mass of a body
increases, so does its gravitational pull.

The corporate organization, the hairball, begins to exert its own corporate gravity.
It is the nature of corporate gravity to suck everything and everyone into its mass,
which translates into corporate normalcy.

Orbiting is operating beyond the bounds of corporate normalcy. The corporate mind
set is to protect and repeat past successes. There is little room in corporate
normalcy for original thinking or primary creativity.

Orbiting is responsible creativity, vigorously exploring and operating beyond the
hairball of the corporate mind set, beyond accepted models, patterns or standards,
all the while remaining connected to the spirit of the corporate mission.

Now a few good quotes from the text itself
Orbiting is actively engaging in the opportunities and resources provided by the
organization without being sucked into the hairball. To orbit, one must be
continuously mindful of the corporate environment and always conscious of one’s
personal mission to be responsibly creative."

"... If you do follow your bliss you put yourself in a kind of track that has been there all the while waiting for you and the life you ought to be living is the one you're living "Joseph Campbell

  Need to find a balance being committed to the organization culture at the same time committing to the heart of the personally relevant goals of the organization and how you create your own unique contribution and be more than just a headcount. It takes courage, courage to cross boundaries, courage to admit it idiocy, courage to acknowledge impasse, courage be open up to being rescued.
 Things to do
Groping leave behind your habitual corporate cultures analytic explicit rational concrete goal  oriented linear reality and instead experience spontaneous playful holistic nonlinear creative energy

Freedom versus security
So:skydiving without a parachute is suicide
total freedom is suicide

And: holing up in the closet is vegetating
total security is vegetating

Start near security and move mindfully toward freedom

Coercion is a deterrent to creative a participation
And a workshop without creative participation is not a creative workshop at all but rather an exercise in cultural indoctrination

When we tease others about their performance we hold up a stop sign, and keeps them from sharing risking or growing. before you tease you should pause just a moment look deep inside yourself and see if you can understand your motivation and then reconsider are you  trying to stop that person ,belittle them or lift them up

Be careful of those things which foster isolation isolation brings atrophy decay fading away! engagement brings passion vision invention! Stay engaged

Orville Wright did not have a pilots license don't always wait for permission

Escape from habitual culture must always be temporary if you wish to be permitted back into that culture "yes you can go on and play but you must be home by dinner time"

Compassionate emptiness a state of nonjudgmental receiving- how do I listen?

To create we must let go:
Let go strategies that worked in the past
let go or biases the foundation of our illusions
 Let go of our grievances the root source of our victimhood
Let go of our so often denied fear of being found unlovable
Not rejecting but letting go open up yourself to new possibilities

If you go to your grave without painting your masterpiece, it will not get painted. No one else can paint it. Only you!


Friday, April 22, 2016

Where The Blue Begins

Where The Blue Begins
By Christopher Morley copyright 1922
To be honest I'm not sure how this arrived on my reading list. Morely is a fiction writer, an essayist, and  poetry writer of some acclaim but no great notoriety. I thought Brigham recommended it, but I was mistaken, he didn't. Nonetheless I got an inter-library loan of the book and quickly devoured it.



Reviews even say it may have been written as a child book or other types but I found this book to be a good philosophical read: compelling observation on society, family life, professional life and the self discovery of what one truly is searching out of life.

I started reading and gathering quotes but decided not to do that this time but just to read it and enjoy it. And that I did! Not everybody can write a book with the characters all being dogs. And for that matter I don't know if it adds value to the story to be dogs or people, a unique device. Glad I read it. And recommended to you if you like philosophy books with a slant on social commentary. And it seems relevant to me today in 2016 as it was in 1922 when he wrote it.

One quote I'll throw out there is how he describes discovering who his real self was "Another one of those numerous self-inflicted committed suicide that was the right idea to keep sloughing them off throwing overboard the unreal and factitious paring them down until he discovered the  genuine and in alienable creature" . reminds me a bit of CS Lewis's description of Eustice as a dragon peeling off his Dragon self and trying to find his real self inside. The challenge for all of us – discovering our true inner self and raison d'etre..

Friday, April 1, 2016

The Speech Writer

The speechwriter a brief education in politics by Barton Swaim

Had I remembered who Mark Sanford was - South Carolina's governor crazy 'gone missing ' - I might not of read the book.  this guy Brian was the communications officer and speechwriter for him.  I was interested in reading the book in terms of writing and writing styles and sustaining  process as a political speech writer. there are a number of  interesting insights,nothing breakthrough, but a quick easy read.

The governor understood building brand , defining his message and his key message points and in sticking to them. His speech writer bryan built the repertoire of content that reflected his governors positions and thoughts and approaches and style thus building and establishing the governors brand.

The book  was its most interesting upon  reaching its last seven pages where in we found the definition of the kind of men, like the governor who run for office who are politicians: "
Was he at  last pondering the ruin he created I doubt it… Men like him think of achievement and victory not a failure. And when they fail disastrously the first thought is not to repair the damage but to gauge how far it is to the next victory "

"Why do we trust men who have sought and obtained  high office by innumerable acts of vanity and  self will. They serve because they glory and receiving glory. Politicians maybe lauded when the right venerated when they're dead but they should never be trusted.  difference between their public and private persona... I believe you wanted to feel a deeper remorse he looked inside and it wasn't there all he found was more of himself... Politicians gain power by convincing us that they are wise and trustworthy... The claimant attention or his highest name is is they are every determine politicians I need to praise the finding the seriousness with people take the remarks gaze of the audience the way room falls silent when enters
. He May have good desires it's a desire it's not what drives him. What drives them is the thirst for glory. The public good as he understands it is a means to that end.


Contrasting to King Benjamin 

Mosiah 29:6 ccf
35 And he also unfolded unto them all the disadvantages they labored under, by having an unrighteous king to rule over them;

36 Yea, all his iniquities and abominations, and all the wars, and contentions, and bloodshed, and the stealing, and the plundering, and the committing of whoredoms, and all manner of iniquities which cannot be enumerated--telling them that these things ought not to be, that they were expressly repugnant to the commandments of God.


Mosiah 2
s suffered by the hand of the Lord that I should be a ruler and a king over this people; and have been kept and preserved by his matchless power, to serve you with all the might, mind and strength which the Lord hath granted unto me.

12 I say unto you that as I have been suffered to spend my days in your service, even up to this time, and have not sought gold nor silver nor any manner of riches of m
16 Behold, I say unto you that because I said unto you that I had spent my days in your service, I do not desire to boast, for I have only been in the service of God.

17 And behold, I tell you these things that ye may learn wisdom; that ye may learn that when ye are in the service of your fellow beings ye are only in the service of your God.
16 Behold, I say unto you that because I said unto you that I had spent my days in your service, I do not desire to boast, for I have only been in the service of God.

17 And behold, I tell you these things that ye may learn wisdom; that ye may learn that when ye are in the service of your fellow beings ye are only in the service of your God


Not lipservice but that he's actually serving God. The –Measure of how people should live and how he should govern. Where is their heart where is their reward! 


Sent from tim wilson

Monday, March 21, 2016

Inside The Magic Shop

I've been trying to improve the quality of my meditation and so after seeing his TED TALK, decided to read his book. An interesting personal journey of his and some insights.
Into The magic shop
By James r doty

Power of intention to change everything 
Alphabet of the heart 
Atonement baptism charity  
divine nature 
eternity
Forgiveness 
gratitude 
humility 
inspiration 
Jesus 
kindness 
love