Monday, January 13, 2025

Jessi's Secret Language

Jessi's Secret Language: A Graphic Novel (The Baby-Sitters Club #12) (The Baby-Sitters Club Graphix) by Ann M. Martin and Chan Chau

The twelfth babysitters club graph novel explores the deaf, ballet and sign language. Jessi is in a new ballet class and is one of the better kids in the class. Other kids feel jealous of her. She feels it may be because she is the youngest and newest girl. (The fact that she is the only black girl in the class is never mentioned.) However, she continues to work and gets a lead role in the upcoming ballet. Meanwhile, she also gets the job of babysitting a new family. She goes twice awake and learns sign language to communicate with a deaf boy and his hearing sister. The sister struggles with being looked down on because she is always helping her brother. Jessi helps her to overcome this. She also helps both to get good friends. She is also able to communicate with the deaf sister of a girl in her ballet class. For the opening performance, Jessi invites all her friends and the deaf class. They all enjoy the ballet. This one is a nice positive message that seems to have fewer false dramas than other BSC books.

1587, a year of no significance: The Ming dynasty in decline

1587, a year of no significance: The Ming dynasty in decline by Ray Huang

By 1587, the Ming dynasty was in terminal decline. The government continued to function, however, the base to its legitimacy was fading away. This book is written in the style of somebody living through the empire and experiencing the decline. It is clear there are a multitude of forces involved. The empire is in a state where the ideal and communications are different from the actual. Humility and frugality are important. However, these are more principles than actual practice. Government officials will preach frugality, but live an ostentatious life. The empire has built on Confucian ideals. It has evolved to be too rigid and difficult to change. Even when actions diverge from the principles, they have been ingrained by the behavior. On the other hand, massive changes can occur when leadership changes. A high level government official can drive out those that they do no like and raise up their friends. Once they are out of power, the leadership changes again.

The book has a number of different chapters that focus on certain people that have a tie to 1587, the year o the Pig. The "year of no significance" has a double meaning. On one side, it can be taken literally because the year is not incredibly significant. On the other hand it can be treated as the imperial doublespeak for "the most important year." Nothing really did happen, but it was emblematic of the downfall of the empire. A chapter covers the young emperor and his disdain for protocol. Another chapter covers a tutor who assumed significant power with display of frugality while living a secretly extravagant life. One chater discovers an official who enforced rules and true frugality. He somehow got into a position of power, but had that taken away. Military officials and others all had their discussion. A system of rent-taking and doublespeak had come about as the society was declining. Through the civil service people from all walks of life had a possibility of entering the upper echelons of society.  However, this also left little continuity. With the enlightenment bringing intellectual changes, the empire has little left to support itself.

Mal Goes to War

Mal Goes to War: A Novel by Edward Ashton

In this not-so-distant future, the US has been concerned that AI entities are gaining too much strength. They release a virus to wipe out the AIs. Mal is an AI malware that is working on the side of the AIs. He wants to protect AIs from the anti-AI humanists. He has the ability to infiltrate various technologies. Since most people have various electronic implants, he is also able to infiltrate them and perform various actions. In the end he works together with people to battle against the humanists and in the end sets some code in the Virus leader to cause occasional pain. It is an interesting dark-humor story on the risks of technological dominance and the difficulty in containing it.

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Books in 2024

In the middle of 2024, I started making a few changes to tagging the books. Now I've added tags to distinguish between paper books and ebooks. I've also added star rankings to books. I use a 10 star scale, but most seem to be in the upper half. (If they are really bad, I am probably not reading them.) This has lead me to being less likely to give a "good book" tag. I've also added more picture books that I read to the kids. This in part helped me to average more than a book per day. 

How I read books

The book "reading" means has evolved. When I started, it was primarily by ripping CDs and running scripts to speed up the audio. Now the primary way is by checking out audiobooks from the library on the Libby app. Most of these are listened to at 3x speed. Every now and then there is one that will be played down to 2x or so. These are most often "full cast dramatizations" or narrators that are faster or harder to understand.

There are a few audiobooks from other sources. There are occasional free Audible books (including a few classics and some from Amazon music.) These support speed up of up to 3.5x, so I listen to them a little faster. 

For other audiobooks, I typically use the "PlayBook" app. (Not to be confused with the Google Play Book" app. This app supports playing up to 4x speed. I typically use somewhere between 3 and 4. Other audiobooks will typically come from Librivox or CD. These are usually ripped via iTunes on an old computer and then transferred to phone.

For eBooks, they typically come from the Library via the Libby app. For most, I "read" with Kindle. I use an old Fire Phone to have the books read via text to speech. This generally works, though it does occasionally hang when there is an image at the end of the page. For some ebooks that are not available on Kindle, I'll load the Epub into the PocketBook app. The Pocketbook app text to speech works pretty well, though it occasionally has bugs with repeating content. These will include some library books not available in Kindle as well as Project Gutenberg and other typically public domain sources.

I rarely read an ebook. The rare exception is typically graphic novels that I cannot get on paper. There are some "ebooks" that are only available online. I will avoid these. I'd prefer to hunt down the paper book. There are also a few old books that are only available via scanned books in the Good Play Books app. (Play Books also has a text to speech for digital books, but this is awful.)

For paper books, these are usually books that cannot be found easily in digital. I also prefer physical books for graphic novels and picture books. I prefer physical books for very verbosely written books. (It is easier to speed-read/skim through wordy books.) Some of these books come from my personal collection. Other will come from libraries. There are three large library systems within a 10 mile bike ride from my house. This allows for a lot of physical book holds. Interlibrary loan is used for books that cannot be found locally.  



Book statistics

Total Books: 483

Great Books (1)

Trust

Good Books (25)

Song for a Whale
Counting by 7s
Who Gets in and Why: A Year Inside College Admissions
Exit
Of Boys and Men: Why the Modern Male Is Struggling, Why It Matters, and What to Do About It
Can't and Won't: Stories
Trust
Suburban Nation: The Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream
Essays One
The Wondering Jew: Israel and the Search for Jewish Identity
Go as a River
Fluke: Chance, Chaos, and Why Everything We Do Matters
How Iceland Changed the World: The Big History of a Small Island
Interior Chinatown: A Novel
How Life Works: A User’s Guide to the New Biology
Bad Therapy: Why the Kids Aren't Growing Up
Drift
A for Andromeda
First Lie Wins: A Novel
Adapt: Why Success Always Starts with Failure
The Universe in Your Hand: A Journey Through Space, Time, and Beyond
How to Know a Person: The Art of Seeing Others Deeply and Being Deeply Seen
The Once And Future World: Nature As It Was, As It Is, As It Could Be
Yellowface: A Novel
Invention and Innovation: A Brief History of Hype and Failure

Good Audiobooks (2)

Chuck Klosterman X: The Audio Companion to a Highly Specific and Defiantly Incomplete History of the Early 21st Century
Tracy Flick Can't Win

By month read

January: 25
February: 38
March: 34
April: 29
May: 59
June: 19
July: 21
August: 33
September: 35
October: 52
November: 75
December: 63

Books by year written

1160: 1
1260: 1
1387: 1
1676: 1
1759: 1
1775: 1
1781: 1
1794: 1
1796: 1
1798: 1
1799: 1
1800: 1
1801: 2
1802: 1
1803: 2
1804: 1
1805: 2
1807: 1
1810: 1
1818: 1
1835: 1
1840: 1
1843: 1
1846: 1
1847: 1
1850: 1
1853: 1
1859: 1
1861: 1
1875: 1
1888: 1
1889: 1
1890: 1
1901: 1
1902: 1
1903: 1
1904: 1
1906: 1
1907: 1
1908: 1
1909: 1
1910: 1
1911: 2
1913: 1
1916: 1
1917: 1
1920: 2
1922: 1
1923: 1
1926: 2
1929: 1
1930: 2
1932: 1
1934: 1
1935: 2
1936: 2
1937: 1
1939: 1
1942: 2
1943: 1
1944: 1
1945: 1
1951: 1
1952: 1
1953: 2
1954: 1
1955: 1
1957: 1
1958: 2
1959: 4
1961: 1
1962: 2
1963: 2
1965: 4
1967: 3
1968: 3
1969: 1
1970: 1
1973: 1
1974: 1
1975: 4
1976: 1
1977: 1
1978: 2
1979: 1
1980: 1
1981: 3
1983: 1
1985: 2
1986: 3
1988: 2
1989: 2
1992: 1
1993: 1
1994: 2
1995: 3
1996: 3
1997: 5
1998: 3
1999: 2
2000: 3
2001: 2
2002: 4
2003: 4
2004: 5
2005: 6
2006: 9
2007: 7
2008: 12
2009: 12
2010: 12
2011: 10
2012: 15
2013: 13
2014: 14
2015: 17
2016: 17
2017: 16
2018: 21
2019: 32
2020: 35
2021: 30
2022: 39
2023: 34
2024: 23
2025: 1

Stats on years written

mean: 1989
median: 2013
mode: 2022

Most popular tags (other than year and book)

ebooks: 81
paper books: 76
history: 66
science: 40
childrens books: 37
politics: 32
business: 28
social science: 28
psychology: 27
economics: 26
good books: 25
autobiography: 21
science fiction: 21
7stars: 19
biography: 18
translated literature: 17
young adult fiction: 17
food: 17
8stars: 16
6stars: 14
Audiobooks: 302
Books: 482 (includes audiobooks also available in book form)

For all time, I have read a book from each year since 1900. For the 1800s, there remain a few gaps. The years and gaps are below. More than half the years covered, but many to go.

1800 1
1801 2
1802 1
1803 2
1804 1
1805 2
GAP! missing 1 years
1807 1
1808 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1810 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1812 1
GAP! missing 3 years
1816 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1818 1
GAP! missing 11 years
1830 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1832 1
GAP! missing 2 years
1835 3
GAP! missing 3 years
1839 1
1840 2
GAP! missing 2 years
1843 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1845 1
1846 1
1847 1
GAP! missing 2 years
1850 1
1851 2
1852 1
1853 1
1854 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1856 1
GAP! missing 2 years
1859 3
GAP! missing 1 years
1861 1
GAP! missing 2 years
1864 2
1865 1
1866 1
1867 1
1868 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1870 2
1871 1
1872 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1874 1
1875 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1877 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1879 1
1880 3
GAP! missing 1 years
1882 1
1883 2
GAP! missing 1 years
1885 1
1886 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1888 2
1889 1
1890 1
1891 2
1892 1
GAP! missing 1 years
1894 1
1895 2
1896 2
1897 2
1898 1
1899 2

Saturday, January 11, 2025

Exhalation

Exhalation: Stories by Ted Chiang

Exhalation explores a number of philosophical topics in Science Fiction short stories. Each story also provides a short "why I wrote it" section. (This can be one of the best part.) The first story was an "Arabian nights" type setting that explores a door that lets you go see time in the future. People can explore the future, but can't really make any changes in their life. (As an example, one man goes to see his future self and discovers that he is a frugal miser with huge amounts of hidden wealth. He feels it would be better to spend money and takes all of that money. Alas, his life of wealth is short lived and leads to him hoarding money due to getting robbed and accused of not "earning" it.

A few stories look at different approaches of freewill. One person analyzes their own brain. In another story, people can "fork" their lives in alternate ways. 

One story looks at "virtual people". These AI beings are allowed to grow on their own and are held somewhat like pets and live in virtual worlds. They want additional freedoms and rights, but are they mature enough?

There is one story that looks at communication. It combines a thread of adding written language to an oral communications tribe with a technology that allows people to replay at will any previous event. Is the "real truth" better than the way that we remember things? We may remember a great experience from childhood. However, if we replayed it, we may see that other participants were reluctantly participating. Does this make it worse? Do we really want the "real truth"?

The stories include:

"The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate" 

"Exhalation" 

"What's Expected of Us" 

"The Lifecycle of Software Objects" 

"Dacey's Patent Automatic Nanny" 

"The Truth of Fact, the Truth of Feeling"

"The Great Silence" 

"Omphalos"

"Anxiety Is the Dizziness of Freedom" 

Collision on Tenerife: The How and Why of the World's Worst Aviation Disaster

Collision on Tenerife: The How and Why of the World's Worst Aviation Disaster by Jon Ziomek

The first half of this book provides a detailed account of the collision between two 747s in the Canary Islands. It even answers questions that I was curious about, such as "what happened to that cruise that passengers were going to go on?" (the cruise did go on, even though none of the passengers from the TWA 747 joined it.) The pilot of the KLM 747 seemed to be the root cause of the crash, with his desire to rush off as soon as possible. It is interesting that crew duty time limits were the root of his rush. Duty limits were in part an attempt at safety, but ended up leading to a disaster. The KLM noticed the TWA jet too late, and tried to take off over it. They nearly made it, but hit the top of the plane, instantly killing some on the TWA jet. The KLM jet then traveled a short distance before crash landing and killing everyone in a fireball. For those that were not killed on the TWA jet, some escaped - often by jumping out of holes in the aircraft to the ground. Many initial survivors died when the TWA plane later burned. 

In identifying the deceased, the Dutch on the KLM jet were easier to identify. They tended to be younger, and the state Dental plan records were readily available. For the TWA jet, the dental records were more not readily available for all Americans and many passengers were older and used dentures. 

The second half discusses the aftermath. There were safety changes made in aviation. More of the discussion was on the personal impact. People often "freeze" in terms of big stress. They could have escaped, but they didn't. People may be more passive and waiting for people to tell them what to do. They could also not have paid attention and are looking to go out the way they came in, rather than the closest exit. Men tend to survive at higher rates than women. People also tend to suffer in different ways after the disaster. Airplane crashes are large scale disasters that don't have the same "community" as natural disasters.

Kristy's Big Day

Kristy's Big Day: A Graphic Novel (The Baby-Sitters Club #6) (6) (The Baby-Sitters Club Graphix) by Ann M. Martin and Gale Galligan

Stylistically, the illustrations on this Babystitter's club has a much more "manga" style than the early books. The eyes pop out, and it feels Japanese. It is very clearly a different artist. Kristy's mom will be marrying Watson. They will then be moving into his mansion. Originally, they had planned to tie the knot in September. However, due to her mom getting a good offer on the house and having an upcoming business trip, they move it to the early summer. There is a lot of work to handle in a short time. Many kids come in from family. The entire babysitter's club comes together to help babysit all the kids. In the end, the wedding goes off well, and Kristy gets to wear her fancy dress and take part in the wedding. The girls also get paid well for the babysitting. It was a lot of work managing small kids  suddenly grouped together. After the wedding, the "big brother" takes over for watching the new blended family. He is intentionally lax.

Friday, January 10, 2025

Project Hail Mary

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

A man wakes up without knowledge of who he is or what he is doing. His memories gradually filer back in bits. The story unravels with his current condition as well as flashback to the past. We realize that he is on a mission to outer space to save humanity. The others on his mission have died. He previously taught science to children and did research on mysterious "astrophages" on the side. This small organisms can suck enormous amounts of energy from the sun. This will lead to massive global cooling in short order. He is on a mission to space to attempt to find something to counteract this problem to allow humanity to survive. 

In space, he meets another alien whose society is in similar circumstances. The other alien has also had his crew wiped out. As the last member of the crew, they only survived because the astrophages being attended had served as a radiation shield. The two of them join together to try to find a solution. They discover a natural predator to astrophages and then attempt to breed it to properly inhabit the local conditions. There are a number of crisis, but eventually they send a message back to earth. The human is on the way back to earth when he encounters a issue. He realizes this will also endanger the alien, so he goes back to help the alien ship. He ends up helping him and going to the alien planet. There he lives a somewhat comfortable - the aliens are excited to have an extra-terrestrial and help him to adapt.

The book has a positive story of encounter with existential threats. The survival of humanity does depend on a single person making good decisions. The right decisions were made. Earth appeared to survive. He thinks that it was what he did that lead to the success. It was not quite clear to me why both lifeforms seemed to travel to the same area in space to look for a solution. How did they know? And did they think they could really get a message back before the earth totally turned on itself with warfare? It did seem to work, but there did seem to be many close calls.

Partition: How and Why Ireland was Divided

Partition: How and Why Ireland was Divided by Ivan Gibbons

Ireland was one of the earliest British colonies. It is close to England and had been tightly integrated into Great Britain. However, there is also an ocean gap and a different (mostly Catholic culture.) Conflicts in Ireland had become a drain on British resources and various attempts were made at granting autonomy. However, Ireland was not unified. The north was mostly protestant, while the remainder was overwhelmingly Catholic. Both parts of Ireland wanted greater autonomy. However, the northerners wanted to remain part of Britain, while the southerners wanted full independence. Resolving this conflict proved to be difficult. The English public was also becoming tired of the conflict in Ireland. As a compromise, Britain drew a border and gave the two parts of Ireland separate control. There remained various conflicts and civil wars. After World War I, a complete boundary commission was set up to fix the boundary. They went through detailed analysis and moved certain areas around. However, this was pretty much ignored and the boundary remained as is. There has been an understanding that Northern Ireland could join with Ireland whenever the public voted for it, however, they have remained part of the UK.

Today, Ireland is an independent country, member of the EU and not a member of the Commonwealth. Northern Ireland is part of the UK and not a member of the EU, but in a special situation that allows free movement of goods to the EU. Northern Ireland is becoming more Catholic. However, Northern Ireland continues to receive significant financial assistance from Britain. Joining with the Republic of Ireland would result in the loss of tens of thousands of government jobs. Northern Ireland have a bit of both worlds, being able to be part of Ireland and the UK. Ireland was one of the first of the European powers "geographic partitionings". The impact is still felt.

The book focuses on the partition. The resultant civil wars and unneeded deaths are mentioned in passing. The focus is instead on the politics and process that lead to the partition. It feels that something is lacking, but does make for a much more readable book on the event it is covering.

Unraveled

Unraveled Book 9.5 (Keeper of the Lost Cities) by Shannon Messenger

Keefe the elf is meandering around the human world trying to find his way to London to allay some guilt. We stops by Seattle and sees the gum wall. he goes around many different cities. Eventually he discovers maps and uses it to make his way to London. He runs into Alber and then they go voyaging to try to get Keefe's spirits up. They explore Australia and a zoo there. It seems that the main goal is to show as many different locations as possible. They also seem to be drawn to contemporary human standards (like finding your own spouse instead of matchmaking.) If they don't understand details of human culture, why would they seem to adapt to "in vogue" social details?  He eventually discovers that Eleanor, a person that he thought he helped to have killed, is actually alive. (He meets her.) He later runs into Sophie Foster, which ties it into the main series. In the end, Sophie and Keefe meet together, even if she is unmatchable and his mom wants her dead. They kiss and now things are different. The book is an "alternate view" of the events of the main series, with the view from Keefe instead of Sophie. It feels like it must have been fun to write in order to explore details of different locations.

This is Not Enough

This Is Not Enough (You Are Not Small Book 6) by Anna Kang and Christopher Weyant

Two friends try to give each other super big presents because they think the other is giving something really big. They end up giving things they made themselves.

Thursday, January 09, 2025

Simon Says Good Night

Simon Says Good Night by Orit Bergman, translated by Annette Appel

A kid plays "simon says" with their animals and other "friends". After one does the action without them saying "simon says", they are sent out to bed. Then the kid goes to bed.

Campingland

Campingland by Ame Dyckman and James Burks

A family attempts to go camping. They are ill-prepared, and have too much stuff, but not the right stuff. They have a miserable experience. One kid even hugs a skunk. They are done with camping and are excited to see "Campingland". It is like camping, but indoors where everything is perfect. At first they like it, but then realize it is not worth it. They decide they like the experience of camping. This time they try it while being properly prepared and have a great experience. It is a tale of being prepared and enjoying nature. There is also societal comment on how everything is commercialized and homogenized. It seems to make a "safe" experience, but without the full joy.

The Truth About Stacey: A Graphic Novel

Mary Anne Saves the Day: A Graphic Novel (The Baby-Sitters Club #3) (The Baby-Sitters Club Graphix) by Raina Telgemeier and Ann M. Martin

The Babysitter's club series continues to be adapted for new media. The graphic novel is fairly faithful to the original book (while the Netflix series seems to make a lot more significant changes.) This story starts out fairly straightforward. The girls meet and get some clients. Then things go downhill. The girl the answers the phone for a job babysitting a baby immediately takes it. This makes everyone mad. They have difficulty even communicating together. Because of this spat, Mary Anne eats lunch by herself. Luckily, this gives her the chance to meet Dawn, the new girl from California. They become good friends. They also discover that their parents (Dawn's divorced mother and Mary Anne's widowered dad) dated each other in high school. As part of a babysitting job, Marry Anne has an emergency with a 104 degree temperature. Dawn comes to help her after she couldn't get in contact with any of the emergency numbers. They end up going in an ambulance to the hospital and both end up getting paid. (Seems they didn't bother to update this "telephone no-contact" problem to the days of cell phones.) Mary Anne ends up getting more privileges from her father after this experience.

The babysitter club girls work together for a kid's birthday party and nearly ruin the party. After that experience they finally agree to make peace. (Mary Anne had written apology letters to help make peace. She even wrote one to Dawn after having a falling out when Dawn discovered that Mary Anne had lied about her friends.) Dawn joins the club and everyone is happy. It is a simple message of how a simple conflict can get out of hand - and be hard to resolve. Often it requires a big stressor to realize how bad the problem is.

Antimatter Blues

Antimatter Blues: A Mickey7 Novel, Book 2 by Edward Ashton

The Mickey7 series continues to show it's Ender's Game influence. The first book witnessed contact and "victory" over the hive-mind aliens. In this second one, the hero attempts to better befriend and understand the aliens.

Mickey had told the gruff colony leader that he had made a truce with the aliens and given them the antimatter bomb. This has bought him his freedom and the end to "death missions" as an expendable. However, he didn't mention the whole story. While he had given them the bomb, he later asked for it back and then hid it under a rock in one of the alien caves.

Two years later, the colony runs into energy problems. He is asked to get the bomb back from the aliens to use as a power source. He is conflicted. He feels he could go pick it up, but this will reduce the leverage that he has. He and his girlfriend eventually decide to get it, however it is not there. They reach out to the aliens and finds they have traded it to another group to the south. After negotiations (which go south in due to the forwardness of his girlfriend), they  get one alien to come with him to try to get it back.

Half the novel consists of the quest to get the bomb back. They get a few people from the colony to accompany them. Mickey's friend Berto has a paragliding device that comes in handy. They try negotiations and eventually use warfare to defeat the aliens and get the bomb back. Mickey is willing to be an expendable again to inject the bomb's fuel into the power reactor. However, before he can do it, the colony leader loses his life doing it.

The "fights" are fairly typical. The sentient life on the planet are two primary species. One is the friendly aliens that adapt to many different shapes using metal and other sources. The others are parasitic and have adapted to the lifestyle of the friendly aliens. They are both "hive"-type live forms that think of most of their members as ancillaries that are somewhat expendable. They also have fairly developed technology and are able to learn human language by monitoring radio transmissions. However, they do have difficulty understanding concepts that are foreign to them.

Wednesday, January 08, 2025

Farenheit 451

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

Tim Robbins may be famous, but his audiobook narration is not the easiest to follow. In this classic story, Guy Montag is a fireman. With everything fireproof, the job of the fireman is to burn books rather than put out fires. They have even rewritten history to say that historical figures, like Ben Franklin, were similar firemen.

On one trip, the fireman encounter a person that wants to stay with their books. Montag also ends up with a book of his own. He is traumatized by the experience, and becomes attached to books. He later seeks others that like books and joins the underground. In the process he frames others and becomes sentimental towards books and knowledge. The fireman concept seems a little far-fetched, but it does play into the preachy nostalgia of the book.

Wind and Truth: Book Five of the Stormlight Archive

Wind and Truth: Book Five of the Stormlight Archive by Brandon Sanderson

Wind and Truth is about as long as the Old Testament.  It also deals with religion and warfare. There are quotes from other "works" that are generally previous books in the series. The scope ranges from individual actors, to Cosmere level discussions. Most of the narrative takes place in a few days times. However, there are chapters that go back thousands of years. In this world, there are gods and people. The gods themselves are also "people" and have their foibles. Dalinar Kholin has challenged the god Odium to a duel. Odium used to be somebody else and we hear his history in some of the flashbacks. There are other characters like Jasnah and Szeth and Pattern. They are fighting battles, discussing slavery and other things. It is difficult to keep track of everything that is going on.

Tuesday, January 07, 2025

Economics in One Virus

Economics in One Virus: An Introduction to Economic Reasoning through COVID-19 by Ryan A. Bourne

The Covid-19 pandemic was a big mess. The world did not understand the virus well and was ill prepared to respond. Subsequent actions counteracted each other and made things worse. We gave too much latitude to public health experts to implement solutions without looking at societal impacts. The result was economic devastation, high inflation and a multitude of societal ills.

This book explores many of the responses to the virus and the associated economic principles. Each chapter discusses the pandemic and then summarizes specific principles and terms that are related. Often it becomes self-evident that basic economics were missed in the response. In some cases, policies worked against each other. Unemployment benefits were ramped up quickly to give consumers cash. Then aid was given to small businesses to keep employees. However, many employees could earn more by taking unemployment than by working. Why go back to work? This created a cascading problem as business such as child care were not fully start back up, making it difficult for others to go back to work.

The pandemic response failed to properly analyze cost and benefits. A politician would proclaim that society would spare no expense at saving a life. Alas, those measures could make the life less worth living. Grandma may hope to live to see her granddaughter's wedding. How would she feel if we preserve her life a few months, but prevent the wedding from happening? 

Centrally managed one-size fits all approaches also caused problems. Rather than let different approaches be experimented, there were similar policies enacted. Everyone was asked to isolate, regardless of risk. However, "essential" workers were still actively interacting with people, even if they did not have protective equipment. The result was both too much isolation and not enough. Things got even more bizarre as the pandemic progressed. People were arrested for solo outdoor activities, but large group protests were allowed. Stores were allowed to be open, but a section selling seeds was roped off. Central planning seemed to create ridiculousness, but didn't have a huge impact on virus spread. People were adapting better than policies. Those with minimal risk were more willing to participate in risky activities. Those at risk were isolating and protecting themselves. The "natural adaptation" was better than the centrally planned policy.

The speed of government change was also a problem. Testing was extremely helpful in containing the spread of the virus. Tests were available early in the pandemic. However, US authorities did not allow them because they were not 100% accurate. Instead, we were left with 100% inaccurate non-tests. The tests provided a better signal for those that were most contagious, but even that was lost on authorities. The problem was later repeated with rapid tests. The delays resulted in excess pandemic spread and economic lockdown.

Shortages were also caused by lack of economic signals. Rather than let important supplies sell at their value, retailers were discouraged from price gouging. Thus prices were kept artificially low, while those that could find things were encouraged to excessively stock up. If prices were allowed to better float, items like hand sanitizer would immediately spike. However, new entrants would be more encouraged to come in and meet demand.

The pandemic was great example of the flaws of centrally managed economies. It is hard to create a universal policy that works for everyone. People will try to adapt to do what they feel is best. If they feel the policy is out of touch with their reality, they will attempt to circumvent it. Many people naturally locked-down and isolated, even without government mandates. Many people later interacted publicly when they deemed their personal risk was low. The economy became a big mess because people did not understand economics.

Laddertop 2

Laddertop 2: The Laddertop Series, Book 2 by Emily Janice Card and Orson Scott Card

The second Laddertop book ramps up the drama. There are "rebels" that are concerned about the unknowns of laddertop. They recruit a few kids and other scientists for their space mission. There is also some more information found about the special symbol. A space object is approaching the earth. Is it benevolent? Or is it bent on destruction? The book ends on a cliffhanger... That was not resolved for a decade. While these were first released as graphic novels, they have recently been moved to audiobooks, with the final book only as audiobook. There was a big cast for this, so some needed to be left off to get under the label limit.

Saturday, January 04, 2025

Mickey7

Mickey7: A Novel by Edward Ashton

Mickey Barnes is an expendable. His entire person was scanned and downloaded onto a computer. His experiences would be regularly backed up. Any time he died, his body would be regenerated from the downloaded version, and his most recently backed up memories would be restored. He is part of a space colonization mission. He would go on dangerous missions or scientific projects that can use a body. He may test the suitability of an environment or explore dangerous areas. Mickey7 is the seventh iteration of Mickey. He goes on a mission to explore some tunnels, and falls down into one. His commander decides to leave him as dead rather than rescue him. However, Mickey survives and makes his way back to the station - only to find that Mickey8 has been generated. This creates a number of complications - especially since the colony is resource constrained.

The novel works backwards and forwards to unravel the history of Mickey and the world. The human diaspora was started after an antimatter war had pretty much wiped out earth. Antimatter technology is still used in limited capacity for propulsion, but is generally taboo for warfare. The human duplication technology was created by an eccentric billionaire. He had eventually moved himself to a world, and made numerous clones of himself to take control of the world. He would destroy anyone that tried to come to the world. This lead to a "nativist" religion and a group of people strongly against cloning ability. (Eventually, his world was destroyed by launching a high speed projectile at it.)

The "creepers" that inhabited Mickey's colony were discovered to be sentient. They were a hive group that seemed similar to Orson Scott Card's Formics. They were willing to live on a world with humans as long as the humans did not disturb them.

The structure of the novel helps to explore numerous science fiction topics, while continuing on the narrative.

Laddertop, Volume 1

Laddertop by Emily Janice Card and Orson Scott Card

In this world, tweens seek to be admitted to "Laddertop". This is a special academy that trains them to travel up into space station. The technology in the station was given years ago by benevolent aliens and portions can only be accessed by children. The book follows a couple 11 year old girls who are selected to laddertop. Things get a little bit weird. The best children are selected by a technology that only the aliens understand. There are also a few kids that get special marking. Perhaps the aliens are not as benevolent as we thought.

The Nutcracker and the Mouse King

Fireside Reading of The Nutcracker and the Mouse King: Fireside Reading by E. T. A. Hoffmann

The Nutcracker ballet was based on this German novella. Interestingly, this audiobook credited the original author, but not the translator. I guess it was just the "most popular" version, whatever that may be. In the ballet, the plot was fairly baffling, as it is in the book. There are a lot of fantastical creatures and a battle with mice. It is unclear why it is all happening.

The Big Money

The Big Money by John Dos Passos

In Big Money, common people experience the roaring twenties. Like the other books in the USA trilogy, this book intersperses the fictional narratives with brief accounts of historical figures and rapid fire "mass media". It works well in an audiobook. The characters and plot are rather forgettable. What stood out most to me was an interest in aviation stocks and praise for Detroit. Some characters seems to get placed in positions above their capabilities, while union conflicts were still an issue.

New Visions for Metropolitan America

New Visions for Metropolitan America by Anthony Downs

The car-centric low-density suburban pattern has dominated American development since the end of World War II. New suburbs have autonomy and encourage comercial, retail and housing development within their boundaries. They enforce ever stricter zoning and building codes to provide higher-quality housing. The poor are priced out of new suburbs and find themselves confined to older inner-city developments of lower quality. Eventually, some of the more well-to-do inner-city residents can migrate to older inner-ring suburbs that have fallen out of favor, however, most remain confined to to the inner ghetto. The inner city often ends up a high poverty, high crime area, with few working class jobs, yet it still supports regional immenties. The disparate pattern of development also results in increased car-centric commute times.

The solutions proposed in the book seek to improve the condition of everyone in the metropolitan area. Regional bodies and regulation will help everyone in the metropolitan area. Increasing density will allow for more affordable housing and reduced commute times. Greenbelts and growth boundaries will help improve the conditions of everyone. Getting there is the challenge. People like having responsive, small scale governments. Government officials like to showcase short term improvements. There is little patience for improvements that take a long time to show results in the long term, especially if they involve sacrifices.

The author has identified many of the challenges to improve the quality of metropolitan areas. Getting a workable solution is a challenge. Even the best set plans can be subverted by inertia and vested interests. It is interesting that in passing he mentions societies decision to turn the mentally ill out in society. That, together with drug epidemics and high housing costs has produced a homeless crisis. That has attracted immediate concern. Alas, it seems most people are eager to throw lots of money at housing authorities and hope it goes away. Nobody wants to address the root causes (especially the housing authorities). It seems society has tried to opt for the "most expensive" solution for housing, and fumbling with it.  

On transportation, we have a mixed result. We are still building far-flung suburbs and spending money to expand roads. However, we are spending billions of dollars on new public transportation infrastructure. It looks good and produces plenty of pork, but not necessarily improvements. In Seattle, Sound Transit is a government agency responsible for light rail and longer-distance buses. Most of the board is made up primarily of local officials. There is also incredible attention to geographical equity. However, the agency is required to get local approval for all work. This allows local suburbs to extract demands from the transit agency. The transit agency has become a money pot that has provided road improvements, parking garages and other car-centric infrastructure. Local governments have specifically fought rail alignments near high density areas due to perceived impacts. Instead, much of the rail line has been near suburban freeways with limited density (or even potential density.) It may be succeeding now. Is this the first step in the improved metropolitan development, or will this be the cautionary case that will prevent the positive long-term goal?

The Serviceberry

The Serviceberry by Robin Wall Kimmerer

Serviceberries go by many names and are present in the midwestern United States. They produce tasty fruit, for those that pick them, yet have not been professionally cultivated. This book uses them to start a discussion of sharing and the economics of a gift giving economy.