Pages Menu
TwitterFacebooklogin
Categories Menu

Posted by on Mar 18, 2013 in Blog, Book Reviews, Personal | 0 comments

Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers

 

stiff-book

 

Cadavers are our superheroes.  They brave fire without flinching, withstand falls from tall buildings and head-on car crashes into walls.  You can fire a gun at them or run a speedboat over their legs, and it will not faze them.  Their heads can be removed with no deleterious effect.  They can be in six places at once.  I take the Superhuman point of view.  What a shame to waste these powers, to not use them for the betterment of humankind.

— Mary Roach (Author of Stiff)

Read More

Posted by on Oct 25, 2012 in Blog, Book Reviews, Essays | 0 comments

Staring Death in the Eye and Not Blinking: On Christopher Hitchens and “Mortality”

 

hitchens-book-review

 

Hitchens, who died nearly a year ago, penned some 15 books over the course a bombastically bountiful career that spanned nearly three decades — the first half spent in the U.K., the nation of his birth, and the later half in the U.S., the country to which he eventually attached himself as a naturalized citizen.  But his real citizenry was to free thought, ideas, and debate.

Read More

Posted by on Aug 23, 2012 in Blog, Book Reviews | 2 comments

Remembering “Doctor Love” — Leo Buscaglia

 

 

 

All of us have the capacity to perform courageous acts and be courageous.  Our challenge is to avoid taking the easy road in life and pursuing the paths of greatest resistance.  To do the things that are the most difficult.  To stand for the things that are least popular.  To fight for the things that are noble and good.

Read More

Posted by on Aug 2, 2012 in Blog, Book Reviews | 0 comments

An Intellectual Lion: Gore Vidal (1925-2012)

 

Gore Vidal Photo

 

Like his more recent now deceased contemporaries Truman Capote, Norman Mailer, and William F. Buckley and in the mold of great thinkers of yesteryear such as H.L. Mencken, Upton Sinclair, and even Mark Twain, he was a fixture on the intellectual circuit.  He basked in the spotlight in a time when writers were afforded the same celebrity as rock stars.  One colleague pined, “he was the man who knew everyone.”

Read More
css.php