Wednesday, November 20, 2019

'Permanent Record' by Edward Snowden


Permanent Record, Edward Snowden (4.0)
Already a fan of what Edward Snowden unveiled for us based on the award winning documentary, ‘Citizen Four’, I didn’t expect to be more impressed. Until reading this book, I hadn’t realized the breadth of experiences he had and the extent to which he had gone, prior to meeting with journalists to verify his assumptions and keep his family isolated from his actions. While the movie focuses on his meeting with the journalists in Hong Kong and the days after, the book spends more time on his background and life up until he contacts the journalists. His own words describe the path that led him to become the most famous whistleblower in our history. I appreciated how he described his aptness for the role: he had enough exposure to understand the abuse and was young enough to be idealistic about our country. I also recommend reading this in order to understand the extent and power of our technology. He has a simple, clear way of explaining concepts (e.g. how nothing is actually deleted with ‘memory’, it’s written over). While he obviously paints himself in the best possible light, I believe history will eventually remember him as a hero.

Saturday, November 2, 2019

'Children of War' by Martin Walker


Children of War, Martin Walker (3.5)
I will call this book a guilty pleasure. A friend who knew how much we loved the food and wine of the area introduced me to Bruno, the Chief of Police in a small, fabricated town in southwestern France in what appears to be his 7th outing. The trope of this book is Bruno’s main pastime: in between great detective work, he serves 4-course farm to table meals to friends and acquaintances. In this particular Bruno adventure I liked how Mr. Walker had him dealing with parallel stories concerning children of war, one present day and one from WWII. Both were interesting. I knock this book from worthy literature down to ‘guilty pleasure’ because while I enjoyed the descriptions of mouth-watering dishes, it was hard to believe a local police officer would deal with terrorists in the afternoon and run home to grab food from the garden and make his 4 course meal. The juxtaposition didn’t work for me.