The New Year had a
few disruptions to the reading schedule (trips to visit The Sole Heir in
Connecticut and the Ancestral Units in Pennsylvania sandwiched around getting
together with a half-million of our closest friends on the National Mall) but
there was still time for some excellent reading.
Razor
Girl, Carl Hiaasen.
It’s authors like Hiaasen who keep me looking for better ways to track and plan
my reading. It had been several years since I read him, and he never
disappoints me. This time he’s in the Florida Keys with a defrocked police
detective who’s now a health inspector, a woman who crashes cars for a debt
collector, a mobster, a guy who relocates beaches, and the “talent” and
“brains” behind a reality show that might remind you of Duck Dynasty. Inspired satirical mayhem ensues.
The
Big Short, Michael
Lewis. There’s an old story about a man who’s walking into town to play poker. “Don’t
you know that game’s rigged?” says a friend. “Yep,” says the man, “but it’s the
only game in town.” Michael Lewis has a gift for explaining not only how the markets
are rigged (in this case the bond market), but how not even the people doing
the rigging really understand what’s going on. Raymond Chandler once wrote that
it was not funny that a man should be killed, but it was often funny that he be
killed for so little, and Lewis brings that to his tales. The crash of 2008 was
a tragedy—many people who never stood to gain from the boom lost everything
while those responsible walked away with millions—yet Lewis finds a way to get you
to shake your head at characters Elmore Leonard would have a hard time coming
up with.
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