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baum

baum

has 141 followers and is following 134 people

Angry Note:

Some adminadroid has magnanimously decided to retroactively truncate this profile. Up yours, control freak.

Short Version:

I like the kinds of books you see listed here, and use this site primarily as a convenient way to list and categorize them. All else is secondary.

Long... more »
  • College Station, TX
  • member since October 15, 2006

Reviews

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Displaying 1-10 of 13 reviews
    • Rated 5 stars

    I highly recommend that anyone thinking of diving into this wide and deep ocean first read Robert Irwin's "Arabian Nights: A Companion" to gain some essential and useful context. Burton's translation isn't really considered the best, although it's certainly the most interesting for that subset of folks who really love a good footnote whether or not it's essential or even germane to the referent. Burton wrote scads of books back in the 19th century, most of which are available on Google Books, and all of them were heavily footnoted by one of the more interesting chaps in a era full of interesting chaps. Come to think of it, it might also be good to read Edwin Rice's biography of Burton for context into an author who was every bit as interesting as the material he was translating (and footnoting) here.

    baum wrote this review Monday, July 6, 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Deep Space Nine Companion
    • Rated 5 stars

    Speaking as someone who watched the original series when it was first aired, and as someone who forced his baby sister to watch reruns of it several years later (which she thanks me for now, by the way), this book provides more than you'll probably want to know about each episode of what I consider to be the best instantiation of the Star Trek franchise to date. If you're a Deep Space Niner, this is an essential companion to watching the complete DVD sets of each season we both know you own. It's comfort reading for comfort television.

    baum wrote this review Monday, July 6, 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Cacti of Texas and Neighboring States
    • Rated 5 stars

    Living in Texas and slowly becoming a cactophile, I've been looking for a book that provides an introduction and overview of the native species. Del Weniger - a biology department chair at a Texas university - has provided a marvelous book for my needs. The seven pages of the "Introduction" and "What is a Cactus?" sections contain the best short overview of cacti I've yet encountered. Weniger is not only well-informed but an interesting writer. The intro material concludes with a "Key to the Genera" section and then continues into the meat of the book, i.e. a section for each of the eleven genus categories found in Texas and the immediately surrounding states. A glossary and index finish off what's going to be the vade mecum for my unequalled (or at least really spiffy) cactus garden. The only gripe that someone might have about this book is that the photographs are all of specimens being grown in cactus gardens rather than in their natural environment. The author explains in the introduction that this was done to more easily provide pictures of all of the specimens in bloom.

    baum wrote this review Monday, July 6, 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Cacti and Succulents in Habitat
    • Rated 5 stars

    A collection of pictures of cacti in their natural habitats by a professional nature photographer. The three main sections cover the cacti of Bolivia, the southwestern U.S. and southern Africa. The pictures are excellent, and the accompanying text entertaining and informative, supplying both the circumstances of the particular photo and scientific information about the cactus. The author has also co-authored "Cacti: The Illustrated Dictionary."

    baum wrote this review Monday, July 6, 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • A Manual of Historical Literature

    by Charles Kendall ADAMS
    • Rated 5 stars

    I originally found this on Google Books, and thought it so good that I bought a non-virtual copy. This is the best annotated bibliography I've ever had the pleasure to read, and I've read a lot of them. Adams apparently read every history book that had been written before 1889, or at least all the ones he could find. His annotations for each book include the biases (if any) of the author, the literary quality of the writing, the accuracy of the history, the depth of the research, and the intended audience. He's not afraid to call the emperor naked, and also reveals a marvelous dry sense of humor occasionally. In addition to the annotations for each book in various sections - e.g. ancient, european, english, french, and american categories - he proposes a general reading plan at the end of each section. As an added bonus, all of the books mentioned are out of copyright and most of them (believe me, I've looked) are also available for full preview and download on Google Books. If you're at all interested in history predating the 20th century, then this is the place to start.

    baum wrote this review Monday, July 6, 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • A Liar's Autobiography : Volume VII
    • Rated 5 stars

    If I've read a funnier book, then I don't remember it. Sure, given my age and my alcohol consumption that sounds like a cop-out but it's really not. Those that come close include Allen Sherman's "The Rape of the A*P*E", goodly bits of Wodehouse, a smattering of Saki, sundry snatches of Twain, Bierce, Hunter Thompson, Thurber, Groucho (yes, he also wrote), and much of Robert Nye. And, of course, all the really good stuff about which I've completely forgotten. I've read this probably 15 times since I picked it up for a song ("Stairway to Heaven") over 20 years ago, and I wind up on the floor in a not un-sidesplittingly mode every freaking time. From the best description of a hangover I've ever read (believe me, I know) to the funniest airplane flight ever described to Chapman's acceptance and exploration of his homosexuality, this book is a rollicking roller-coaster (even without the naughty gypsies) of fun. The Pythoners were a damned talented bunch, with Chapman perhaps the most talented of the lot, and this is his tour de force.

    baum wrote this review Wednesday, August 13, 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Anthony Burgess: A Biography
    • Rated 0 stars

    While this does the usual task of presenting at least some factual information about the subject, it is remarkable for the visceral hatred the author obviously feels for his subject. Even though I've been a big fan of Burgess for quite a while, I can still read this pleasurably despite the author's negative bias. Think of Lewis as Kitty Kelley with a bit more literary talent. I suspect that were Burgess still shuffling about, he would read this with some amusement.

    baum wrote this review Monday, March 31, 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • The New Madrid Earthquakes
    • Rated 0 stars

    If you think California is a fun ride on nature's rollercoaster, just wait until the New Madrid plate decides to shrug again. The last time it happened in 1811-1812, the course of the Mississippi River was changed, bells in Boston churches rang, and there were tales of 10-foot-high traveling water-like waves in the ground. If it happens again, the Gateway Arch in St. Louis may survive. The tricky bit is the average return period, a topic of much debate in the seismology community. There are quite a few who claim the geological record show it to be around 200 years. You do the math. While this book is excellent on the historical information, it is a bit out of date on the seismic research component seeing how probably 90% of the total has been done in just the last couple of decades (for obvious reasons). A simple web search will obtain just oodles of current information on the topic. Perusing recent volumes of the "Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences" will also prove fruitful.

    baum wrote this review Tuesday, September 18, 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Underland
    • Rated 0 stars

    One of the volumes comprising Mick's take on the vampire mythos. One of my guilty pleasures is vampire stories, although much of that pleasure has been removed by the gigaton of recent stories featuring whiny, angst-ridden vampires written to appeal to whiny, angst-ridden teens. (Face it, this is a nation of drama queens). If living forever meant agonizing forever, I'd stake myself while diving into a vat of holy water and garlic at sunrise. Fortunately, Mick has forestalled that day with a fine tale featuring a vampire who - while not emotionally dead - isn't an agony aunt and knows when to just bloody well get on with it. A corking good read filled with all the sorts of unusual touches that have made Mick's stories appeal to me for over 30 years.

    baum wrote this review Tuesday, September 18, 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Sex, Lies & Politics: The Naked Truth
    • Rated 0 stars

    One wonders what is says about a society that a pornographer has a clearer grasp of political reality than either Joe Average Citizen or Johnny Pundit. But then again, nothing gives one a clearer and more realistic view of a society than being one of those that society has chosen to marginalize and - almost inevitably - punish. And nothing gives one a cloudier, more fantastical view than the desperate need to convince yourself that your society, i.e. you, are the pinnacle of the history of civilization.

    baum wrote this review Tuesday, September 18, 2007. ( reply | permalink )
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Displaying 1-10 of 13 reviews