Lights Out: Pride, Delusion, and the Fall of General Electric

** 8th book of 2021: GE- Not the Company we Want, but the Company We Deserve ** GE was born not of Edison’s invention, but from JP Morgan’s financial acumen. Jack Welch took a sleepy industrial giant and turned it into a financial superpower by combining American Investor credulity, ruthless management, and a healthy dose of testosterone. Under his reign GE shares returned 5200%, and this is where Lights Out begins. ...

2021.01.13 · 2 min · Thomas Gryta

What's Going On in There? How the Brain and Mind Develop in the First Five Years of Life

** 5th book of 2021: First Principles of Parenting** One constant of learning to be a parent is contradictory advice. People and authors are sufficiently convinced by limited or non-controlled sample sizes and new parents have no priors to push back on bad advice. This is why we have… science. Eliot provides a scientific framework for the massive changes that happen to infants throughout the first 5 years, and while answers are not delivered in the sense of listicle or lifestyle advice, the underlying framework makes this the most compelling book on parenting I’ve read to date. ...

2021.01.11 · 2 min · Lise Eliot

The Eerie Silence: Renewing Our Search for Alien Intelligence

** 4th book of 2021: Somewhere between zero and infinity ** In modernity, we accept that evidence and experimentation can lead us to answering some of life’s most important questions. By applying Bayesian reasoning, we can use priors and the accumulated body of evidence to evaluate new and sometimes deeply strange hypotheses like quantum physics. Yet for SETI, the priors point in opposite directions, creating Fermi’s Paradox: the one solar system we are close enough to investigate thoroughly has intelligent life. Every other part of the universe we have the tools to investigate reveals nothing, only an eerie silence. ...

2021.01.07 · 1 min · Paul C.W. Davies

End of an Era: How China's Authoritarian Revival is Undermining Its Rise

** 3rd book of 2021: Reversion to the Mean ** A common fallacy among China watchers is assuming that liberal democracies are the norm or a logical endpoint of human development. I would describe this as 井底之蛙, or the frog looking at the world from the bottom of the well. Much of the American China watching community both lacks sufficient experience with non-democratic systems or, frankly, with history, to properly grapple with China’s development. ...

2021.01.06 · 2 min · Carl Minzner

There's No Such Thing as Bad Weather: A Scandinavian Mom's Secrets for Raising Healthy, Resilient, and Confident Kids (from Friluftsliv to Hygge)

** 2nd book of 2021: Free Play ** friluftsliv * is the nordic concept of getting outdoors as a means to cure all maladies. With the craze started by books like ‘Bringing up Bebe’ this book talks about how Swedes approach parenting, mainly by going outdoors and playing with little supervision. As somebody who grew up in a junk yard, modern ‘junk parks’ seem a both an amusing concept and an essential part of childhood. Like the author, I grew up in a rural environment and wonder what the effects of growing up in a deeply urban city will have on the next generation. Unfortunately most of the book is spent in circular reasoning author’s preferred parenting style and environments are beneficial. I don’t disagree with most of the points, but after the first few chapters, I also didn’t gain much either. ...

2021.01.05 · 2 min · Linda Åkeson McGurk

The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (All 6 Volumes)

** 1st book of 2021: The Forest and the Trees. ** After reading this near 4000 page epic, I found myself made of questions. What is Rome? What is history? What is a book? I don’t know enough to know whether Gibbon threw out the norms, or just wrote this before the norms were created, but Decline and Fall is like trying read a fractal version of game of thrones while playing a memory game about every person you met in elementary school. Is this something you would enjoy? Read on… ...

2021.01.04 · 5 min · Edward Gibbon

2021 on Goodreads

2021 was a strange year. My first year as a dad changed how I spent time as well as the topics that interest me, and the second year of the pandemic made this year seem almost static. I started and ended the year sitting in the same desk for more hours of more days that I ever have before or will again. I read 110 books but only 53/63 of my target books, and did 100% of my reading in English. Next year I’ll hopefully get through more in Arabic and Chinese. ...

2021.01.01 · 3 min · Various

Astrophysics for People in a Hurry

Watch cosmos instead. Or take even a little bit of time to read a full book on the subject.

2021.01.01 · 1 min · Neil deGrasse Tyson

Chinese Breeze Graded Reader Series: Level 1: 300 Word Level: 你最喜欢谁?: Nǐ zuì xǐhuan shuí?: Whom Do You Like More?

A book with a reasonable narrative using only 300 word-groups! Very helpful.

2021.01.01 · 1 min · Yuehua Liu

Chinese Breeze Graded Reader Series: Level 1: 300 Word Level: 错, 错, 错!: Cuò, cuò, cuò!: Wrong, Wrong, Wrong!

Best of the 300 word level books, simple but worth starting out .

2021.01.01 · 1 min · Yuehua Liu