The Essential W.S. Merwin

Give me berries Something small, short, a bust of flavor and relish the memory These are blackberries, prickled with thorns of death, greed, hopelessness Unripe and bitter Some might like the flavor I don’t Let me forage elsewhere

2025.09.01 · 1 min · W. S. Merwin

Breakneck: China's Quest to Engineer the Future

The world lost something when Dan Wang moved back from China to Canada. A perspective worthy of Hessler, with insight worthy of James Scott. A simple thesis that means a lot. More thoughts to come

2025.08.29 · 1 min · Dan Wang

House of Huawei: The Secret History of China's Most Powerful Company

Huawei is the one global tech giant that is unmistakably Chinese — which makes it a perfect subject for a corporate history. House of Huawei captures some of the intrigue, but avoids the hardest questions. The company’s governance, famously opaque, is treated as an afterthought. Yet Huawei’s “employee shareholding system” is not a detail; it is a microcosm of how power and opacity work in China. Likewise, its culture is only sketched but not filled in — a sharper, hungrier version of a typical Chinese firm, willing to push the limits but not fundamentally alien. ...

2025.08.24 · 2 min · Eva Dou

One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This

** Are we the baddies? ** Rockets fall. Lie flat, open your mouth, blunt the shockwave. Witness empire up close—papers for bodies that were lives that were souls. Countless. What do you do with this moral shockwave, how do you speak? I’ve been there. One Day is Omar El Akkad’s grappling with moral injury. He is incandescent over Gaza, his pain so bright it blinds everything else. But incandescence without clarity burns indiscrimanently—and without purpose. At its best, this could have been Between the World and Me for Arab‑Americans. Instead, he spends his force arguing universal culpability. I remember feeling that after Iraq. ...

2025.08.15 · 2 min · Omar El Akkad

FDR

FDR in Soft Focus I went into this book wanting to understand Franklin Roosevelt after watching his enormous footprints on other lives, from TR to president Johnson. I came out unsure whether I was disappointed in FDR or in how Smith chose to write about him. In the end I finished with more questions than answers, especially about Franklin and Eleanor, along with his legacy in the economy and post WW2 world. ...

2025.08.10 · 2 min · Jean Edward Smith

Reagan: The Life

Comfortably Aloof and Right (wing) On the American right, Reagan has already acquired mythic status. “Reagan Republican” is the purest form of conservatism, especially in contrast to the two Bush presidencies. This book helps explain that myth—but also shows why I don’t share it. Reagan, as Brands tells it, embodies most of what I don’t want in a president: aloof from detail, ideological rather than pragmatic, and firmly in the FDR/JFK lineage of style over substance. I don’t doubt his conviction or quarrel much with his broad aims. The problem is execution. Brands is at his best showing how the mantra of “cut taxes and cut spending” never really added up. Reagan pushed through large tax cuts and a major defense buildup, but serious, sustained spending cuts never followed; deficits and debt ballooned instead. This isn’t ideology, it’s just debt. ...

2025.07.16 · 2 min · H.W. Brands

On Power

Not a book, more a director’s commentary on the rest of Caro’s oeuvre. Yet Caro’s other books are so good I have no problem revisiting the Tri-Borough bridge or the sad irons of West Texas. I can’t imagine readig this in lieu of his other works, and it feels just a bit too transactional between Caro, Amazon and myself, but if Caro makes a buck, I’m OK with that. Perhaps what makes me sad about books like the Power Broker and the Lyndon Johnson series is the extent to which Caro researched and produced them. Few topics will receive the treatment that Caro gave to these areas, leaving us, poor readers, still in the dark on most subjects we read about.

2025.07.06 · 1 min · Robert A. Caro

Flag in Exile (Honor Harrington, #5)

** Deus Ex Honor ** I understand the now Honor Harrington books run on a clear formula: Honor does the right thing, ruffles lesser egos, then redeems herself in battle. It’s competence porn, executed with military precision. Rather than deus ex machina, we get artes armorum a Deo—godlike weapons skills. Last book it was pistols, this time its swords. The climax is usually a well-executed space battle, the kind that’s as much poker math as mayhem. ...

2025.06.29 · 1 min · David Weber

Field of Dishonor (Honor Harrington, #4)

Succeeds where Jack Campbell fails, providing some military scifi to fall asleep to without too many eye-rolls. The villains are cookie cutter, and Honor’s dueling abilities with any weapon seem a bit unfair, but after accepting that the rest of the story rolls out easily.

2025.06.28 · 1 min · David Weber

The Price of Privilege: How Parental Pressure and Material Advantage Are Creating a Generation of Disconnected and Unhappy Kids

Trophy Kids and Other Casualties Madeline Levine’s The Price of Privilege tries to dissect the malaise of affluent adolescents in the 2010’s, and occasionally succeeds. Its most useful moments are scattered insights: “the best gift you can give your kids is a good marriage”, or her indictment of “maladaptive perfectionism”—the silent plague of the well-off. Her core claim is that psychological control corrodes, while authoritative structure builds. Parents, she argues, should anchor their children emotionally—“serve as the emotional ballast”—while prioritizing their child’s value, effort, and only then performance. Self-efficacy is emphasized as equal in importance to self-esteem. ...

2025.06.28 · 2 min · Madeline Levine