Books
The Bonnie Lea Book Group
Our Next Meeting: April 24, 2012
Book: Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell
Our Last Read:
Hi!
The Bonnie Lea Book Club is a book club devoted to reading books that the members
wouldn't otherwise consider reading. It's an endeavor that has shown us some real
literary gems over the years!
Included on this page are the books we've read and our reviews, as well as links that
you can use to purchase them at the lowest price.
If you find this page half as enriching as we found these books that's a win as far as
we're concerned!
Who We Are
Steve Jobs
Walter Isaacson
Bad Money: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics,
and the Global Crisis of American Capitalism
Previous Meeting Notes (Books are Alphabetized)
Kevin Phillips
Previous Books
Phillips has plenty to say about the "financialization": of America: Wall Street's shilling bad paper to investors around
the world, abandonment of of dollars as foreign reserves, petrodollars replaced by baskets of currencies, and of
course, that recurring nemesis, peak oil.
We all agreed the book was provocative, diligently researched, and timely.
Chapin posed: Where do we go from here? Geoff hoped for a more responsible national debate (and working strategy)
about oil; Robin corrected that we need a national strategy toward ENERGY, Rob L and Rob R agreed that
alternative energy would be in our future.
Dan suggested we'd have all the valuations trouble behind us in 6-12 months, and discouraged sitting on the sidelines
at this juncture. There are many good opportunities, and while the real estate pain may endure for years, the credit
crisis should be short lived. (Not everyone agreed)
NPR interview with author
The Blind Side: The Evolution of a Game
Michael Lewis
The development of the game was one of the best parts of the book. We've all watched football with a more critical
eye, especially the big guy on the left side of the line. Fun to learn the origins of the West Coast offense
Did Sean and Leigh Ann adopt Michael for altruistic, or selfish reasons? Maybe a little of both. Geoff believes 80%
altruistic, 20% personal need. But why does Sean look for other young up-and-coming athletes from disadvantaged
communities? (The cynic's view)
How can America abide the communities Michael grew up in, ...are there solutions in a land of personal freedom? The
heterogeneity of America's demographics are different from Europe's where homogeneous populations tend to take
care of their own, England is experimenting with community centers for adolescents who need protection from their
neighborhoods, communities, and families, where they can see and experience the result of work and dedication.
Could that model work in America?
For a similar discussion on Baseball (also by Michael Lewis) read Money Ball Also examines fundamental changes in a
game.
Burr
Gore Vidal
"After reading this, I like Burr more than Vidal".
The book's leader, Rob, gave the book a "4". Its flaws included some choppiness in flow, ineffective use of the first
person, and over-sexualization of some of the players. However, it still gave a great taste of the people who were
instrumental in the earliest days of the republic, and illustrated the broad diversity of opinions and interests from
those years. Additionally, the characterizations of our familiar founding fathers was good for discussion: Jefferson's
conceit, Hamilton's status, Adams' discomfort with politics, even a rare look at a very human Washington. Overall, it
was worth reading, the insights good; but it was harder than most of us thought it should have been..
Franklin
James Srodes
7 members present: For a man with such extraordinary grace, energy, and intellectual curiosity, we only faulted him
for his personal relationships with wife Deborah and son William. Overall, a very likeable man, a giant among demigod
peers.
Must add to the list Adams, Hamilton, His Excellency (Washington), and 1776 to catch the nuances of this tome.
Related books:
Suggested related books for added perspective: John Adams, Alexander Hamilton, Founding Brothers, His Excellency
(Washington), From Dawn to Decadence (by Jacques Barzun), The Glorious Cause (Jeff Shaara) and anything else
about Franklin or 18th century America. Your host, Geoff Gordon, has all these for loan.
The Given Day
Dennis Lehane
In this book by Boston author Lehane, Boston in 1919 comes to life, along with its colorful characters (with apologies
to Luther), the Coughlin family, Tessa, Nora, Eddie, and of course the Babe. The divergence of history and fiction is
hard to discern at some points, but the story's characters make that all irrelevant. Anarchists, Bolshevicks, unions,
influenza, murder, intrigue, love, passion, disappointment, this book has it all.
Bruce remarked that as tragic and hard life was, it showed how far we've come in 90 short years: medical advances,
social contracts, unions, ...life in the City of Boston. In many ways, we’d made more progress in the past 90 years than
in the previous 900 (Since WWE)
The story line's various twists and turns were intricately drawn, with very few inconsistencies. We identified a few
minor criticisms, but overall the group was pleased with the book. Recommended to anyone who likes history, and a
story of humanity, love, honor, and duty.
The House of Morgan: An American Banking
Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance
Ron Chernow
The history of the greatest financial institutions in American history took us from the Civil War to the modern day, an
examination of American, and in many cases international, history for a century and a half.
The discussion of the Morgan family didn't take long to circle around to discussions of today's economic malaise. If we
could take Pierpont Morgan, and set him on Wall Street in October 2008, or March 2009, what advice would he
offer? We agreed that partnerships where capital was the net worth of the bankers was a more stable structure than
paid CEOs and directors working with other peoples' money. We also agreed that today's financial products and
landscape are infinitely more complex than the deals done a century ago.
We discussed the panics of 1873, 1893, 1907, 1929... and wondered, why do we continue to do these things? We did
agree, they seem to be getting worse.
One memorable line, by Andrew Carnegie, upon Pierpont's death "I thought he was rich".
It was a simpler time, when single men made decisions and then worked hard to make sure the decision was the right
one;
Five in attendance, four of whom actually read the whole book, the best absentee excuse being Peter T's, in Vegas,
being entertained by other peoples' money...
Imperium
Robert Harris
Imperium was timely given the date of Massachusetts’ special election in which Scott Brown became the junior
Senator from Massachusetts, though we managed to stay mostly clear of the details of that contest. Cicero’s early
years are chronicled in Robert Harris’ great book, written from Tiro’s perspective, from speech training on the shores
of Greece, to great power plays on the floor of the Forum.
Occasional anachronisms were distracting to some, but served as effective means of bringing the story into a modern
context for others. But the overall story of raw power, corruption, soft power, dedication, leveraged power, political
power, and the power of persuasion made for good reading and good discussion.
We marveled at Rome’s highly developed society: a well functioning metropolis with no electricity, but plenty of
diversity, opportunities, and culture, and agreed that it was the government with a rule of law and effective checks
and balances that made such development possible. Back when being a citizen of Rome meant something!
Nevertheless, the extreme depravity of those who crossed power, slavery as a way of life for Tiro, the cheapness of
life, and bold unfairness in the affairs of men were reminders that not all was perfect.
We also deliberated on the historical accuracy of the characters. How about Caesar! How about Crasseus? Hortensius;
Verres; Pompei; Tiro (behind the tapestry)?
Overall, nobody was disappointed, and another trip back in to history was worth the trip
Reminder: the sequel to Imperium is Lustrum. Pompei is another by Harris that takes you to Vesuvius on that fateful
day.
In the Heart of the Sea
Nathaniel Philbrick
A Nautical theme for our July meeting, we read In the Heart of the Sea, Nathaniel Philbrick's account of the
Whaleship, Essex, and Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea. Both are stories of the big fish that got away,
so to speak.
Our discussion began with our collective appreciation of the Old Man, Santiago, and his enduring stoicism, his
strength, his character. He is a simple man; a fisherman. And yet he embodies so many things we as men want to be:
respectful, tough, determined, a survivor.
Jeff's and Chuck's comparison of taking a tuna over five hours gave us all some perspective on endurance: with no
power, hand held lines, no navigation system (as we know it), and a single bottle of water over three days , the old
man boats a great fish. He proves himself again and again. He yearned for the companionship of the boy to wet the
lines and help him retrieve the great fish; he may have yearned for simple companionship too, but would never admit
it. He was at one with his environment, accepting the ruthlessness of the sea as a playing field where you do your best
to survive. Though his moods and some perspectives changed, his respect for the fish and for the battle itself, were
uncompromising. He is a man's man.
But men in a whaleboat in the middle of the great Pacific Ocean face other challenges. Here among other men, one
leader fails (Captain Pollard) by questioning his own judgmen), and another emerges by personal expectations
(Chase). The men who go off to sea for years follow a similar pattern as their sperm whale prey, whose females rear
young while males venture thousands of miles. The brutal harvesting of these great "fish" was an avocation for a
unique breed of Americans: Nantucketers. These Quakers engaged in a most violent and bloody harvest, away from
home, to return occasionally to their pacifist homes. Chase can't keep married, and Pollard becomes a nighwatchman.
One questions for discussion included, "what would you do at the island: stay behind or leave?" Imagine the calculus
by the three men who stayed, wondering if the small island produced enough bird eggs and fresh water to survive.
Apparently so, as they were rescued eventually. One more man and they may have met the fate of the Elizabth. We
also discussed the morality of the segregation within the three boats: Pollard and the Nantucketers, Chase and
Nantucket and Cape Codders, and the second mate with African Americans. The survival of the Nantucketers and the
death of so many African Americans wasn't spoken of openly after the voyage, but Philbrick poses the question. Was
this a simple Darwinian segregation? If so, why were food stores equally divided? Were the physiological factors that
handicapped Africans and favored the plump Pollard enough to result in such survival rates? Could there have been
ruthlessness unreported?
We all agreed that if Hemingway wrote the story of the Essex, we'd get more than Philbrick delivered. Perhaps that's
why reading another classic, Moby Dick, becomes compelling.
Two other books drifted into our discussion: Unbreakable, another story of survival on the Pacific, and Seen the Glory
about race and death and survival in the Civil War from another Massachusetts Island, Martha's Vineyard.
Left in Dark Times: A Stand against the New Barbarism
Bernard Henri Levy
So when you signed on to the Bonnie Lea Book Club, you signed on to try books that you might never have read on
your own. Well, this one proved the rule.
Bernard Henri Levy goes to great lengths to prove that he is a pure European Liberal, in every way: He needs to
establish this as he begins to tear apart the weakest links of today's European Left's political philosphy. By the end of
the book he appears to tire of his own verbosity and intellectual masturbation and actually get into some real ideas.
Some of the fallacious arguments Levy attacks are European Left's Anti-Americanism (borne in part by their inability
to accept America's saving Europe in WWII), Anti-Semitism (Israel and America too tightly connected, identity with
Judaism before nationalism, and millennia of Christian intolerance), and of course the dishonesty of "Tolerance"
(distinct and far removed from respect).
Will his promotion of "Universality", those enduring principles of respect for human integrity and the sanctity of life
find nourishment in the soil of other civilizations around our troubled world? Levy argues that the Left must embrace
universal truths if it will have a basis for future credibility, rather than chase tired old arguments that he dismantled
throughout the book.
Conclusion? Few reached the epilogue: Levy's writing style was pompous, complicated, overly academic. But it
provided the foundation for a great discussion. Overall, a succeess. But Rob Raymond won't even think about
recommending another book for another couple of years.
Mayflower
Nathaniel Philbrick
So much for the romantic imagery of Pilgrims serving their Pokanoket guests a feast of turkey, venison, sweet bread
and cranberry sauce! We agreed that the Pilgrims assured their survival exploiting the Massasoit's political
vulnerabilities, making great land deals, and pressing every advantage that England, small pox, influenza and God
gave them.
Their faith sustained them, their fortitude kept them, and their accomplishments against great odds will never be
repeated in the history of our world.
We agreed also that King Phillips War was inevitable, and the players were all products of their own culture and world
view. And Benjamin Church was a stand-up guy! (But what about the murder of Indian children by the old lady as a
final act of desperation in 1675? And what about that War's casualties? 8% of New England's white population, and
50+% of the native population!) Lost to history, but here we are.
Can we compare the Pilgrims to al-quaeda in their use of religion to justify other ends?? Can we equate English taking
of land to developers’ use of 40B by developers?
The view was indeed Euro-centric, and lacked a deep discussion of native culture, though Philbrick never held back
from his exposure of English atrocities, such as the at the Great Swamp massacre of the Narragansetts or other acts
of perfidy. For a broader view of the two irreconcilable cultures, try Crazy Horse and Custer: The Parallel lives of two
American Warriors.
Great story, and we managed pretty much to stay clear of economics and politics, tough in today's climate. For better
discourse of those subjects, you'll have to read the next book!
Mountains Beyond Mountains
Tracy Kidder
Our discussion tonight ranged from our health care delivery system (not perfect) to charitable giving (the closer to
the recipients the better), to John D Rockefeller (read Titan), to the Bible (Matthew 24) and everything in between.
We agreed in general that Paul Farmer is an inspiration who challenges us and certainly has delivered life to countless
people who would not be alive without him.
If you're a Russian physician and given a grant that can save 5000 lives with the proper treatment to drug-resistant
TB, or prolong the lives of 100,000, which do you choose?
New York
Edward Rutherford
New York was all we hoped for and then some. The first quote referenced Napoleon’s lack of business acumen, but
discussion rolled right into the Dutch – English transition, the value of beavers, wampum, and of course, the main
theme: the primacy of commerce in New York.
Free and open commerce prompted the resistance to the Stamp Act (and all that followed); but close ties with London
finance and business opportunities for war trade influenced New York’s Tory loyalty to the Crown. Commerce had
plenty to do with New York's anti-Union sentiment during the Civil War, and of course business was the topic right to
9-11.
We all enjoyed Rutherford’s strong character development. Most characters, flawed or pure as they were, made the
times come alive. Washington’s tip of his hat showed good fictional author’s license. While we liked the Masters, most
seemed to have enjoyed other families: Quash and Hudson, the O’Donnell’s, the Caruso’s, and all the others who
make up New York . It is a city of immigrants, a city of diversity, and most of all, a city of commerce.
Rutherford's research is impressive (read also Sarum, London, etc), and glimpses in to humanity's inhumanity was
not new. The prisoner ships, Quash's transfer to the plantation, Five Points, Draft riots mob rule... all sorry
commentaries on the depraved human condition.
I for one, need to get down to the City again soon.
The Old Man and the Sea
Ernest Hemingway
A Nautical theme for our July meeting, we read In the Heart of the Sea, Nathaniel Philbrick's account of the
Whaleship, Essex, and Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea. Both are stories of the big fish that got away,
so to speak.
Our discussion began with our collective appreciation of the Old Man, Santiago, and his enduring stoicism, his
strength, his character. He is a simple man; a fisherman. And yet he embodies so many things we as men want to be:
respectful, tough, determined, a survivor.
Jeff's and Chuck's comparison of taking a tuna over five hours gave us all some perspective on endurance: with no
power, hand held lines, no navigation system (as we know it), and a single bottle of water over three days , the old
man boats a great fish. He proves himself again and again. He yearned for the companionship of the boy to wet the
lines and help him retrieve the great fish; he may have yearned for simple companionship too, but would never admit
it. He was at one with his environment, accepting the ruthlessness of the sea as a playing field where you do your best
to survive. Though his moods and some perspectives changed, his respect for the fish and for the battle itself, were
uncompromising. He is a man's man.
Season of Life
Jeffrey Marx
Male relationships… the core issue discussed over Season of Life. Too many men have few male relationships, and we
questioned why. Hard wired? Family experiences? Cultural expectations? (Ball field, bedroom, bill-fold) Are bad
coaches always a bad thing? Or just something to experience and endure?
They do give a preview to life. If they push kids out of sports when team building may be one of the most important
and enduring experiences available during formative years, that’s beyond unfortunate. Our relationships with our
fathers varied, though most of us realized the book will let us have new relationships with our kids. (“Read this book,
and tell me when you’re done!”) One tip: Find a cause bigger than you.
Overall, we didn’t talk about the Gilson Greyhounds a lot, but the book laid the foundation for open honest discussion
about important relationships and how success is measured in many different ways.
The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet
Reif Larson
This debut by Reif Larsen is the story of a 12 year old cartographer turned out to be a win for the attendees. Rob R
said it was one of his favorite books ever. We jumped around the book a lot, debating the development of cowboy T.E.
Spivet, speculating about whether Dr Claire engineered the trip to the Smithsonian, Layton's "your death is your
fault" , the fortuitous (incredible among incredibles) appearance of Valero the Winnebago on the train, Josiah
Merrymore's appearance in the big city of Chicago, followed by Rick's "WTF happened to you, little man?," and of
course, T.E.'s saving the day at the end of the story, knocking Jibson to the ground with the "Father" to the priest
witness. And then there was the richness of the margins. If, when you first got the book, you thought you might skip
the margins, fuggetaboutit. Great escpism. Now on to something a little more challenging...
The Steel Wave
Jeff Shaara
The Bonnie Lea Book Club met on a warm October evening outside by the fire to talk about Jeff Shaara’s The Steel
Wave. This book about the Invasion of Normandy in World War II did an outstanding job of giving personalities to
both the men on the ground (Adams, Unger), and the men in the war rooms (Eisenhower, Monty, Leigh Mallory,
Bradley, Patton and of course Rommel).
We asked whether any of us would have hit the German sniper, how the war might have turned out if Rommel got
the defense provisions, armor, or personnel that he had asked for to defend the Normandy coast, and how many ways
Hitler cost Germany the war. To our humanity, we had to ask, knowing the horror of war, how does war persist?
The character development permitted good discussions about differences and similarities between Monty (British –
with very fresh memories of the Great War - WW I) and his deliberate, careful progress, and Patton, the impatient
American who was probably let loose at the best time for him, when Germans were already on the run. Also the
characters of Rommel and the assassination conspirators.
Several members had not assumed that the characters were non-fictional. Curiously, my mother who called right
after the gang left, remembered General Gavin, including his young age, and subsequent work at Arthur D Little.
Knowing they were real was an interesting point at the end of the book.
We speculated whether we would today respond to an attack on South Korea with tactical (or shall we say strategic)
nukes? How about if they attacked Boston? How much force is too much in war? What was the justification of
Dresden fire bombing? Vengeance?
The Trouble with Islam Today
Irshad Manji
Does America's long history of integrating immigrants insulate it from Islamic extremism? A little (Geoff's conclusion)
Is Manji a true Muslim?
For all here criticisms, couldn't she have spent a little time discussing the beauty of the religion she calls her own?
(Chapin)
Comparisons to the Reformation of the Christian church (Martin Luther, Protestantism) were made, but just because
a religion has been around for 1400 years, doesn't give it a pass to go around killing non-believers (and partial
believers). (Jeff)
Is there anything we can do to promote reformation? Mosques have been inundated with churches looking to engage
them since 2001, and right now, there just aren't enough mosques to handle the entreaties.
What are possible solutions to the treatment of women? Micro loans? hardly. Education? There are so many men who
are threatened by greater roles for women, a solution is evasive.
Economic incentives tend to get results in all societal contexts; the blending of religion and culture that gets noticed
by sociologists, but what about religion, culture, and economics? This blend may be more powerful, and certainly gets
results.
Other books to provide additional perspective:
A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini (author of Kite Runner) for an examination of women’s rights in
Afghanistan ;
The Looming Tower: Al Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 (Vintage) by Lawrence Wright (I borrowed Steve Lombardo's
copy - excellent, very disturbing analysis of al qaeda)
No god but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam by Reza Aslan (i read in a small group at church - good
background into the foundation and origins of Islam)
Twilight in the Desert
Matthew R. Simmons
Jeff Caira recommended this book about sustainability of the Saudi oil fields, particularly its super giants, Ghawar,
Abquaiq, and Safaniya, to meet an increasing global demand for cheap energy.
The discussion began with whether the Saudis were justified in using the oil sword in 1973 (yes), and moved to why
they don't make a concerted effort to bring the price higher than its current $60/bbl. One reason was the inefficiency
of OPEC as a cartel. We spent some time on how to reduce our dependence on cheap energy, which led to the
conundrum of how can a free and democratic society can ration a resource as broadly available as petroleum? One big
concern Rob L raised was the fragility of the Saudi political system: a major revolution there could result in $120 / bbl
oil, causing major fundamental economic disruptions on the world's economy. $120 / bbl oil is in our future, but if it
comes at a pace that allows people to adjust, then adjust we will. Sharp increases cause the most economic disruption
and pain.
Taxes a la Europe and U.K. are politically unfeasible (too regressive), even if gradually phased in higher gas taxes
would reduce our demand for and dependence on foreign oil. Energy unencumbered by additional tax loads also helps
many aspects of our economy run efficiently and competitively.
The second hour dwelled on what we can do, since political leaders have not provided leadership. Eating locally
produced food, and consuming locally produced product are likely effects of higher transportation costs. Energy
efficient homes (Robin's dream) and autos (Jeff's reality) are other solutions. For all the debate about whether global
warming is energy consumption caused, if the concern forces us to be smarter consumers of energy, that would be a
good thing. Oil is a finite resource. Now that we know that, we know something most people haven't bothered to
consider. Be prepared.
When the Rivers Run Dry
Fred Pearce
Our discussion of When the Rivers Run Dry began with a criticism of the author’s fast and loose tossing around
statistics in the first few pages…turning some off, including non-present but contributing Jeff Caira. We agreed the
message was stronger in the anecdotes from around the world’s rivers, from the opening chapters about farming
along on the Rio Grande to fishing in the Great Lake on the Tonle Sap, and that the variety of different stories about
rivers around the world all pointed to a similar trend.
One stat that caught our attention: half the world’s population lives in the basins of international rivers. The potential
for conflict for a resource that we consider “free” and unlimited, and is neither, is almost inevitable. When treaties fail,
war often follows. The greater question seems to be what the conflict’s catalyst might be: food production (crop
failure) or another by-product of water, the water itself…or something else. Witness the Kashmir, headwater of the
Indus which supports Pakistan, or the Golan Heights, which hydrate Israel.
Another epiphany was China’s obsessive attention to Tibet. We all thought that the Tibetan issue was more symbolic
than practical. But Tibetan snowmelt water (and of course rare earth metals) have strategic values for the billion
people in eastern China.
The trends that appeared clear included: the agricultural demands for water are unsustainable if they draw from
non-replenished sources (ancient aquifers). So how will all the people be fed? Malthus noted that human population is
regulated by three things: war, pestilence, and starvation. Are Malthusian predictions finally coming near?
The final chapter – solutions - was too short, and could have been developed further. There may be solutions to the
waste while still supporting agriculture; but regulation and respected international agreements will need to work.
Problems seem inevitable from the waste of this limited but valuable resource.
World Without End
Ken Follet
Take a tour of 1327 England! Meet the residents of the town of Kingsbridge, in southeastern 14th century England,
where nobles aren't noble, clerics aren't all pure, and peasants struggle. This was our first novel, and a pleasant break
from some of the meatier books we've been reading.
Several participants also read Pillars of the Earth, Follet's earlier tome, and while some argued that Pillars was the
better of the two, we all agreed they were both worth the time to live in medieval England and feel the pain, the
suffering, and savor the little victories of Follet's well developed characters.
One of our more provocative questions, posed by Robin, was "was the plague a good thing?". Clearly the effect on the
cost of labor and the change that forced wage concessions by landowners helped the survivors leverage their value to
landowners. The loss of labor intensive agriculture prompted the wool industry, as sheep keep the woods from
encroaching, and made better use of the land which can support lots of sheep on fallow land.
This brought us back around to today's current commodity pressure and the great threat to the world's billion
poorest from famine. Whether commodity inflation is caused by excess dollars or by demand outstripping supply is a
debatable subject, but the reality of potentially broad and horrifying starvation is our modern day Plague. Once again,
Malthus has raised his head. Is is Malthus, or Kevin Phillips who has the answer?
Note to club: If you have a finished copy of the prequel Pillars of the Earth, let other members know.. Readers of
World Without End may want to borrow. Personally, I liked the time between the two so as to avoid comparisons, but
both are fun experiences.
Bad Money
The Blind Side
Burr
Franklin
The Given Day
House of Morgan
Imperium
In the Heart of the Sea
Lost in Shangri-La
Left in Dark Times
Mayflower
Mountains Beyond Mountains
New York
The Old Man and the Sea
Season of Life
The Selected Works of TS Spivet
The Steel Wave
Steve Jobs
The Trouble with Islam Today
Twilight in the Desert
When the Rivers Run Dry
World Without End
Lost in Shangri-La
Mitchell Zuckoff
We all agreed that Lost in Shangri La was a worthwhile read, a simple book about a simple story of fortitude and
toughness, interesting on multiple levels: History, specifically U.S. history and the regular people from the 'greatest
generation' who faced incredible challenges; sociology and the interplay of western and Dani culture, and interesting
character dynamics.
Jeff began discussions posing some questions from an internet book club to get us started. We delved into the
interaction between the three survivors and their unwitting hosts. Was the author unfair in pointing out how the
Americans thought the natives as 'children' or simple? To his defense, someone acknowledged he spent plenty of time
describing Margaret's relationship with the Chief's wife, and the real human connection that developed in spite of
language and cultural barriers. In the end, humanity wins.
What about the devastation of the crash? Lose your twin brother, have your legs burned, have a great gash in your
head, burned buttocks, and never complain…then walk through an impenetrable jungle to set up a site to be seen by
searchers. The generation of children reared of the Depression were indeed a remarkable lot, their secure conviction
in their superiority perhaps a natural development given the circumstances.
We also talked about the carnival atmosphere after the discovery: airlift drops; Hollywood, even the extension to
selling war bonds long after the jungle.
And of course, the glider snatch. Were the other options not as impressive, or simply, not options at all?
We are in search of a theme for our spring '12 book.. Come with an opinion. Meanwhile, in deference to a request for
something modern, scientific, or technological, we're going to read about Steve Jobs.
Steve Jobs
Walter Isaacson
We began our discussion on Steve Jobs discussing what it would have been like working for him. Geoff said he
never could, not for a moment, but Chapin countered, if he came to you and said, 'this is a singular life opportunity
to change the world, and you're the only person who can do it…" would you? There was no doubt, he had an
uncanny way to assemble A-players, and drive them to develop great ideas into revolutionary products.
It may have been Jony Ives who suggested that Jobs' greatest attribute was to take a vision and drive that vision
through all the financial and engineering impasses, and spearhead through marketing, without compromising the
simplicity and elegance of the original idea. We all agreed this close to the mark.
Jobs created truly new products that changed our world: the graphical interface PC started it all. Pixar changed
animated movies and led the digital development of film. The imac brought us the PC as a hub, the macbook
elegant laptops, and of course, more recently, the greatest art to music since the electric guitar, the ipod for
music, and ipads as tablets, and the iphone for just about everything digital. The results speak for themselves.
Rob spoke to the difficulty, the tedium, and the mindset needed to get through software engineering: to develop a
new process or function which might take ten-steps. The ten step process might have taken getting to step 7 or 8
a few times before realizing you needed to go back to step 2 or 3 to redevelop.
We talked on and off about Steve Jobs as a human being. Clearly he was difficult to work with in so many ways;
and those who did most successfully learned to recognize the 'reality distortion field' as well as understand and
moderate the extreme emotional swings. One human moment was near his death when he recognized how
liberating impending death could be (a thought articulated by St Benedict in the 5th century).
The book was everything we expected, and knowing Steve Jobs better makes us all richer.