
Sherman Alexie wrote the perfect prose poem for everyone who's ever had trouble sleeping.
If you read regularly, not many of the books you read can change your life much. I read Mountains Beyond Mountains over a year ago, and it clearly is a book that can change your life. It changed mine.
Check out my friend Andrea Okomski's blog Pedestrian InRoads. Andrea's son was run over in a crosswalk three years ago. He survived, but his life was turned upside down (along with his mother's). Andrea's boy spent four months in a coma. If you know anything about head injury, you know that's a very serious situation. I've met him, and his life seems to be like some sort of fever dream. Not what his mother hoped for. Not what he was entitled to. He's a good kid, but every day is a massive struggle.
The Trouble With Physics tries to be about physics, but it's more about the politics of physics. Of course, since physics is the original Big Science, there is very little about physics that isn't political. Smolin's thesis is that string theory stopped being a proper theory a good while ago, and is now something more like a political party. Or a cult.
...or maybe not.
Floyd Landis blew it yesterday. He lost his chance to win the Tour de France. What did he do next? He admitted the obvious, to himself, to his team, and to the world.
Happy Martin Luther King Day.
Much like Nabokov's career, Nabokov's Blues doesn't hold a single focus, but the beautiful moments make it worthwhile.
I read this book World on Fire by Amy Chua, about the economic role of ethnic minorities in many developing countries. Chua is a law professor, not a scientist, but she has an interesting thesis. She also deserves props for writing carefully about a dynamic that many people, regardless of their politics, would rather not discuss.