Showing posts with label Books worth Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books worth Reading. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Bill Gates' Favorite Books of 2016

String Theory, by David Foster Wallace. This book has nothing to do with physics, but its title will make you look super smart if you’re reading it on a train or plane. String Theory is a collection of five of Wallace’s best essays on tennis, a sport I gave up in my Microsoft days and am once again pursuing with a passion. You don’t have to play or even watch tennis to love this book. The late author wielded a pen as skillfully as Roger Federer wields a tennis racket. Here, as in his other brilliant works, Wallace found mind-blowing ways of bending language like a metal spoon.
Shoe Dog, by Phil Knight. This memoir, by the co-founder of Nike, is a refreshingly honest reminder of what the path to business success really looks like: messy, precarious, and riddled with mistakes. I’ve met Knight a few times over the years. He’s super nice, but he’s also quiet and difficult to get to know. Here Knight opens up in a way few CEOs are willing to do. I don’t think Knight sets out to teach the reader anything. Instead, he accomplishes something better. He tells his story as honestly as he can. It’s an amazing tale.
The Gene, by Siddhartha Mukherjee. Doctors are deemed a “triple threat” when they take care of patients, teach medical students, and conduct research. Mukherjee, who does all of these things at Columbia University, is a “quadruple threat,” because he’s also a Pulitzer Prize– winning author. In his latest book, Mukherjee guides us through the past, present, and future of genome science, with a special focus on huge ethical questions that the latest and greatest genome technologies provoke. Mukherjee wrote this book for a lay audience, because he knows that the new genome technologies are at the cusp of affecting us all in profound ways.
The Myth of the Strong Leader, by Archie Brown. This year’s fierce election battle prompted me to pick up this 2014 book, by an Oxford University scholar who has studied political leadership—good, bad, and ugly—for more than 50 years. Brown shows that the leaders who make the biggest contributions to history and humanity generally are not the ones we perceive to be “strong leaders.” Instead, they tend to be the ones who collaborate, delegate, and negotiate—and recognize that no one person can or should have all the answers. Brown could not have predicted how resonant his book would become in 2016.
Honorable mention: The Grid, by Gretchen Bakke. This book, about our aging electrical grid, fits in one of my favorite genres: “Books About Mundane Stuff That Are Actually Fascinating.” Part of the reason I find this topic fascinating is because my first job, in high school, was writing software for the entity that controls the power grid in the Northwest. But even if you have never given a moment’s thought to how electricity reaches your outlets, I think this book would convince you that the electrical grid is one of the greatest engineering wonders of the modern world. I think you would also come to see why modernizing the grid is so complex and so critical for building our clean-energy future.

23 Books Everyone Should Read, According to Mark Zuckerberg


Zuckerberg introduced these books through his 'A Year of Books' reading group

Wal-mart CEO's top 6 inspiring reads of 2016


Doug McMillon shares the surprising and thought-provoking books that resonated with him most this year.

Read more: http://www.cnbc.com/id/104164093

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

5 Books to Read This Summer

Bill Gates shares his list of five great books to read this summer.

Seveneves, by Neal Stephenson. I hadn’t read any science fiction for a decade when a friend recommended this novel. I’m glad she did. The plot gets going in the first sentence, when the moon blows up. People figure out that in two years a cataclysmic meteor shower will wipe out all life on Earth, so the world unites on a plan to keep humanity going by launching as many spacecraft as possible into orbit. You might lose patience with all the information you’ll get about space flight—Stephenson, who lives in Seattle, has clearly done his research—but I loved the technical details. Seveneves inspired me to rekindle my sci-fi habit.
How Not to be Wrong, by Jordan Ellenberg. Ellenberg, a mathematician and writer, explains how math plays into our daily lives without our even knowing it. Each chapter starts with a subject that seems fairly straightforward—electoral politics, say, or the Massachusetts lottery—and then uses it as a jumping-off point to talk about the math involved. In some places the math gets quite complicated, but he always wraps things up by making sure you’re still with him. The book’s larger point is that, as Ellenberg writes, “to do mathematics is to be, at once, touched by fire and bound by reason”—and that there are ways in which we’re all doing math, all the time.
The Vital Question, by Nick Lane. Nick is one of those original thinkers who makes you say: More people should know about this guy’s work. He is trying to right a scientific wrong by getting people to fully appreciate the role that energy plays in all living things. He argues that we can only understand how life began, and how living things got so complex, by understanding how energy works. It’s not just theoretical; mitochondria (the power plants in our cells) could play a role in fighting cancer and malnutrition. Even if the details of Nick’s work turn out to be wrong, I suspect his focus on energy will be seen as an important contribution to our understanding of where we come from.
The Power to Compete, by Ryoichi Mikitani and Hiroshi Mikitani. I have a soft spot for Japan that dates back three decades or so, when I first traveled there for Microsoft. Today, of course, Japan is intensely interesting to anyone who follows global economics. Why were its companies—the juggernauts of the 1980s—eclipsed by competitors in South Korea and China? And can they come back? Those questions are at the heart of this series of dialogues between Ryoichi, an economist who died in 2013, and his son Hiroshi, founder of the Internet company Rakuten. Although I don’t agree with everything in Hiroshi’s program, I think he has a number of good ideas. The Power to Compete is a smart look at the future of a fascinating country.
Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, by Noah Yuval Harari. Both Melinda and I read this one, and it has sparked lots of great conversations at our dinner table. Harari takes on a daunting challenge: to tell the entire history of the human race in just 400 pages. He also writes about our species today and how artificial intelligence, genetic engineering, and other technologies will change us in the future. Although I found things to disagree with—especially Harari’s claim that humans were better off before we started farming—I would recommend Sapiens to anyone who’s interested in the history and future of our species.

Original link:

https://www.gatesnotes.com/About-Bill-Gates/Summer-Books-2016

Friday, December 25, 2015

The Best Books I Read in 2015 by Bill Gates

The Road to Character, by David Brooks. The insightful New York Times columnist examines the contrasting values that motivate all of us. He argues that American society does a good job of cultivating the “résumé virtues” (the traits that lead to external success) but not our “eulogy virtues” (the traits that lead to internal peace of mind). Brooks profiles various historical figures who were paragons of character. I thought his portrait of World War II General George Marshall was especially enlightening. Even if the distinction between the two types of virtues is not always crystal clear, The Road to Character gave me a lot to think about. It is a thought-provoking look at what it means to live life well.
Thing Explainer: Complicated Stuff in Simple Words, by Randall Munroe. The brain behind XKCD explains various subjects—from how smartphones work to what the U.S. Constitution says—using only the 1,000 most common words in the English language and blueprint-style diagrams. It is a brilliant concept, because if you can’t explain something simply, you don’t really understand it. Munroe, who worked on robotics at NASA, is an ideal person to take it on. The book is filled with helpful explanations and drawings of everything from a dishwasher to a nuclear power plant. And Munroe’s jokes are laugh-out-loud funny. This is a wonderful guide for curious minds.
Being Nixon: A Man Divided, by Evan Thomas. Former U.S. president Richard Nixon is often portrayed as little more than a crook and a war monger. So it was refreshing to see a more balanced account in Being Nixon, by author and journalist Evan Thomas. I wouldn’t call it a sympathetic portrait—in many ways, Nixon was a deeply unsympathetic person—but it is an empathetic one. Rather than just focusing on Nixon’s presidency, Thomas takes a cradle-to-the-grave approach and gives you sharp insights into the inner workings of a brilliant, flawed, and conflicted man.
Sustainable Materials With Both Eyes Open, by Julian M. Allwood, Jonathan M. Cullen, et al. How much can we reduce carbon emissions that come from making and using stuff? Quite a bit, according to the University of Cambridge team behind this book. They look closely at the materials that humans use most, with particular emphasis on steel and aluminum, and show how we could cut emissions by up to 50 percent without asking people to make big sacrifices. Although the topic can be dry as a desert, the authors keep it light with lots of colorful illustrations and clever analogies without sacrificing clarity or rigor. I learned a lot from this thoughtful look at a critical topic. (You can download it free on the authors’ site.)
Eradication: Ridding the World of Diseases Forever?, by Nancy Leys Stepan. Stepan’s history of eradication efforts gives you a good sense of how involved the work can get, how many different kinds of approaches have been tried without success, and how much we’ve learned from our failures. She writes in a fairly academic style that may make it hard for non-experts to get to her valuable arguments, but it’s worth the effort. You come away from it with a clearer sense of how we can use the lessons of the past to guide future efforts to save lives.
Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, by Carol S. Dweck. This book first came to my attention a few years ago during an invention session on education with my friend Nathan Myrhvold. It’s been an important influence on the foundation’s education work. Through clever research studies and engaging writing, Dweck illuminates how our beliefs about our capabilities exert tremendous influence on how we learn and which paths we take in life. The value of this book extends way beyond the world of education. It’s just as relevant for businesspeople who want to cultivate talent and for parents who want to raise their kids to thrive on challenge.
Honorable mention: I read one book this year that definitely deserves a spot on this list, but I haven’t had time to give it the full write-up it deserves. The Vital Question, by Nick Lane, is an amazing inquiry into the origins of life. I loved it so much that I immediately bought all of Lane’s other books. And I jumped at the chance to meet Lane and talk to him about his research last September, when both of us were in New York City. I’ll post more about his fascinating work when I get the chance.

Original link:

https://www.gatesnotes.com/About-Bill-Gates/Best-Books-2015

Monday, May 25, 2015

Beach Reading, 2015 by Bill Gates

Hyperbole and a Half, by Allie Brosh. The book, based on Brosh’s wildly popular website, consists of brief vignettes and comic drawings about her young life. The adventures she recounts are mostly inside her head, where we hear and see the kind of inner thoughts most of us are too timid to let out in public. You will rip through it in three hours, tops. But you’ll wish it went on longer, because it’s funny and smart as hell. I must have interrupted Melinda a dozen times to read to her passages that made me laugh out loud.
The Magic of Reality, by Richard Dawkins. Dawkins, an evolutionary biologist at Oxford, has a gift for making science enjoyable. This book is as accessible as the TV series Cosmos is for younger audiences—and as relevant for older audiences. It’s an engaging, well-illustrated science textbook offering compelling answers to big questions, like “how did the universe form?” and “what causes earthquakes?” It’s also a plea for readers of all ages to approach mysteries with rigor and curiosity. Dawkins’s antagonistic (and, to me, overzealous) view of religion has earned him a lot of angry critics, but I consider him to be one of the great scientific writer/explainers of all time.
What If?, by Randall Munroe. The subtitle of the book is “Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions,” and that’s exactly what it is. People write Munroe with questions that range over all fields of science: physics, chemistry, biology. Questions like, “From what height would you need to drop a steak for it to be cooked when it hit the ground?” (The answer, it turns out, is “high enough that it would disintegrate before it hit the ground.”) Munroe’s explanations are funny, but the science underpinning his answers is very accurate. It’s an entertaining read, and you’ll also learn a bit about things like ballistics, DNA, the oceans, the atmosphere, and lightning along the way.
XKCD, by Randall Munroe. A collection of posts from Munroe’s blog XKCD, which is made up of cartoons he draws making fun of things—mostly scientists and computers, but lots of other things too. There’s one about scientists holding a press conference to reveal their discovery that life is arsenic-based. They research press conferences and find out that sometimes it’s good to serve food that’s related to the subject of the conference. The last panel is all the reporters dead on the floor because they ate arsenic. It’s that kind of humor, which not everybody loves, but I do.
On Immunity, by Eula Biss. When I stumbled across this book on the Internet, I thought it might be a worthwhile read. I had no idea what a pleasure reading it would be. Biss, an essayist and university lecturer, examines what lies behind people’s fears of vaccinating their children. Like many of us, she concludes that vaccines are safe, effective, and almost miraculous tools for protecting children against needless suffering. But she is not out to demonize anyone who holds opposing views. This is a thoughtful and beautifully written book about a very important topic.
How to Lie With Statistics, by Darrell Huff. I picked up this short, easy-to-read book after seeing it on a Wall Street Journal list of good books for investors. I enjoyed it so much that it was one of a handful of books I recommended to everyone at TED this year. It was first published in 1954, but aside from a few anachronistic examples (it has been a long time since bread cost 5 cents a loaf in the United States), it doesn’t feel dated. One chapter shows you how visuals can be used to exaggerate trends and give distorted comparisons—a timely reminder, given how often infographics show up in your Facebook and Twitter feeds these days. A useful introduction to the use of statistics, and a helpful refresher for anyone who is already well versed in it.
Should We Eat Meat?, by Vaclav Smil. The richer the world gets, the more meat it eats. And the more meat it eats, the bigger the threat to the planet. How do we square this circle? Vaclav Smil takes his usual clear-eyed view of the whole landscape, from meat’s role in human evolution to hard questions about animal cruelty. While it would be great if people wanted to eat less meat, I don’t think we can expect large numbers of people to make drastic reductions. I’m betting on innovation, including higher agricultural productivity and the development of meat substitutes, to help the world meet its need for meat. A timely book, though probably the least beach-friendly one on this list.

Original link:

https://www.gatesnotes.com/About-Bill-Gates/Summer-Books-2015

Friday, December 31, 2010

Books to Set You Free..

Courtsey - The Wall Street Journal
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'The Year of the Hare' is only the most Finnish, and perhaps most antically Zen-ish, of a shelf-load of books that tell us to find and live by our own ideas of contentment. Here are a few other memorable summonses to a new life:

The Moon and Sixpence By Somerset Maugham (1919)
Maugham may have looked and sounded like an upstanding member of the British ruling classes, but all his books are about a longing to escape—through romance or mysticism if not downright flight. In this, one of the greatest of his novels, he tweaks the story of Gauguin's journey to send a British stockbroker to a richer life in Tahiti. Maugham was the rare soul who knew both cosmopolitan society and the runaway's life—and how the latter could somehow complete the trajectory of the former.

Walden By Henry David Thoreau (1854)
He traveled only a mile and a quarter from Concord's railroad station; he stayed in his cabin only two years, two months and two days; and he held mass anti-slavery meetings there, while also taking off for excursions to Maine (and jail). But the details don't matter. What Thoreau shows us is how easy it is to step off the grid, think more carefully about our choices, and live a little closer to our senses and truest needs. A man is rich, he knew, 'in proportion to the number of things which he can afford to leave alone.'

Eat, Pray, Love By Elizabeth Gilbert (2006)
This book has become so popular and so widely envied that it's hard to see it clearly. But Ms. Gilbert won seven million readers mostly by exploring, with unusual intelligence and wit, something many of us feel: Why stick around in New York, writing articles and drifting between partners who don't entirely fulfill you, when there's a whole wide world to explore? The beauty of this memoir is that she is honest enough to know her story sounds like cliché, even as she is open, warm and wise enough to find a new life, a clearer sense of herself and, yes, a new husband.

A Journey in Ladakh By Andrew Harvey (1983)
Harvey held a sinecure fellowship at Oxford—the youngest to win such in the university's 800-year history—when he took off for an almost unvisited corner of the Himalayas in northern India. The people and places he met in Ladakh proved so eye-opening that he left Oxford, became a full-time mystic and, in the 30 years since, has published dozens of books on Christianity, Sufism, Buddhism and much else.

As You Like It By William Shakespeare (1599)
The characters in many of Shakespeare's last plays, culminating in 'The Winter's Tale' and 'The Tempest,' find that, once exiled (however reluctantly) from their homes, everything feels like a holiday. But even in this much earlier comedy, the exiled protagonists lose their fixed identities in wandering—and promptly find themselves in the company of clowns and zanies who might have stolen right out of 'The Year of the Hare.' 'And this our life, exempt from public haunt, finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, sermons in stones, and good in everything,' says the Duke, sounding startlingly similar to Vatanen.

(To lovers of 'A Burnt-Out Case' by Graham Greene, of 'Steppenwolf' by Hermann Hesse, of 'The Seven Storey Mountain' by Thomas Merton, and of all the many other books—'Playing With Water' by James Hamilton-Paterson!—that could be here, I apologize. They all could change your life.)

Pico Iyer

Thursday, October 28, 2010

A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers will Rule the Future

Lawyers. Accountants. Computer programmers. That’s what our parents encouraged us to become when we grew up. But Mom and Dad were wrong. The future belongs to a very different kind of person with a very different kind of mind. The era of “left brain” dominance, and the Information Age that it engendered, are giving way to a new world in which “right brain” qualities-inventiveness, empathy, meaning-predominate. That’s the argument at the center of this provocative and original book, which uses the two sides of our brains as a metaphor for understanding the contours of our times.


In this insightful and entertaining book, which has been translated into 20 languages, Daniel H. Pink offers a fresh look at what it takes to excel. A Whole New Mind reveals the six essential aptitudes on which professional success and personal fulfillment now depend, and includes a series of hands-on exercises culled from experts around the world to help readers sharpen the necessary abilities. This book will change not only how we see the world but how we experience it as well.

Here are the you tube clips.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pVFQ78HbJK0&feature=&p=4CBB362AEF9C9976&index=0&playnext=1

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hI3gkwxc_Ds&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rqvCj-J8noE&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePUwc2wFlq4&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u45s8hk-zf0&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1KCZzSKT-HE&feature=related

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us

Daniel H. Pink provides concrete examples of how intrinsic motivation functions both at home and in the workplace.



From Daniel H. Pink, the author of the bestselling A Whole New Mind, comes a paradigm-shattering look at what truly motivates us and how we can use that knowledge to work smarter and live better.  An excellent read.

Most of us believe that the best way to motivate ourselves and others is with external rewards like money—the carrot-and-stick approach. That’s a mistake, Daniel H. Pink says in, Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us, his provocative and persuasive new book. The secret to high performance and satisfaction—at work, at school, and at home—is the deeply human need to direct our own lives, to learn and create new things, and to do better by ourselves and our world.

Drawing on four decades of scientific research on human motivation, Pink exposes the mismatch between what science knows and what business does—and how that affects every aspect of life. He demonstrates that while carrots and sticks worked successfully in the twentieth century, that’s precisely the wrong way to motivate people for today’s challenges. In Drive, he examines the three elements of true motivation—autonomy, mastery, and purpose—and offers smart and surprising techniques for putting these into action. Along the way, he takes us to companies that are enlisting new approaches to motivation and introduces us to the scientists and entrepreneurs who are pointing a bold way forward.

Drive is bursting with big ideas—the rare book that will change how you think and transform how you live.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

The Power of Less by Leo Babauta

Recenetly I read an interesting book, The Power of Less website by Leo Babauta.  Nothing earth shattering but definitely good take aways.  Here are the six principles he recommends.
  1. Set Limitations - By setting limitations, we must choose the essential.  So in everything you do, learn to set limitations.
  2. Choose the Essential - By choosing the essential, we create great impact with minimal resources. Always choose the essential to maximize your time and energy.
  3. Simplifying - Eliminating the Nonessential
  4. Focus - Focus is your most important tool in becoming more effective.
  5. Create Habits - Create new habits to make long lasting improvements.
  6. Start Small - Start new habits in small increments to ensure success.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Holiday Book Guide: Photography - WSJ.com

Holiday Book Guide: Photography - WSJ.com

Despite a murderous year for the publishing industry, artful books of photographs continued to roll off the presses in impressive numbers. Electronic devices simply can't match (so far) the substantial pleasure of looking at—and owning—pictures on a paper page. Here are some highlights.

"We English" by Simon Roberts (Chris Boot, 56 pages, $60). Most of us experience nature along pathways and shorelines trodden for decades, if not centuries. This rueful truth is known in the bones of the English, who have pieced and parceled their half of an island since the Bronze Age. Simon Roberts gently mocks his compatriots as they search for weekend inspiration in these well-groomed landscapes, even as he reminds us why such lovely places were, and still could be, wellsprings for poetry.

"Looking In: Robert Frank's The Americans" (Steidl, 506 pages, $75). This mammoth catalog is a tribute to Robert Frank's lacerating classic, "The Americans." Published a half-century ago, the Swiss emigre's deeply emphatic and critical examination of his adopted country has only improved with age. "Looking In" offers dozens of Frank's outtakes, as jagged and tough as the 83 pictures that he included in the original book. If you can afford it, buy the hardcover edition of "Looking In," since the paperback inexplicably deletes many of the smaller images that accompany the superb essays.

"Small Trades" by Irving Penn (Getty Museum, 269 pages, $49.95). The final book overseen by the late andinimitable Mr. Penn collects more than200 portraits of tradesmen and -women taken in 1950-51 in Paris, London and New York. A tip of the cap from one exceptional craftsman to his fellow workers, this salute also eulogizes professions—tinsmith, charwoman, iceman, pickle salesman, organ grinder—that would soon be obsolete.

"Playing With Pictures: The Art of Victorian Photocollage"by Elizabeth Siegel (Yale University Press, 200 pages, $45). Photocollage was invented not long after photography. Aristocratic women in Victorian England were notably keen on cutting up photographs of humdrum realism and mixing and matching them to create whimsical fantasies—e.g., photos of children nestled in the blooms of painted flowers or a drawing of a juggler tossing balls decorated with portrait photographs of sober, bearded Englishmen. Ms. Siegel's expert commentary on her selection from family albums of the 1860s and 1870s leads us on a twisty ride down the rabbit hole.

"Faces of the Frontier: Photographic Portraits From the American West 1845-1924" by Frank Goodyear III (University of Oklahoma Press, 181 pages, $45). Myths about the American frontier persist despite the best efforts of historians to disprove them. From the archives of the National Portrait Gallery, Mr. Goodyear has culled a wild bunch of characters— Gen. Winfield Scott ("Old Fuss and Feathers"), Levi Strauss, Calamity Jane, Sam Houston, Geronimo and even Hollywood cowboy Tom Mix—who left their imprint on our image of the West. As photographs often show, most of these men and women looked quite ordinary, which makes their star billing in our imagination all the more interesting to ponder.

"Legacy: The Preservation of Wilderness in New York City Parks" by Joel Meyerowitz (Aperture, 209 pages, $65). Who knew that the five boroughs had so many parks, encompassing 29,000 acres of greenery? In his systematic tour of what is left of the city's natural landscape—and where it is even being enhanced, thanks to Mayor Michael Bloomberg's campaign to plant a million trees—Mr. Meyerowitz uncovers odd and charming hideaways that most native New Yorkers will not have visited or even heard of. Particularly striking are the images of North Brother Island, acquired by the city's parks department in 2007. The 13-acre island in the East River has clearly been reverting to the wild—vines seem to be pulling a power station down into the ground—since the 1963 closing of Riverside Hospital.

"Why Photography Matters as Art as Never Before" by Michael Fried (Yale University Press, 409 pages, $55). The latest art historian to discover that photography offers challenges not found in the other arts, Mr. Fried trains his lucid mind and prose on the work of Jeff Wall, Thomas Struth and other contemporary figures. The knotty arguments here call for a reader's undivided attention, but they reward it.

"Sawdust Mountain" by Eirik Johnson (Aperture, 143 pages, $50). A permanent mist hangs over the inhabitants of a region Mr. Johnson calls Sawdust Mountain, and it isn't just the rainy climate. In his moving group portrait of a community of loggers and fishermen in the Pacific Northwest, Mr. Johnson, a native son, documents the precariousness of life in this corner of America. At the same time, his photographs capture the defiance of those who have made certain choices—rural solitude instead of an urban economy—and are content (or not) with that bargain.

"The Photographs of Homer Page" by Keith F. Davis (Yale University Press, 144 pages, $50). One of the best-printed books of the year restores to public view one of mid-century America's unjustly forgotten photographers. Page was a humanist in the style of Helen Levitt, with a similar eye for the ballet of the street. This tasty selection of his New York work from 1949-50 whets the appetite for a full retrospective.

"The Contact Sheet" by Steve Crist (Ammo Books, 192 pages, $39.95). Before the digital era, contact sheets preserved a photographer's thought process and were a graveyard for burying mistakes. The strips here reveal how an illustrious group— William Claxton, Nan Goldin, Dorothea Lange, Julius Schulman, William Wegman and others—went about their business. We see a full-page reproduction of a well-known photograph, accompanied by the contact sheets—sometimes with more than a dozen images—from the same session. There is, for example, Claxton's famous 1960s image of a model (his wife) wearing what became known as the first topless bikini, as well as 12 other rejected shots—including some showing her wearing a diving mask pushed up over her forehead. It's not always clear why the photographers chose one picture over another, which only adds to the value of this archival material.

"The Jazz Loft Project: Photographs and Tapes of W. Eugene Smith" by Sam Stephenson (Knopf, 268 pages, $40). From 1957 until 1965, Gene Smith ran one of the hippest jazz scenes in New York out of his Sixth Avenue loft. He obsessively photographed and tape-recorded everything that went on there, from rehearsals for Thelonious Monk's big-band concert at Town Hall in 1959 to all-night jam sessions with Zoot Sims and Roland Kirk. Thought for years to have been unplayable, the tapes—and the photographs—from this lost jazz world have been restored, thanks to Mr. Stephenson's tireless efforts.

"Who Shot Rock and Roll: A Photographic History" by Gail Buckland (Knopf, 319 pages, $40). Ms. Buckland tells a familiar rock-music story but from the perspective of the photographers who attended the concerts or hung out in the hotel rooms. Blessedly, she makes no attempt to inflate celebrity portraiture into High Art. Though the musicians pictured, from Elvis Presley in 1955 to Amy Winehouse in the present day, are what you'd expect, the line-up of photographers is anything but the usual suspects. Yes, we find Jim Marshall, Lynn Goldsmith and David Gahr but also Dennis Hopper, Andreas Gursky, Ari Marcopolous and others not solidly embedded in rock culture.

"Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard" by Jeff L. Rosenheim (Steidl, 407 pages, $65). The huge collection of postcards—9,000 of them—owned by photographer Walker Evans was in keeping with this lifelong pack-rat's affection for many things looked down on by the high-minded. Mr. Rosenheim's delightful catalog for a show of the postcards at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York explores the many relationships, direct and indirect, between these commercial images—of hotels, parks, lighthouses and much more—and Evans's supposedly austere photographs. Only a sourpuss could flip open this book and not break into a smile.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Five Best travel accounts that offer first-class enjoyment

Ms. Landro writes the Journal's Finicky Traveler column (courtsey The Wall Street Journal)

1. A Moveable Feast By Ernest Hemingway Scribner, 1964

The young Ernest Hemingway hadn't yet published his first novel, "The Sun Also Rises," when he moved to Paris in 1921 as a correspondent for the Toronto Star. Soon he was mingling with the likes of Ezra Pound, James Joyce, Gertrude Stein and F. Scott Fitzgerald, and although he was barely earning enough to keep himself and his family fed and housed, "in Paris, then, you could live very well on almost nothing, and by skipping meals occasionally and never buying any new clothes, you could save and have luxuries." This heady memoir of the expatriate life doubtless lured many a young romantic to travel to the City of Light in pursuit of the moveable feast at its cafés, bookshops and salons. Hemingway and wife Hadley also journeyed by train through Switzerland to the Austrian frontier, where we glimpse an era before the modern ski resort: They climbed through the Alps aided by seal skins attached to their skis. Though the trip is the beginning of the end of their idyll, as he writes, "there is never any ending to Paris." A newer edition of "A Moveable Feast" published earlier this year has sparked controversy for changes made by Hemingway's grandson; for the full picture, read it side by side with the original, published after the author's suicide in 1964.

2. Innocents Abroad By Mark Twain 1869

In 1867, Mark Twain embarked on an ambitious cruise to Europe, the Middle East and the Holy Land. His aim was to see Europe and the East with his own eyes rather than those of the guidebook writers who had gone before. The letters from the road that Twain wrote for publication back home—they are compiled in "Innocents Abroad"— presented one of the first unvarnished looks at the realities of travel. With scathing wit he mocks his fellow passengers ("We have a poet and a good-natured enterprising idiot onboard, and they do distress the company") and the drudgery of guided tours. Churlish after too many churches, Twain never feels so blessed as when he learns that Michelangelo is dead. After an arduous but fascinating journey on horseback through Lebanon and Syria, he is felled by cholera but recovers to swim in the Sea of Galilee, where a night sky "has no boundaries but the broad compass of the heavens." The curmudgeonly traveler becomes downright reverent by the time he reaches the Holy Land, "the genuine center of the earth."

3. Married Adventure By Osa Johnson Lippincott, 1940

Still in her teens when she married pioneering photographer and documentary filmmaker Martin Johnson in 1910, Osa Leighty gave up the safety of Kansas and domestic comfort for an often-perilous existence filming life in the South Seas, Africa and Borneo. Her maiden voyage, on a tramp steamer across the Pacific, starts with cockroaches nibbling at her fingernails in the night, but that was nothing compared with fleeing hostile natives in the jungle, stumbling across a hut full of shrunken heads and seeing evidence of cannibalism roasting in the embers of a campfire. Acting as her husband's helpmate, crew member and occasional protector, she trains her rifle at the rhinos charging at him in Africa while he captures them on film, but she also becomes a lover of animals, cuddling baby cheetahs and weeping after shooting an antelope. The Johnsons' documentaries inspired many to explore distant lands, and Osa's "I Married Adventure" still makes for breathtaking reading.

4. Riding the Iron Rooster By Paul Theroux Putnam's, 1988

The author of "The Great Railway Bazaar" and "The Old Patagonian Express" spent a year traveling through China by train in 1986, ending up in Tibet and witnessing along the way China's "turbulent passage" as the reforms of Deng Xiaoping brought an end to the deprivations of the Cultural Revolution. Like Twain before him, Paul Theroux is something of a misanthrope; he spends much of his time scorning and evading fellow Western travelers and gives the slip to the government minders accompanying him into the more remote parts of Inner Mongolia. He finds the Chinese he meets along the way unfailingly friendly and unsuspicious as he tries to learn "how people felt about hookers and high fashion in a country where a few years ago foreign decadence was condemned and everyone wore baggy blue suits." And as he comes to understand, the Chinese "are never happier than when on a railway journey," even in the crowded compartments of cars with a designation that translates as "hard class," chattering away, smoking, slurping tea, playing cards, spitting sunflower seeds onto the floor and "watching the world go by."

5. Dave Barry's Only Travel Guide You'll Ever Need By Dave Barry Fawcett, 1991

OK, so Hemingway he's not, but Dave Barry's slim volume of irreverent riffs on modern travel is laugh-out-loud funny. Intended to help readers travel with "a minimum of unpleasantness and death," this guide by the Pulitzer Prize-winning humorist notes that "most domestic locations are conveniently located right here in the United States," and he spares none of them. Atlantic City is the one seaside resort, Barry says, that could actually be improved "by the arrival of an oil slick." When traveling abroad, he advises, dispense with the notion that the French are rude—"they just happen to hate you"—but be prepared to assert yourself with helpful French phrases like "Attemptez vouz a yanquer ma chaine, boudet?" Germany, he notes, is "actually a very nice nation that used to have an unfortunate tendency to fall in with the wrong crowd and every few decades try to take over the world." As for culinary adventure, Barry has praise for "the great variety of Mexican food, which is perfectly safe as long as you never let any of it get into your digestive system."

Monday, January 25, 2010

Books on Finance During Trouble

These books on finance in a time of trouble pay big dividends, says Duff McDonald (courtsey The Wall Street Journal)

Mr. McDonald is the author of "Last Man Standing: The Ascent of Jamie Dimon and JPMorgan Chase" (Simon & Schuster, 2009). He is a contributing editor at New York magazine.

1. The House of Morgan By Ron Chernow, Atlantic Monthly, 1990

Can a bank actually be heroic? Ron Chernow suggests as much in his exhaustive history of J.P. Morgan and its instrumental role in the development of the industrial Western economy from the late 19th century to the end of the 20th. But the clear-eyed Chernow does not ignore the less-than-heroic in this National Book Award-winning title, which is as much a social and political history as it is the story of the Morgan dynasty. Of the fallout from the Crash of 1873, Chernow writes: "Not for the last time, America turned against Wall Street with puritanical outrage and a sense of offended innocence." When World War I erupted: "Wall Street, which prided itself on its prescience, was once again caught napping by a historic event." Both tendencies remain in place today. What we do not have is a Wall Street king like John Pierpont Morgan, the man who built the banking dynasty and who had the power to intervene personally in the Panic of 1893 and save the U.S. Treasury by launching a syndicate to replenish the nation's gold supply.

2. The Go-Go Years By John Brooks, Weybright & Talley, 1973

Just as the stock market moves in cycles, even though each new generation seems to think each new high and low is happening for the first time, so, too, do market players often imagine that they're breaking new ground when most are not. Today's high-flyers are pretty much the same as those depicted by John Brooks in "The Go-Go Years," his account of how the stock market changed during the 1960s. At the very moment when stocks were truly going mainstream in America, Brooks produced one of the most enjoyable and insightful books ever written about the tribes and tactics of the stock market. Chronicling the escapades of almost-forgotten swashbucklers such as Gerald Tsai and Saul Steinberg, he produced incomparable observations about Wall Street's merry-go-round of triumph and tragedy. He describes 1968 as the year "Wall Street had become a mindless glutton methodically eating itself to paralysis and death," something that happened again in the period 2004-07. And what of our capacity to learn from our mistakes? "Reform is a frail flower that languishes in the hot glare of prosperity," he observes. Given that prosperity still looks a while off at this point in 2010, maybe reform will actually bloom.

3. The Bubble Economy By Christopher Wood, Atlantic Monthly, 1992

"What everybody knows is seldom worth knowing," begins "The Bubble Economy," an incisive, readable assessment of the Japanese real-estate boom and bust of the 1980s. Christopher Wood, the former Tokyo bureau chief for the Economist, writes with such flair that it's a shame he gave up journalism, becoming a financial analyst and the publisher of the newsletter Greed & Fear. His book has aged well; swap out names and institutions and it might have been written last year. "Isaac Newton actually arrived in Japan in 1990," Wood writes. "His presence did not prove a pretty sight in a country where too many people had concluded that the laws of gravity, when applied to their own financial markets, had somehow been suspended." Like a faded rock star, the 367-year-old Newton is back for another world tour.

4. When Genius Failed By Roger Lowenstein, Random House, 2000

A raft of books have been written—and are still being written—trying to explain the complex financial products, such as collateralized debt obligations and credit default swaps, behind the near collapse of Wall Street about 16 months ago. The last time something this complicated took the system to the brink, it was the crash in 1998 of the gigantic hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management, when its "relative value" trades went bad. Luckily Roger Lowenstein was on the case—there is no better writer for explaining the intricacies of finance in eminently understandable terms. His description of how Wall Street reached its precarious state in 1998, necessitating a rush to bail out LTCM, capturesthe birth of the "too big to fail" doctrine: "Almost imperceptibly, the Street had bought into a massive faith game, in which each bank had become knitted to its neighbor through a web of contractual obligations requiring little or no down payment." A decade later, we'd done it again. If more people had read "When Genius Failed," today's miseries might have been avoided.

5. Point of No Return By John P. Marquand, Little, Brown, 1949

While Wall Street hardly has trouble generating stories that seem straight out of a novel, there are a handful of sublime works of fiction that capture the spirit of its strivers in ways that nonfiction cannot. These novels, like Tom Wolfe's excellent "Bonfire of the Vanities," show us what the traders were thinking as well as what they were doing. Nearly four decades before "Bonfire," John P. Marquand wrote "Point of No Return," a lost masterpiece that shines a bright light on the mind-set of that species of Banker Americanus that helped to build the modern financial-services edifice and that colonized suburbia. Marquand's protagonist, Charles Gray, managed not just to survive but to thrive in the 1929 stock market crash, the Depression and its aftermath, and he has collected an enviable set of trophies: the new house in Westchester County, the wife, the two kids and the country-club membership. But "Point of No Return" is hardly a cheerful success story. Instead, it's a gripping portrayal of a man obsessed with roads not taken and of the insecurities that lie just beneath a veneer of seeming achievement. "The more you get, the more afraid you get," says Gray. "Maybe fear is what makes the world go round."

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Five Best works of fiction about families..

Pete Dexter chooses his favorite works of fiction about families (courtsey The Wall Street Journal)

1. The Complete Stories By Flannery O'Connor Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1971

Flannery O'Connor died of lupus at age 39, leaving behind two novels, the material for two books of nonfiction and 32 short stories—perhaps half the stories close to perfect. A prime example is "A Good Man Is Hard to Find," about a family heading from Atlanta to Florida on vacation. The husband and wife ("a young woman in slacks, whose face was as broad and innocent as a cabbage"), their three children, a grandmother and her cat are not far into the trip before an accident (startled cat, clawed driver) sends the car into a ditch. Another car comes along, but the would-be rescuers turn out to be three escaped convicts. Then comes one of fiction's great revelatory scenes, when the grandmother, even as the other members of the family are being led off into the woods and executed, bargains for her life with the convict called The Misfit. The grandmother, too, will soon be dispatched—but not before her pleading turns into a religious discussion. "She would of been a good woman," The Misfit says, once she is dead, "if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of her life.'' As this mesmerizing short-story collection shows, O'Connor's tales—many of them about families and distant relations— seem to have come to her built-in with such scenes and lines and characters.

2. Edisto By Padgett Powell Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1984

Here's why—I imagine—J.D. Salinger has never come out of hiding. From the moment "Catcher In the Rye" was published in 1951, every novel written about a precocious kid found some critic erroneously calling it the best book about precocious youth since "Catcher in the Rye." Then one day in 1984 Salinger—again, I'm imagining—had the bad luck to pick up "Edisto," by a young man called Padgett Powell, who had never written a novel before, and the next day the old recluse woke up feeling like Floyd Patterson the morning after his first fight with Sonny Liston. What Salinger would have seen when he opened "Edisto" was what Patterson saw when he looked across the ring into Liston's baleful eyes: the real thing. It's not just anybody, after all, who can write a believable novel about youthful brilliance. "Edisto" is the story of a 12-year-old named Simons Everson Manigault, whose sophisticated-beyond-his-years tone can't disguise how unfathomable he finds the adult world. The mysteries begin with his mother—or "the Doctor," as he thinks of this haughty college teacher—and his father, or "the Progenitor," who is no longer with the family. A mysterious stranger soon becomes the boy's surrogate father, teaching him about life using "one ounce of suggestion and pounds of patience." Padgett Powell is a writer of strange and original gifts. I just can't get over how little attention he receives from the thumb-suckers who sit around bemoaning the state of the arts in America.

3. Straight Man By Richard Russo Random House, 1997

The story of William Henry Devereaux, Richard Russo's middle-age university professor, begins with a remembrance of how, as a boy, he had begged his parents for a dog for years and then he finally got one. Devereaux's father, a well-known literary critic not interested in dogs or kids or, in the end, his wife, shows up one afternoon with an ancient Irish setter, who limps into the kitchen five minutes after arriving and dies. As his father buries the dog, Devereaux suggests naming it Red. His father looks at him in disbelief—name a dead dog? "It's not an easy time for any parent," muses Devereaux, "this moment when the realization dawns that you've given birth to something that will never see things the way you do, despite the fact that it is your living legacy, that it bears your name." Russo's access to the pulse of family attachments can make it all too easy to overlook the power of his great comic novels, like the hugely entertaining "Straight Man."

4. A River Runs Through It, and Other Stories By Norman Maclean University of Chicago, 1976

The writing just drops on you out of a tree. Norman Maclean (1902-90), a revered Shakespeare professor at the University of Chicago, published only two books, one an account of the 1949 smoke-jumping tragedy in Montana's Mann Gulch and the other this one, a 104-page novella about two brothers, their father and the mysteries of family love. For the entire length of "A River Runs Through It, and Other Stories," Maclean sustains a voice so precise and beautiful that it becomes part of the story itself—as fundamental and natural to what is here as the characters and the trout-fishing rivers where matters of love and attachment settle out into time. Here's the narrator, one of the brothers, on the devastating moment when a big fish gets away: "The fish has gone and you are extinct, except for four and half ounces of stick to which is tied some line and a semitransparent thread of catgut to which is tied a little curved piece of Swedish steel to which is tied a part of a feather from a chicken's neck." In the end, it's the voice that stays with you, long after the particulars of the story have mingled with other stories and faded away—a reminder of the consequential things that measured, dead-accurate sentences can be.

5. Rhine Maidens By Carolyn See Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1981

This explosive, driven little novel—which makes you feel, almost as soon as you begin, that it's slipping through your fingers too fast—could well be the most explicit, reasonable description of the craziness of women ever written. I'm not referring to the specific craziness of specific women— which is here, too, and beautifully done—but to a general condition: that wild, random windsock blowing somewhere out there. Carolyn See's novel is built around two women. The mother is in late middle age and bitter, so thoroughly disabused of all happiness and hope that even the idea of them makes her physically sick. The daughter, 20 years younger, has two unremarkable and unlikable children and a similarly unremarkable and unlikable television screenwriter for a husband. The daughter can see for herself who she married but is nevertheless scared to death of losing him. Many writers experience a period of bereavement after they finish a novel—not as bad as your dog dying but bad enough. Finishing "Rhine Maidens" did that to me, just as a reader.—Mr. Dexter, whose novel "Paris Trout" (1988) won the National Book Award, is the author, most recently, of "Spooner."