Saturday, April 9, 2022

TV Review: Longmire. Netflix (originally A&E), Seasons 1-6.

This six-season TV show on Netflix was definitely one of our favorite pandemic "year 2" binges.   Set in a small town in modern Wyoming (in the first decade or so of the 2000s), it features Walt Longmire (Robert Taylor), a grizzled and recently widowed old-school Western Sheriff, solving crimes with the help of his small department of younger deputies and various local characters and friends.    

His deputies include Vic Moretti (Katee Sackhoff, who starred as Lt. Starbuck in the more recent Battlestar Galactica series from the SyFy Channel), and several young men with interesting personality traits, histories and quirks.   

Walt Longmire also has a best friend (played by the outstanding Lou Diamond Phillips), a Native American who owns the local watering hole, and acts as a social bridge to the local Indian reservations and their people.  Then there’s Walt’s young adult daughter Katie, recently graduated from law school, who is a bit at loose ends as to her career and future.    

Most episodes tell the story of a particular murder or other crime, but there are also long-running mysteries and unsolved crimes simmering in the background.  Full of wonderful who-dun-it stories, a lot of realistic plots about the fraught relations between rural white communities and their Indian neighbors, occasional gunfire and violent action, mild love interests and sex, and a very relatable cast of characters, with strong writing and scripts.   

This series is based on the (by now) 24-book set of Longmire mystery novels by Craig Johnson.  Highly recommended.

TV Review: Atlantic Crossing (2021). PBS mini-series.

Kyle McLachlan stars as FDR in a fact-based story of the Danish princess (the wife of the crown prince) who escaped with her children from the Nazis, and then carried on a charged friendship with romantic overtones with the President, while trying to influence the Americans to aid the Danish war effort and resistance during World War II.    

It appears that there was some dramatic license in the series, but in general it sticks to facts that have been reported elsewhere about the unusual relationship of the Danish princess to President Roosevelt, and the influence she wielded with him for the benefit of the Danish government in exile.  Recommended.

Friday, April 8, 2022

TV Review: The Gilmore Girls. Netflix Series, Seasons 1-7.

A very smart and funny dramedy about a rebellious former teenage unwed mother (now adult, independent and successful) from a wealthy upper crust family, and her high-achieving teenage daughter, who live together in Starr’s Hollow, a small town near Hartford, Connecticut.  

The duo at the center of the story are separated by only 17 years of age and the actual fact of their relationship and roles as mother and daughter, but otherwise behave like two teenage best friends, as they try to find their way together through their respective growing up processes,  love affairs, relationship problems and broken hearts, oddball friends, difficult parents and grandparents, and charming but unhinged neighbors and assorted characters around town. 

We binged this endearing series for several months.  We also saw Netflix's four-part "9 years later" sequel, The Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, where we caught up almost a decade after the end of the original series (circa 2016) with Lorelei, Rory and most of the other familiar denizens of Starrs' Hollow.  

This series was written and produced by Amy Sherman-Palladino (who also wrote and produced The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel).  Both series feature harried single mothers in unusual predicaments, each surviving and sometimes thriving while producing a nonstop flow of hyperactive dialogue and wisecracks.

The fact that Lorelei Gilmore (the mother, brilliantly played by Lauren Graham) has a more than able verbal sparring partner in her best friend/daughter Rory (equally brilliantly played by Alexis Bledel), along with numerous other verbally-quick-witted friends and relatives, makes the whole show a delightful and very worthwhile entertainment.  Highly recommended.

Thursday, April 7, 2022

Book Review: Soldier Girls (2014). Helen Thorpe.

This excellent social and military history is essentially a triple biography of three women soldiers of different ages, races and backgrounds who served together in Afghanistan and Iraq in the first few years after 9/11.  

All three were members of the Indiana National Guard, who had joined for very different reasons, but none with an expectation that they would ever end up in a combat zone.  Then 9/11 happened, and they were each pulled into the vortex of multiple deployments punctuated by strange intervening returns to normal life. 

The author interviewed all three soldiers extensively, as well as many of their fellow soldiers, family and friends.  Their personal lives and experiences, most intimate thoughts and relationships were revealed and interwoven, in order to show how they were changed in ways both positive and negative by their time spent together, as part of a mixed-sex unit at war during several deployments in both the Afghanistan and Iraqi war zones.  

An absorbing, moving and complex tale of loves and friendships gained and lost, unexpected skills and abilities developed, maturity and wisdom acquired through trauma and suffering, and the powerful bonds forged among people sharing common dangers and adversity.  Recommended.

Wednesday, April 6, 2022

Book Review: Red Sea Spies: The True Story of Mossad's Fake Diving Resort (2020). Raffi Berg.

This book was the basis for the exciting spy movie Red Sea Diving Resort (2019), which I saw and liked, but haven’t reviewed.  The book is also really good, and it supplies even more excitement, sense of constant danger and risk than the movie.  

The underlying true story is about a secret Israeli campaign over several years in the late 1970s and early 1980s to help black members of an ancient Jewish community escape from oppression in Ethiopia, and move to Israel as Jews under the Right of Return.  

The book focuses more of a spotlight than the movie on the origins of the campaign, the dedicated and daring but often disobedient Mossad team leader on the ground, the means by which the Ethiopians escaped their homes and camps despite the government’s oppressive monitoring of their communities, and many of the close calls and specific incidents that took place during the course of the rescue operations. 

Of course, the main focus of the story is still the establishment of a fake diving resort, from which the Ethiopian Jews could be secretly evacuated to boats offshore by Israeli commandos.  It’s a thrilling and inspirational true story of dedication, great personal risk, intrigue, daring rescues, and human compassion towards strangers under threat by a brutal regime.  Highly recommended.

Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Book Review: Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art (2020). James Nestor.

This is an entire book on something we all usually take for granted: breathing. 

The author has previously reported on deep-sea “free” divers, who can descend to great depths and stay submerged while holding their breath for long periods of time.  As a result of what he learned in researching the divers, and because of his own health issues, particularly around respiration and nasal congestion, he went on a personal search for more knowledge about this essential and largely automatic human function.  

In the course of the book, he describes many historical and contemporary religious and exercise disciplines that focus on control of breathing as the key to other health, mental and spiritual attainments, and his own experiments in using these techniques to improve his breathing.  

He reveals other intriguing facts too.  One was that the structure of human skulls, and the size and shape of our breathing passages in the nose and mouth, as well as the health of our teeth and jaws, have changed for the worse at two points in human evolution:  first, about 10,000 years ago, when the agricultural revolution began, and humans stopped having to chew their food as hard, and even more dramatically about 300 years ago, with the introduction of soft breads and manufactured food that further softened most of the food in our diets.  Who knew?

In any event, it’s a fascinating tour of the complex role that breathing plays in our health and happiness, and how we can alter and improve our breathing by revisiting techniques that have been known across many human cultures since ancient times. Recommended.

Monday, April 4, 2022

Book Review: Churchill's Ministry of Ungentlemanly War: The Mavericks Who Plotted Hitler’s Defeat (2017). Giles Milton.

A very well-written history of the small group of British genius inventors and scientists who developed a vast toolkit of sabotage devices for use by the SOE, OSS, and ultimately the allied military forces. 

It also reveals some of the most successful special operations using these weapons, including the Norsk heavy water Hydro plant raid, the "harass and delay" campaign that kept the Das Reich SS divisions from reaching Normandy in time during the Allied invasion, and the use of a new weapon late in the war for hunting submarines that far exceeded the effectiveness of conventional depth charges.  One of several very good histories by Giles Milton.  Recommended.

Sunday, April 3, 2022

Book Review: The Echo Maker (2003). Richard Powers.

After reading The Overstory, Richard Powers’ remarkable novel about trees, forests, and how the fate of humans, the environment and the planet is bound to them, I decided to explore some of his other work.  

 

This much older novel weaves a gripping mystery out of the results of a young man’s late-night car crash, and the rare mental condition he suffers from the accident, where he can’t recognize the people and things closest to him.  

 

In the course of this unusual but masterful story, a number of different characters and elements are drawn into the mystery, including the beloved sister he can’t recognize, an alienated older popular neuroscience writer and academic, an old girlfriend of the crash victim, the fate of a local migratory crane population and the river site they visit each year, and other pieces.  

 

The book didn’t look that large or long, but it did seem to last and last, with a slowly unfolding story that held my rapt attention throughout, even though I frequently had no idea where it was leading.  A neurological, philosophical and ecological mystery of the first order.  Recommended.

Book Review: Chip War: The Fight for the World’s Most Critical Technology (2022). Chris Miller.

I was intrigued this morning to read an article about a growing problem in the latest iterations of new generative AI products. This probl...