Friday, January 26, 2018

Sweet Thursday (John Steinbeck)

John Steinbeck
Sweet Thursday



The sequel to Cannery Row. Follows our friends through a bit of torment and also has a few odd chapters thrown in as if Steinbeck wrote a characterisation and didn't want to make a book of it. The story is a bit corny and the whole thing is not as convincing as the brilliant Cannery Row, or his other books that I've read, but very enjoyable nevertheless. For a lot of books you can forgive slack characterisation and plot details if the story is compelling. In this case it's the reverse. A lot longer than Cannery Row and not sure that adds to it either. But worth reading.

Sunday, January 21, 2018

Cannery Row (John Steinbeck)

John Steinbeck
Cannery Row

As I said last time... I've read this a few times and it's one of my favourite books:
https://psibooked.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/john-steinbeck-cannery-row-ive-read.html

I lent my last copy to Pete who leant it to his dad in hospital in Cardiff so hopefully it's doing the rounds and cheering a few folk up. Every time I read it a new angle comes out. Those major events which you thought took half the book are in fact short passages and you notice other things. Maybe I should re-read a lot of books. So little time...  Click the link to see the rest of what I wrote on it. Now reading Sweet Thursday the sequel. Watch this space.


Saturday, January 20, 2018

Zero Carbon Britain (Centre for Alternative Technology)

Centre for Alternative Technology
Zero Carbon Britain: Rethinking the Future




Another book I've been reading for ages and not gripping me. OK it's not a thriller although it may have a very unhappy ending if we don't go with what's contained within. It's a bit too scientific and statistical for me. Most who read it for interest probably already know that the environment is going down the pan and we got to do something fast. It's a bit like the books in the 70s giving forecasts of resource depletion and climate change. But they were seen as mad prophesies of doom whereas nearly all of us accept the prophesy these days. So although I heartily agree with the content about half way through I just stopped. I think I'll give it to someone who will make use of the facts and figures to support their work.

Sober (Tony Adams)

Tony Adams
Sober: Football. My Story. My Life.




Bruce gave me this having found on the underground when visiting. It was part of the Books on the Underground where they are left for people to pick up. His Addicted was very interesting especially around the Arsenal dressing room. This book is less so. It's part what he did after Arsenal and his getting into management and part battling his demons and setting up his counselling service. Whilst I guess both are his later years bio there's too much, for me, banging on about the spiritual side and it all seems a little defensive and pious at the same time. I can't fault TA6 for keeping off the booze which must be painfully hard and he seems to have handled it brilliantly. But it's not gripping reading and it's one of the few books I've not been bothered to finish. Oh, and the next one I'm about to write about.

Friday, January 05, 2018

No is Not Enough (Naomi Klein)

Naomi Klein
No is Not Enough: defeating the new shock politics




Excellent analysis of why it shouldn't be a surprise that Trump is in power and how he, and others like him, i.e. those running our capitalist systems, will continue to engineer massive shocks (economy, wars, environment) as it's precisely those that allow them to implement draconian laws (austerity whilst bailing out bankers, the war on terror and increased "security" aka police state at home, build nuclear power stations as low carbon alternative whilst also pushing further fossil fuel extraction). I was wondering at the time of Trump's triumph if I was a bit paranoid - maybe he is just a complete twat who accidently got into power. A bit like Johnson. But this book tells me it's not paranoia. Whilst most of the book is a depressing validation of how the world is going it ends on a positive note in that history tells us that some massive shocks can unite people and push for social justice - such as the introduction of the welfare state, NHS and nationalisation of industries in the UK after WWII. I tend to think that the march of history is towards a collective society although we sometimes have (major) set backs. I guess that's Marx in the background. Klein's view is that due to environmental melt down the next push forward must be a Leap (sounds a bit Maoist!) as we've no time to lose. Various pressure groups need to combine to push a wide agenda that covers all their wants. Whilst an excellent analysis I don't think that Klein gets to the logical conclusion in that if the wrongs of the world are due to the capitalist military industrial system then that needs to be replaced. With what isn't really articulated apart from greater democracy and local decision making. Maybe a book for the American market is going to far in stating that a collective, communist, anarchist model of society is the alternative to capitalism if you agree that the latter is bound to stamp on everyone and everything (environment) as that's what it's ethos is.

A few topics I think should have been covered, at least in passing, which I don't recall. The whole medical system built up to sell expensive drugs for ailments that are better tackled at source (our poor diets) often meaning that the taxpayer further subsidises big business whilst pricing poorer countries out of the market. On diet, the major contribution to poor health and poor environment is the animal husbandry / exploitation industry (I can't call keeping thousands of hens in a warehouse "farming") producing poor quality hormone and chemically laden foods, releasing poisonous chemicals into the environment, contributing massive CO2 transport costs and putting the means of production of foods into the hands of big business through genetically modified, and therefore patented, seeds. Brexit is also mentioned as an example of a xenophobic backlash of populism. Although a lot of the campaign that was high profile in the media was of that ilk and no doubt contributed to the vote outcome it's not as simple as Klein glosses over. She often references the way that the EU banks force austerity and privatisation of state assets onto faltering economies and indeed states that Germany post 2008 invested in it's economy including local energy production whilst forcing other EU countries (Greece, Italy, etc. etc.) down the detrimental "austerity" road. That's the reason why a lot of people voted to leave the EU - due to the unfairness in the powerful north European states butchering the southern states in a neo-colonialist manner. It's an irony that many saw Labour as pro EU and the Tories as anti EU whereas in fact many on the far left think of the EU as yet another institution supporting a failing capitalist system and the far right (economically if not politically) use it to artificially support failing industries through taxpayer subsidies, including large "farming" companies. Did the City of London want Brexit? I think that says it all. I hope that Klein hasn't made the classic mistake of thinking that UK citizens, or rather subjects but that's a topic for another day, are confusing being part of Europe with being part of the EU. One is a feeling of community and kinship with neighbours, the other an artificial institution that is bloated, full of red tape and at best wastes money and worse subsidises those that don't need it/

Having given my two cents worth this is an excellent book and the Leap Manifesto at the back is great.