OYENTE

Catherine Puma

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  • opiniones
  • 475
  • votos útiles
  • 469
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Relating Ancient Authority to Modern Power Systems

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-26-24

I follow Dr. Kara Cooney's podcast, I've listened to her The Great Courses lecture series, and I've read two of her other books, so I'm squarely in her demographic camp, and I'm a happy camper! In "The Good Kings", Cooney discusses the authoritarian successes and failures of 5 ancient Egyptian pharaohs--Kufu, Senwosret III, Akenhaten, Ramses II, and Taharqa. Simultaneously, she analyses these powerful historical figures and compares them to modern kings--Trump, Obama, Putin, and Kim Jung Un, among others.

This is an excellent example of how studying history, especially ancient history, can shed light on our current societal power structures. Cooney's core anti-authoritarian and anti-patriarchal perspectives shine through this work, which is a natural sequel to her "When Women Ruled the World" book. Published in 2021, this is also able to discuss how politics corrupted government response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

This is well written, well structured, and consistent in its messaging. I learned much about influential ancient Egyptian pharaohs and am inspired to think critically about the power systems till in play today. Brushing up on Egyptian gods and goddesses with Donna Jo Napoli's "Treasury of Egyptian Mythology" book really helped me.

I recommend this book to all fans of ancient Egypt, Egyptian pharaohs, Egyptian mythology, Egyptian history, world history, history of power and authority and government, politics, public relations, US politics, modern politics, world politics, or any previous work by either Kara Cooney, Mary Beard, or Stacy Schiff.

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Engaging Narrative Overview

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
4 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-26-24

This is a great intro for middle grade readers and older to hear about the gods and goddesses of Ancient Egypt. I love Donna Jo Napoli's work and recommend it widely. I knew I'd read this, especially about I read her "Treasury of Greek Mythology" book a part of the same National Geographic series.

This overview of the gods and goddesses and their respective mythologies is also a good refresher. It is watered down to a PG level, so perhaps professional archaeologists won't like this as much. Y'all know how Isis * really * brought Osiris back to life *wink wink*. Regardless, I really liked the informational sections in between each divinity chapter, as well as the author's note describing why she chose certain versions of the tales over others.

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Magnificent World Pollinators and Insectivores

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-26-24

This book is fabulous, I'm thrilled I read it this year. I've seen bats from a distance once or twice, viewed cute videos of fruit bats being fed, and watched a documentary or two, but I haven't studied them in detail. My husband and I just bought a house, and we want to install a bat box to help local and transient populations, but I wanted to know more about my flying mammalian cousins. This was a perfect book to scratch that itch!

Merlin Tuttle is a renown bat scientist and National Geographic photographer, and his book details the discoveries made over the 40+ years between the 1970's and 2010's during his exciting field career. Found of Bat Conservation International, Tuttle explains how he began studying bats, advocating for cave conservation and bat protection in the United States, and acquired grants to study, document, and advocate for bat species overseas. Tuttle's travels take him from Tennessee to Texas, then onward to Africa, South America, and even American Samoa!

the trajectory of Tuttle's career emphasizes different skills he cultivated. The beginning describes exciting spelunking and climbing adventures, the middle details the technical challenges of photography wild bats--often in remote locations, and the multi-sector collaboration needed to establish American Samoa's first National Park. This book will thus be of interest to bat enthusiasts, climbers, spelunkers, wildlife photographers, ecotourists, wildlife conservationists, and naturalists alike.

Last but certainly not least is how much I learned about different bat species. Bats are incredibly important pollinators, fruit seed dispersers, and insectivores. By helping plants repopulate open areas to consuming thousands of pest insects in a single night, bats contribute millions of dollars in profit to the agriculture industry benefitting from their existence. Tuttle demonstrates that species identification is important by showing how vampire bat mitigation efforts miss their target species (which roost in small groups in hidden areas) and instead slaughter thousands of helpful individuals (which roost in large groups in caves). The number of times he engages with and enlists help from strangers not typically highlighted in wildlife conservation stories--from moonshiners to nudists and even hunters--is truly impressive.

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This Brief Overview Left Me Thirsty For More

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
4 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-26-24

Tom Standage describes key points and aspects in our shared human history in relation to 6 types of drinks: beer, wine, spirits, coffee, tea, and cola. This is for every foodie who wants to know a bit more about their favorite drinks' history and how it spread through commerce and culture around the globe. The tagline of this book's description is, "You may never look at your favorite drink the same way again", which sums up this book's wake pretty well.

I read this with my husband, and we were both surprised "spirits" with all its diverse types and forms were condensed into one chapter. Human History is a gigantic topic to tackle, and each of these chapters could easily get their own book. There are many books out there about different beverages. Standage's historical perspective provides insight not possible through strictly gastronomical publications. His comparisons across drinks, even between alcoholic and non alcoholic drinks, offers a holistic and widespread approach to grappling history.

This is certainly thought provoking and I'm glad to have read it. I appreciate my beverages more having taken a glance at where they've been. I look forward to learning more! The Epilogue discussing the importance of water as a scarce resource, including advocating for better management of and access to safe drinking water, is a welcomed surprise.

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Early NASA: Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo Missions

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
4 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-26-24

Gene Kranz was a fighter pilot before serving on NASA's manned space missions from the early days of the Mercury program, then as flight director in Mission Control for the Gemini and Apollo missions. This memoir is a fascinatingly detailed description of such thrilling historic events, providing a perspective not typically depicted in space exploration movies, which highlight the astronauts more. This is a great read for any fan of space flight, mission control operations, manned missions, or the history of NASA.

There are some parts that prevent me from giving this 5 stars, however. Although Kranze compliments his wife more often than I thought he would, there's barely any mention of the women crucial to NASA's inception. The female computers are only given a single paragraph! Anyone who reads this must also read "Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race" by Margot Lee Shetterly.

Kranz is also so preoccupied with the navigational and engineering accomplishments of space flight, that he doesn't describe any of the scientific experiments conducted as part of the mission objectives. Maybe these are highlighted in other people's memoirs from this time, but he could have devoted a paragraph or two to each program at the very least. And finally, his writing has an odd habit of criticizing a colleague for an entire paragraph and then ending with an odd non sequitur like "he was the best boss; I always counted on him", like he is saving face at the last minute or something.

Oh, well. Overall, I'm glad I read this memoir from Kranz' career in NASA Mission Control for the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo missions, but this is only one perspective from that historic period. I look forward to reading more about the Space Shuttle, ISS, rover, and telescope missions from other sources. They have to be out there--who doesn't love NASA?

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A Fed Bear is a Dead Bear; Here's Why

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
4 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-26-24

The tone and style of "The Ravenmaster: My Life with the Ravens at the Tower of London" by Christopher Skaife meets the rural USA setting of "Bearskin" by James A. McLaughlin. In this first volume of "Bear in the Backseat: Adventures of a Wildlife Ranger in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park", Kim DeLozier describes changes in bear management policies and key highlights from his 30+ years as a wildlife ranger at the park. This is crucial reading for anyone who visits or writes about the Great Smoky Mountains, works or wants to work in wildlife management, and anyone who appreciates the United States' black bear population.

I assume I'm meant to absorb all these stories and content as Kim DeLozier's words and perspective, but I want to understand more of what Carolyn Jourdan's role as coauthor was. There's no author contributions section and Jourdan's acknowledgements section is so brief it might as well be nonexistent. Jourdan has written about the Great Smoky Mountains before; did she know DeLozier and approach him with a pitch idea upon his retirement? Just a 1-2 paragraph explanation would have helped me frame this wildlife memoir.

Regardless, this is an interesting read and I'm glad I got to it. DeLozier stresses repeatedly how tourists harassing, photographing too close, and especially feeding bears literally kill them. Don't do it! A fed bear is a dead bear because she loses her fear of people, raids campgrounds, and if she continues such behavior after being tranquilized and relocated, then wildlife managers have to kill the bear. Leave no trace. Research parks, their wildlife, and proper human behavior before visiting. The Great Smoky Mountains has the most black bear and also the most visitors, so bear management is crucial to keeping bears and people as safe as possible.

DeLozier does a good job of describing what management was like back in the early 1980's, how things have changed, and why. We behave differently now because we understand more about bear behavior, and that's a good thing. There are stories about invasive wild hogs, curious deer, and tame skunks, but most of this book is about black bears.

I couldn't do his job and it's a critical one. I'm grateful there are wildlife rangers in our national parks that dedicate their careers to maintaining the beautiful environment and animals that live there. I have no idea what volume two could add because this is a complete book with no loose ends, but maybe I'll check it out someday.

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Gay Coded Nautical Tale

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
4 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-26-24

I've heard about this novella by Herman Melville from time to time, and I'm glad I read it. It's not even 4 hours long, so I recommend to anyone who appreciates Melville's style but doesn't have the time to reread "Moby Dick". I've read his other short work "Bartleby the Scrivner", but I like this a bit more due to its nautical setting.

Though I would recommend this to fans of C.S. Forester's "Hornblower" series as well as those of Patrick O'Brian's "Master and Commander" series, there is not as much action in this tale. Billy Budd is the subject of the narrative but not its narrator, so there's ample opportunity for other characters to build up his persona through their varying perceptions of his nature. Billy Budd, recruited into Naval service from a merchant's vessel, is fresh to his post when he is accused of a mutinous plot.

Because this focuses on the months leading up to and then immediate fallout from a singular incident, it really works as a novella. Themes include innocence vs. guilt, youthfulness vs. experience, naive vs. manipulative, lawful vs. just, honorable vs. devious, and principled vs. carefree. I felt the homosexual undertones and honestly wish there was more of that included. Throw in some filler scenes, and you could make a power film adaptation of this.

Overall, a well written classic! For readers who enjoy this setting and complex character but crave more action, I recommend Jack London's "The Sea Wolf" or "South Sea Tales".

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Why the Norman Conquest Matters

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
4 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-26-24

This is a great blow by blow description of the Norman Conquest of England by medievalist and award-winning Professor Jennifer Paxton of Georgetown University. Definitely an engaging listen for fans of British history, "The Last Kingdom" series by Bernard Cornwell, and the AC Valhalla video game. I am squarely in this work's core demographic and I enjoyed it quite a bit. I appreciate the explanations of linguistic continuity as well as adaptations as English and French root words developed side by side following 1066.

However, I wish there was more time devoted to analysis and reflection. Paxton's conclusions are shuffled into a single 30min lecture, when they could have been given 2+ lectures or at least woven throughout the previous discussions a bit more. Perhaps the Great Courses or her university imposed time constraints, and it is a lot of content to cover, which Paxton does rather well. So, perhaps this is a great starter to thinking about how impactful the Norman Conquest has been on English history. I just wish Paxton had delivered a little more thoroughly on that front.

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What Lived Alongside the Dinosaurs?

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-26-24

This popular science nonfiction book about prehistoric life is right in my wheelhouse, and it's even better than I expected. In "Otherlands", Thomas Halliday discusses life across geological time scales, not just from a morphological comparison perspective, but a holistic view of the context within each fossil lived. Halliday describes geography, aridity, food availability, climate, elevation, and other species that one might compete with for an ecological niche. I've read other prehistoric nonfiction books that are great in their own right, but I really appreciated Halliday discussing deep sea, invertebrates, plants, trace fossils, small, and lesser known fossils in addition to the charismatic dinosaurs.

Maybe 4.5/5 stars then? This is super great, but not perfect. I advise those interested to either read or at least consult a physical copy to keep track of all the creatures discussed. I want to find this book's index so I can take note of species names for my personal further independent study.

This is for fans on "The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs" by Stephen Brusatte and "Raptor Red" by Robert Bakker. Once readers have been introduced to a particular time period, Halliday then uses the present tense, which helps build the scene for us to imagine how these past life forms might've experienced our world. This book is for anyone whose gaze lingers over the artistic representations of prehistoric scenes in museum murals, for anyone who would use a one way time machine ticket to visit the ancient past just to know what some dinosaurs were really like. I'm really glad I read this, and I'll be seeking more like it.

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Informative Immersive Podcast

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
4 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-26-24

This short, casual podcast takes an important ecological topic and discusses it in a conversational manner. The delivery is great for explaining data, statistics, and scientific terms to listeners who want to learn more about insect population decline--or lack thereof?--but who wouldn't independently read scientific papers.

The soundscapes of different biomes aren't just pleasing to listen to, but help demonstrate how interesting yet challenging this field of acoustics is. I loved how the journalist related insect acoustic studies to those of more charismatic subjects like bats, coral reefs, whales, and elephants to show how connected these efforts are.

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