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Posts Tagged ‘economics’

3 Dec 2009

Seize the Day by Saul Bellow

seizethedayOh books that have no real ending, why do you exist?  Is it just to taunt and frustrate me?  Did you, Saul Bellow, predict that I would read this, writing it as you did 30 years before my birth, and leave a stupid, jaded ending to what otherwise might have been just an O.K. novella?

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3 December, 2009 at 13:25 by J.T. Oldfield

Tags: economics, Jewish authors, novella, psychology
Posted in Fiction | 4 Comments »

7 Nov 2009

Possible Futures by Jude Treder-Wolff

frontThe subtitle to to this book is “Creative Thinking for the Speed of Life”.  So, I was O.K., when the first few chapters talked about how desensitized we are by media, that we are bombarded with ads all day long.  That was just set up, right?

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7 November, 2009 at 11:27 by J.T. Oldfield

Tags: economics, female authors, medicine, pop culture, psychology
Posted in Nonfiction | 2 Comments »

2 Nov 2009

Politically Correct Bedtime Stories by James Finn Garner

002542730X.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_This is going to be one of those posts where I mostly just quote from the book.  James Finn Garner, takes classic fairy tales, and makes them satirically politically correct.  While occasionally that can be offensive (odd, that), it’s all in good fun.

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2 November, 2009 at 21:32 by J.T. Oldfield

Tags: economics, pop culture, satire, short stories
Posted in Fiction | 9 Comments »

13 Oct 2009

All the King’s Men by Robert Penn Warren

n179844This is an epic, character-driven, beautifully-written, philosophical, sad, political, morally-ambiguous, expertly-foreshadowed, thematic,hard to get immersed in, dramatic, ironic, difficult, sweeping book.

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13 October, 2009 at 15:22 by J.T. Oldfield

Tags: economics, education, historical fiction, medicine, philosophy, politics
Posted in Fiction | 9 Comments »

6 Oct 2009

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

gatsby-198x300Somehow, in my years of schooling, I never read this book.  So whatever I say here comes from the notes my Aunt scribbled in the margins 30+ years ago, wikipedia, and my own daunting brain.  Therefore, my analysis may be questionable.  Just sayin’.

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6 October, 2009 at 11:04 by J.T. Oldfield

Tags: classic, economics, Music
Posted in Fiction | 10 Comments »

29 Sep 2009

The Bookseller of Kabul by Åsne Seierstad

967-1I have mixed feelings about this book.  Mixed feelings about the way it was written and its content.

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29 September, 2009 at 21:52 by J.T. Oldfield

Tags: Asian/Asian-American, autobiography/memoir, coming of age, economics, education, female authors, Middle Easten/Middle Eastern American, politics, religion
Posted in Creative Nonfiction | 5 Comments »

28 Sep 2009

Strange But True America by John Hafnor

strange_but_true_america_lgHere are some of the things I learned reading this book: Read the rest of this entry »

28 September, 2009 at 11:03 by J.T. Oldfield

Tags: adventure, archaeology, economics, education, history, medicine, politics, religion, war
Posted in Nonfiction | 5 Comments »

21 Sep 2009

Poland by James Michener

n141000In European History and Western Civilization classes, at least in the U.S., you pretty much study England, France, a little bit of Germany, some Italy, possibly some Russia, and maybe a bit of the Spanish and Vikings.  I’m half Polish (on my Mom’s side), and have always been annoyed with this.  So it was with great relish that I read Michener’s epic, Poland.

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21 September, 2009 at 16:31 by J.T. Oldfield

Tags: adventure, economics, historical fiction, politics, religion, war
Posted in Fiction | 10 Comments »

2 Sep 2009

The FB Zombie Apocalypse Discussions: Post the First

Zombie_GardensmiDetail2In honor of Zombie Appreciation week, I will be showcasing my Zombie Apocalypse discussions I have on Facebook with my non-blog friends. 

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2 September, 2009 at 17:40 by J.T. Oldfield

Tags: economics, lit crit, politics, pop culture, war, zombies
Posted in Memes | 8 Comments »

1 Jul 2009

The Inheritance of Loss by Kiran Desai

the inheritance of lossThere’s a couple of distinct, though intertwined, story lines in this book.  What probably accounts for the “main” story line, is Sai, the granddaughter of a retired judge, and their relationship–as well as Sai’s relationship with her tutor.

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1 July, 2009 at 18:24 by J.T. Oldfield

Tags: Asian/Asian-American, coming of age, economics, female authors, politics, religion
Posted in Fiction | 2 Comments »

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