Tangent Time!: Nonfiction #2

It’s time for another Tangent Time! I had four nonfiction that I wanted to write about and that seemed like too many for one post, so here is nonfiction post #2 :-)

The first book, Pricing Life by Peter A. Ubel, MD was given to me as part of a ethics themed book club over spring break and I met with a group of 25 or so other students to discuss the concepts afterwards. I am very glad I participated in this book club because I feel like I learned a lot about the current healthcare situation and some problems that will need to be dealt with in the near future.

The second book is I’m Feeling Lucky: Confessions of Google Employee Number 59 by Douglas Edwards. It was pretty hyped in the press a while ago when it came out, but I’m one to wait for the hype to die down before deciding if a book seems worthwhile. It was only have a second recommendation from a friend that I put it on my birthday wishlist and I’m glad I did!

Title: Pricing Life
Author: Peter A. Ubel, MD
Pages: 183 paperback
Summary: I will start off saying this book is bound to be super contentious given the current political atmosphere around health care and what our country should do about it. This book focuses on the US health care system and talks about something that apparently a lot of people hate: health care rationing. He starts by defining a working definition for health care rationing, since it is not something agreed upon at all. He continues by making the argument that we are getting to the point in health care progress that we really will have to ration health care services if we want to afford reasonable health care for everyone as a nation. The idea is that every year more and more expensive new therapies come out for the big scary diseases and most of the time they are highly unlikely to actually help that much, so where should the line be drawn of what is covered by health care providers and what isn’t?

I found the book quite approachable for a non-premed college graduate and interesting. It obviously is a very difficult issue, but Ubel explains his thoughts and suggestions very well and it’s something I’m glad health care professionals might start thinking about, since as a patient I had no idea how unnecessarily expensive normal procedures were and how unhelpful a lot of screenings are to do annually. If you are interested in this sort of thing, I definitely recommend it as an interesting and engaging read.

 Title: I’m Feeling Lucky: The Confessions of Google Employee Number 59
Author: Douglas Edwards
Pages: 390 (hardcover)
Summary: Google had a crazy path from start-up to technology giant and I’m a sucker for tech start-ups, so this book was very appealing to my inner nerd. It is told, however, from a marketing department employee who joined Google early in its development, but always seemed to be just sort of along for the ride. While Edwards certainly contributed to Google brand significantly, he approaches the story of Google’s development while he was there with an approach more similar to a fly on the wall and only sometimes talks about his own adventures.

As someone who hadn’t followed Google’s rise to power very closely and simply adored the search capability when I found it (and Gmail when I was introduced to that) it was very interesting to read about the very eccentric personalities of the original idea makers. While reading this book I was constantly intimidated by the brilliance of the people working at Google, and as someone who has seen multiple recent grads get rejected from Google’s hiring crusade, it was almost reassuring.

This book tells the tale of Google from a small 60 person start-up to a giant tech company that just went public, but I sometimes found myself lost in a see of short stories. Edwards approaches this 6 year story as a collection of short episodes and often jumps to events years before or after the current story to explain some dynamic of the current telling. This meant that I rarely knew where exactly I was in the timeline of the book, but it didn’t really worry me that much. What I enjoyed about this book was the fascinating insight into what a successful start-up model is, the very entertaining stories about some now very important people, and a better understanding of what Google’s goals really were throughout this whole development.

If you like tech at all, especially if you think the quirky but brilliant techies that are currently taking over the world are people you’d like to hang with, I’d recommend picking up this book. I found it getting a little long in the middle, but once I got past 2/3 I rushed to the end because I had finally figured out the style and was content floating along the quantum jumping timeline.

Anyone else read either of these?

-A

Tangent Time!: Nonfiction #1

So despite the name of this blog, I do very much like to read books that don’t have stories, ie most non-fiction. I also sometimes want to talk about random things, which has led to my decision to add Tangent Time! as a when-I-feel-like-it feature of the blog. If you are only interested in reviews for Sci-Fi and Fantasy, then feel free to ignore these posts :-).

In any case, as any of you who follow my WWW’s know, I’ve been reading a fair amount of nonfiction lately, so I’m going to glomp together two of the nonfiction that I’ve read in the last year that I feel like telling people about briefly. In this nonfiction post I will include The Happiness Advantage by Shawn Achor and Guns, Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond (though I listened to only the abridged version). In the next one I will write about Pricing Life by  Peter A. Ubel, MD and I’m Feeling Lucky by Douglas Edwards. 

 Title: The Happiness Advantage
Author: Shawn Achor
Pages: 210 hardcover
Summary: The idea of this book is that a lot of psychology research over the past few decades has shown that people are much more productive, creative and ultimately successful in all aspects of life if they are happy. This covers happiness in terms of deep satisfaction with the direction of your life and shallower happiness of feeling appreciated and cared about by the people around you, etc. The book presents the evidence throughout with actual studies that have shown these results and talks about studies that have shown how people can increase their happiness in their life with deliberate steps, such as purposefully noticing the nice things that happen during the day and purposefully giving other people compliments. It tends towards advice to managers about how to increase their employees productivity, but as someone who isn’t a manager currently, it was still helpful.

I’m generally a happy person and have found evidence in my own life that I am much more productive when I maintain that happiness, but it was nice to get reassurance that I’m not crazy and advice that I will keep in the back of my mind for when times are tough (ie in grad school) of how to continue to maintain a happier mindset.

This book is definitely pop science and some of his explanations of scientific studies gave this science major the heeby jeebies, but for the most part it looks like good science and good advice for people who really want to reach that upper crust of performance in their lives but don’t know what they are doing wrong.

 Title: Guns, Germs, and Steel
Author: Jared Diamond
 Hours (audiobook): ~5 abridged copy
 Summary: For anyone who has ever wondered why the heck the European and Asian civilizations were able to make ships and conquer other civilizations, this book tries to figure that out. A lot of the problems of today’s world comes from the inequities of the civilizations of the past, and at first blush it can be confusing to students of history why the Spanish made ships and guns before the people of South America. Diamond explains that a lot of the development of history’s civilizations depended on the domestic-able plants and animals in the area and the fact that Europe and Asia have a major axis that goes East to West where as Africa and the Americas are oriented North to South. This actually makes a big difference in terms of how easily crops can be adapted from neighbors. The major geographic barriers also play a role in how easily ideas and inventions can get spread between cultures. All of this paints a fairly convincing story of why people in one area progressed so much faster than others, giving us the world we currently have.

As stated above, I only listened to the abridged audiobook of this book because that is what I had available, but I found the audiobook still very enlightening, unlike most abridged books that I’ve encountered. The full paper book is quite long, and so if you want an idea of the argument but not all the gory details, I do recommend the abridged version. In any case, I think this book makes a very important argument because it presents evidence that it wasn’t something special about the genes of the people who became the conquerors, it was simply the luck of the land that they happened to inherit.

Well, that was a longer post than expected, but I hope any of you non-fiction buffs out there have enjoyed! Anyone have any good nonfiction recommendations for me?

-A

Footnotes: Happy Easter to those who celebrate :) Happy Sunday to those who don’t :)