OYENTE

Moxie1

  • 52
  • opiniones
  • 128
  • votos útiles
  • 69
  • calificaciones

Less than I was hoping for

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

Revisado: 04-18-25

The book is an interesting perspective on Huckleberry Finn from Jim's point of view, but there was too much about Jim that did not feel believable. I read Tom Sawyer as a child, but I have never read Huckleberry Finn, so I am not able to say how closely the book tracks Mark Twain's original story. I can say, however, that neither Tom nor Jim came across in this book as the scrappy youngsters I remembered. Jim's level of sophistication just seemed too high. The practical impact on me as a reader was to make the story feel made-up rather than true.

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A scary book

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

Revisado: 03-29-25

This book is excellent. The author, Jon Meacham, makes creative use of collateral sources to give us a very complete sense of both Abraham Lincoln and his times. On the one hand, he helps us understand the powerful role played by Lincoln's belief in the wrongness of slavery and Lincoln's commitment to the universality of human rights. While Lincoln was a moderate and incrementalist within the anti-slavery movement, his commitment was very deep. The author carefully shows that, although the Civil War not entirely about slavery, Lincoln's rejection of slavery was critical to the making of numerous key decisions as the war went on. On the other hand, however, the book lays out two types of very frightening pieces of information. One is the deeply ingrained and nearly universal anti-black racism of so many white Americans at the time, including most of the abolitionists. The opposition to slavery did not necessarily equate with a belief in racial or social equality. The other is Lincoln's extraordinary and dangerous use of claims of executive power during the Civil War. Even if used in a good cause, the exercise of those powers is something to be worried about in the future.

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An average story about terrible real events

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

Revisado: 12-31-24

This book is a powerful condemnation of the worst part of the adoption industry from 1920 to 1950, in which low-income children were taken from indigent parents and effectively sold to wealthy couples. The book puts the topic on our radar screens and helps us understand the way in which middle- and upper-class society confused poverty with child abuse. The book, however, does not live up to the potential of its topic for at least two reasons. First, in the author's effort to show the evil of Georgia Tann and others involved in these commercialized adoptions, she overplays their bad behavior, making them so utterly hypocritical, nasty, and mean-spirited that they turn into stereotypes that are hard to believe. For example, their lying to the couples who seek to adopt has no element of subtly at all, down to the implicit suggestion that a man in an adopting couple might like to sexually abuse the girl that he and his wife seek to adopt. The text would have benefited from a bit of subtly. Second, this defect, which pervades the book, is exaggerated by the readers' presentation, which does not give us the solid base that would make add credibility to the story. Nevertheless, the book is powerful in its message, and an epilogue thoughtfully invites readers to do some research on their own. To me, the idea behind this book is excellent, but it could have resulted in a 5-star product if done properly.

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Superbly and creatively crafted story

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

Revisado: 11-15-24

This masterful book is a must-read. Author Maggie O'Farrell imagines in every detail the life of late 16th century England. She builds from two key facts -- that Shakespeare had a son, Hamnet (also known as Hamlet), who died at the age of 11, and that four years later Shakespeare wrote the tragedy, Hamlet. From a combination of known facts, an understanding of life in those times, and an amazing ability to put herself in the shoes of the Shakespeare family, she fills in all the details of this story. O'Farrell's creative and detailed recounting of how "the pestilence" found its way from Egypt to England is extraordinary. So is her filling out the character of Shakespeare's wife, Anne Hathaway (known as Agnes). Ell Potter is brilliant as the narrator. When I finished this book, I realized that I had missed many of the details that ultimately took on great importance. On a second reading, the book is even better than on the first. Knowing what to look for has opened my eyes even further to the skilled manner in which O'Farrell has carefully but subtly provided the reader with information early in the story that will take on great significance later in the book. It is really well done.

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You have to read this book twice

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

Revisado: 09-22-24

This is a book that you have to read twice to understand its twists and how everything falls together. The book is about a nine-year-old boy who tries to stay connected to the father he lost in 9-11 by searching all of New York City for the lock that goes with the key he found in his father's closet. Huh? Well, yes. But the book is also about his mother and his father and his grandmother and the renter in his grandmother's apartment. The book is well written and very well narrated; but, on my first read, I found it very confusing, not always being clear on who was related to whom and which character the narration was actually about. On a second reading, however, I came to see how all the confusing pieces fit together, like a giant puzzle, and things that I didn't understand at first now made perfect sense. I had simply missed some of the intricacies of the relationships on the first time through. Bottom line: I liked the book.

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Fascinating and clever

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

Revisado: 09-22-24

The author has put together numerous quirky stories from baseball history that are fun to hear. Posnaski's love for baseball shines through. He is able to speak about events only he knows about from his career as a sportswriter, and he has researched much of what he has written by following off-beat leads from his primary them. And his reading of this first-person narrative is great because it feels so real.

But who thought it would be a good idea to have a woman narrate part of the book? That choice sabotages the audiobook. Posnanski is his own narrator, and the book is written in the first person as he talks about his own experiences.
Almost half of the stories, however, are read by Ellen Adair, in all of which she reads "I did this" or "I covered this event" or "I spoke with so and so." But, of course, she didn't -- Posnanski did. This reader choice undercuts the spirit of the book in regard to those incidents that she reads. It's not her fault. It's just that this kind of very personal first-person book by a male author cannot be read credibly by a woman, especially when the male author, with whose voice we become familiar in the parts that he reads, is narrating the rest of the book in the first person.

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A very funny book

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

Revisado: 07-08-24

I'm new to Richard Russo, but "Straight Man" has probably hooked me on him forever. I love his low key ironic sense of humor. This book, in which the main characters are all academics or academic-related, pokes gentle but accurate fun at men who are very smart but can be very stupid. Sam Freed is brilliant as a reader. I was offended by a racist rant by one of the non-academic characters late in the book (it went on much longer than necessary to make its point), but everything else felt just perfect. I recommend it highly.

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Powerful condemnation of colonialism in Africa

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

Revisado: 06-10-24

Set around 1960 at a time when the Congo is becoming independent from Belgium, this book follows the family of an evangelist Baptist minister who goes on mission to Africa to save the heathen Africans and convert them to Christianity. He has no understanding or respect whatsoever for African customs and practices. His wife and four daughters are forever changed by the events that occur. The author's detailed and perspective treatment of these non-urban African communities brilliantly reveals to us the harsh and destructive consequences of the arrogance of European colonialism and its American support.
One minor downside: The narrator sometimes reads too quickly and does not always create distinctly difference voices for each of the characters.

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Brilliant, sensitive, and captivating

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

Revisado: 05-15-24

I really loved this book. Talk about a tough life. This survivor of a boy is a character that you want to meet. Funny, perceptive, ironic, determined, resilient -- he is all of these. Barbara Kingsolver's writing is brilliant, and narrator Charlie Thurston completely becomes the main character. This book compares very favorably with "This Boy's Life," a book with a similar theme I read recently. The hard-life boy in that book, however, lacks the redeeming qualities of Demon. In particular, he lacks the ability to overcome the obstacles in his way. Demon is different. He gets it; he pushes back; he knows the difference between right and wrong; and he survives on his own terms.

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Boring

Total
1 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
2 out of 5 stars
Historia
1 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 11-22-23

I tried -- I really tried -- to fight my way through this book; but I gave up about two-thirds of the way through. Kombusch just isn't that interesting.

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