Thursday, December 31, 2009

Top reasons why I would never buy an e-reader


In this age of facebooking, tweeting, texting, you-tubing, and yes, blogging - I like to think that there are some things that can be done the old fashioned way... like reading. If there's one thing that takes you away from tiny little screens, big screens, keyboards and keypads - it's a book. That final sanctuary where the turn of a page can take you a million miles away from the ordinary. You might say that an e-reader does pretty much the same (except that you don't really turn a page - that difficult task has been automated by the touch of a button), plus it offers the added benefits of having all of your favorite titles in the same place. But before I start sounding like a commercial for an e-reader, let me just state for the record: I refuse to buy an e-reader. I refuse to buy an e-reader just for the sake of having one more electronic toy with a touch-screen. And here are some other reasons why:


- I like the feel of a book in my hands.
- I like turning the pages, and making dog-ear marks to indicate my favorite passages.
- I like seeing the books I've read on my bookshelf. I like opening up an old book and seeing my name or a message scrawled on the inside of the book cover.
- I like walking into a bookstore and seeing shelves of shiny new book covers.
- I know I can count on a book even when a coffee shop doesn't have Wi-Fi or a power outlet.
- I don't have to turn it off during take off and landing.


Here's hoping that more people decide to turn a page, instead of pressing another button......

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

The Informant - Kurt Eichenwald


A PhD from Cornell, a lucrative career at a Fortune 500 company, a 3 year stint as an FBI informant, and almost 10 years in federal prison.. Mark Whitacre's story as described by Kurt Eichenwald is as bizarre as it is true.


Eichenwald takes the reader through Whitacre's role in the biggest antitrust case ever tried in the United States. Whitacre's employer, ADM, is a global supplier of agricultural products. In their own words, "the competitors are our friends, the customer are our enemies" - and in the spirit of this prinicple, ADM engaged in a price fixing scheme with some of their largest international competitors. That may sound humdrum, but Eichenwald's description of the FBI investigation, that involved secret tapings of top executives at these price fixing meetings, across 5 different countries for 3 years, is only the beginning of a complex case that has more twists and turns than a John Grisham novel. But it's even better than a John Grisham novel, because it's all true! The first half of the book focuses on the FBI investigation and Whitacre's role as an informant. There is chapter after chapter of incriminating evidence which the author diseminates in an engaging narrative.


And it doesn't end there. Whitacre's credibility as a key witness for the prosecution is called into question when allegations of fraud and money laundering are brought against him. Eichenwald sifts through mountains of research material - audio tapes, video tapes, interviews, court documents - to examine Whitacre's motivation as a whistle blower in light of all these accusations. Eichenwald does a good job of being unbiased and laying out the evidence as it is. It's for the reader to judge whether Whitacre is an unsung hero, a crook, someone with serious mental health issues, or simply human.