I’m not at all a big fan of “blog memes.” But in response to several calls for “less world, more Kip,” I’m starting a sporadic string of weekend posts that I’ll call “Inside the Vault” (i.e., the vault of my life).
One meme that is circulating right now caught my eye, so I’ll partake: “The Book Meme” –
One Book That Changed My Life:
All good libertarians are supposed to say Atlas Shrugged. But the truth is that it was one of the last Rand books I read; I absorbed her non-fiction first.Then I thought I’d be really clever and answer Cosmos by Carl Sagan, but then saw that Rammage of Atlas Blogged beat me to it. Still, it’s the best answer — Sagan made the macro- and micro-cosmic metaphysical orderings of the universe comprehensible. Which in turn made it pretty much impossible not to be an atheist. So yes, a “Big Bang” on my junior high school brain.
A book I have read more than once:
A Separate Peace, by John Knowles. Gene was the first fictional character I could almost totally relate to. But don’t worry, you can climb a tree with me without fear.
One book I would want on a desert island:
How to Get Off a Desert Island for Dummies. Okay, this one’s hard. Maybe The Boomer Bible by R.F. Laird. Because it has more pages than you can shake a pointy stick at, and it would remind me just how silly modern culture can sometimes be, hence I wouldn’t miss it all that much.
One book that made me laugh:
Nothing’s Sacred, by Lewis Black. Self-explanatory.
One book that made me cry:
Cry to Heaven, by Anne Rice. No pun intended. To be betrayed is one thing; to be betrayed by the one person in the world who isn’t supposed to betray you is another thing entirely.
One book I wish I had written:
Anything by James Clavell, but especially Tai-Pan. Clavell is like Rand without the speeches — great plot and character development in some of the most exotic settings at the most “culture clash” periods of history, with clear-cut, but not super-human, protagonists and antagonists.
One book you wish had never been written:
This one’s easy: The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair. That piece of gobbledygook wasn’t “fiction,” it was fantasy. And yet it remains a rallying cry for recruiting foolish youngsters into the lethal fraud of socialism to this day.
One book I am currently reading:
Gotham, by Mike Wallace and Edwin G. Burrows. Of course, I’ve been “reading” it (I’m making air quotes with my fingers right now) for well over a year. Meanwhile, as you can see in the sidebar, I’m about to start Young Patriots by Charles Cerami, about the pre- and post-constitutional relationship between James Madison and Alexander Hamilton.
One book I have been meaning to read:
The Power Broker, by Robert A. Caro. It’s just plain embarrassing that I haven’t read this yet. Before there was Kelo v. New London, there was Robert Moses. And apparently we have learned nothing from his reign of terror.
Someone to be tagged for this meme:
Anyone reading this: If you have a blog, then go for it. If not, then feel free to answer one or more questions in the comments.





3 responses so far ↓
Link mahndisa // Aug 20, 2006 at 6:45 pm
08 20 06
Kip those are very interesting titles, which I need to check out. I haven't read much of Carl Sagan as his time was after I came into the world. I would say that Steven Hawking fulfills the role of Carl Sagan for my generation. Ironically, seeing Steven Hawking in person (twice) I became more entrenched in the assertion that the Universe was created somehow.
Yes, I sure am a biased Christian in that regard. But when I see symmetries pop up all of the time in describing physical phenomena (even chaotic systems) I see order in a way. But I am not a fundamentalist and believe in the time evolution of our existence as well. I am sure that reading Sagan may make one get rid of the thought of an intervening and wrathful God, but it doesn't get rid of the question of how some entity (the universe) could create itself!!!
What I find most intriguing about your posts is how you process information. We can see the same news snippet and read the same stuff yet perceive it completely differently. That is why I like comng here!
Link Dave // Aug 21, 2006 at 6:55 am
A Separate Peace?
Are you kidding?
Book that changed my life: Joyce's Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. Made me see the evil that is religion.
Book that I read more than once: Krakauer's Under the Banner of Heaven. See above.
A book I'd want on a desert island: what is a desert island, anyway? Too flush with water.
Book that made me laugh: will have to get back to you on this. I don't laugh.
Book that made me cry: can't think of one. Das Kapital?
Book I wish I had written: the Da Vinci Code (it's all about the money). Serious answer: On The Origin of Species
Book I wish had never been written: well, there are many. The Bible, the Communist Manifesto, Das Kapital, the Little Red Book, Mein Kampf.
Book I'm currently reading: I'm not.
Book I've been meaning to read: None.
Link George // Aug 21, 2006 at 10:05 pm
I thought The Jungle was a marvelous work of fiction. Of course, I read it blind — not knowing that it was commie propaganda. That stuff didn't really even bubble up until the very end — and clumsily then — almost as if Michael Moore had written the last chapter.
Read it for the story of human life, love, and suffering. It's great stuff.