Friday, July 26, 2024

Book Review: Atheist in Appalachia

R.K. Brislin, Atheist in Appalachia: Nonbelief in Rural America. Astute Coyote LLC (independently published), 2023. ISBN: 9798385959662.

Genre: atheism, Appalachia
Subgenre: personal essay, memoir 
Format: paperback
Source: Hutchins Library, Berea College

 

The author is an atheist in a part of the United States where "belief in god is practically mandatory." The book is basically a collection of short essays where the author explores his experience as an atheist in an extremely religious region and lays out the arguments for atheism. 

The book is organized into 8 chapters. At 74 pages, this is a relatively short treatise to read. The specific focus on Appalachia is not something we see often when it comes to atheism. For some readers, there may be lessons and encouragement if they are doubters and/or atheists stuck in a rural area where you are judged by which Christian church you attend. 

However, the book suffers from that same sense of superiority that atheists tend to display. They've embraced science, reason, logic, and the religious are basically retrogrades that still believe in fairy tales. The author here may be a bit more polite about. If you've read other writings by prominent atheists, you've already read the basic arguments presented here. In some cases, such arguments do get aggressive. This author is no exception. His chapter on being vegan really hits readers over the head with the evils of eating meat. Therein lies a key issue with the book and atheists in general. They can be just as militant, aggressive, preachy, and judgemental as any Christian preacher. 

In the end the book for me was just OK, but I can see where it may give comfort to folks who doubt seeking some affirmation and encouragement to leave the old religion. Libraries in the region and in rural areas may want to add the book to their collections, in part just to add a different point of view. 

2 out of 5 stars. 


Qualifies for the following 2024 Reading Challenge: 




Friday, July 19, 2024

Book Review: Eerie Archives, Volume 1

Archie Godwin, et.al., Eerie Archives, Volume 1. Milwaukie, OR; Dark Horse Books, 2023. ISBN: 9781506736198.

Genre: graphic novels and comics
Subgenre: horror, macabre, vintage
Format: trade paperback
Source: Eastside Branch, Lexington (KY) Public Library

 

This volume collects the first five issues of Eerie Magazine as published by Warren Publisher. The magazine first appeared in 1962 in part to take advantage of Creepy Magazine's success. With stories by Archie Goodwin, the magazine features art from artists such as Frank Frazetta, Al Williamson, and Steve Ditko. The volume features a foreword by Forrest J. Ackerman. 

On a bit of trivia note that this is a magazine, not a comic book. As Ackerman explains, "Like Creepy, Eerie was a magazine-format publication and thus avoided having to earn the seal of the Comics Code Authority" (4). That was a savvy choice. Another advantage of the large format, which I highly appreciate, is that it enhances readability. The print and writing are a lot easier to read. In addition, you can appreciate the art and make out the details a lot better with the larger format. 

If you enjoy horror thrillers and the macabre, often with a twist at the end, you'll enjoy these stories. You get stories about monsters, mad scientists, and zombies plus ghosts, crimes, and other mysteries. There is something for just about every reader. Stories are not terribly long, just a few pages each, so you can read one or a few in one sitting. The stories draw you in along with the black and white art. 

I really enjoyed reading these. Granted, not all stories are original; variants of Frankenstein's monster are plentiful, but they are fun to read. There are still plenty of original stories as well. Some of my favorites in this volume include: 

  • "Death Plane."
  • "Eye of the Beholder."
  • "Under the Skin."
  • "Hatchet Man." 

I am sure readers will find favorites here as well. These are stories and art that are a pleasure to read. I enjoyed taking my time reading through this volume. 

The publisher of this archives edition has done a great job in terms of format and aesthetic. They even include the magazine's letters to the editor and the old time magazine ads. That just adds to the overall charm. 

Overall, I really enjoyed this, and I will look for the next volume in the series. I highly recommend it for libraries that collect comics and graphic novels. These volumes are a great way to introduce these tales to a new generation of readers. This is one I would personally add to my collection. 

5 out of 5 stars. 

 

Qualifies for the following 2024 Reading Challenge: 

 


 


Monday, July 15, 2024

Book Review: Tarot in Love

Elliot Adam, Tarot in Love: Consulting the Cards in Matters of the Heart. Woodbury, MN: Llewellyn, 2023.

Genre: Tarot
Subgenre: love, relationships
Format: e-book galley
Source: Netgalley

 


Love and relationship questions are often very popular in Tarot, cartomancy, and other forms of divination. Whether you are a beginner starting out or an experienced Tarot veteran, this book can help you refine your skills when it comes to love and relationship readings. 

The book is arranged as follows: 

  • Foreword.
  • Introduction. This includes advice on how to use the book and avoiding pitfalls in relationship readings. 
  • Part 1: The Major Arcana in Love.
  • Part 2: The Minor Arcana in Love. This is arranged by suits, and the suits include the court cards. 
  • Part 3: Spreads for Relationship Readings. This includes 7 spreads. 
  • Conclusion. 
  • Appendix: "How Does This Person Feel?" Quick Guide. A bit of a quick reference sheet. 

This is the best book if you want to learn about and relationship readings in Tarot. It is not just about intimate love. The book teaches about other forms of relationships. Many of the lessons about love relationships are applicable in settings such as family and business. You can get a lot of insight on relationships in general if you read this book. The book is easy to read, and the material is accessible. Jargon is kept to a minimum. 

Each card entry covers the following categories: 

  • New relationship.
  • Long-term partnership.
  • Intimacy.
  • Seeking romance.
  • Desires.
     

Each entry also includes reversed card interpretations. The entries are well written and get to the point. They are informative and provide options for interpretation. Much of the content is applicable to other situations besides love readings. This is a good feature for learners as well as advanced readers seeking to learn more or expand their knowledge base. By the way, I also appreciate authors that do not skimp on the Minor Arcana. Speaking of the Minor Arcana, the book includes some notes on getting multiples in reading, example if you get two aces. This is a question I often find interesting, and I appreciate this author addressing it in the book. 

Overall, this is an excellent book that I strongly recommend. It belongs on your book shelf. I would buy one a personal copy. I am glad I read this one. I really liked it. A great Tarot resource to keep handy. 

5 out of 5 stars. 

By the way, if you liked this book,  you should consider also reading his previous book, Fearless Tarot (link to my review).

 

Additional reading notes: 

On Tarot as language of symbols: 

"Tarot is a language of symbols that speaks directly to the heart. It can be very useful to discover the vibration around a person or situation, highlighting patterns in human behavior and giving you a general idea about what direction events are likely to progress in. However, tarot can be tricky when interpreting hints about the future if your emotions, fears, and expectations are fixed on a desired person. Tarot readings are link mirrors. They reflect what you carry in your heart at the time of the reading. The future is always in motion" (2, emphasis in original). 


Where Tarot is effective: 

"Tarot is most effective when it is highlighting warning signs, patterns, or issues that need to be resolved within yourself before proceeding with others. When predicting the future with tarot, you must understand that  you are seeing a potential future, based on the information you carry with you now" (2, emphasis in original).  


The author strives to be inclusive: 

"This book is not restricted to only interpreting heterosexual partnerships and interactions. It can be applied to any relationship or any gender identity" (3). 

As for pronouns, he uses "he" and "she," but you can substitute pronouns as needed. 


On that puzzling card: 

"Sometimes you might encounter a particular card over and over in your readings that doesn't seem to describe the person or situation you are asking about. Instead, the card may be trying to get you to understand a particular lesson you yourself are struggling to move beyond" (5). 


When Tarot works best: 

"Tarot works best when you are accountable. It can also help you find what needs to be replenished in your own heart before you place expectations on others to fill it for you" (8). 


Tarot is contextual: 

"However, tarot is contextual. The meanings of the cards change depending on what you are asking about, your current state of mind, or what position of the spread a card appears in. That is why no one tarot book can give you fixed definitions that apply to every concern. Tarot is a nuanced tool. It can go far deeper than simple yes or not answers to your questions, but you must have the courage to see what is truly there" (101). 


What the Minor Arcana reveal: 

"The Minor Arcana will reveal passing situations or events that can be enjoyed, worked through, or learned from" (101). 


What Tarot spreads can do: 

"Tarot spreads help you systematically organize the intuitive information you receive in a reading. They supply structures, sequence, and, most importantly, context for card interpretation" (341, emphasis in original).

 


This book qualifies for the following 2024 Reading Challenges: 

 



 

Friday, July 12, 2024

Book Review: Allow Me To Introduce

Lon Milo DuQuette, Allow Me To Introduce: an Insider's Guide to the Occult. Newbury, MA: Weiser Books, 2020.  ISBN: 9781578636549.

Genre: occult, esoterica
Subgenre: essays, collected works
Format: trade paperback
Source: Eastside Branch, Lexington (KY) Public Library


Lon Milo DuQuette is a well known scholar and author on magick, esoterica, and on the life and work of Aleister Crowley, If you need someone to explain Crowley, DuQuette is the person for the job. In addition to his many books, DuQuette is often asked to write introductions for other authors. Allow Me To Introduce collects 28 of these introductory pieces. As a whole, these essays provide a good sampling of his writing and a broad picture of his interests and scholarly pursuits. These essays also provide a pretty good introduction to various topics in the occult and esoterica. 

The book is arranged as follows: 

  • Foreword by Brandy Williams. Williams wrote Practical Magic for Beginners. (Link to WorldCat.)
  • Preface.
  • Part One: Teachers, Heroes, and Mentors. 
  • Part Two: Classics of Magick.
  • Part Three: Qabalah and Tarot. 
  • Part Four: Thelemic Magick. 
  • Part Five: Enochian Magick.
  • Part Six: Magical Masonry.
  • Part Seven: Magical Miscellany. 

 

Each part features two to six essays on the topic. Each essay includes a footnote that identifies the book or work that DuQuette is introducing. Introductory material is something many readers skip in the rush to get to the "actual book." If I need context on a book, I appreciate introductory materials. 

The essays  in the book are interesting overall. They are not always easy reading, especially if you do not have the extensive background in magick and esoterica, which as a still new learner I do not have yet. However, the material is fairly readable. The author is very good at breaking down ideas and explaining clearly, so I feel confident I could keep reading and learning. 

If anything, this book may leave you wanting more. These essays are introductory material to other books, and DuQuette sets up the books quite well. You may want to go out and find some if not all of the books he is introducing. As Williams writes in the foreword, "reading the books in this list would constitute a mighty magical education" (xii.). 

I found myself picking up the book to read whenever I had a moment, which is also a good sign. You don't have to read it cover to cover. As DuQuette writes, you can "jump around as interest and spirit moves" (xviii). I did read it cover to cover to write this review and because it was just that interesting. It was well worth it. 

I would say this is a good book for folks wanting an introduction, an entry point into some key occult and esoteric topics. Read some of these essays then decide if you want to go deeper or not into the topics. 

Libraries that collect occult and esoteric topics should add this to their collections. This is a book I would add to my personal library. 

5 out of 5 stars. 

 Qualifies for the following 2024 Reading Challenge: 

 


 


Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Book Review: Barons

Austin Frerick, Barons: Money, Power, and the Corruption of America's Food Industry. Washington DC: Island Press, 2024. ISBN: 9781642832693.

Genre: corporate history
Subgenre: economics, monopolies, agriculture, United States, multinationals, politics, corruption
Format: hardcover
Source: Hutchins Library, Berea College. 

 

This account of seven robber baron dynasties and the empires they created will likely be on my list of best nonfiction read in 2024 at the end of the year. This is also overall one of the best books I have read so far this year. 

The book is arranged as follows: 

  • Foreword by Eric Schlosser. Schlosser is often known for his book Fast Food Nation (2001); he has written other works since then. I read Fast Food Nation some years back when it was still fashionable to assign it in some college classes. In fact, I read it back then because freshman composition classes were reading it for their classes, so as the librarian helping those students out with their research I figured I should read it. You can find my review of the book here. I do not always read every book campus students read; it is just not feasible, but when one sounds interesting I do try. Getting back to this review, in this foreword Schlosser does a good job of setting up the book and its context.
  • Introduction.
  • Chapter 1: The Hog Barons.
  • Chapter 2: The Grain Barons.
  • Chapter 3: The Coffee Barons.
  • Chapter 4: The Dairy Barons.
  • Chapter 5: The Berry Barons.
  • Chapter 6: The Slaughter Barons.
  • Chapter 7: The Grocery Barons. 
  • Conclusion. 
  • Book also features extensive notes for each chapter, so the book is well researched and documented. 

At less than 200 pages, excluding the notes, acknowledgements, and index, the author covers a lot of ground. A strength of the book is that it is concise and gets to the point right away. It does not skimp on the details and gives us a solid and strong picture of these baron dynasties and how they control not just the American food systems but also food systems around the world. 

One of the things the book does is: 

"The following profiles of seven food industry barons show how each one built an empire by taking advantage of deregulation to amass extreme wealth at the expense of everyone else" (3). 

Though robber barons like to portray themselves as self-made men, and they are mostly men, that is often far from the truth. They may have started out with a smart idea, concept, and/or product (give the devil his due), but they did not do it all on their own. They had various forms of help along the way. Some ways were legal, others not so much. Often, the American government and U.S. taxpayers helped pay for their exploitative and often morally questionable successes. In at least one instance the legacy of a Nazi fortune comes into play. In another instance outright crimes such as bribery and corruption come into play. No matter how they did it, the barons prospered and continue today pretty much unaccountable. If there has been any reckoning, it was mostly a very minor irritant in the form of relatively modest fines. In essence, they paid their fees and went on exploiting others, tightening monopolies, and making things worse for society in the long run. 

The book is very easy to read. Corporate history books can often be long and dense, written for specialists. This book is written for regular secular readers. It explains concepts with ease, keeps jargon to a minimum, and it has a good narrative pace. We get the basic history of a baron dynasty from the start to how they made their fortunes to today. A common pattern is their ruthless cunning combined with an ability to exploit loopholes, gaps in laws, and breaking the law as needed. They may portray themselves as wholesome benefactors, as philanthropists even, but whatever token good works they do can never wash their bad deeds. 

The author states that he did not write the book to just "gawk at these barons," and he chose seven, but there were others he could have chosen that are just as bad. The book then is about:

"In that way, this book is less about the specific barons themselves than it is about the conditions that facilitated their rise to power. I hope these stories give you a better sense of how the American food system was corrupted and why it matters for all of us" (5).

It's not just the barons. Governments play a role in enabling their power, often rewarding the exploitation. People in general are not that much better. In their constant desire for cheap food delivered fast at any time and season, they easily and willingly overlook the true costs of those cheap berries at the grocery store. In the end, the barons may be the villains, but they had plenty of accomplices along the way. 

Overall this is an excellent read. If you know little about how the American food system really works, this is a solid and accessible book to help you learn. Much like Schlosser's Fast Food Nation,  this is a book that belongs in college classrooms. On our campus, the following subject areas might or should consider it: 

  • General Studies.
  • Peace and Social Justice Studies.
  • Political Science.
  • Economics.
  • Business Administration.
  • Agriculture. 

I highly recommend the book for public and academic libraries. This is an essential read on American business and food systems. I ordered it for our library, and I will actively promote it in research consults if relevant and for reader's advisory. 

5 out of 5 stars. 

Additional reading notes: 

The foreword opens looking back at Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations.  Contrary to what some may have you believe, Smith was critical of monopolies and mercantilism. To Smith: 

". . .merchants and manufacturers were 'an order of men, whose interest is never exactly the same with that of the public, who have generally an interest to deceive and even to oppress the public'" (qtd. in xi).

That sounds very familiar, and it is certainly applicable to the barons in the book. 

Schlosser on unchecked market power: 

""Unchecked market power allows corporations to charge unfair prices, stifle innovation, set the prices paid to independent producers, break labor unions, and cut wages. It is the central driving force of inequality" (xiii). 


Why this book is so important: 

"The way in which the United States produces and distributes its food has a profound effect on worker rights, animal welfare, air quality, water quality, the landscape, rural communities, public health, international trade, and the global climate. Even the DNA of sentient creatures is now owned, manipulated, and sold to American farmers by a handful of corporations. Four companies control 66 percent of hog genetics; three companies control 95 percent of broiler chicken genetics; two companies control 99 percent of turkey genetics" (xiii). 

On a side note, when I talk, comment, or write about the bad economy, I often get some armchair economist or Internet pundit mewling the numbers are fine such as wages, unemployment, etc. As I often say none of the "experts" ask past the well to do. To them, I would love to give them this book to read and then try to claim with a straight face that the economy is good. It is not, and saying otherwise is at least intellectually dishonest. Ask the small farmers losing family farms. Ask the exploited migrant workers in slaughter plants. Ask them and many others if they think and experience that the economy is fine. 


 The template of the American success story, some of which may be outright bullshit, not unlike the old Ragged Dick stories: 

"An immigrant family comes to the United States with little more than two pennies to their name, opens a small business, and works hard year after year. As the family members slowly build the business, successive generations take on the responsibility of running and growing it. The business prospers, and its leaders become prominent citizens, giving back to the community that helped them succeed. Museums, schools, and hospital wings soon bear their names" (29). 

 

As we learn in the book, the coffee barons built their fortune by supporting the Nazis in Germany. If you recall history, so did the chemical giant IG Farben. You can read about IG Farben in Hell's Cartel (link to my review).  

As for the dairy barons, the dynasty founder exemplifies that these folks are not really "self-made men." They may have political savvy and business ability, but they had a lot of help: 

"They perfected the art of using public resources--whether they were water, land, tax breaks, subsidies, or politicians themselves-- for private gain. They are not self-made barons; the system made them, and continues to promote them, even as many family dairies have been lost" (73).  

By the way, I always find it highly hypocritical when Americans bitch and moan about other nations subsidizing parts of their economy while they keep quiet about their own subsidies. At least other nations often do it for a good cause and not just to add money to a robber baron's pockets. 

 

 How to get, or get back, healthy markets: 

"Healthy markets are not a natural phenomenon. As a society, we make decisions about how markets are structured, about the rules that govern them and what constitutes fair play, about who holds power and who does not. Once we acknowledge how these decisions have shaped the food system we have now, we can opt to create a different system that better reflects our values" (78). 

That assumes that decent people in the United States get their heads out of their asses long enough to stop watching MILF Manor or whatever reality crap they are watching and maybe bother to think about something other than getting everything cheap costs be damned. I am not optimistic on that front. 


Why telling people to just "opt out" of the system is basically bullshit. Telling people to "buy organic," for example, is useless and to be honest seriously elitist: 

"Here is the thing: the multinational corporations co-opted the alternative system. Stonyfield Farm and Siggi's Dairy are now owned by Lactalis, a French yogurt giant with annual revenues in the tens of billions. Annie's Homegrown was acquired by General Mills. The theory of alternative consumption ultimately just created a bifurcated system, with healthy options at a higher price point for a few and the same unhealthy processed foods for everyone else. It didn't do anything for workers or local businesses or family farms. The reality is that any solution to these problems that does not directly challenge power is doomed to failure" (181). 


Finally for me, from the notes, three books I am adding to my TBR list to read down the road I hope: 

  • Christopher Leonard, The Meat Racket. It sounds interesting, but it is a 2014 book, so a bit concerned it may be getting out of date especially since it is also pre-COVID. 
  • David de Jong, The Nazi Billionaires (2022). This one may be a while since it is subject to my reading boycott; it is published by a Harper Collins imprint.
  • Chloe Sorvino, Raw Deal (2022).


 

Book qualifies for the following 2024 Reading Challenge: