Keeping up with my sci-fi reading trend. Baker has a series of books about "The Company." The setup of the story is promising. In the future immortality is invented and time travel is invented to test it out. The owners of the technology (the Company) make some people from olden times immortal and use them to amass wealth and save extinct species, working within the various times as operatives.
Promising. The story is told by a recruit from the time of the Spanish Inquisition, a young girl who is made immortal and trained as a botanist to save several medically-valuable species. A "Spanish" team of operatives goes to rural England in about 1554, just before England is reconnected to Roman Catholicism. The estate where they stay is divided as far as religion, with factions in each camp. It's an interesting setup, as the "Spanish" as suspected to be agents of the Inquisition (though they are irreligious altogether, but pretend to Catholicism in order to fit expectations.)
I was unhappy with what becomes a main thrust of the story--the young woman becomes entangled with a Protestant "true believer" who had previously been a libertine. He essentially becomes one again, however, taking the girl as his sexual partner for the duration, all the while endeavoring to "save her soul" by urging her to convert to the true religion. The inconsistency between belief and behavior is obvious, but never even commented upon by the girl, oddly, or the others who seem to be aware of it. It all leads to tears, of course, when the Roman Catholic church is reestablished and Protestants are now under the thumb of the throne.
Baker was recommended by the Plano Library based on other books I enjoyed, mainly because of Connie Willis and her books on time travel. I enjoy Willis's a lot more than I enjoyed this first book of Baker's series. I may try another of Baker's to see how the series continues as far as narration and content.
Monday, April 1, 2013
The Inimitable Jeeves by P.G. Wodehouse (Audio)
Another audio book! The same reader as did Carry On, Jeeves did this one. Another PGW book that I've read several times, so I knew what was coming each moment. But it was fun to hear someone else read it to me.
The book includes stories about unmarried Bingo Little and also his eventual marriage to Rosie M. Banks. To please Bingo's uncle, Bertie has posed as Rosie M. Banks ("his pen name") and is found out eventually when the real Rosie shows up, married to Bingo.
It also includes "The Great Sermon Handicap" and "The Purity of the Turf," two stories with the blighter Steggles who nobbles the favorites to ruin the book in local bets on sermon length and the children's races in the village fair.
I listened to this on the way to Chattanooga on 3/21/13.
The book includes stories about unmarried Bingo Little and also his eventual marriage to Rosie M. Banks. To please Bingo's uncle, Bertie has posed as Rosie M. Banks ("his pen name") and is found out eventually when the real Rosie shows up, married to Bingo.
It also includes "The Great Sermon Handicap" and "The Purity of the Turf," two stories with the blighter Steggles who nobbles the favorites to ruin the book in local bets on sermon length and the children's races in the village fair.
I listened to this on the way to Chattanooga on 3/21/13.
Roger Williams and the Creation of the American Soul by John M. Barry (Audio)
Barry's work on Roger Williams spans 150 year's time and two continents. He covers a thorough history of the schisms and changes of religious affiliation in England in the period from 1500-1680ish and the journey of Puritans as outsiders, insiders, and leaders. This book was a great supplement to the Teaching Company class I listened to recently on the history of Christianity in the Reformation era. It expands to cover the beginnings of a church/state separation. Edward Coke, about whom I recalled learning nothing in the past, was an attorney and statesman who was in and out of favor, and who brought Williams into his practice as a lad and whose thought influenced Williams greatly.
Though a long listen, it was engaging throughout, and detailed enough to provide insight beyond just the historical facts.
Williams was an original thinker who stood for his convictions and fled England when his nonconformance threatened his life. Initially accepted warmly in America, he eventually alienated the authorities in Massachusetts and Connecticut and was banished. He fled in a deep snow, and sought refuge with various Indian groups, whose languages and leaders he had taken the time to get to know. He believed that the State should have no role in religion and that all religions should be accepted equally. This was tested severely when the Quakers and Ranters came to Rhode Island, but it remained a refuge for those who had been rejected by other colonies.
I got this from the library and finished it as I was driving to Chattanooga to visit my daughters, on 3/21/13.
Though a long listen, it was engaging throughout, and detailed enough to provide insight beyond just the historical facts.
Williams was an original thinker who stood for his convictions and fled England when his nonconformance threatened his life. Initially accepted warmly in America, he eventually alienated the authorities in Massachusetts and Connecticut and was banished. He fled in a deep snow, and sought refuge with various Indian groups, whose languages and leaders he had taken the time to get to know. He believed that the State should have no role in religion and that all religions should be accepted equally. This was tested severely when the Quakers and Ranters came to Rhode Island, but it remained a refuge for those who had been rejected by other colonies.
I got this from the library and finished it as I was driving to Chattanooga to visit my daughters, on 3/21/13.
The Advantage: Why Organizational Health Trumps Everything Else in Business

Lencioni combines and condenses insight he put into five separate books, making this a quick overview of his concepts and learning. His practical suggestions were a highlight--asking new teams as they come together to spend time coalescing as a team and getting to know one another--seems obvious but it's not. One question he suggests teams start with as they get to know each other (beyond the obvious name and role) is to tell one thing that was a particular challenge to them when they were growing up. He gives a few examples of organizational understanding breakthroughs when the simple exercise was used.
I finished this on about 3/12/13. I bought and read it as a learning exercise for our church Session planning, so I will add it to my business book library.
Carry On Jeeves by P.G Wodehouse (Audio)

It was fun to have this read to me. It took some getting used to to as the reader played Jeeves as a considerably older Jeeves than I have always envisioned. But, it makes sense that he would be older given his wisdom and knowledge, so I got used to it and got to hear some of my favorite Bertie and Jeeves stories during otherwise wasted commute time. Win win!
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