Friday, August 22, 2025

Review of A Quiet Life by William Cooper, Michael McKinley

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Genre = Novel


Watch Short Review

Excerpts

“”Okay,” I said, my heart thumping harder now.  Meeting with the FBI?  As a suspect?  What?  “Why would I be a suspect?”  |  “Because … well … to be blunt: given who your wife is, since her family is from Iran, it looks like you knew the email was coming and clicked on it on purpose, to let Iran into our network.  Why else would you have clicked on it?”” – William Cooper, and Michael McKinley, Chapter 5, Page 19



“It’s weird if you think about it.  There are eighty million people in Iran – tens of millions more with family ties there – and you get all the big and complicated variation in that group that you would in any other large group of humans.  Without exception.  A simple family dinner of five reveals stunning differences between blood relatives under one roof.  Yet to most outsiders, all Iranians are crammed into one monolithic category defined by a handful of zealots who happen to have seized the government.” – William Cooper, and Michael McKinley, Chapter 6, Page 24

 


“As if Pam had anything to do with this.  I’m just some dude that works at a company that does business with the federal government, one of hundreds of thousands.  Iran hacks everyone.  And millions of people have family connections to Iran.  Pam was not in cahoots with Iranian-government hackers.  She is smart and kind and works for the greater good of us all with the films she makes and she is the last person on the planet who would use her husband as a pawn in a treasonous cyber espionage campaign.” – William Cooper, and Michael McKinley, Chapter 7, Page 28

Excerpts provided with approval by the author

Review

Is This An Overview?

A war between America and Iran has begun.  Cities are set ablaze.  The trigger for the war was an Iranian cyberattack.  What enabled the cyberattack, was a phishing email, by someone who worked at a security company that sold equipment used by the American government.  That someone was Michael.  What the government believes, is that Michael clicked on the link on purpose to assist Michael’s spouse, Pam, who is of Iranian descent.  Even though Pam is American, and Pam’s parents fled Iran. 

 

It is not just Michael and Pam who face prejudice, as all those with Iranian ties become considered hostile.  With a bounty on anyone who looks to be Iranian.  The war justified the suspension of various laws, which lead to Michael and Pam to be separated and taken by the government for questioning.  How can Michael and Pam overcome the persecution?  How far would the government and people be willing to persecute others?

 

Caveats?

This book is based on politics and sociology.  There is a political bias.  The political biases are references to behavior of politicians when the book was written, projected forward a few years with different names attached to the people.  


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•Why is there a war between America and Iran?
•How has America been cyber hacked? 
•Who is Michael Talbot Housen?
•Was the war Michael’s fault?
•Does Michael get out of prison?
•Who is Pam?
•Does Pam get out of prison?
•Who is Agent Weiss?
•Who is Janine Wood?
•Who is Davis?
•What are Davis Truths?
•Who is Nicole?
•Who is Zahra?
•Who is Steve Velarde?
•Who is Christopher Clay?
•Who is Bo?
•Who are the Knights of Liberty? 
•How are Iranians being treated?  
•What is Armor Security? 
•What is the Game Changer?
•What are the bounties for? 
•What did the FBI want from Michael and Pam? 

Book Details
This book was provided to the reviewer by the author
Publisher:               Arcade Publishing [Skyhorse Publishing]
Edition ISBN:         9781648210334
Pages to read:          250
Publication:             2024
1st Edition:              2024
Format:                    Paperback 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    5
Content          3
Overall          4










Monday, August 18, 2025

Review of The Evolution of Everything: How New Ideas Emerge by Matt Ridley

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Book Club Event = Book List (09/27/2025)
Intriguing Connections = 1) The Evolution of Evolution, 2) To Cooperate Or To Defect?



Watch Short Review

Excerpts

“The word ‘evolution’ originally means ‘unfolding.’  Evolution is a story, a narrative of how things change.  It is a word freighted with many other meanings, of particular kinds of change.  It implies the emergence of something from something else.  It has come to carry a connotation of incremental and gradual change, the opposite of sudden revolution.  It is both spontaneous and inexorable.  It suggests cumulative change from simple beginnings.  It brings the implication of change that comes from within, rather than being directed from without.  It also usually implies change that has no goal, but is open-minded about where it ends up.  And it has of course acquired the very specific meaning of genetic descent with modification over the generations in biological creatures through the mechanism of natural selection.” – Matt Ridley, Prologue, Page 7


“As this illustrates, the chief reason that copying is not much cheaper than original discovery is ‘tacit knowledge’.  Most of the little tricks and short cuts that industrialists follow to achieve their results remain in their heads.  Even the most explicit paper or patent application fails to reveal nearly enough to help another to retrace your steps through the maze of possible experiments.  One study of lasers found that blueprints and written reports were quite inadequate to help others copy laser design: you had to go and talk to people who had done it.” – Matt Ridley, Chapter 7: The Evolution of Technology, Page 126


 

“The very purpose of education has been distorted all too often by a top-down fantasy.  Rarely, if ever, has the purpose of state education been to add scholarship and generate knowledge.  The purpose instead is to train an obedient citizenry, loyal to the nation, likely to deliver economic growth and brainwashed with the latest fashion in ideology.” – Matt Ridley, Chapter 10: The Evolution of Education, Page 176


Review

Is This An Overview?

Evolution is a narrative of change.  An internal incremental transition into something else.  A spontaneous change, without an end goal.  Evolution effects species, through natural selection, but has applications beyond biology.  Biology and culture co-evolved as biology enabled culture but culture shaped biology.  Morality evolves based on how people behave.   Common laws are not given by government, but emerge from precedent and adversarial argument.  Markets are a form of coordinating behavior which evolve through error correction of products and the behavior of participants.  Technology evolves through the tacit knowledge of tinkerers, with their chance discoveries and experimentation. 

 

Caveats?

This book is based on examples.  Interest in the examples depends on the reader.  Examples and data that are used to support biases such as favoring local individual action.  Examples which reference how an evolutionary approach produces mainly beneficial outcomes.  Examples in which the evolutionary approach produces inappropriate results, are absent.  


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•What is evolution? 
•How does evolution effect biology?
•How has evolution affected history? 
•How does evolution effect society?
•How has evolution affected the universe?
•How does evolution effect culture?
•How is morality formed? 
•How does evolution effect the economy?
•How does evolution effect the market?
•How does economics effect morality? 
•How does evolution effect technology?
•How effectively can technology be copied? 
•What is tacit knowledge?
•How does evolution effect education?
•How does evolution effect government?

Book Details
Edition:                   First U.S. Edition
Publisher:               HarperCollins
Edition ISBN:         9780062296023
Pages to read:          291
Publication:             2015
1st Edition:              2015
Format:                    eBook 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    4
Content          3
Overall          3






Thursday, August 14, 2025

Review of The Land of Hope and Fear: Israel's Battle for Its Inner Soul by Isabel Kershner

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Book Club Event = Book List (10/04/2025)
Intriguing Connections = 1) Get To Know The Peoples Of The World (Israel, Palestine), 


Watch Short Review

Excerpts

“A governmental commission of inquiry that investigated the police response exposed an institutional pattern of government discrimination, prejudice, and neglect of the Arab minority over decades, expressed among other things in the chronic underfunding of Arab municipalities and schools, widening the social gaps and deepening poverty.” – Isabel Kershner, Chapter 6: Sabras and Olive Trees, Page 195


“The rapidly expanding Haredi population posed one of the greatest internal challenges to modern Israel.  Those who trembled before God had little ingrained respect for the state, many being ambivalent about Jewish sovereignty preceding the arrival of the Messiah, or even rabidly anti-Zionist.  By the early 2020s, the Haredi sector made up at least 12 percent of the general population, and 16 percent of draft-age Israelis, though most Haredim shunned military service.  Half the men chose full-time Torah study over formal work, living off government stipends and stirring the resentment of taxpaying Israelis.” – Isabel Kershner, Chapter Seven: Haredi and Israeli: Having It All, Page 223


“Universal conscription had allowed a small, young Israel surrounded by enemies to build a formidable fighting force at relatively low cost, by giving it the pick of the country’s best and brightest human capital.  The principle of equal service had allowed the IDF to foster an ethos of social solidarity and cohesion – David Ben-Gurion’s military melting pot for an immigrant nation – and later, to remain a last bastion of national consensus for a largely native but fractious population.  This status afforded the army popular legitimacy, allowing it a wide degree of freedom of action.” – Isabel Kershner, Chapter Eight: Half the People’s Army, Page 265


Review

Is This An Overview?

Israel can seem united, but is socially divided.  Social divisions based on ideology, religion, ethnicity, and state policy.  Israel’s social identity was formed by people who built a state out of an existential threat.  But after the existential threat was removed, Israel lost its unity.  Zionism had accomplished its goal, and stopped being a motivator.  No longer an immigrant nation, and no longer share a Zionist upbringing.

 

Different factions took their place.  Different groups are fighting for representation.  Those who want an integrated inclusive region, and those who think others are an enemy that respond only to violence.  Those who want to treat other with human rights, and those who defend violations of human rights.  Those who are religious, and those who are secular.  Those who are part of an ethnic group, and those part of another ethnic group.

 

Jewish sovereignty is based on religious mythology.  With the Bible as the deed.  With laws that defend the land for Jews only.  The religious community do not respect the state, as they listen primarily to religious leaders.  Many do not participate in military service, and chose religious study rather than formal work.  Supported by government funds, which is resented by taxpayers. 

 

The religious community wield political influence, which shapes voting outcomes.  They supported belligerent factions, which gained and maintained power through corrupt means.  The Israeli justice system supports justice for Jews, not others.  Contains an exceptionally sophisticated intelligence network, as long as the perpetrator is not Jewish and the victim not Arabic.  For if they are, the network ceases to function.    

 

What Happened To The Kibbutz System?

The region of Palestine had become the Jewish state of Israel due to population size.  The Kibbutz system incentivized immigrates that enabled sovereignty.  The Kibbutz was a farming commune that provided safety for living.  Without the need for safety, the Kibbutz system had failed as there was no longer a purpose.  Had transitioned from being sustained by communal work, to sustained by becoming a real estate enterprise, and through Holocaust reparations.  Alternative income sources that built luxury, and used immigrants as low-income employment.  But the reparation income had declined as members were not sharing their income, causing the Kibbutz to charge members.  Rather than equality, those who are politically connected have more power within the Kibbutz. 

 

Various locations, not only in the Kibbutz, feature foreign cheap labor.  Labor that contains abusive treatment, with the people overworked, and underpaid.  Who live in poor housing, and work with hazardous material.  There are qualified immigrants who do not keep their qualifications.

 

How Does Universal Conscription Affect The State?

Universal conscription enabled a relatively low-cost army composed of the best human capital.  Enabled social solidarity and cohesion.  While the public wants a change, to develop a professional volunteer army, with a proper salary.  The army does not want to lose their ability to recruit form the best. 

 

There have been disillusioned army veterans, who opposed military practices.  Speaking about the practices caused them to be demonized as traitors. 

 

Caveats?

The book is meant to explain Israel’s social and political system to others, to outsiders.  While many references are explained, sometimes the reader would need prior background to understand the content.  There are some Jewish myths raised, which are sometimes disapproved, sometimes used to validate a claim.

 


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•What are causing Israel division?
•How did Israel come to have the land it does?
•What is Zionism? 
•What happened during the 1967 conquest? 
•What happened during the 1947-1948 conquest?
•What is Israel’s identity? 
•Who is Netanyahu?
•Who is Ben-Gurion?
•What is the conflict between Ben-Gurion and Jabotinsky? 
•What is the sabra bush?  What does the sabra bush represent? 
•How has Israel been innovative?
•What was the 1st Palestinian intifada? 
•What is the situation with Palestinians? 
•How does Israel treat Palestinian private property? 
•What happened to the Palestinian population?  
•Why are there Thai in Israel? 
•Who are the Ashkenazi? 
•What do Israelis think of other people?
•Why were there Russian immigrants between 1989-1999?
•What happened to the Russians?
•What is the Kibbutz?
•What is Israel stance on human rights? 
•How does the Israeli police treat people other then Jews? 
•What happens to the justice system when the perpetrator is Jewish and the victim is Palestinian? 
•How does Israel use religion? 
•What is the Basic Law?
•What is the Law of Return?
•Who are the Haredi?
•How did Covid affect the religious? 
•What is the effect of universal conscription? 
•What kind of military force do Israelis want?
•What is the argument for women participation in military service? 
•How did the army change its inclusion policies? 
•What happens to disillusioned veterans who disagree with military practices? 

Book Details
Publisher:               Alfred A Knopf [Penguin Random House]
Edition ISBN:         9781101946770
Pages to read:          371
Publication:             2023
1st Edition:              2023
Format:                    eBook 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    4
Content          4
Overall          4






Review of The Dead by James Joyce

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Genre = Novel
Intriguing Connections = Get To Know The Peoples Of The World (Ireland)


Watch Short Review

Review

Is This An Overview?

Gabriel and Gretta are at an annual dance.  Gabriel is generally self-absorbed, but notices that Gretta has an emotional response to a song.  A song that makes Gretta reminisce about a boy, who loved Gretta, who Gretta think died for Gretta.  Gabriel disapproved Gretta making a comparison between Gabriel and the dead boy.  But then Gabriel thinks further about the story Gretta told, and tears fill Gabriel’s eyes.  How does Gretta’s story change Gabriel? 


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•Who is Lily?
•What is Misses Morkan’s annual dance?
•Who is Gabriel? 
•Who is Gretta?
•What does the song, The Lass of Aughrim, represent for Gretta?

Book Details
Publisher:               Bantam Dell [Random House]
Edition ISBN:         9780553213805
Pages to read:          209
Publication:             2005
1st Edition:              1914
Format:                    Paperback

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    1
Content          1
Overall          1




 

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Review of Grace by James Joyce

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Genre = Novel
Intriguing Connections = Get To Know The Peoples Of The World (Ireland)


Watch Short Review

Review

Is This An Overview?

Kernan has lost grace.  Of the physical and spiritual kind.  Kernan has a fall, due to being a drunk.  Kernan has lost socioeconomic status.  Kernan’s friends think that the problems come from the spiritual.  Kernan was a Protestant, until a conversion to Catholicism, but it was noted that Kernan did not fully take on Catholicism.  Kernan’s friends think that a retreat, can restore the spiritual balance of Kernan.  Does Kernan go on the retreat?  What does Kernan think of God’s grace?  What behavioral decision does Kernan do to rectify the situation?

 

Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•Who is Tom Kernan?
•Who is Cunningham?
•Who is M’Coy?
•Who is Power?
•What is Kernan’s socioeconomic status?
•What religion is Kernan?
•What does Kernan think of the Church?
•What is grace?

Book Details
Publisher:               Bantam Dell [Random House]
Edition ISBN:         9780553213805
Pages to read:          209
Publication:             2005
1st Edition:              1914
Format:                    Paperback

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    2
Content          2
Overall          1