The Snake Charmer: A Life and Death in Pursuit of Knowledge (2008)

Author: Jamie JamesSnake_charmer
Title: The Snake Charmer: A Life and Death in Pursuit of Knowledge
Pub date: 2008
Genre: Nature / Biography

What it's about: The book profiles the life, career, and death of herpetologist Joe Slowinski.  Joe Slowinski was well-known in the close-knit snake scientist community for his enthusiasm for, and some might say reckless handling of, the most dangerous snakes on the planet.  Slowinski utterly lived for snakes, exuding a passion for his subject that completely consumed him.  Like many herpetologists, the more venemous the snake, the more fascinating the pursuit became.  After spending his youth and early career chasing the pit vipers of the Americas, Slowinski became enthralled with the elapids of Asia, such as cobras and kraits. He especially focused on Burma (Myanmar), making many expeditions to the closed land, where he helped prove the existence of the Burmese spitting cobra. In September 2001, Slowinski was bit by a small krait in remote rural Burma, leading to an agonizing 30-hour effort to save him that proved unsuccessful.

Why it's worth reading: Slowinski was a larger-than-life personality, combining the theatrics of a Steve Irwin "Crocodile Hunter," with the fierce intelligence of a researcher (indeed, Slowinski pubished over forty peer-reviewed articles on his subject). Slowinski was well-respected for his scientific contributions by many of his peers.  The book provides a stirring biography of Slowinski, giving a glimpse into the macho and tight "snake community" of snake scientists.  The last sections of the book, detailing the efforts to save Slowinski from the neurotoxic venom of the krait, are engrossing. 

A very good book for those who will stop while flipping channels if they see a snake documentary on cable TV.


Other books about snakes and those that wrangle them available via the Library
:

Mean and Lowly Things: Snakes, Science, and Survival in the Congo by Kate Jackson
Steve & Me by Terri Irwin
The Lizard King: The True Crimes and Passions of the World's Greatest Reptile Smugglers by Bryan Christy
The Snakebite Survivors' Club: Travels Among Serpents by Jeremy Seal

Putin's Labyrinth: Spies, Murder, and the Dark Heart of the New Russia (2008)

Author: Steve LeVineHw7pl
Title: Putin's Labyrinth: Spies, Murder, and the Dark Heart of the New Russia
Pub Date: July 2008
Genre: Current Affairs

What it's about: Foreign correspondent LeVine spent much of the 1990s and 2000s in Moscow, where he witnessed the rise of Vladimir Putin in the wake of the post-Soviet chaos of the Boris Yeltsin years. The premise of the book is that Russia under Putin has a "culture of death," where political murder and the loss of ordinary Russian lives are routine events and of little note.  As evidence of this culture, LeVine cites the overwhelming viciousness of the two wars in Chechnya, the murders of Russian journalists, such as Anna Politkovskaya, the murder-by-nuclear-isotope of exiled dissident Alexander Litvinenko in London in 2006, and the curious willingness of the Kremlin to allow ordinary Russians to die in stand-offs with terrorists, such as occurred in a Moscow theater in 2002 and at a school in Beslan in 2004. In both the Moscow theater and Beslan incidents, the government focused more on killing the terrorists than in rescuing its citizens. 

Why the book is worth reading: Other books have dealt with the growing autocracy of Vladimir Putin.  LeVine also outlines the shrinking of democracy in Russia, but spends more time on the troubling question of why a G8 nation allows and approves, tacitly or overtly, the deaths of so many people, dissidents and ordinary people alike.  As of August 2008, when Russian troops are deep within neighboring Georgia, this book is extraordinarily timely and deeply troubling. 

Similar books available through the Library on present-day Russia:
The Oil and the Glory: The Pursuit of Empire and Fortune on the Caspian Sea  by Steve LeVine
The New Cold War: Putin's Russia and the Threat to the West by Edward Lucas
A Russian Diary: A Journalist's Final Account of Life, Corruption, and Death in Putin's Russia by Anna Politkovskaya
Kremlin Rising: Vladimir's Putin Russia and the End of Revolution by Peter Baker

Thunder Bay: A Cork O'Connor Mystery (2007)

Author: William Kent KruegerHw71pl
Title: Thunder Bay: A Cork O'Connor Mystery
Genre: Mystery
Publication date: 2007

What it's about: In Krueger's seventh Cork O'Connor outing, the retired sheriff of Tamarack County in Minnesota's northwoods is dumbfounded when his ninety-something friend and mentor, the Ojibwe medicine man Henry Meloux, announces that he has a long-lost son, living somewhere in Thunder Bay, Ontario.  Cork finds that Meloux's son is the reclusive mining baron, Henry Wellington (think Howard Hughes in his last days).  Cork attempts to contact the mysterious Wellington, only to be thwarted.  Things become complicated when someone tries to kill Meloux back in Minnesota - someone linked to Henry Wellington.   

Why it's worth reading: Anyone that has read Krueger's earlier entries in his series will enjoy this solid entry. Neither hard-boiled nor cozy reads, Krueger's books remain somewhat tough-skinned but warm-hearted. Readers familiar with the flinty loveliness of Minnesota's northwoods will recognize the setting as one of Krueger's main attractions.  Cork O'Connor remains an affable yet reluctant hero.  It's not necessary to read the previous entries in the series to enjoy this novel, but Krueger's fictional town of Aurora is a nice enough place to visit on a regular basis.

The eighth book in the series, Red Knife, is due this fall.

Similar rustic locale mystery series:
Nevada Barr's series featuring Park Ranger Anna Pigeon - starts
C.J. Box's series featuring Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett
Steve Hamilton's Alex McKnight series set in Michigan's Upper Peninsula
Joseph Heywood's Woods Cop series also is set in the U.P., but features a conservation officer named Grady Service

Lincoln's Virtues: An Ethical Biography (2003)

Review by Doug Wood, Monona Alder and Library Trustee
Lincolns_virtues
Author: William Lee Miller
Title: Lincoln's Virtues: An Ethical Biography
Pub Date: 2003
Genre: Biography

Review: William Lee Miller has accomplished a remarkable feat - he has written a truly fresh biography of Abraham Lincoln. In some ways it easier to describe what Miller's book is not rather than what it is. Lincoln's Virtues is not a standard biography, nor is it an uncritical hagiography, nor certainly is it a so-called `debunking' work that would show us an unworthy despicable Lincoln (if anything Miller debunks the debunkings). Miller does take the reader through many of the events of Lincoln's life, but always with an eye to Lincoln's "moral escalation" as a politician (retain the emphasis on both parts: moral and politician).

Lincoln was a politician. The revered, marble-man Lincoln is typically not viewed as a `mere' politician, but in fact politics and his role as a practitioner of politics - a politician - were the centerpiece of his life. As Miller observes in the Preface "if Abraham Lincoln was not a `politician', then words have no meaning."

In this reader's view, Miller spends too much time on Lincoln's early days - the evidence from the early days is quite clouded looking back through the lens of Lincoln's later. While these early events were no doubt important to young Lincoln's development, whether we can parse their importance today is highly problematic - doubly so given the underlying doubts about the `facts'. An interesting and perhaps revealing set of facts does emerge, however. Lincoln was a social nonconformist - he did not drink, hunt, fish, regularly attend church, or swear - all of which marked him as highly idiosyncratic in the frontier communities of his youth. And yet, Lincoln was no social outcast; to the contrary he was often at the center of social life telling stories.

Miller rewards the patient reader, especially with the chapters on the Lincoln-Douglas debates and the Cooper Union Address. The Lincoln-Douglas debates have provided fodder for the Lincoln debunkers who want to portray Lincoln the `Great Emancipator' as a common white racist (to use a 20th century term). Lincoln did say some highly offensive things (to our ears) about the social inequality of black and white. Without excusing Lincoln, Miller reminds us of the context. Lincoln was running for political office in a state that had recently adopted a constitutional amendment by popular vote to exclude all blacks, free or slave, from its borders. Moreover, he was running against a political giant, Stephen A. Douglas, a proud across-the-board white supremacist. One really must read Douglas's statements to appreciate Lincoln's. Here is the key point of dispute between Lincoln and Douglas: Was the black man a human being with the right not to be enslaved? Lincoln said yes on both counts and Douglas said no and no.

Miller demonstrates that Lincoln rose from his unlikely background to potential Republican nominee for the presidency because of his stance against slavery and because of his ability to communicate his thoughts with absolute clarity. The Cooper Union Address, discussed at some length, established his credentials to interested, but skeptical Easterners and was key to his political rise. Lincoln conveyed his reasoning without evoking great waves of emotion and, in this instance also without his trademark storytelling.

Miller's Lincoln is a politician: an unstinting party man, willing to compromise to attain policy goals, and standing on core principles. (Lincoln the man also shines through as a fundamentally decent, honest, generous person, but that is not the book's focus). Lincoln's core principles were chronologically, first, that slavery was wrong (or nothing is wrong) and, second, preservation of the Union. The Union that Lincoln sought to preserve was no mere gathering of states, but rather a republic, the first modern republic. Lincoln came to regard its preservation as paramount, but also believed that slavery would not survive within that Union.

Miller quotes Lincoln's letter to his long-ago Congressional colleague Alexander Stephens: "You think slavery is right and should be extended; while we think slavery is wrong and ought to be restricted. That I suppose is the rub. It certainly is the only substantial difference between us." That statement captures the essence of the argument with Lincoln's trademark ability to get at the nub of a thing in a way that anyone could understand and no one could dispute.

Oddly, Miller concludes his book at Lincoln's inauguration (after a brief, but interesting discussion of the forgotten and failed Crittenden Compromise). It is a measure of Miller's success that the reader feels regret rather than relief that Miller did not explore Lincoln's Virtues in his years as President.

Addendum: Miller subsequently wrote President Lincoln: The Duty of a Statesman (2008) that covers Lincoln in the White House

The Terror: A Novel (2007)

Author: Dan Simmons Terror
Title: The Terror: A Novel
Publication Date: 2007
Genre: Historical Fiction / Horror

What it's about
: Noted horror and science fiction author Dan Simmons (Hyperion) imaginatively recreates the ill-fated 1840s Franklin Expedition.  The expedition, under the command of John Hope Franklin, consisted of two ships, the Erebus (commanded by Franklin) and the Terror (skippered by veteran Royal Navy captain Francis Crozier).  The plan was to find the elusive Northwest Passage.  Unfortunately, the two ships become encased in ice, Franklin dies, and as years pass without their ships breaking free from the ice, the men must contend with shrinking rations, bitterly cold conditions, and, most terrifyingly, a creature utterly beyond anything they’ve imagined. As his men become more desperate, and the creature begins killing off any crewmember that strays from the ships, Francis Crozier must try to find a way out from his frozen hell, as the creature and cold conditions begin killing his men.

Who will like this book: Simmons takes what historians have pieced together about the lost Franklin Expedition and adds elements to make a convincing, horrific story.   He weaves together historical fact, brilliant conjecture, and Native American myth to make the tale truly frightening.  Historical Fiction buffs who would never be caught reading a standard horror novel, will find this tale utterly gripping – the historical conditions Franklin and Crozier’s men find themselves trapped in are horrifying enough (rotting food, temperatures near -100 degrees, mutiny, possible cannibalism).  Horror and speculative fiction readers will respond to the more supernatural elements in the book.  Great and scary stuff.

Website of interest: PBS’s NOVA aired a program last year on the Franklin expedition.

More frigid horror available through the Library:

The Hour Before Dark by Douglas Clegg
The Shining by Stephen King
A Winter Haunting by Dan Simmons
Ghost Story by Peter Straub