Friday, January 19, 2018

Lab Girl

Lab GirlLab Girl by Hope Jahren
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Sometimes your life story is defined as much by the paths you did not take as the ones you did. I felt a kinship with Jahren simply over her enthusiasm for plants. I was a Biology graduate and I loved my botany classes. Jahren understands my marvel over the miracle of a seed landing in the right soil, with the right sun and water balance to make it grow. A seed can be less than an inch away from a seedling, but lay dormant because the right microclimate doesn’t exist. Jahren writes about all of that and more that makes plants some of the most amazing and tantalizing organisms on earth. And she does it in an interesting and understandable way. Each chapter is alternated between an essay on plants—all gold—and memoirs of her life. Perhaps tellingly, either of me or of Jahren I don’t know, the essays on plants were much more intriguing to me. Still, I enjoyed much of her life as well if only because it made me recall fondly the time I spent out in the field. The relationships formed around the search for knowledge is unique, deep, and can be truly plutonic. There were definitely some tedious parts (how to keep a saline bag sterile); some annoying parts (we get it, scientists are poor); and some weird parts (hair in a tree?) but overall I enjoyed this virtual tour of a path I didn’t take.

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The embryo that became my tree sat on the ground for years, caught between the danger of waiting too long and the danger of leaving the seed too early. Any mistake would surely have led to death, and to being swallowed up by a seething, unforgiving world capable of rotting even the strongest leaf in a matter of days.

the grown-up trees presented a future that was as stultifying as it was interminable. Nothing but fifty, eighty, maybe a hundred years of just trying not to fall down,

The adults grew a bit thicker around the middle each year, with little else to show for the passing decades.

Something so hard can be so easy if you just have a little help. In the right place, under the right conditions, you can finally stretch out into what you’re supposed to be.

Each beginning is the end of a waiting. We are each given exactly one chance to be. Each of us is both impossible and inevitable. Every replete tree was first a seed that waited.

Helpless and impotent against the awesome power of Death, we nonetheless bowed our heads in the pharmacy, injected twenty milliliters of salvation into a bag of tears, blessed it again and again, and then carried it like a baby to the hospice and offered it up.

Humans are actively creating a world where only weeds can live and then feigning shock and outrage upon finding so many.

A CACTUS DOESN’T LIVE in the desert because it likes the desert; it lives there because the desert hasn’t killed it yet.

They further hypothesized that the VOC must have traveled at least a mile and was sensed as a distress signal by the other trees, which then preemptively fortified their leaves with caterpillar poison. Through the 1980s, generation after generation of caterpillars died miserable, starving deaths due to these poisons. By playing this long game, the trees ultimately turned the tide of the war.

Plants do not travel through space as we do: as a rule they do not move from place to place. Instead they travel through time, enduring one event after the other, and in this sense, winter is a particularly long trip.

Multiple light experiments have shown that the changing “photoperiod” is what triggers the tree to harden; it can be triggered in July if we fool the tree using artificial light. Hardening has worked for eons because a tree can trust the sun to tell it when winter is coming, even during years when the weather is capricious. These plants know that when your world is changing rapidly, it is important to have identified the one thing that you can always count upon.
 
What if this moss had moved into an area, deemed it not wet enough, and proceeded to change this high ground into the soggy mess it preferred, causing what was previously heterogeneous to evolve into a uniformly green expanse?

Many of the same things that control our decisions regarding what we do with new resources, it turns out. Our genes limit our possibilities; our environment makes some courses of action wiser than others; some of us are inherently conservative with our earnings; some are prone to gambling; even our fertility status might be considered when evaluating a new plan for investing.

His clock and my own were forever out of sync, a simple fact that had placed an untraversable canyon between us. While it seemed that I experienced everything, he appeared to me to passively do nothing. Perhaps, however, to him I was just buzzing around as a blur and, like the electron within an atom, exhibited too much random motion to register as alive.



God Grew Tired of Us

God Grew Tired of Us: A MemoirGod Grew Tired of Us: A Memoir by John Bul Dau
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

An incredible, inspirational memoir. Dau’s life is incredible—that he survived at all, first of all. That he survived with as much grace, wisdom, and gratitude makes it inspirational.

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The Ocean at the End of the Lane

The Ocean at the End of the LaneThe Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I’ve read Coraline and The Graveyard Book and I admire the way Gaaiman doesn’t shy away from the horror and confusion that can come with childhood. Death, disappointment, and fear are even more horrifying for the young who don’t understand or have the perspective to cope with it all. Most terrifying of all in Gaiman’s world is the sudden changing of a parent, whose constancy used to be a source of safety. At the same time, Gaiman also doesn’t back down from the magic that hope and love have and that children are more open to. Once again, Gaiman captures childhood with all its horrors and all its hope.

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How to be Victorian

How to Be a VictorianHow to Be a Victorian by Ruth Goodman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

When I was young, my idea of imaginary play was to pretend I was the characters in the books I was reading and extrapolate what my daily life would look like in their terms. I had no idea how off I was. This book covers a typical Victorian day for both sexes and in multiple financial classes. I found the whole book fascinating and even enjoyed the author’s personal anecdotes. I am now extremely grateful for hot water, modern medicine, and my washing machine!

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Wednesday, January 3, 2018

Funny Girl

Funny GirlFunny Girl by Nick Hornby
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Not as hilarious as other Hornby books I’ve read but still a fun romp. It takes a jab at those who deem popular (art, books, comedy) as somehow inferior to the highbrow. Hornby, one of the funniest authors I’ve come across, seems to point out that pop culture is not only art (inspired at that) but that it is valuable because it reflects and shapes “real life”. Those characters that were scoffed at for being conventional and sell-outs seemed happier than those who tried to be avant garde. Cute, fun book.

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She understood the need for something better...And she could argue that she had talent, and if she'd let it swell and fester, then it would have killed her.  But she hadn't known for sure it was real, and she hadn't known for sure it would save her. 

She owed her mother everything and nothing, all at the same time.

The Book of Joy

The Book of Joy: Lasting Happiness in a Changing WorldThe Book of Joy: Lasting Happiness in a Changing World by Dalai Lama XIV
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I didn’t uncover any new mystery to joy in this book; rather, it reminded me of things I already knew but are inclined to forget, like forgetting yourself and focusing on others. From gratitude to humility they really do sum up the principles of joy. Abrams does a good job, too, of including the Dalai Lama’s and Tutu’s life stories. These are good reminders of truths told in a way that people from various belief systems would be open to. (One caveat...no mention of those suffering from clinical depression).

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Summerland

SummerlandSummerland by Michael Chabon
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Chabon is a favorite author of mine, but while I liked parts of this book quite a lot, I just didn’t love it. The beginning felt a bit too convoluted and contrived. Once the plot is set up, however, and the “rules” to this alternate reality are established, the story takes off. It is wildly imaginative and even somewhat surprising. There is a motley of characters (enough for a baseball team!) and Chabon does a rather skillful job of fleshing these sidekicks out. The lands and people they meet are also strange and wonderful. Everything is so strange and wonderful in fact that it can feel a bit overwhelming. Unfortunately, the ending! Why are endings so hard?! It was confusing, contrived, and unfulfilling. I suggest you read The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay instead.

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This belief, like all our most fervent beliefs, was largely a matter of will.

Believing in fairies was a kind of discipline, and enforced habit of looking and listening that invested the world around me with rich and strange possibility.  Children, like scientists--and, at our best moments, like writers--know that the deepest mysteries are encountered when we are paying the closest attention.

Fairies, the remnant of a departed grandeur, a fallen race, a regretted creation, help to explain the way the world that has been left to us so often feels hostile to our presence.

Coyote wants everything, but he wants in carelessly, and in no particular order.

No matter how richly furnished you made it, with all the noise and variety of Something, Nothing always found a way in, seeped through the cracks and patches.

Mr. Feld was right; life was like baseball, filled with loss and error, with bad hops and wild pitches, a game in which even champions los almost as often as they won, and even the best hitters were put out seventy percent of the time.