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Category: Books (Page 2 of 2)

My 2016 in Books

These are the books I read in 2016.

The Tell-Tale Brain: A Neuroscientist's Quest for What Makes Us Human
In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin
The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature
The Martian
Thinking, Fast and Slow
The Fifth Witness
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany
Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of a Jobless Future
Too Big to Fail: The Inside Story of How Wall Street and Washington Fought to Save the Financial System from Crisis — and Themselves
Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction
Subliminal: How Your Unconscious Mind Rules Your Behavior
The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion
The Undoing Project: A Friendship That Changed Our Minds
Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioral Economics


14 books, 6,782 pages. Some great books!

Here is a look at the reading over the course of the year. The book in green (The Tell- Tale Brain) is a carryover from 2015. The 3 books in tan (Good to Great, Smarter Faster Better, and The Upright Thinkers) are books that I have not finished.

2016 Books Timeline

It’s interesting to see how it’s not 100% serial. There is a fair amount of overlap. For example, I started 4 and finished 3 books while reading The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich.

  • The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich is sort of in a class by itself. I found it to be an intense and fascinating read. It never slowed (which is impressive for a 1250 page book). (on a side note, here is a textual analysis I did for that book.)
  • I also greatly enjoyed Kahneman’s Thinking, Fast and Slow. It covers a wide swath of the research Kahneman and Amos Tversky (Israeli phycologists) undertook. We are bad at thinking statistically, so we create these shortcuts / rules of thumb that inevitably lead by biases in how we made decisions.
  • The Undoing Project (which is in some ways a follow-on to Money Ball) looks at decision making and tells the story of Kahneman and Tversky. It certainly covers much of their research (with great anecdotes), but also tells the personal side of the two as individuals and as a partnership.
  • Thaler, who wrote Misbehaving, worked with both Kahneman and Tversky. He’s an economist, but a bit of an iconoclast. He coined the terms Econ and Human to refer to the theoretical “rational actor” vs the actual person who behaves as they do (not necessarily as they “should”).
  • Superforecasting was also great (and it turns out I know a Superforecaster – top forecaster in Tetlock’s IARPA-funded Good Judgement Project). Successful forecasters are ones that are not tied to a specific world view (and thus do not feel the need to fit world events into their box of pre-conceptions) and change their predictions as they learn more (not wedded to previous predictions). It is interesting that the loud voices in punditry are not the people that are the most accurate prognosticators, but rather the ones that exude confidence (making the viewer see them as likely right) and are experts at conforming whatever happens into their world view (through their telling, the past always makes sense as part of their world view).
  • The last book I will mention is The Righteous Mind. Haidt does a good job of digging into the different moral intuitions people have and how it influences their view of the world. And there is an interesting discussion of his research on harmless taboos (e.g. the Julie and Mark story).
  • Oh, and of course, The Martian. Fantastically fun read.
  • Below shows the number of pages in each of the 14 finished books. This totals 6,782 pages (average of 484).

    pages

    And here is graph showing the pages read per day by book. I averaged about 19 pages per day, but as you can see there is quite a swing. Some of these books were read in a continuous fashion; others were read in spurts.

    pages per day

    Lastly, here are the Goodreads ratings along with my ratings. Goodreads allows a score of 0 to 5 (whole numbers only). Across the 14 books, I gave an average rating of 3.9 out of 5.

    ratings

    A Textual Analysis – The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich

    The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich

    William Shirer was a foreign correspondent with UPI and CBS stationed in Europe before and during World War II. After the war he wrote The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich which was first published in 1960. As the title suggests, the book covers Hitler’s and the Nazi’s rise to  power through their downfall at the end of World War II. It is a brutal and agonizing journey.

    Here is Shirer’s closing:

    The guns in Europe ceased firing and the bombs ceased dropping at midnight on May 8-9, 1945, and a strange but welcome silence settled over the Continent for the first time since September 1, 1939. In the intervening five years, eight months and seven days millions of men and women had been slaughtered on a hundred battlefields and in a thousand bombed towns, and millions more done to death in the Nazi gas chambers or on the edge of the S.S. Einsatzgruppen pits in Russia and Poland – as the result of Adolf Hitler’s lust for German conquest. A greater part of most of Europe’s ancient cities lay in ruins, and from their rubble, as the weather warmed, there was the stench of the countless unburied dead.
    No more would the streets of Germany echo to the jack boot of the goosestepping storm troopers or the lusty yells of the brown-shirted masses or the shouts of the Fuehrer blaring from the loudspeakers.
    After twelve years, four months and eight days, an Age of Darkness to all but a multitude of Germans and now ending in a bleak night for them too, the Thousand-Year Reich had come to an end. It had raised, as we have seen, this great nation and this resourceful but so easily misled people to heights of power and conquest they had never before experienced and now it had dissolved with a suddenness and a completeness that had few, if any, parallels in history.

    A painful part of our collective history.

    To state the obvious, this book is filled with a multitude of characters and I thought it would be interesting to see who plays large rolls and, since the book (for the most part) proceeds chronologically, when the characters come on and off the stage. This led me to parse and analyze the text. I parsed the 1990 edition which is 1,029 pages. Below is a textual analysis of this book.

    I parsed and analyzed the text using python and pandas. I used a superset of stop words from here and here. The graphs are in plotly. And the word clouds were made using Andreas Mueller’s generator. All of the code is in github.

    Some basics about the text:

    • Number of words: 571,387
    • Number of words (sans stop words): 244,881
    • Number of unique words: 22,748
    • Number of unique words (sans stop words): 22,266

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