Book Day!!!!!!! I just love posting about new books becouse I read book blogs all the time to catch up on something new. Today I finnished SWAY: The irresistible pull of irrational behavior written by Ori Brafman and Rom Brafman. The book was just suppost to be a placefiller in all honisty and I did not expect that it would become much more. Shockingly this became a book I couldnt put down! It could be the most stimulating read thats passed my door in quit awhile. focusing on aspects of the brain from how we react to group dynamics to what fairness realy means this book will get you thinking. Good for those with a background in psychology as well as those simply reading for fun this book truely toes the line between entertainment and education.
Grade: A
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Thursday, June 21, 2012
First Ever Book Review
My very first Thursday book review! like everything else
about this blog I'm sure this new segment will evolve in the future but for
today I have chosen to share the book
Mop Men: inside the world of crime scene cleaners by Alan Emmins. Not a normal
summer read I agree but an interesting one never the less. Alan, a journalist,
finds that his latest story pitches are not hitting the mark in today's media
and looks for a new angle to pitch. In a roundabout way Alan moves to California
to follow Neal, the owner of crime scene cleaners and his crew of merry
moppers.
While the book can be graphic for the everyday reader I
found the book to be more disheartening. Alan spends most of the book, in my opinion,
looking down on those who treat death with a casual manner. He seems at times
to feel superior to many of those around him while he works on the sidelines of
jobs under Neal's company. This attitude is directed at times to the police
working the crime scene, the other cleaners, those who work for motels or
hotels where suicides are more common, and most often at Neal.
While I see how those who have not been exposed to death or
first responders could misinterpret there reactions to death I find it sad that
Alan never seems to fully comprehend the shift in there thinking or to stop
holding his own attitude as the only "acceptable" model. in fact he
at times seems afraid that he might have gone to some kind of dark side for
thinking like those around him. If you have a loved one who is in a first
responder field you might want to simply bypass this book for this reason.
While the overall book in interesting and holds some interesting incite it in
no way compares to Stiff: the curious lives of human cadavers, a great read, who's shoes I got the feeling it modeled. All in all one that can be skipped
C rated.
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