Thursday, June 27, 2019

John DeMont, The Long Way Home ***

The Long Way Home is exactly the kind of book I want to buy and read on vacation: "A Personal History of Nova Scotia" that covers the history of the place I'm visiting and shows how that history is reflected in the present. Surprisingly, I came across the book in Montreal rather than Halifax.

In addition to learning the highlights of (European) Nova Scotian history -- the competition between the French and English, the Acadian Expulsion, the influx of Loyalists, the impact of the two World Wars, fishing, shipbuilding, and coal mining -- I saw how the psyche of residents has been shaped by the short-lived nature of most of its booms. Its location gives it key advantages that led to it being "from the European view of things, the oldest part of Canada," but people and industries tend to move on after just a few years. The town of Shelburne, for example, grew to nearly 17,000 residents around the time of the American Revolution, but most of the people were gone by the 1790s. Nova Scotia's "defining myths and stories are mostly about loss and sheer determination."

I got what I wanted from the book, even though DeMont's prose and the organization are merely serviceable.

Sunday, June 23, 2019

David Huebert, Peninsula Sinking **** 1/2

I picked up Peninsula Sinking from the "Atlantic Canada Authors" shelf at a store along the Halifax waterfront. It's advertised as a collection of stories about "Maritimers caught between the places they love and the siren call of elsewhere." In other words, it seemed like a perfect book to read while touring Nova Scotia.

All eight stories take place in Nova Scotia, but the plots or characters don't feel specific to the Maritimes. They have a classic structure, appealing everyday characters, and a compassionate tone. The main characters often have interesting jobs (woman's prison guard, submarine officer, Canadian Equine Federation clerk), and animals play an important role in nearly every story. The stories are engaging, enjoyable, and the right length to read in a single sitting. I was pleasantly surprised by how much I liked this low-key book.

Sunday, June 16, 2019

Ling Ma, Severance ****

Reviews of Severance tend to emphasize the apocalyptic part of the plot: an epidemic of Shen Fever, which causes people to mindlessly repeat routines from their lives, such as setting the table, trying on clothes, or watching TV. Readers drawn to Severance based on the zombie-like premise will be severely disappointed, because that premise forms a surprisingly small part of the story. The book uses it as a device to explore life as a millennial, the immigrant experience, and the commodification of America. 

The metaphor was particularly clear to me near the beginning, when our heroine Candace's boyfriend imagines a future where New York City is taken over by chain stores and restaurants that offer a simulacrum of its vibrant culture, and Candace finds herself taking photos that perpetuate the same cliches. Humans continue to desire the same experiences even when the original meaning and impetus for them is lost.

The book also tells the story of Candace's parents emigrating from China, and her job as production coordinator for a publisher. I enjoyed all of the component pieces, and felt like they all contributed to the core theme in more or less obvious ways. Narratively, though, the different elements felt disjoint.

Thursday, June 6, 2019

Sean Carroll, From Eternity to Here ****

While browsing the Philosophy section during our recent visit to Powell's Books, I found myself intrigued by An Introduction to the Philosophy of Time. I suddenly realized that I wanted to know more about the nature of time. (This is exactly the kind of experience I want and expect from Powell's: the abrupt upwelling of a desire I didn't know I had to explore a subject or author.) That specific book was new and expensive with few mixed reviews, so I wandered over to the Physics section and considered the numerous options with "Time" in their title. I ended up with From Eternity to Here, which admittedly doesn't have "Time" in its title.

I am very happy with my choice. From Eternity to Here is exactly what I hope for in a science book: an engaging style, a new perspective, and just the right percentage of material that goes over my head.

The fundamental mystery is why time travels in just one direction when all other dimensions of spacetime allow travel in any direction and the laws of physics are inherently reversible. The answer – or the evidence that points toward an answer – has to do with the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which says that entropy is always increasing. Why and how did the universe start in a state of such low entropy? In other words, pondering the nature of time reduces to pondering cosmology, information theory, and the laws of physics, the mysteries of relativity, quantum mechanics, gravity. Carroll does a nice job of showing how the various mysteries fit together. He is also honest about the limitations of our knowledge: while the goal of science is "to understand the behavior of the natural world," our comprehension of the fundamental mechanisms falls short of that goal.
Physicists are completely confident in how they use quantum mechanics – they can build theories, make predictions, and test against experiments, and there is never any ambiguity along the way. Nevertheless, we're not completely sure what quantum mechanics really is.
Whenever I read a book like this one, I always wonder what conceptual breakthrough will finally allow us to understand what's going on.