Carl Tashian

archives: books & writing

20 Dec 02006

In praise of the long form: free online books

I think our low-resolution computer screens and the global time crunch have biased Internet content toward the short form. I wanted to take a second to point you toward some outstanding long-form work that’s freely available online. So when you get the Sony Reader for Christmas, you’ll know what to do…

I’m not including technical books here because there’s probably too many to list.

The Classics

Recent Books

Please send me your favorites that I missed. I want to keep this post available as a record of the “best of the best.” The fact is, there are over 25,000 free online books. The Online Books Page holds the full catalog. Their New Listings page reveals an uncommon mix of subject matter—this is not the Border’s New Releases shelf. E-books tend to be either out of copyright books preserved for historical purposes, like Betty’s scrapbook of little recipes for little cooks (1930s), or they’re very specific non-fiction releases, like The Paths of Heaven: The Evolution of Airpower Theory (1997). But there is certainly something for everyone here, if you have the patience to dig for it.

14 Sep 02006

the media propaganda model

This is very blogosphere-meta-referential of me, but I have to post it anyway. Below, here’s an index of recent posts written by my physics professor in college, Dr. Mano Singham, about the US media propaganda model. They are his “informal gleaning” of key points from a handful of books on the subject. I’ve really enjoyed reading them.

The benefits of “unbalanced” media coverage
The consequences of having media monopolies
Media self-censorship
The entangled media, business, and political monopolies
The media propaganda model in action
The media filters: part one and part two
The class nature of journalists

13 Dec 02005

How to Wrap 5 Eggs

I noticed Paul Smith has posted some great vintage books on their online store, at much-inflated prices. One gem is How to Wrap 5 Eggs, which looks like a fantastic book on Japanese design. This is the kind of book that’s rare enough to command $200, but not sought-after enough to demand another printing. Intro by George Nelson.

Some photos from the book.

10 Mar 02005

Blink

Malcolm Gladwell’s Blink is about split-second decision making. Specifically, it’s about having loads of experience to draw from when making split-second decisions. It’s a roller-coaster ride—a fast read that hurls armchairs of psychology at you that are surprising enough to make you want to stand up and tell someone what you just read. Gladwell takes us through food tasting labs and military exercises and murder cases and lie detectors and improv comedy and numerous psych experiments that bring up a variety of questions about the workings of the subconscious. He shows us marriage councilors and car salesmen and art collectors whose success is based on the ability to make split-second decisions, or decisions about a split-second in time, by distilling their lifetime of experience quickly.

Gladwell also shows us places where quick judgments go wrong: novice cops, unable to handle their first high-pressure encounter smoothly, or politicians and businessmen who rise to power on dignified looks and stature alone, fooling everyone along the way. He shows us an ER where a finely-tuned and thoroughly researched decision tree, posted on the wall, replaces doctors’ judgment calls and improves the success rate in isolating heart attacks among patients with chest pain—traditionally very difficult to predict because it draws upon dozens of medical and emotional indicators.

There are many tangents on Gladwell’s path. The book feels like a series of New Yorker articles. But I like that about it—my easily distracted mind was fully engaged. My favorite chapter covers the Facial Action Coding System, an encyclopedia of facial expressions, photographed and numbered, by psychologists Paul Ekman and Silvan Tomkins. The FACS provides a vocabulary for the most common facial expressions, and once you have enough experience with it, you can improve your interpretation of facial expressions. Gladwell is quick to point out that we already interpret facial expressions continuously, subconsciously, but that we’re not always able to tap into our interpretation directly, so our detection of someone lying, for example, might bubble up to the conscious brain in the form of a vague feeling of discomfort or fear. Ekman and Tomkins can see things more clearly, though, because they’ve built a vocabulary and spent years studying and making faces.

That’s the real point here: The best art historians may be able to spot a fake from across the room, the best cops can quickly and accurately size up a tough situation, and the best food tasters can taste the difference between Oreo cookies that came from two different batches, but none of this is possible without vast experience placed in a well-developed context. So don’t expect to start mind-reading tomorrow.

This is Gladwell’s second book after The Tipping Point, and while I don’t think it’s quite as powerful in its conclusions, it’s still a lot of fun.

3 Mar 02005

tea time

Grandma brings out the tea tray and sets it down on the table. “So where do you live now?” she asks again. “Cambridge,” I say. “Oh, my! I grew up in Newton, you know,” she says. Again she describes her daily commute from West Newton to Cambridge, and how a nice Harvard Law student gave her and another girl a ride in his car each school day in exchange for gas money. Her voice is very musical, so I start listening to the notes and the rhythm of her speech this time. Again she tells me how she found it so amusing that her “great big Harvard professor” had to walk all the way from Harvard Yard, in all kinds of weather, to teach her and the three other Music majors in Radcliffe College’s class of 1936.

This is the routine that she and I have. She lives behind my parents’ house now, and when I’m in Nashville I have tea with her two or three times, so we can go over the routine again. Her stories are a key to her longevity. She always tells them with the same exuberant sincerity. Sometimes I try refining my role a bit, but the conversation doesn’t change much.

She pauses for a moment and takes a sip of tea. I look up at her painting of Cambridge in the mid 1800s, the one that used to hang over the fireplace when she lived in Westport. The Cambridge Common and the First Parish are the only things I recognize in the painting. She asks again, “Tell me, do they still have cobblestone streets in Harvard Square?” “Yes, a few streets still do,” I say, and I leave it at that. She smiles. I’m not compelled to give her many details about my Cambridge, and I can tell she’d rather not have hers tarnished.

So she continues her questioning, in the usual order. “What are you doing up there in Boston?” This is always the most difficult one for me, so I stop to take a sip. It’s not that I don’t think she’d understand what I do—I could tell her anything and she’d be happy with my response. Her question is simple and straightforward—so much so that it throws me off. For a moment I see myself through her eyes, and it turns my whole life into questions. “Yes, what the hell am I doing?” I think. Am I still just as unfocused as I was last time we had tea together? I say something to move the conversation along. It’s an empty response, and she’s happy with it.

But I can’t get the question out of my head. We finish our tea and start cleaning up. Next time I see her, I think, I’ll have a real answer. Maybe I’ll write her a letter once I’ve untangled more of my life. I want my answer to be as simple and straightforward as her question.


A couple weeks after I wrote this, I got a letter from grandma, in which she recounted exactly the same stories about Cambridge and her time at Radcliffe.

I wonder what stories I’ll have on repeat when I’m 90 years old?

21 Feb 02005

Life with Picasso

I’ve been complaining about the title of “Life with Picasso” since I started reading it. At first I wanted it called “Life with Pablo,” to underscore the intimacy between the author—Françoise Gilot—and Pablo, her lover of ten years with whom she had two children. About halfway through the book, I started calling it “Pablo’s Tantrums,” given the number of times Pablo flew off the handle and spewed vitriol at whomever was close by—usually Françoise. But in the end I decided the title was perfect: it clarified the distance in the relationship, and it hinted that Pablo’s legacy was his only love.

When Françoise first meets Pablo at a Paris restaurant in 1944, she’s twenty-one years old, studying to be a painter. Pablo is sixty-two and has two ex-wives, both obsessed with him (he laughs as they wrestle over him on the floor of his atelier one day), and a son older than Françoise. He’s a scoundrel of the highest order and a ball of creative energy with a youthful spirit, an entourage, and a red Hermés suitcase stuffed with Francs.

Françoise enters Pablo’s life with a professional interest in his work, but—despite his awkward seductions—she soon develops a desire to get closer. She’s hesitant, not wanting to become another “failed” ex-wife. She knows Pablo is a hurricane; she knows he won’t let anyone get too close, but she can’t pass up the opportunity to be with him.

That’s the central struggle: she tries to get close, he backs away. So she recedes and he pursues her again. For Pablo, everything is a game to either be won or, in the worst case, stalemated. He’s the provocateur and conqueror, and no relationship is sacred. So it’s frustrating to watch Françoise dedicate her life to a monster for so many years. She has two children to him, she assists him in the studio late into every night, she keeps his books and she tends his fires. While she learns how to stand up to him at times, the relationship still tears her apart and destroys her health.

But there’s a lighter side to this book. While Françoise spends much of the time describing how Pablo took advantage of her innocence, his fame, his art dealers, other women, and everyone else, she also gives fascinating insight into his working style. In the studio, he’s full of valuable design principles:

“The Chinese taught that for a watercolor or a wash drawing you use a single brush. In that way everything you do takes on the same proportion. Harmony is created in the work as a result of that proportion, and in a much more obvious fashion than if you had used brushes of different sizes. Then, too, forcing yourself to use restricted means is a sort of restraint that liberates invention.”

He hands her a piece of blue paper, a cigarette wrapper, a match, and a piece of cardboard, and asks her to make a composition with them. “It’s incredible the number of possibilities one has with three or four elements,” she says—to which Pablo replies, “I’ve always believed that one should work below their means. If you can handle ten elements, handle only five. In that way the ones you do handle, you handle with more ease, more mastery.”

Pablo and Françoise visit Matisse often, and Matisse delivers wise art historical commentaries. He is the levelheaded Buddhist, and one of the few people Pablo doesn’t vilify. On one visit, Matisse flips through a book of reproductions of Jackson Pollock and other abstract expressionist paintings:

“You see, it’s very difficult to understand and appreciate the generation that follows. Little by little, as one goes through life, one creates not only a language for himself, but an aesthetic doctrine along with it. That is, at the same time one establishes for himself the values that he creates, he establishes them, at least to a degree, in an absolute sense. And so it becomes all the more difficult for one to understand a kind of painting whose point of departure lies beyond one’s own point of arrival. It’s something based on completely different foundations … as far as these new painters are concerned, I think it is a mistake to let oneself go completely and lose oneself in a gesture. Giving oneself up entirely to the action of painting-there’s something in that that displeases me enormously … The unconsciousness is so strong in us that it expresses itself in one fashion or another. Whatever we do, it expresses itself in spite of us. So why should we deliberately hand ourselves over to it?”

The book pairs philosophical art commentaries with scenes of vicious psychological abuse. It’s full of fiery bullfights and private beaches in southern France, discussions of Cubism and discussions of childbearing. It’s an intimate, candid biography of an aging Pablo Picasso, and I recommend it to admirers of art and struggle and the struggle of art.

15 May 02004

long week ends

simpsons-road-rage.jpg

I finally picked up The Culture of Fear, one of the dustier books on my shelf that I couldn’t stomach when the weather was colder and there were no flowers.

But it’s springtime so I need something to keep the darkness of winter brooding in my mind. Barry Glassner’s 1999 book on why Americans are so scared will certainly do the trick. He looks behind the made-up alliterative epidemics of the 1990s: killer kids, road rage, mutant microbes. The frequencies of these things are anomolous, says Glassner: 19 violence related deaths out of 54 million children in the nation’s schools during the 1996-97 academic year. About 200 of 250,000 total roadway deaths between 1990 and 1997 were attributed to angry drivers by the AAA. And don’t even get me started on flesh-eating bacteria.

Why do we make these fears up? Glassner’s not just blaming the media, though they take a beating. And he’s not agreeing with Roosevelt here. He’s just saying that the real trouble is misplaced and overblown fears. Road rage took the focus away from drunk driving, because people were sick of talking about drunk driving in the mid-90s, but drunk driving caused 17,000 deaths in the same period from 1990 to 1997, so it’s definitely still a worthy fear. Asbestos removal from schools in the 90s cost us $10 billion and posed more health hazards by being removed than if we’d taken no action. Glassner backs his assertions up with plenty of statistics and references (I’m sorry I haven’t included references for the stats I’ve given here, but they’re all in the book).

It’s interesting to read this pre-9/11 book post-9/11. I think there’s even more fear mongering right now than in 1999. And more things to be legitimately fearful of. But Bush is really feeding on it. (Glassner: “[people reacting to fear] is the sine qua non of contemporary political campaigning”) It cuts across party lines and it plays out at federal, state, and local levels. I’m terrified and angry, and so should you be. Lets riot!

Here’s how I’m rioting: in a fit of rage I got rid of my TV, shut down the computer, quit my job, and got outside to see how the world is these days. I got ice cream. I went to the library and started reading some books. So far I’m pretty happy with this strategy.

(The Culture of Fear was referenced when Michael Moore interviewed Glassner in Bowling for Columbine)

8 Apr 02004

urban books

I was distracted today by a Wired magazine spread about Christopher Alexander, the author of A Pattern Language and a few other architectural theory books that I’ve mentioned here before. He defines a theory of patterns in our world that move us forward and patterns that hold us back, and he ends up redefining 20th century architecture and design along the way. It’s a self-help book and a primer on rearranging your furniture just as much as it’s a book on architectural theory and urban planning.

The Wired spread announced that Alexander has released four juicy new books in a series called The Nature of Order. So far I can only find these books on amazon.com for $75— the libraries and bookstores around here don’t seem to have them, but the amazon reviews are all glowing and Alexander is being compared to Stephen Wolfram—an odd comparison unless you think of them both as scientists, not a mathematician and an architect.

Also along those lines is Jane Jacobs’ The Death and Life of Great American Cities. This is an urban planning classic, and the book Sasha said made him choose (within a few minutes, apparently) to go into urban planning.

And, of course, I can’t end this entry without mentioning Rem Koolhaas’ Delirious New York: A Retroactive Manifesto for Manhattan. I think if I read all of these books, I’d be prepared to declare my level of commitment to architecture and urban planning, once and for all.

19 Feb 02004

bostonsecrets.com

Yeah! it was available! So I took it. and I put a site there. Ok, not much of a site. But BS will be a site before it’s a book. Books cost too much to make, waste too much paper, aren’t incrementally updateable, and so on. So I’ll stick with a site until it gets popular enough for a book… or just falls apart.

Meanwhile I need to come up with a tagline for Boston Secrets. You know, like “boston secrets: blah blah blah”

I hate taglines.

Here are some thoughts. Boston Secrets:

… finally told.
… finally revealed.
… for past and present residents.
… for resident presidents.
… a guide for residents.
… a guide for presidents.
… please don’t tell anyone.
… listen closely.
… shhhh!
… self-exemplifying.
… the residents’ guide.
… not a travel guide.
… not for tourists. (can’t use this, because of these people)
… seek them out.
… know them.
… what’s worth it.
… an organized city guide.
… is a such dumb idea.
… I hate taglines.
… fuck this, this is bullshit.
and of course
Freddie’s Funnel Cake Emporium (offered by Freddie)

Also, received my 10D camera yesterday. I’m not going to post bad photos taken while screwing around with it so far, but I will say that I’m thrilled. Great image quality, usability (it behaves exactly like a really nice SLR: an actual shutter that pops up, almost no AF lag, no shutter button lag whatsoever, etc), and compatibility with every other (Canon) thing I own.

I do wonder, though, if this kind of digital SLR, which is basically a regular SLR with a CCD and LCD screen instead of film, will last much longer. It seems like they’re taking an old technology and changing it just enough to merge with a new technology. In the future will we be rethinking the digital camera into something entirely new? Maybe an all-digital digital camera?

It’s interesting to note what isn’t made useless by CCDs. These things probably aren’t going out of style in the next 50 years:

- lenses. digital won’t slow the demand for good glass.
- as long as you have a lens, you’ll have apeture, focal length, and shutter speed.
- which means mechanical parts are needed to stop down the lens and to move the curtain, at the very least, though something like LCD windows might eventually offer a solid-state answer.
- the shutter button isn’t going anywhere.
- you always need more light (especially with the tiny lenses and CCDs made today), so you’ll always need a flash mechanism.
- the need for a tripod might be reduced with technology, but definitely not eliminated.
- and there has to be a way to see the results. so printers and digital picture frames aren’t going anywhere.

19 Jan 02004

Beyond the Clouds

I just finished watching Beyond the Clouds, directed by Michelangeo Antonioni. It’s a beautiful, slow-paced movie that often comes across more as a series of photos, or watercolors even, than a movie. Everything is so lush and sensual. The movie is shrowded in Italian coastal fog and thin silk nightgowns which roll back to reveal startlingly beautiful European women. Lots of sex here, but I wouldn’t call them “sex scenes”—that sounds too crude for what was portrayed. Each scene had its own emotions attached: Some of it was out of pity or revenge, some out of love and joy. Some was narrowly avoided due to “pride or folly.”

And within and between all these sex scenes, Beyond the Clouds gets into some philosophical and emotional grounds that we’re all too young to understand. I’ll need to watch this movie a few times—and maybe dig deeper into the Antonioni catalog—if I’m to have any chance of knowing what it’s all about. I’m looking forward to it.

11 Jan 02004

cutting the book open

to Cecelia:

This is more for your amusement than anything else. I had an idea today about mystery books and since you’re the only mystery writer I know, I thought I’d send it along. I’d been thinking for a while of alternative ways to present a novel; aside from the graphic novels currently in vogue, how about a novel that changes typeface as you go along? Who decided that authors be limited to bold and italics? I understand that too much dynamic type can be distracting—it all depends on how you use it. But anything on paper will be visual by nature, so why not make the most of the medium by introducing some well-chosen type modifications?

Of course I’m not the first person to think of that, but I’m surprised it’s not done more frequently. Have you seen a book called House of Leaves by Mark Danielewski? I haven’t gotten my hands on a copy of it yet, but apparently he uses changes in typeface and well-chosen page breaks to effectively increase the drama.

So I had all of this rolling around in my head, and last night I watched “Stolen Kisses”, a wonderful old François Truffaut movie. At one point the main character, Antoine Doinel, takes his latest read and a knife into the bathroom with him. His wife notes that the pages still haven’t been opened. I guess I’d never known that paperbacks weren’t always cut at the factory. It seemed kind of quaint, and the picture stayed in my mind of someone holding a book in one hand and a knife in the other.

Which led me to think of this for a modern-day mystery novel. Yeah, the book and knife thing is gimmicky, but I wonder how the experience of reading a book would change if you were forced to open the pages? Would it just be annoying, and break your concentration, or could the enforced pauses be used as a narrative device? Would you feel required to cut the pages in order, and be less likely to skip around? Etc…

Anyway, I hope all is well with y’all! Sorry I didn’t get to see you over the holidays…

best,
Carl

25 Nov 02003

ZAMM

Some interesting reading in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance this evening. Here’s a little excerpt, which philosophically relates to my earlier discussions about faceted classification. Pirsig first defines classical vs. romantic views of the world:

“A classical understanding sees the world primarily as underlying form itself. A romantic understanding sees it primarily in terms of immediate appearance. If you were to show an engine or a mechanical drawing or electronic schematic to a romantic it is unlikely he would see much of interest in it. It has no appeal because the reality he sees in its surface. Dull, complex lists of names, lines and numbers. Nothing interesting. But if you were to show the same blueprint or schematic or give the same description to a classical person he might look at it and then become fascinated by it because he sees that within the lines and shapes and symbols is a tremendous richness of underlying form.

“The romantic mode is primarily inspirational, imaginative, creative, intuitive. Feelings rather than facts predominate. ‘Art’ when it is opposed to ‘Science’ is often romantic. It does not proceed by reason or by laws. It proceeds by feeling, intuition, and esthetic conscience…”

and so on. the classic dichotomy. Then here’s where it gets interesting:

“We take a handful of sand from the endless landscape of awareness and call that handful of sand the world … Once we have the handful of sand, the world of which we are conscious, a process of discrimination goes to work on it … We divide the sand into parts. This and that. Here and there. Black and white. Now and then. The discrimination is the division of the conscious universe into parts.

“The handful of sand looks uniform at first, but the longer we look at it the more diverse we find it to be. Each grain of sand is different. No two are alike. Some are similar in one way, some are similar in another way, and we can form the sand into separate piles on the basis of this similarity and dissimilarity. Shades of color in different piles—sizes in different piles—grain shapes in different piles—subtypes of grain shapes in different piles—grades of opacity in different piles—and so on, and on, and on. You’d think the process of subdivison and classification would come to an end somewhere, but it doesn’t. It just goes on and on.

“Classical understanding is concerned with the piles and the basis for sorting and interrelating them. Romantic understanding is directed toward the handful of sand before the sorting begins. Both are valid ways of looking at the world although irreconcilable with each other.

“What has become an urgent necessity is a way of looking at the world that does violence to niether of these two kinds of understanding and unites them into one. Such an understanding would not reject sand-sorting or contemplation of unsorted sand for its own sake. Such an understanding will instead seek to direct attention to the endless landscape from which the sand is taken…”

One twist on this that came to mind for me was what I’d call romantic classifications, such as allmusic, where you can start with an artist and say “I want something more playful” or “more dark” or “less sophisticated” or “similarly harsh but more arranged”. If you step back further and look at genres of media, some have only vague emotional ties (“rock and roll” might be somewhat harsh and rebellious, but not necessarily… “classical” might be relaxing and proper, but not necessarily) and others are completey emotionally detached (“documentary” has only to do with the approach to filmmaking, it doesn’t have to be educational or shocking or anything else). So it’s not surprising that allmusic chose to reclassify their database.

Speaking of media classification, have you seen this article about the group trying to find an algorithm for pop music? I like the other potential uses for the database that Polyphonic HMI is building… for example, computer-generated mix tapes. Not only could the computer find recommended music based on your current collection, it could also build a mix tape that has a nice balance of loud/soft, slow/fast tempo, etc…!

21 Nov 02003

zen and the art...

I bought Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance a long time ago and its sat next to my bed for ages. Eventually it moved to the bookshelf. Then a girl mentioned it totally out of the blue (I like that: it indicates to me that it’s constantly at the front of her mind, so it must be meaningful) and she insisted that I read it.

I’m now enthralled. Originally published in 1974, this book has lost none of its relevance. I guess that’s what makes it a classic. So far it seems the author thinks a lot like I do, and he feels like an outsider as a result.

I’ll post more when I pass the 100 page mark (where, apparently, it starts to get really good.)

10 Sep 02003

blogging

I need to make more time for blogging. It’s harder than I thought! The ideas are coming up but I’m not writing them. And there’s not a lot of administrative excise to this thing. I just always seem to come up with things at inopportune times. I want to be able to compose blogs in my head and post them from there.

But I can’t.. so the ideas fade.

I have a lot more respect now, in a way, for people who really put the time into their blogs. On the other hand, they probably have a lot filler, and I don’t.

Hmm.. except for this entry. This entry is definitely filler.

9 Aug 02003

Boston Secrets

In the morning, I drafted an abstract for Boston Secrets:

Boston is chock full of secrets, and it keeps them closely guarded. It’s a city rich in history and culture, with endless resources for everyone, provided you know where to go…

This book is not for tourists. You could fill a library with Boston travel guidebooks, but once you’ve visited Quincy Market as a Boston resident, you’ll understand that those books show a limited picture. Tourists are herded to and fro within their own part of town. But behind the Market, behind Hanover Street and Harvard Square, and beyond the city limits, if you know the right alleys to follow and the right doors to knock on, you’ll find the local side of Boston. This is the realm of Boston Secrets. I hope this book will be of interest to newcomers and long-time residents alike.

This book could be expanded in a couple ways: horizontally, into a series of Secrets books for different cities, and vertically, into a web service for sharing secrets and selling the book.

Feeling inspired in the afternoon, had the rare pleasure of sitting down and listening to music through headphones in a quiet room. Everything sounds beautiful. Noticed some interesting new production in David Gray’s “Nightblindness” — the reverb on his voice is very prominent, definitely a style in itself.

Played bass along with Radiohead (“Optimistic”, “There There”) and old James Taylor. Found Oblique Strategies on the web.

I’m hoping writing this blog (also inspired by Brian Eno) will improve my writing.