Books and Spin
Posted: Fri Dec 01, 2006 6:34 pm
I've noticed that some books get a reputation or spin that is undeserved or misleading. One example is "Collapse" by Jared Diamond. At a family get-together, my mother ("liberal") and my cousin ("conservative" who works for an oil corp.) were talking about "Collapse." Both parties took "Collapse" to be a "liberal" anti-oil-company pro-govt-intervention book. And yet, as I told my cousin (who hadn't read it) later, that characterization is not quite right. It may have some bias that way, but part of the book covered Diamond's visit to two oil-drilling operations. The first was in southern New Guinea, actually a part claimed by Indonesia. The Indonesian government ran the operation, and they did everything wrong. It was awful - oil spills everywhere, some burning, wide swathes of clearcut for roads, ugly derricks and equipment strewn everywhere - it looked like a wasteland, and was. Wildlife was basically gone, extinguished. Then Diamond went to an operation run by Chevron (or was it Shell?) in northern New Guinea. It was an environmental showcase operation. It appeared to be a refuge, and was. People were not allowed to hunt or fish. One couldn't see evidence of drilling unless one was right on top of a drill site and knew where to look. The few roads were narrow, allowing wildlife to pass over. Diamond saw birds and animals he'd never seen before in any other part of New Guinea. The book was quite different than its rep. I'm not saying it's the opposite, just that its bias was nowhere near as pronounced as reputed.
Another book like that is "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man." Its reputation is ultra-anti-capitalist. In fact, I'm ultra-pro-capitalist, an anarcho-capitalist no less, and I enjoyed it immensely. I learned a lot from John Perkins' observations of the "corporatocracy" and related experiences, and agreed with much of what he had to say. I did disagree with most of his prescriptions, but that was not the bulk of the book.
"State of Fear" is another book with a skewed rep. It is considered by those who have not read it as braindead anti-earth blasphemy. Yet, Michael Creighton emphasizes that climatology is complex, and that different parts of the earth may have vastly different temperature readings, so you can't judge earth's temperature on the basis of local phenomena. (In many reviews, the reviewer claims that Creighton says the opposite; this is a dead giveaway that the reviewer has not even read the book!) Another theme is that science can become politicized. It is actually a book that even greenies would enjoy. It is basically a James Bondish world-traveling mystery-suspense book, cliffhangers and all, with a science edge, as one would expect from the author of "Jurassic Park." You wouldn't know that from its rep among some people!
Do you know of other books that are different from their "spin?"
Another book like that is "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man." Its reputation is ultra-anti-capitalist. In fact, I'm ultra-pro-capitalist, an anarcho-capitalist no less, and I enjoyed it immensely. I learned a lot from John Perkins' observations of the "corporatocracy" and related experiences, and agreed with much of what he had to say. I did disagree with most of his prescriptions, but that was not the bulk of the book.
"State of Fear" is another book with a skewed rep. It is considered by those who have not read it as braindead anti-earth blasphemy. Yet, Michael Creighton emphasizes that climatology is complex, and that different parts of the earth may have vastly different temperature readings, so you can't judge earth's temperature on the basis of local phenomena. (In many reviews, the reviewer claims that Creighton says the opposite; this is a dead giveaway that the reviewer has not even read the book!) Another theme is that science can become politicized. It is actually a book that even greenies would enjoy. It is basically a James Bondish world-traveling mystery-suspense book, cliffhangers and all, with a science edge, as one would expect from the author of "Jurassic Park." You wouldn't know that from its rep among some people!
Do you know of other books that are different from their "spin?"