Book Report

Ok, so Blink was good. Really good. So good, in fact, that I devoured its 250 pages in 2 and a half days (and still managed to eat, sleep, and stay married). The back of the book promised that you’ll never think about thinking the same way again. (Lisa told me this is called meta-cognition.) And it certainly lives up to its promise. But I think the thing that fascinated me most about the book is the author. His phrasing, his approach, the material he chose to include, how he handled it, and the way he related the pieces to each other taught me about more than just rapid cognition: they also told me a lot about Malcolm Gladwell. Reading a book to understand the author is always an interesting endeavor. Some publishing companies, editors, and other intermediaries can do a pretty fair job of disguising the author’s persona, but never completely. For instance, when you read JFK’s Profiles in Courage, you get a sense that you’ve known Kennedy, the efforts of his ghost writer notwithstanding. A small amount of that effect is intended, but most of the clues about the author emerge unbidden and probably unintended.

Just thoughts,
Andrew

Other book stuff

Alright, so I thought I’d share some other stuff I’ve read recently. This summer, I read The Oxford Book of American Detectives Stories(new window). It was a fun little romp through the development of a genre. I also read The Power of One(new window) by Bryce Courtenay. It’s interesting in that it’s told very effectively from a child’s perspective when the main character is a child, and just as effectively as a growing and grown boy later in the story. I also bought The 9/11 Commission Report(new window) at a military bases in Spain, but have yet to read it. Before I left for Africa, I read God’s Politics(new window) by Jim Wallis. I don’t know that I agree with everything Wallis said, but it was certainly worth reading. I doubt that any critical reader will fully agree about anything as highly controversial as the intersection of politics and religion. But most of the value of his work is that it drove me to think about the issues, so in that regard whether I agree or not is immaterial. I’m also in the process of reading The Harvard Business Review on Entrepreneurship(new window) by various authors and Six-Week Startup(new window) by Rhonda Abrams.

Anyway, I have to leave to go to church. More later.

Cheers,
Andrew

My Book List

Hey, Shinnfans. I’ve been meaning for a while to post some recent books have captured my fancy. I intend to read these soon. Some of them I’ll read very soon (like as soon as I finish this blog post). Ok, here they are in no discernable order:

  1. Blink(new window) by Malcolm GladwellThis book is about the power of immediate
    decision-making and assessment. I started reading it
    today, and it’s every bit as good as I decided it would
    be when I picked it up. Why that is I may have to read
    further in the book to find out.
  2. The Tipping Point (new window) also by Malcolm GladwellBy the same author, this book explores change,
    epidemics, and what drives these things today in many
    different spheres. I don’t know much about it, and I
    don’t have the book yet. Anyone else read this? I
    think I may be the last person in America to read it.
    Talk about being behind the change curve.
  3. Good Business (new window) by Giles Gibbons and Steve HiltonI started reading this book a few years ago and never
    finished it. It’s haunted me ever since, because the
    very little I read changed my life. It really did. It
    radically altered my view of business, it’s purposes,
    and its global impacts. The authors say
    that if you want to change the world, you should
    use business. And if you want to do good for your
    business, you should try to change the world.
    Profound? Yes. Obvious? Maybe to most. It wasn’t to
    me. Worth Reading? Definitely. I checked out a
    version of this from a school library, but I want to
    own a copy to finish, keep, refer to, and share.
    Probably my favorite book of the past several years.
  4. The World is Flat(new window) by Thomas FriedmanI think God wants me to read this book. It’s alarming
    the frequency with which this book (and recommendations
    to read it) cross my path. In the space of four days,
    I’ve been referred to it by a good friend (thanks,
    Alex!), recommended to read it and ordered to read it
    for one of my classes, and saw it mentioned in the
    letters to the editor of the Lodi News Sentinel. I
    walked into Borders last night with Lisa, and it was
    the first book I saw. Knowing that fate would sooner
    or later clobber me with this book, I beat the bugger
    to the punch and purchased it (but on my terms: at 30%
    off the cover price). I’ll let you know how it is. If
    you ever want to borrow it, it’ll be on my shelf.

Well, that’s the short list for now. Has anyone read any of these books? Can you tell me what to expect? Any comments?

Cheers,

Andrew

Word verification

Well, friends, the day has come that people have started spamming the comments section of our treasured blog. There’s an easy way around that: word verification. I’ve turned it on. It means an extra step when posting, but it should keep our discussion free of ads for tarps, glycobiology, and viagara. What this means is that you’ll see a little box with a sort of warped word or series of letters in it. All you have to do it type what you see and you’ll be able to post. It’s one very small extra step, but it should keep us all tarp-free. Sorry I had to do this, and I hope it doesn’t deter from your liberal, wild-and-free loquacious posting on this blog.

Thanks!
Andrew

Blingo

Alright, friends, here’s the latest in the wide world of cool new internet stuff. It’s called Blingo. You use it as a serch engine (it’s powered by Google, so you know you’ll get good searches), and the first 10 times you search every day, you run the risk of winning cool prizes, like an iPod. If you invite someone else to join and they win, you win the same prize! So, in the grand tradition of tupperware, pyramid schemes, and other offenses against humanity, I’m inviting YOU (yes, YOU!) to join Blingo as my Blingo friend. Use it and try to win, and maybe I’ll win something cool, too! Just click on the icon below, and all will be cool.

Cheesily,
Andrew

Blingo

Google Blog: “Sign up for Gmail”

Alright, so this has been a very long time coming, but Google (unoffical motto:”Favourite Web Company of the Shinn Boys”) is now offering their ledgendary Gmail service to ANYBODY for FREE! Yesterday, if you didn’t have a Gmail account, it’s because either a) you weren’t cool enough or b) you didn’t know the right people. To get an account, you had to be invited by someone who already had an account (classic viral marketing). But TODAY, if you don’t have a Gmail account, it’s simply because (despite your best intentions) you haven’t visited gmail.com yet. Not to worry, though, I’m sure you’ll do it. Right after reading this blog post, in fact! And when you do, you’ll revel in the glory of e-mail organized by conversation and frolick in the meadow of 2+ gigabytes of free space. You’ll spend the rest of the day logged into gmail, thinking up labels with which to organize your correspondence instead of creating folders for your various e-mail interactions. Eventually you’ll get around to creating filters, so that your incoming e-mail ALREADY KNOWS where you want it to be! Oh, glorious day! And you’ll never lose information buried in your e-mail program, because with Google every scrap is available to you at the click of the “search” button. Yes, friends, today is a good day. A very good day. And the rest of us (who have been using Gmail since we were yeah-tall) are very happy for you.

2006 Lighthouse Calendar

Exciting news, friends! Shinn Photo has officially published our first calendar. It’s a compilation of four different lighthouses I visited in New England, presented in black and white. Some of the lighthouses were shot with film, and some with digital technology. Anbody care to take a guess at which are which? You can see (and buy) the calendar by clicking on the title of this post or by going to www.lulu.com/content/154719. With the end of the year fast approaching, new calendars are just what we all need! They also make great Christmas gifts, for those of us who aren’t like my wife (who is almost finished with this year’s Christmas shopping, bless her!).

Let me know what you think in the comments below.
Excited,
Andrew

Travel Horrors

Ok, fanbase, here it is:

The mighty Bear pulled into Portsmouth, Va., at about 11:00. This was okay. I left the Bear earliler than I should have. This, also, was okay. A friend drove me to Norfolk Airport, where I was holding a ticket for a 12:45 p.m. flight. Still Kosher. I arrived at the airport at 12:20 p.m., which still should have been alright. I was in uniform, and the people standing in line waved me to the front of the line. This was better than O.K., it was downright pleasant. I breathlessly told the ticketing agent which flight I was on, and tried to check in for the flight. This is where all the okay-ness came to a screeching halt. Worse than that, it actually kicked into reverse and floored the gas pedal of fate, catching me like a deer in the tail lights and running me the heck over. The ticketing lady (who works for United Airline, curse their very name) looked at her watch and told me that since I wasn’t there 30 minutes before the flight was scheduled to leave, she was not going to check me in for the flight. So I asked her if I could re-book, and she said she had already helped me and I would have to go to the end of the line if I wanted to be helped again. I was steamed. My mouth dropped to the ticketing counter, and I stood there and stared at her with my jaw hanging open until she threatened to call airport security. I didn’t tell her that they would probably be on my side. I just gawked at the ugliest little manifestation of bureaucratic evil I could possible imagine at that moment. Then I dragged my sorry butt to the end of the line and waited for more than an hour to get back to the front of it. It seems everyone else in the queue was getting about the same service I got. I met a family who was trying to fly to Sacramento who had the misfortune of walking to the same ticketing stall I did. They arrived just before me, and they actually waited for an hour and a half in the line before being told that United oversold their flight, and they would not be able to get on. The little Evil One told them that the next available flight wasn’t until the next day, so they could come back and try again if they wanted.

Well, after waiting through the entire line, I was back with HER again. She told me there were no seats on any flights leaving Portsmouth for the rest of the day. Hard to believe? I thought so, too. I told her to go ask her manager if she could get me onto another airline. She went through a door and came back with a sloppy guy who was licking his fingers. He didn’t bother to come out, just stuck his head through the door and looked around. Didn’t even look at me. She told me it was up to me to do that, although the travel agent I worked with vehemently disagreed.

So I spent the next 45 minutes with my head stuck to a payphone trying to find any flight out of Norfolk for that day. By now it’s almost 3 p.m. The travel agent found me a flight on another airline. I booked it and walked over to America West, and left all the cranky United customers behind.

When I tried to check in with America West, at least I got to talk with a man that seemed friendly. He was no customer service whiz, but at least he was working at a moderate speed. Besides, I think I would have been impressed with a high schooler talking through a fast-food microphone after my previous experience. Never fly United!

The moderate man told me my ticket wasn’t paid for. There was no way I was going to miss the chance to get out of Norfolk that day, so I handed him my credit card, bought the ticket, and hustled through security. When I was sure I was going to make the flight, I called the travel agent and found out they had also purchased a ticket and charged it to my credit card. So I had two tickets for the same flight, both on a credit card, neither that I was supposed to have paid for. I found another moderate man at the departure gate. He cancelled the ticket I was already checked in on and re-checked me. Disaster was narrowly averted, though I still have yet to figure a way to get reimbursed for the other ticket.

I flew to Pittsburgh. It was an uneventful flight. In Pittsburgh I found out that my connecting plane, which was supposed to have been bound for Los Angeles, was hung up in Boston. I was going to miss my connecting flight. Luckily, a mildly friendly counter-lady working for America West re-routed me through San Fransisco. I then scrambled all over the airport trying to find a payphone that worked to tell Lisa of the change of itinerary. I boarded the plane and found my emergency exit-row seat (ah, leg room!) and settled in for a long flight across the country.

After we took off and I was getting settled, I leaned my chair back after a quick glance behind me. I didn’t see anything on the lap of the man behind me, and he didn’t seem to be using the space. Besides, I had woken up 5 times zones away and I was exhausted. The man woke me up to tell me that he had both a cat AND an infant on his lap, and would I mind putting my chair forward? I didn’t say anything, but moved it forward and tried to go back to sleep. I was asleep about a half hour later when his cat landed on my head. Well, I guess it didn’t land there, but it took a good swipe at my head as the guy was taking the cat out to walk around the cabin. I was grumpy about it, but didn’t say anything. Neither did he, which made me even grumpier. I found out later from Lisa that it’s strictly forbidden to take your pets out and let them move about the cabin during a flight.

I tried to go back to sleep, and woke up later with a sore neck from sleeping upright. No fun. I arrived in San Fransisco to find that my ticket held a departing time for Fresno that didn’t match any published departing time. I feared I was going to miss my flight after all. I didn’t miss it, but ended up sitting in the front seat of a 10-seat turboprop next to a nervous smelly Ukranian girl.

When I got to Fresno at midnight (5 a.m. the next day according to my body), I found out the airline had lost my luggage.

Well, there it is. You asked. Just call me Alexander and write a children’s book about me.

Apologies…

…to the faithful, to those of you who check this blog every day, hoping for some morsel to indicate the well-being or otherwise of your favorite Shinns. I realize this update is long overdue. (I also realize that previous sentence is a terrific example of reverse hyperbole. Does anyone know the real term for that, or should we make one up?)

Ana-ways, (as Edna Brosie would say), (or is it Ed Nabrosie? I always wondered.), (is this too much parenthetical chatter? Am I throwing off an intelligence-gathering effort as we speak?), I’m in Reedley. I’m tempted to say that I’m back in Reedley, back that implies a prior state of physical location here, and we all know there is nonesuch state.

I arrived here after the worst travel day of my life. In comparison to many travel experiences, even some that YOU may have had, it wasn’t that bad. For instance, I arrived here with 10 fingers and 10 toes intact, and that meets the Navy’s definition of a safe trip. Feel free to share your worst travel experience in the comments below, and we’ll all ooh! and ahh! over how bad you’ve had it. I’ll spare you the details of my story.

Well, we’ve had some interesting experiences here in Reedley so far. So interesting, in fact, that I’ve pondered a name change for the blog. How does ‘Andrew and Lisa Move to Small-Town America’ sound to you? Yes, it is a shameless rip-off of ‘Jon and Rachel Move to England’. No one ever said the best ideas lay in the realm of originality!

Stay tuned for a blog post (coming soon to a blog near you!) (back to the parantheticals again?!) about our trip to the Saturday auction!

California Cheers,
Andrew

MORE New Wallpaper For You

The Coast Guard Cutter Eagle
Shinnfans,

Here’s more new wallpaper for you. We saw the Coast Guard Cutter Eagle today. As always, click on the picture to see the the real-sized version. I was going to write a treatise about digital imaging and a defense of its legitimacy as art, but it’s late and I’m tired. I’ll just post it and hope you enjoy it. Comments?

Enjoy,
Andrew