Monday, October 22, 2012
Bibliography
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Welcome to Keenan’s Book Reviews
A blog isn’t the greatest way to organize a set of book reviews and summaries in terms of quickly finding the book you’re looking for. It’s more like browsing in the library or bookstore. Use the topic links on the sidebar to get to your category of interest and enjoy browsing from there.
Like on many other blogs, you'll see ads on here and I may get a few coins if you click them. I choose the books I read based on my own interests and the reviews are my own opinions. I'll always try to be upfront about advertising in this blog. (See more about this here.)
I hope you enjoy this blog and find it useful. Thanks for visiting.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
New Job
Friday, December 21, 2012
What You Were Looking for In December 2012
Monday, February 18, 2013
Dr. Horrible, the Hamlet of Nerds
- like working with machines, having interest in technical subjects or complex hobbies, and
- prefer direct, logical, rule-bound communication to indirect, emotional communication.
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Interesting Stuff Sept. 21, 2010
-Agatha Christie:120-year anniversary
-Agatha Christie 120th birthday anniversary celebrated by Google Doodle
-Celebrate Agatha Christie’s 120th
-Dame Agatha Christie’s 120th anniversary celebrations
-Delicious Death cake recipe for Agatha Christies 120th
-Torquay on the English Riviera throws birthday bash Christie
Arts commission vote against donation to be revisited
China's massive traffic jam could last for weeks
Comics in court
Comics-inspired art by Bob Kessel
Fyrefly’s Book Blog: Mary Roach – Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers (If Stiff sounds interesting to you, you might also check out Buried Alive by Jan Bondeson)
Greener, Cleaner Hybrid Buses Debut in Missouri
Interesting Stuff August 23, 2010
The Latest in Sudanese Urban Planning: Cities Shaped Like Animals
Missouri Part of America's Marine Highway System
Midnight Children – India’s superheroes to the rescue (This may have persuaded me to read a Salman Rushdie book)
Ray Bradbury: A Sci-fi legend turns 90
Review of Michaels Chabon’s Final Solution at Fyrefly (I enjoyed this book, but didn’t review it for this blog)
Sandman art at ComicTwart (My favorite is the Golden Age
States pressed to fix local water systems
Friday, April 17, 2009
What's New April 17, 2009
Alternative Fuels and Energy Resources Articles and Links (Updated)
Asset Management Presentation Available
Bill Would Limit Greenhouse Gas Considerations in Endangered Species Decisions
Bridge Bill Could Require States to Address Corrosion
The busy googleganger: Keenan Patterson - Silicon Valley, CA Facebook
, Widgetbox › Keenan Patterson commented on the group 'Website Owners', April Fools Day Around The Web Keenan's Blog, New Theme » Keenan Patterson’s Blog, Keenan Patterson (keenanpatterson) on Twitter
Congress Considers Dam Safety Bills
Economic Stimulus Funds 2000 Transportation Projects (Infrastructure Watch, Apr. 14, 2009)
Infrastructure Watch can now be reached at www.infrastructurewatch.net
Infrastructure Watch has a New URL
Missouri Gets Economics Stimulus Fund for Clean Diesel Projects
More Federal Environment and Infrastructure Appointees Announced
Missouri Selects Transportation Projects for Economic Stimulus Funding
Missouri to Hold Public Meeting on Economic Stimulus for Weatherization Program
New Chief of Natural Resources Conservation Service Named
New Commissioner Appointed to Missouri Highways & Transportation Commission
Pharmaceuticals in Water (Updated)
Progress ReportProposed House Resolution Supports National Public Works Week
Transportation Headlines for Wednesday, March 18, 2009
www.keenanpatterson.net now redirects to Keenan’s Book Reviews
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Future Bright by Martin E. Martinez
Thursday, December 30, 2010
On Becoming a Leader by Warren Bennis
Bennis, Warren. On Becoming a Leader. New York: Addison-Wesley, 1994.
Bennis’ premise is that leadership comes out of the state of being of the leader. Leadership starts with a leader’s capacity for self-invention, to shape himself with learning and reflection as opposed to being shaped by circumstances. In Bennis’ words, “No leader sets out to be a leader. People set out to live their lives, expressing themselves fully. When that expression is of value, they become leaders.”
Bennis’ process of self-invention begins with self-knowledge. He proposes four lessons to gaining self-knowledge. First, “you are your own best teacher”; learning is essential. Second is to accept responsibility for your own education. Third, “you can learn anything you want to learn.” Finally, reflection is necessary to develop understanding and a leader must question his experience to learn. Leaders innovate and learn from experience without fear of mistakes. According to Bennis’ definition, a leader is someone in the front, doing things others have not done.
A leader must add knowledge of the world to self-knowledge. Bennis says that a leader should learn about the world through participation rather than reaction. One learns by trying to change something as well as experiencing it as it is. The conscious learner seeks broad experience, learns from others and from mistakes.
A leader must trust his instincts. Bennis uses Emerson’s term “blessed impulse.” Blessed impulse is a tool for making decisions in a world to complex to be completely understood.
Leaders must deploy themselves. By this Bennis means a leader must practice self-expression. Deploying oneself is offset against being deployed by others or the voices of others on one’s head.
Leaders must “get people on their side.” Bennis prescribes constancy, congruity of words and action, reliability and integrity.
Bennis also speaks more generally about the characteristics and roles of leaders. These are similar to what might be found in other books on leadership.
Bennis calls the organization the primary form in American society. He challenges leaders to shape their organizations, and shape society, to make them work in a rapidly changing world. He encourages executives to empower junior leaders in their organizations to teach them leadership through experience.
Throughout, Bennis uses the experience of twelve leaders gleaned from interviews. Bennis includes a brief biography of each leader at the end.
At first, it seems that Bennis says that one becomes a leader by being a leader. This is what he says, but he does not leave the reader hanging. Bennis’ perspective is what is unique about the book. Leadership is the expression of the character, qualities, values and personality of a leader. His is not a direct call for us to become leaders, but for us to become ourselves. Leadership will follow.
This may be a difficult lesson. Buyers of books on leadership are probably more interested in learning the skills of leadership and management to help them in their current situations. Bennis says express yourself. If you are doing what you think you ought to do, if others deploy you, you will not be a leader. Self-expression may take you to something different.
The first step to leadership is self-knowledge. A useful tool is self-evaluation, what Bennis calls “tests and measures.” Bennis offers a set of four tests—really four statements. One could apply the tests with pencil and paper, making lists in response to each statement. Of all the tools and suggestions in the book, this set of tests is the most clear and immediately applicable. A reader wanting to apply Bennis’ lessons would do well to start here.
Little else can be used immediately. Changes in point of view and lifestyle take time. One might argue that only a few Bennis’ suggested activities are specific to developing leadership. To me, much of it sounds fun and interesting. That is the point Bennis is trying to make: leadership comes out of broad experience, education, perspective, desire, mastery of one’s discipline and synthesis of ideas.
My own experience validates this. I am as proud of my single published poem as I am of my accomplishments as an engineer or public servant. The skills and abilities exercised by writing are different from those exercised by engineering. I am persuaded that, though seemingly unrelated, one improves the other in me.
Bennis’ somewhat artificial distinction between managers and leaders is a shortcoming. He makes a manager sound like something one would not want to be. He list skills and characteristics developed from the “education” of a leader and the “training” of a manager. All seemingly undesirable things are on the manager side. On might argue tat several management skills, like deduction and common sense, would be useful to a leader.
Most of the interviews are businessmen, but some come from public service agencies and professions. In may seem that businessmen are more susceptible to “surrendering to the context”—the bottom line, the corporate culture, the style of a boss to be pleased—but public service leaders must face their own context. A public servant may readily accept his organization’s view of the way things should be or done, what is important and who to involve without ever considering his own vision, ability and desire.
It may be more important for public section leadership to use self-expression. While a business leader may have the satisfaction of bringing a product to market, making a profit, even gaining notoriety, a public leader may never see his vision achieved. A public leaders’ satisfaction may have to come from living the life he wants to live.
A particular item addressed by Bennis that may be of use to one in public service is getting people on your side. A public leader may have little to rely on besides his integrity and “voice”—an ability to change the climate of his organization and shape it to work more effectively. As important as it is, Bennis can offer little on the subject except constancy, congruity, reliability and integrity. He says to be someone others might follow. He offers no lessons on persuasion, though if persuasion can be taught, it may be of little benefit to those who lake those characteristics.
If you’re interested in this book, you may also be interested in
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership Tested by Time by James L. Garlow
Blink by Malcolm Gladwell
Developing the Leader Within by John C. Maxwell
The Difference Maker by John C. Maxwell
Winning with People by John C. Maxwell
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Notes on Collecting
Friday, March 25, 2011
Women’s History Month Links
Beezus and Ramona by Beverly Cleary
The Big Necessity by Rose George (also here and here)
The Christian’s Secret to a Happy Life by Hannah Whitall Smith
Doing Work You Love by Cheryl Gilman
Don’t Grow Old—Grow Up! by Dorothy Carnegie
Dreams of Iron and Steel by Deborah Cadbury
The Emotional Energy Factor by Mira Kirshenbaum (also here)
Finding Your Writer’s Voice by Thaisa Frank & Dorothy Wall
Girl, 15, Charming but Insane by Sue Limb
Good Dog. Stay. by Anna Quindlen
Gratitude by Melody Beattie (also here)
The Great Stink by Clare Clark
Henry Huggins by Beverly Cleary
How Much Does Your Soul Weigh? by Dorie McCubbrey
How to Write a Manual by Elizabeth Slatkin
How to Write Mysteries by Shannon OCork (also here)
Idea Mapping by Jamie Nast
Keeping a Journal You Love by Sheila Bender
The Last Taboo by Maggie Black and Ben Fawcett
The Lighthouse Stevensons by Bella Bathurst
Little Shifts by Suzanna Beth Stinnet
The Man Who Loved Books too Much by Allison Hoover Bartlett
The Millionaire Maker by Loral Langemeier
Ramona the Brave by Beverly Cleary
The Relaxation Response by Herbert Bensen with Mariam Z. Klipper
Simple Pictures are Best by Nancy Willard, illustrated by Tomie de Paola (also here)
Stories for a Man’s Heart by Al and Alice Gray
The Success Principles by Jack Canfield with Janet Switzer
True Blood by Charlaine Harris
Walk Away the Pounds by Leslie Sansone
Why Aren’t You Your Own Boss by Paul & Sarah Edwards & Peter Economy
Why Good Things Happen to Good People by Stephen Post & Jill Neimark (also here)
Write It Down, Make It Happen by Henriette Anne Klaus
The Vulnerable Fortress by James R. Taylor and Elizabeth J. Van Every
You Can Write a Column by Monica McCabe Cardoza
I don’t consider the author’s sex when picking books to read or review for this site. I just read what I like. Almost 19 percent of the books I’ve reviewed so far have a woman author or coauthor. They are represented in all the major areas covered on this blog, but seem to be a little more common in fiction and the nonfiction topics of writing and self-help/psychology.
Thursday, January 1, 2009
25 Book Reviews Posted on Keenan’s Book Reviews
The 4:8 Principle by Tommy Newberry
A Politically Incorrect Guide to Western Civilization by Anthony Esolen
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon
Awakening the Entrepreneur Within by Michael Gerber
The Big Necessity by Rose George
The Book of Lies by Brad Meltzer
Buried Alive by Jan Bondeson
Case Closed (Vol. 2) by Gosho Ayoama
Chance by Amir Aczel
The Chinatown Death Cloud Peril by Paul Malmont
Dreams of Iron and Steel by Deborah Cadbury
Epic by John Eldredge
Good Dog. Stay. by Anna Quindlen
The Great Stink by Clare Clark
Happier by Tal Ben-Shahar
His Excellency by Joseph J. Ellis
The Leadership Triad by Dale E. Zand
The Lighthouse Stevensons by Bella Bathurst
Luke (Holy Bible)
One Small Step Can Change Your Life by Robert Maurer
Red Harvest by Dashiell Hammett
The Science of Leonardo by Fritjof Capra
Undaunted Courage by Stephen Ambrose
The Vulnerable Fortress by James R. Taylor and Elizabeth J. Van Every
Walking with God by John Eldredge
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
150 Book Reviews Posted on Keenan’s Book Reviews
We’ve posted reviews of 150 books on this blog so far. The most recent 50 are listed below in alphabetical order by title.
The 4-Hour Workweek by Timothy Ferriss
8 Minutes in the Morning for Extra-Easy Weight Loss by Jorge Cruise
Acres of Diamonds by Russel H. Conwell
Attitude is Everything by Jeff Keller
The Beethoven Factor by Paul Pearsall
Beezus and Ramona by Beverly Cleary
The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler
Changing for Good by James O. Prochaska et al
The Christian’s Secret to a Happy Life by Hannah Whitall Smith
The Club of Queer Trades by G. K. Chesterton
The Complete Verse and Other Nonsense by Edward Lear
Copernicus’ Secret by Jack Repcheck
The Dangerous Duty of Delight by John Piper
The Dain Curse by Dashiell Hammett
Descarte’s Secret Notebook by Amir D. Aczel
The Difference Maker by John C. Maxwell
The Elements of Technical Writing by Gary Blake and Robert W. Bly
The Emotional Energy Factor by Mira Kirshenbaum
Fathered by God by John Eldredge
Follow Your Heart by Andrew Matthews
Genesis
The Golden Age of DC Comics by Les Daniels et al
Henry Huggins by Beverly Cleary
The Hunter adapted by Darwyn Cook
Idea Mapping by Jamie Nast
The Innocence of Father Brown by G. K. Chesterton
Instant Self-Hypnosis by Forbes Robbins Blair
The Invention of Air by Steven Johnson
Keeping a Journal You Love by Sheila Bender
Kidnapped by Robert Louis Stevenson
Language and the Pursuit of Happiness by Chalmers Brothers
The Man Who Loved Books too Much by Allison Hoover Bartlett
Mastering Fiction Writing by Kit Reed
Maus by Art Spiegelman
The Mindful Way through Depression by Mark Williams et al
The Numbers behind NUMB3RS by Keith Devlin & Gary Lorden
The Numbers Game by Michael Blastland & Andrew Dilnot
The Once and Future King by T. H. White
Peace of Mind through Possibility Thinking by Robert H. Schuller
The Private Investigator’s Handbook by Chuck Chambers
Ramona the Brave by Beverly Cleary
The Richest Man Who Ever Lived by Steven K. Scott
The Secret of the Ages by Robert Collier
Tortilla Flat by John Steinbeck
Triumvirate by Bruce Chadwick
Water by Marq de Villiers
The Way of the Wild Heart by John Eldredge
When the Rivers Run Dry by Fred Pearce
You Can Write a Column by Monica McCabe Cardoza
Your Intelligence Makeover by Edward F. Droge, Jr.
Additional or expanded reviews have been posted on these books:
The Amazing Adventure of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon
The Big Necessity by Rose George
Blink by Macolm Gladwell
The Chinatown Death Cloud Peril by Paul Malmont
The Emotional Energy Factory by Mira Kirshenbaum
Epic by John Eldredge
The Ghost Map by Stephen Johnson
God Wants You to be Rich by Paul Zane Pilzer
The Gospel of Luke
Gratitude by Melody Beattie
The Great Divorce by C. S. Lewis
His Excellency by Joseph J. Ellis
How to Write Mysteries by Shannon OCork
The Joy of Supernatural Thinking by Bill Bright
Mastering Fiction Writing by Kit Reed
No More Christian Nice Guy by Paul Coughlin (see comments)
The Numbers Behind NUMB3RS by Keith Devlin & Gary Lorden
One Small Step Can Change Your Life by Robert Maurer
The Physics of Superheroes by James Kakalios
The Politically Incorrect Guide to Western Civilization by Anthony Esolen
Proverbs
Red Harvest by Dashiell Hammett
The Relaxation Response by Herbert Benson with Miriam Z. Klipper
The Spirit by Darwyn Cooke
Undaunted Courage by Stephen Ambrose
The Unfinished Game by Keith Devlin
Walking with God by John Eldredge
The Water Room by Christopher Fowler
Why Good Things Happen to Good People by Stephen Post & Jill Neimark
Wisdom from the Batcave by Cory A. Friedman
Additional reviews:
First 25 Reviews
Reviews 26-50
Reviews 51-75
Reviews 76-100
Thursday, July 30, 2009
The Centuy Mark: 100 Book Reviews Posted on Keenan’s Book Reviews
1089 and All That by David Acheson
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership Tested by Time by James L. Garlow
The Ancient Engineers by L. Sprague de Camp
Are You Dumb Enough to be Rich? by G. William Barnett II
Don’t Grow Old—Grow Up! by Dorothy Carnegie
Einstein’s Clocks, Poincare’s Maps by Peter Galison
Getting Started in Consulting by Allen Weiss
The Great Bridge by David McCollough
How Much Does Your Soul Weigh? by Dorie McCubbrey
How We Got Here by Andy Kessler
IBM and the Holocaust by Edwin Black
The Millionaire Maker by Loral Langemeier
No More Christian Nice Guy by Paul Coughlin
The One Minute Millionaire by Mark Victor Hansen and Robert G. Allen
The Pinball Effect by James Burke
Positive Imaging by Norman Vincent Peale
The Power of Positive Thinking by Norman Vincent Peale
Sea of Glory by Nathaniel Philbrick
Secrets of the Millionaire Mind by T. Harv Eker
Self-Love by Robert H. Schuller
Simple Pictures are Best by Nancy Willard
Starting from Scratch by Wes Moss
The Success Principles by Jack Canfield with Janet Switzer
University of Success by Og Mandino
You Can Write for Magazines by Greg Daugherty
Additional Reviews:
First 25 Books Reviews
Reviews 26-50
Reviews 51-75