Book jacket for Random House | Art Director and designer: Carlos Beltran | Published 2018

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Book jacket for Random House | Art Director and designer: Carlos Beltran | Published 2018
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Robert Kurson, from Shadow Divers
Robert Kurson
Book Club in Session: Shadow Divers: Two Americans Who Risked Everything to Solve One of the Last Mysteries of World War II by Robert Kurson
Continue reading Book Club in Session: Shadow Divers: Two Americans Who Risked Everything to Solve One of the Last Mysteries of World War II by Robert Kurson
Pirate Hunters by Robert Kurson
Pirate Hunters by Robert Kurson
Title: Pirate Hunters: Treasure, Obsession, and the Search for a Legendary Pirate Ship by Robert KursonAuthor: Robert KursonRating Out of 5: 4.5 (Amazing, but not quite perfect)My Bookshelves: History, Memoirs, PiratesPace: MediumFormat: eBook, NovelYear: 2015 I’ve had a bit of a thing about pirates since I saw Pirates of the Caribbean. I mean, who wouldn’t after Captain Jack Sparrow? There’s…
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A True Blog Post of Safety, Inertia, and the Man Who Settled for Blindness
Man gets blinded in chemical accident at age three. Goes on to live pretty incredible life. In his mid-forties, he learns about radical new treatment to give him vision. It’s risky, but he goes for it.
Man can now see. Movement and color are fine, depth and faces are not. This frustrates him greatly but he keeps trying. Researchers determine neurons necessary to interpret depth and faces are gone. He’s on the verge of giving up but doesn’t. Decides to use his organizational and memory skills acquired as blind person to help him with depth and faces.
Story ends on a positive note. Man’s vision is not perfect, but he’s still working on it.
That’s the story of Mike May as told in Crashing Through: A True Story of Risk, Adventure, and the Man Who Dared to See, a crazy book by Robert Kurson.
And I didn’t even mention the painful injections straight into his eyeball.
I have taken so much for granted in my life. I can’t think of much in my life that could even be charitably described as “crashing through.”
At work I ostensibly want to get better at advanced analytical methods because that is the direction my industry is going. I updated my development plan accordingly. In my current job I have the luxury of space to work on these things and being encouraged to develop myself in this area.
Last week I saw a job description that would be a slight promotion, not one I would go for now, but one I could use the details of to model my development plan off of.
And I could work on those things for the next year or two. Take a few classes in data science and machine learning. Tinker with things myself. Read Towards Data Science every day on Medium. Stay on top of what’s new. Blog all about it along the way. Really dive deep.
And that would certainly set me up nicely for the next decade of my career. But I’m not sure I want the next decade of my career to move that direction. When I picture myself being happy a ten years from now, it’s not managing a team of data scientists, it’s writing.
I am not sure how to crash through to that reality. So I keep going to work. In fact, it’s time to get ready right now.
Kraft and his men wanted Apollo 8 to fly just 69 miles above the lunar surface, the same altitude at which the command and service modules would operate during a future landing mission. That required almost unimaginable precision, equivalent in scale to throwing a dart at a peach from a distance of 28 feet--and grazing the very top of the fuzz without touching the fruit's skin. If that weren't daunting enough, the Moon would be barreling through space at nearly 2,300 miles per hour. Toss a peach in the air at 28 feet and now hit the top of the fuzz with a dart.
Rocket Men: The daring odyssey of Apollo 8 and the astronauts who made man's first journey to the moon by Robert Kurson
Weekend Finishes
The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins – one of those very hard to describe books – could possible describe it as mystery/science fiction. If you like a book that’s very unusual (as most science fiction is) then give this one a try.
Rocket Men by Roburt Kurson – the true story of the Apollo 8 mission- mans first journey to the Moon. Personally, I love books about space (perhaps because I love the science fiction genre), and this one was no exception - a thrilling read!
The Endless Beach by Jenny Colgan – a continuation of the Café by the Sea story. Going to be a trilogy, and this time I’m thrilled. Jenny Colgans novels are all about love and friendship…..and food! Yum!
Currently Reading: Blackfish City by Sam J. Miller and Our Dark Duet by Victoria Schwab