The Little Old Lady Who Broke All The Rules by Catharina Ingelman-Sundberg

A Swedish novel, The Little Old Lady Who Broke All The Rules by Catharina Ingelman-Sundberg, is a charming story of a group of senior citizens stuck in a nursing home.

The premise of the book is that the leader of the group, Martha, is tired of nursing home life and does not want to end her days in a nursing home whose management has gotten progressively more stingy. So, she hatches a plan with four of her fellow residents, to “break out” of the home and commit a robbery. However, they do not want to keep the loot, but want to get caught so they go to prison and enjoy the good food and shelter offered by prison. Things soon go awry.

The book is an endearing and heartwarming tale of respecting our elders and realizing that life should not end at retirement. Ingelman-Sundberg brings life to an older generation that is often overlooked and quickly forgotten.  She asserts, through her story, that life should not end when a person gets old.

Each member of the gang brings their own unique talents. For example, Brains brings the innovation and Anna-Greta brings the math and money management skills. Their combined talents help their plan to succeed.

There are many surprising and funny scenes. For instance, the planning and execution of the robbery is hilarious. The group is overlooked as suspects because the thought being old people would never be able to pull off a heist of epic proportions.

A must-read for people who overlook the older and mostly wiser seniors in our world.

The Angel: The Egyptian Spy Who Saved Israel by Uri Bar-Joseph

The Angel: The Egyptian Spy Who Saved Israel by Uri Bar-Joseph is an excellent book about Ashraf Marwan, son-in-law to late Egyptian president Gamal Nasser.

Here is a synopsis of the book from the publisher:

A riveting feat of research and reportage, The Angel explores one of the twentieth century’s most compelling spy stories: the sensational life and suspicious death of Ashraf Marwan, a top-level Egyptian official who secretly worked for Israel’s Mossad.

As the son-in-law of Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser and a close adviser to his successor, Anwar Sadat, Ashraf Marwan had access to the deepest secrets of his country’s government. But Marwan had a secret of his own: He was a spy for the Mossad, Israel’s renowned intelligence service. Known to his handlers as “the Angel,” Marwan turned Egypt into an open book and saved Israel from a devastating defeat by tipping off the Mossad in advance of the joint Egyptian-Syrian attack on Yom Kippur in 1973.

Remarkably, Marwan eluded Egypt’s ruthless secret police for decades. In later years he enjoyed a luxurious life—but that would come to an abrupt end in 2007, when his body was found in a bed of roses in the garden below his apartment building in London. Police suspected he had been thrown from his balcony on the fifth floor, but the case has remained unsolved. Until now.

After Marwan died, details of his shadowy life were slowly revealed. Drawing on meticulous research and exclusive interviews with key figures involved, The Angel is the first book to discuss Marwan’s motives, how his identity as a Mossad spy was deliberately exposed by none other than the former chief of Israel’s Military Intelligence, and how the information he provided was used—and misused. Expanding on this focus, it sheds new light on the modern history of the Middle East and the crucial role of human espionage in shaping the fate of nations. And, for the first time, it answers the questions haunting Marwan’s legacy: In the end, whom did Ashraf Marwan really betray? And who killed him?

After reading the book and some comments about the book, I feel like I was living in a hole when Marwan was killed. I feel this way because I had never heard of him. I understand it was not as big of a deal in the U.S. due to his influence in Middle Eastern affairs, but those affairs affected our relations in the region (especially with key ally Israel).

Joseph painstakingly outlines Marwan’s relationship with Mossad. He explores Marwan’s motives for spying on Egypt for Egypt’s mortal enemy at the time. This discussion is fascinating because it delves into Marwan’s psyche – if Joseph is correct, Marwan’s reasoning does not completely make sense to me.

The most interesting part of the book is the Israeli response to the intelligence that Marwan fed to them. Based on Joseph’s account, it is almost too hard to believe that Israeli military intelligence was that completely inept when deciding not to believe the intelligence that Egypt was preparing to attack to start the Yom Kippur War. All indications were pointing to an attack, but many Israelis chose to not believe it because they had it in their minds that the Egyptians would not attack (they felt that the Egyptian military even thought they would fail in an attack). However, these Israelis did not take into account Sadat’s erratic thinking.

One final note is on Joseph’s scathing criticism of Eli Zeira, Israel’s director of Military Intelligence during the Yom Kippur War. Joseph claims that Zeira purposely revealed Marwan’s name. Zeira did this to defend his actions in not believing Marwan before the War. Zeira contended that Marwan was a double agent and was not to be trusted – Zeira tried to convince the general public of this in many ways.

The New Trail of Tears by Naomi Schaefer Riley

The New Trail of Tears is an important and yet depressing book. It details the myriad problems besetting American Indians today. These include: a lack of economic opportunity, massive dysfunction and family breakdown and tribal and Washington leaders unwilling to face the reality or do anything about it except propose more money and more government (neither of which has worked).

Naomi Schaefer Riley details the plight of the American Indian by highlighting the structural, legal, economic, and political barriers to their success.  Through history, interviews and anecdotes, and analysis, Riley charts the bleak picture.  They lack the opportunity to achieve success in important ways because they do not have the property rights we take for granted.  They can’t really build up equity in property, use land or ownership as an investment or as collateral for a loan, etc. This basic element of financial and economic growth is denied.

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Last Stand at Khe Sanh: The U.S. Marines’ Finest Hour in Vietnam by Gregg Jones

The Vietnam War – one of the subjects that lured me into exploring and loving history. I can never read enough about this war – everything from the failed strategy to the individual acts of valor on the battlefield. Gregg Jones takes his turn at documenting the events surrounding the siege of Khe Sanh in Last Stand at Khe Sanh: The U.S. Marines’ Finest Hour in Vietnam.

The book generally covers the fighting between the Marines and the North Vietnamese Army from January until April 1968, when the siege was lifted. This coverage includes the many hill fights surrounding the main base. Jones draws upon the personal accounts of the thousands of Americans who fought in the battle. NVA accounts are sketchy due to the lack of material – although Jones does draw on some captured NVA documents.

There are plenty of books written on Khe Sanh (Valley of Decision is one that is excellent), but this is one of the most recent books to chronicle the battles. Jones provides great insight into the men who fought and shed blood in the hallowed grounds surrounding Khe Sanh. This insight is from countless interviews and letters from the combatants.

Jones includes many stories of bravery, including the actions of artillery forward observer Dennis Mannion as he directed artillery fire upon the North Vietnamese as they tried to capture Hill 861. Conversely, Jones also writes about some of the stupid decisions made during the fighting. This includes the higher command’s approval to send a small patrol out of Khe Sanh and the field officer’s decisions in the ambush of a Marine platoon that left more than 20 killed.

The personal stories of loss are the hardest parts of war books. It is easier to read about five or six men killed in the abstract rather than knowing the names and stories of those five or six individuals. Jones includes tales of grizzled veterans cut down and men in-country for a few days who lost their lives.

Simply put, an excellent book on the Battle of Khe Sanh.

The Weaver Fish by Robert Edeson

The Weaver Fish by Robert Edeson is a unique and confounding work of fiction. It is fascinating and frustrating.

Here is a bit about the book:

Cambridge linguist Edvard Tøssentern, presumed dead, reappears after a balloon crash. When he staggers in from a remote swamp, gravely ill and swollen beyond recognition, his colleagues at the research station are overjoyed. But Edvard’s discovery about a rare giant bird throws them all into the path of an international crime ring.

The Weaver Fish is a gripping adventure story. Set on the island nation of Ferendes in the South China Sea, this book’s sound science and mathematical games will make you question all that you know, or think you know, about weaver fish, giant condors, the infamous tornado-proof Reckles® Texan hat, and much much more.

The book is a bit confounding because I did not understand it until a few chapters into it. At first, the first few chapters seem pointless, but then they fit more into the story as you read along. It is a very interesting book once you get past some of the initial side trails.

Based on the writing, Edeson’s mind is amazing. He makes stuff up, but it sounds so real. I caught myself several times googling some of the things to find out that the things do not exist.

Once the story gets going, it is hard to put down. The plot is engaging and the characters are interesting. The best part is the climax where everything comes together.

Adam’s Rib by Antonio Manzini

The second book of the Rocco Schiavone Mystery series by Antonio Manzini, Adam’s Rib, is just as good as the first – Black Run.

Here are the basics to the plot:

Six months after being exiled from his beloved Rome, Deputy Police Chief Rocco Schiavone has settled into a routine in the cold, quiet, chronically backward alpine town of Aosta: an espresso at home, breakfast in the piazza, and a morning joint in his office.

A little self-medication helps Rocco deal with the morons that almost exclusively comprise the local force. Especially on a day like today. It’s his girlfriend’s birthday (if you could call her that; in his mind, Rocco’s only faithful to his late wife), he has no gift—and he’s about to stumble upon a corpse.

It begins when a maid reports a burglary in Aosta. But there’s no sign of forced entry, and after Rocco picks the lock, he notices something off about the carefully ransacked rooms. That’s when he finds the body: a woman, the maid’s employer, left hanging after a grisly suicide. Or is it? Rocco’s intuition tells him the scene has been staged. In other words, it’s murder—a pain in the ass of the highest order.

Manzini continues his excellent work from Black Run with his latest translation. Schiavone is back as the acerbic deputy police chief of Aosta. He is ably assisted by police officer Italo Pierron and Inspector Caterina Rispoli, but hindered by less-able officers such as Michele Deruta.

I think what draws me so much to Schiavone is his sharp wit and cynicism. Both of these are on display in the book.

The plot is good because Manzini brings in several threads into the story. Although two events seem unrelated, they turn out to be related in one of the characters. Although some may not like the rabbit trail that Manzini takes Schiavone on to Rome, I think it helps develop Schiavone’s character and to more fully understand his thinking.

Manzini does another great job of bringing Deputy Police Chief Schiavone to life.