Monday, March 30, 2026

Book Review: Abominable Snowmen: Legend Come to Life by Ivan T. Sanderson

Abominable Snowmen: Legend Come to LifeAbominable Snowmen: Legend Come to Life by Ivan T. Sanderson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Leaning on his training in botany and zoology, Ivan T. Sanderson examined the reports and data available on the topic of abominable snowmen from around the world in the early 1960s and later in that decade and the result is one of the classics of cryptozoology and sasquatch literature. Abominable Snowmen: Legend Come to Life examines reports of unknown hominoids on five continents and if there is anything to them.

Sanderson begins by chronicling how the Abominable Snowman got its name in popular culture in 1921 then explored of reports of incidents and sightings in the Himalayas before that. Then over much of the book Sanderson covers vast stretches of the globe in which similar hominoid reports and stories are told before concluding that there were four man-like species with humans on the planet as of his writing. The rest of the book covered various geographical and biological elements that Sanderson believed helped explain why reports that he covered happened where they did. While the reports, stories, and local folklore were invaluable and Sanderson’s explanation of physical characteristics of the earth were insightful, there were several issues that made this book a tad painful to read. The first issue was Sanderson’s sometimes over-the-top snark filled comments on everything from both sides of the cold war being idiots to the sensationists in the press, but the biggest target and frankly where it got the past the point of “I get it, move on” was on scientists who professed skepticism of things in the outside world while they kept their pasty white butts in their comfy offices—if he had just put all of that in one chapter of his book it would have been more impactful but he just kept on with it. The second was Sanderson’s terminology for different types of humans—actual homo sapiens—that honestly today wouldn’t be allowed but some of the stuff he used was nearly crossing the line even in the 1960s. Another thing that isn’t a critique but is something that must be stated is the scientific names of early human ancestors used in the book, which a lot are not used today because they’ve changed a lot with various discoveries by paleoanthropologists in the 60+ years since the book was first published.

Abominable Snowmen: Legend Come to Life is a look at worldwide reports of what today would be called relic hominins, it’s one of cryptozoology’s most famous books by one of the field’s founders, Ivan T. Sanderson.

View all my reviews

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Book Review: The Americans: The Democratic Experience by Daniel Boorstin

The Americans, Vol. 3: The Democratic ExperienceThe Americans, Vol. 3: The Democratic Experience by Daniel J. Boorstin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

After the Civil War, the United States transformed from a country looking for a national identity to one whose democratic experience spread to everyone. The Americans: The Democratic Experience is the third and final volume of Daniel Boorstin’s trilogy which features the American experience after it found a national identity and creating a democratic culture.

Throughout the 600 pages of text of Boorstin’s work, his working thesis that after finding a national identity Americans looked to create a democratic culture in which everyone had access to the same quality of products and experiences no matter their income or pedigree. Covering such diverse things like how all Americans were able to get access to fresh beef, how education from primary school up through college—including the creation of high school—for all became a national obsession, how clothing went from being a mark of status to mass produced equality, and so much more Boorstin made the case that Americans looked to make things for everyone either for profit or for the betterment of society but through this democratic pursuit to create for everyone it resulted massive efforts to do things collectively on a large scale leading to the atomic bomb and the landing on the moon roughly a century after the country had nearly torn itself apart while also spreading it’s democratic outlook to the world. Of the six books I’ve read of Boorstin’s this is the one in which his consensus view of history really stands out with his focus on inventors and entrepreneurs in this book even while expressing his loathing of the vulgarities that crept into American culture and advertising through this democratization process. As the concluding installment of his trilogy of looking at American history through how the physical environment of the continent shaped—from the beginning of colonization to the late 20th Century—American society and how it reflected on how individuals interacted with their society, it’s been informative especially one little discussed individuals and trends that would influence those more well known to us.

The Americans: The Democratic Experience completes Daniel Boorstin’s trilogy on the cultural history of the United States by showing how in the shadow of a war that nearly destroyed a country a culture aiming to spread to everyone was formed.

View all my reviews

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Book Review: Uniting Heaven & Earth: Christ in Philippians and Colossians by Clinton Wahlen

Uniting Heaven & Earth: Christ in Philippians & ColossiansUniting Heaven & Earth: Christ in Philippians & Colossians by Clinton Wahlen
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Two short epistles that sometimes are hard to find, which you miss as your flipping through the New Testament when looking at them, but when you find them the words of Paul deliver powerful messages. Uniting Heaven & Earth: Christ in Philippians and Colossians by Clinton Wahlen is the supplemental book of the Adult Sabbath School Bible Study (1st Quarter 2026) covering two of Paul’s letters that he wrote while in a Roman prison. Whalen begins the book with a chapter focusing on Paul’s circumstances when he wrote these two letters, then dedicates a chapter on aspects from both books that are in common, and divides the rest of the eleven chapters, five for Philippians and six for Colossians, for in-depth lessons from the books themselves. Though this supplemental book is only 128 pages long, Wahlen gives the reader insights into the messages that was not only relevant in Paul’s day but for us today.

View all my reviews

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Book Review: Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel

Bring Up the Bodies (Thomas Cromwell, #2)Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Growing up the son of a blacksmith, becoming the right-hand man to the most powerful man in England after the King, then surviving his mentor’s fall to end up the King’s able servant after getting him a divorce, but now he’s expected to get the King out of his second marriage. Bring Up the Bodies is the middle installment of Hilary Mantel’s historical fiction trilogy chronicling the rise and fall Thomas Cromwell which immediately follows the end of Wolf Hall and runs through the fall of Anne Boleyn.

Mantel covers essentially a year from fall 1535 to fall 1536, but it’s a year packed with all lot of important events in the reign of Henry VIII and for Cromwell’s position and future. The first-person point-of-view was the same framing device as the previous novel giving the audience an inside view of Cromwell’s thoughts and keeps the narrative close to him even as he works to end Henry’s marriage to Anne while setting him up with Jane Seymour though Mantel gives Cromwell an attraction to her. My one complaint from the previous book of Mantel not using quotation marks to denote Cromwell speaking to other people wasn’t an issue in this book and resulted in a smoother reading experience. Given the shorter timeline than previous book, the little 400 pages of the novel was just right given the political intrigue going on.

Bring Up the Bodies is an excellent middle volume for this historical fiction trilogy, Hilary Mantel’s characterizations and well-written narrative create a page turner that’s hard to put down.

View all my reviews

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Book Review: The Origin and Principles of the American Revolution, Compared with The Origin and Principles of the French Revolution by Friedrich von Gentz

The Origin and Principles of the American Revolution, Compared with the Origin and Principles of the French RevolutionThe Origin and Principles of the American Revolution, Compared with the Origin and Principles of the French Revolution by Friedrich von Gentz
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

For over a decade the French Revolution had raged within the country, and they had spread it throughout Europe with their massive armies, all the while claiming inspiration from their American predecessor, but one conservative disagreed. The Origin and Principles of the American Revolution, Compared with The Origin and Principles of the French Revolution is Friedrich von Gentz’s essay on the two great revolutions of the 18th Century and why one was legitimate and the other wasn’t.

To conservative Europe the havoc of the French Revolution had one direct cause, the American and its war against their lawful king. However German diplomat Friedrich von Gentz not only defended the American Revolution in his essay, showing that it was a legitimate war against a monarch that had sided with a usurping power to oppress his own subjects. Gentz took it for granted that the reader of his day knew the events of the French Revolution but given that it had been almost a quarter century since the beginning of the fighting of the American Revolution, and nearly four decades of the political resistance that preceded it, he focused on recounting the events in America then doing short comparisons to those in France. The four points of view that Gentz contrasted the American and French on—the lawfulness of origin, character of the conduct, quality of object, and compass of resistance—were like all were presented from the lengthiest to the shortest, yet all of them were strongly argued. The one critique was Gentz handwaving away of the American use of natural and unalienable rights along with popular sovereignty as superfluous rhetoric that the Americans used not their actual beliefs, which for a few was true while others it was not.

The Origins and Principles is a well-written defense by a 18th Century European conservative of the legitimacy of the American Revolution especially when contrasted with that of the French which claimed to be inspired by it.

View all my reviews