Friday, August 25, 2023

On Playing Against the House: The Dramatic World of an Undercover Union Organizer by James Walsh

Playing Against the House: The Dramatic World of an Undercover Union Organizer by James Walsh was a great book about union organizing at a casino, Mardi Gras, in Miami, Florida. I've driven past this casino, and all of the other ones listed, having grown up there, which made it feel a little more close to home. I learned about a lot of union details like card-check agreements, salting, and organizing. The book was a balanced account of Walsh's experience with the zealous union organizers and the dehumanizing upper management of casinos. The experience takes place around 2011 through 2015. 

Walsh is a great writer and I think this book definitely beats Nickel and Dimed, which felt less real to me. As a salt, Walsh worked with the union and was separately hired by two casinos at different points, Calder and Mardi Gras. In these casino roles, he did his job and, on the side, began organizing towards a union through relationship building. 

I don't have too much to say on this book, but I think unions are regaining power and I'll be curious to see if this will be a long term culture shift. 

I'll leave it at a quote from Harriet, a Haitian woman who helped lead the union, after Mardi Gras executives suppressed justice for her job: "This is my job now," she said. 'Being poor is my job," (p252).

Miscellaneous:

"Housekeepers are more likely to suffer injuries on the job than coal miners by more than one percentage point," (p29).

When asked about a worker's credit when she doesn't pay the hospital bill, "she rolled her eyes...she didn't care. She wasn't planning on financing a new car or a home any time soon," (p107). 

"In 2014, Florida was home to 115,000 workers who were not union members but were covered by union contracts," because of right-to-work laws (p116). 

"Low wage jobs made up 22% of job losses during the recession but have accounted for 44 percent of job growth during the recovery," (p248). 

Thanks to Daniel Powers for recommending this book!

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

On Greedy by Jen Winston

Greedy: Notes from a Bisexual Who Wants Too Much by Jen Winston was a narrative read about the author's experiences as a bisexual woman. This review is short because the book didn't have a ton of facts, but it had a couple quotes any person who was an insecure middle-schooler can relate to, which I've included below. Overall, it would have been nice if this book had done a biological and social analysis of bisexuality in America. It read like a memoir which, for me, was just ok. I'm still glad I read it. Thanks, Lexie, for the recommendation. 

Miscellaneous quotes:

On the importance of place representation: "Queer bars give structure to queer communities, while literally putting those communities on the map," (p17).

"If we only focus on equality, we'll only end up achieving assimilation," (p133).

Sunday, August 20, 2023

On River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey by Candice Miller

 River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey by Candice Miller was a thrilling book detailing the Roosevelt-Rondon expedition of 1913-1914 after Teddy Roosevelt lost the opportunity to serve a second full term as President of the United States in 1912. At that time, he was a co-founder of the new Progressive Party, and ultimately lost to Woodrow Wilson. Roosevelt had a history of taking on adventure in times of hardship, but this expedition was the most trying of his life. Many people know Roosevelt as a hunter, but "by the time he was in the White House....[he was also] one of [the] the most knowledgeable and experienced naturalists" in the country (p25). 

This book was incredibly descriptive of the challenges and natural miracles of the Amazon rainforest and its expedition: "Far from its outward appearance, the rain forest was not a garden of easy abundance, but precisely the opposite," some trees have developed smooth bark or bark that sheds to prevent vines from exploiting the tree's efforts to reach the sun (p138, 142). For context, penicillin wouldn't be developed for 14 years and the most dangerous tribes they encountered had crossed the Bering Strait 12,000 years prior and virtually had not seen non-native people since. 

The primary challenges faced by the expedition were posed by the rainforest and its inhabitants, human otherwise. The forest underneath the canopy was pitch black, and every living thing in the forest evolved to disappear at a moment's notice. "In the fathomless canyons of tree trunks and the shrouds of black vines that surrounded the men at night, the hum and chatter of thousands of nocturnal creatures would snap into instant silence in response to a strange noise, leaving the men to wait in breathless apprehension of what might come next," (p148). The native people who lived along the River of Doubt were known to be highly aggressive and ceremonially cannabilistic; what saved the expedition crew was the Nhambiquara requirement that all family chiefs agree on war, and that was up for debate (p301). 

The relationship between Roosevelt and his son, Kermit, was a driving force for Roosevelt's will to live, despite repeated infection and a chronic fever for several months. Roosevelt brought a lethal vial of morphine on every trip, in case he needed to end his life quicker than natural causes would allow. But Roosevelt felt that, to save his son's life, he had to try to live another day. Roosevelt chronically slipped in and out of consciousness after an injury in the river and a resulting bacterial infection. There was a moment where he asked his son if their fellow expedition mates had eaten enough to keep going, as he lay there nearly dying in the Amazon (p273). Eventually, the Brazilian doctor on the expedition operated on Roosevelt's leg in the rainforest along the river bank (p303). It could be said that this trip did kill Roosevelt; a few years after, he still had feverish fits and weakness in his legs due to the infection he suffered in the Amazon. When he did pass away, his son was driven to suicide, as Roosevelt expected. 

Overall, this book was fantastic. It was an inspiring account in the Age of Exploration and helped contextualize my understanding of scientific expeditions, especially after reading about John Wesley Powell earlier this month.

Miscellaneous:

An earlier explorer, Orellana, named the Amazon rainforest for the native women he encountered who were said "to have removed their right breast so that they could more effectively shoot a bow and arrow," and comes from the Greek words to mean "no breast" (p202). 

Thanks to my friend, Daniel V, for recommending this book!

Detroit Resurrected: To Bankruptcy and Back by Nathan Bomey

Detroit Resurrected: To Bankruptcy and Back by Nathan Bomey details the inside story of Detroit's bankruptcy filing. $18 billion in deb...