Posts in the Favorites Category

My Favorite Albums of 2008

Author: Geoffrey :: Published: Dec23 2008 :: 2 Comments

Milosh
III

My friend Lorie turned me on to Milosh a few years back but it took his third album for me to see/hear the genius. The whole thing was written after Michael Milsoh spent a year living in Thailand. Somehow, that makes the songs even better.
Favorite Track: Hold My Breath

Dengue Fever
Venus On Earth

One of my favorite bands does it again. Psychedelic Khmer rock kicks ass and makes everybody wanna dance!
Favorite Track: Clipped Wings

Jill Scott
The Real Thing

Jill Scott still makes great R&B. I may have played this one the most.
Favorite Track: Crown Royal

Vampire Weekend
Vampire Weekend

I’m not sure this one has the staying power to keep me interested down the road, but I sure did play this a lot last summer. Paul Simon meets the Shins or something like that.
Favorite Track: Oxford Comma

The Raconteurs
Consolers Of The Lonely

Jack White is fantastic. I really like the dual-vocal dynamic with Brendan Benson.
Favorite Track: Old Enough

The Sea and Cake
Car Alarm

Sam Prekop is one of my favorite vocalists and these guys make great, breezy music.
Favorite Track: Weekend

Common Market
Tobacco Road

These guys are getting much tighter. Really, the only Hip Hop album I enjoyed all year. Awesome beats. Not bad for a couple of locals.
Favorite Track: Winter Takes All

The Pica Beats
Beating Back the Claws of the Cold

Speaking of locals, The Pica Beats put out an awesome debut with storied lyrics, indie pop sound and some fantastic sitar playing.
Favorite Track: Summer Cutting Cale

Emiliana Torrini
Me and Armini

Sparse, whispery pop form Iceland. Sad and sweet.
Favorite Track: Beggar’s Prayer

Neil Halstead
Oh! Mighty Engine

The lead singer of Mojave 3 puts out an album on Jack Johnson’s label and the result is much the same as his previous efforts—which is to say: pretty darn great. Neil drifts along with an even more pared down sound than the last album. Mostly acoustic guitar and mostly great lyrics.
Favorite Track: Little Twig

TV On The Radio
Dear Science

I haven’t figured out how to describe this one yet. It’s great. This much I know.
Favorite Track: Love Dog

Beck
Modern Guilt

I like Beck and I like Danger Mouse. This album is good but it’s not perfect. But I’m glad these two are making music.
Favorite Track: Walls

Web Favorites 2008

Author: Geoffrey :: Published: Dec17 2008 :: 3 Comments

Here’s a list of the sites I use/read/listen to the most these days. Some are blogs, others are tools, all of them are good.

Slog
Still my favorite place to catch up on Seattle news and banter. Plenty of snark, mean-spirited commenting, and gossip.
Huffington Post
While not exactly unbiased, still the best place for national news in blog form.
Facebook
I finally drank the Kool-aid on this one.
The Strobist
Great place to learn how to use your flash properly.
Joe McNally
More photographic wisdom from a master of the strobe.
Skepticblog
Linked to an upcoming (hopefully) television show. Lots of good skeptical insight.
FFFFound
Stuff people find.
The Skeptics Guide To The Universe
Favorite Poscast of all time.
Point of Inquiry
Other favorite podcast of all time.
Photoshop Insider
Photography geeks writing about photography.
Flickr
Still my favorite web hangout.

Ten Favorite Books of 2008

Author: Geoffrey :: Published: Dec 6 2008 :: 1 Comment

The Varieties of Scientific Experience

The Varieties of Scientific Experience

A Personal View of the Search for God

by Carl Sagan (and Ann Druyan)

This is hands down my favorite book of the year and it’s also secured Carl Sagan as one of my new heroes. I’ve read a couple of his books previously and have always enjoyed his hallmark approachability, but I’ve honestly never really been that interested in The Universe as it relates to humanity—until now. Carl manages to dismiss religion on one hand while also inspiring an almost visceral reverence for everything with his naturalistic view of the cosmos.

The book is actually a series of lectures edited by the late astronomer’s wife, Ann Druyan, and she sums up a philosophy shared by both Sagan and Bertrand Russel in this quote: “…what is wanted is not the will to believe, but the desire to find out, which is the exact opposite.”

Carl Sagan was a brilliant thinker and this book is a brilliant read. Buy it.


Irreligion

Irreligion

A Mathematician Explains Why the Arguments for God Just Don’t Add Up

by John Allen Paulos

Lots of reason, logic and comedy spell out many mathematical proofs that God can’t exist in this latest from the “New Atheist” movement. This book is intentionally witty, brief and to the point. Once he puts forth the proofs, there’s really not that much more to say.


The Moment it Clicks

The Moment It Clicks

Photography Secrets from one of the World’s Top Shooters

by Joe McNally

I read a lot of photography, design, and technical manuals throughout the year and they don’t usually make it to this list for obvious reasons—but this book is different. It reads like a collection of short stories with each chapter being a particular photo shoot and its challenges and how Joe rises to each occasion. This book also made me realize that my misconception about flash photography as being an undesirable photographic method is/was completely off base. It’s not flash photography that’s bad, it’s bad flash photography that’s bad. I have seen the light.


Suckers

Suckers

How Alternative Medicine Makes Fools of Us All

by Rose Shapiro

This is a great book! Highly recommended. I’m always fascinated by just how credulous one can become when it comes to medicine and health. (Full disclosure: I’ve been there myself.) The idea that there is something called “ancient wisdom” that is somehow untestable by science goes against all reason—and yet it is commonly accepted by a lot of people. (As if somehow the human race has been getting dumber over time, not smarter.) This book touches on pseudoscience in every form, from the relatively harmless (and pointless) practices of acupuncture and “chi-balancing” to the sometimes dangerous (and deadly) arena of alternative cancer cures, chiropractic, and the anti-vaccine movement. My favorite chapter is the one on homeopathy, which itself is so utterly ridiculous I can’t even begin to imagine how health food stores sell this crap with a straight face.


Under the Banner of Heaven

Under the Banner of Heaven

A Story of Violent Faith

by Jon Krakauer

This book is half crime thriller and half history lesson with both halves being equally bizarre and horrific. I find modern religions like Mormonism and Scientology beyond absurd in this day and age, and yet even more curious is just how much people don’t really know about them. Krakauer offers a pretty compelling history of a resilient con-man and what he was able to accomplish with the Mormon church.


Things I Have Learned

Things I Have Learned in my Life So Far

by Stefan Sagmeister

This book was as much fun to look at as it was to read. Stefan is one of the more famous graphic designers working today and I’ve followed his work for years. A few years back he decided to take a year off from client work and produce work only for himself. (Man, that would be awesome.) This book is the result of a year’s worth of freedom. The things he has learned aren’t overly profound, but they are solid little life lessons and worth a look if your professional life resides anywhere near the design/art field.


The Portable Atheist

Essential Readings for the Nonbeliever

by Christopher Hitchens

I haven’t actually read this book cover to cover but it sits on my nightstand and offers the perfect bedtime story for the modern heathen. Depending on my mood I can enjoy some Lucretius, Spinoza, Dawkins, Sagan, Harris, Twain, Russel and a hundred more. All the great nonbelievers are in there and Hitchens opens the anthology with his usual vigor. Recommended!


No Problem Girl

by David Young

Full disclosure: I did the cover for this book, and the author is a good friend. That said, you should still consider reading this fine tale of deception and despair set in Thailand and Chicago.


The Selfish Gene

by Richard Dawkins

I’ve been making an effort lately to truly understand just how evolution works and I thought I should go back to the beginning of one of my favorite author’s careers and get myself up to speed on genes and their selfish nature. This book is amazing. I’m not going to lie and say I comprehend it in its entirety, but I do have a much greater understanding of how evolution came about and why we are how we are.

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