‘The Camp Grant Massacre’ by Elliott Arnold

Last night, after the closing of the 2nd Trump Impeachment Trial, I finished reading Elliot Arnold’s 1976 historical fiction novel about ‘The Camp Grant Massacre.’ I was struck by the some of the text in the denouement scenes post massacre. Recall that the Camp Grant Massacre happened within approximately five miles of the US Army’s Arizona Territory post, Camp Grant, 150 years ago on April 30, 1871, when a US Army officer, my great great grandfather, had accepted the surrender of starving Pinal and Aravaipa Apaches who were being hunted to the point of extermination. Without official authority, other than President Grant’s new peace policy toward native tribes, he established a reservation and accepted the tribe’s surrender of weapons in exchange for feeding and establishment of a settlement on their ancestral home, the Little Running Water, the Aravaipa Creek, which bleeds out of the Aravaipa Canyon. The entire book builds toward the massacre committed by an association of Anglo Americans, and Mexican Americans, from Tucson, and the Tohono O’odham Indian tribe from the Tubac area, and resulted in the deaths of approximately 125 Apaches, 117 women and children, and eight males, who were teens and seniors, most of which were bludgeoned to death or killed by hand in close range, in a 30 minute killing spree. The locals had been wiped to a frenzy by the Tucson Arionian, the local paper, with cries to seek revenge against the unarmed Apaches at Camp Grant, for alleged atrocities committed by Apaches, but likely not by the bands resident at Camp Grant, in the recent past. The passage I quote comes after the Massacre, when Lt Whitman tries to get the Chief, Eskiminzen to talk about what happened two days after the event:

‘… “Two nights ago while my people slept, the people of Tucson, white men, Mexicans, Papago Indians, stole in, hoping to kill us all… They knew we had no arms, or they would not have come. They killed more than a hundred of my people, almost all of them women and children…. I ask you , what shall we do.”

Whitman remained silent… He hoped the Apache would say more. He thought how agonizing it must be for Eskminizin to hold it in.

“We saw you with your people buy our dead and we do not think you know they were coming or we would not be here together.” Eskiminzen looked away.

“By my word as a man I knew nothing about this,” Whitman said. “And I had no means to overtake them-nor was I authorized to take punishment in my own hands.”

“If we were white people?” Eskiminzin asked.

“I could still not on my own deal punishment.”

Eskinimzen raised his head. “If Indian massacred whites?”

Whitman’s jaw tightened. “Yes,” he agreed. “That’s the way it is.”

The book more or less ends at the massacre, spelling out very briefly a bit more about how events played out, including the trial the President Grant demanded, and that resulted in a five day trial and a 19 minute jury deliberation acquitting all 100 defendants.

I hadn’t anticipated seeing examples of white privilege and vigilante justice in the book that remind of the storming of the Capitol that we witnessed on January 6th, in our time, just a little over a month ago, and yet there were those reminders and analogies staring me in the face. I guess the good news is that in 150 years, we’ve gone for a unanimous verdict to acquit to at least seven choosing to convict instead of finding not guilty as charged.

As for a review of the book, I’ll note Elliott succeeds in capturing the multiple factions involved in the Camp Grant Massacre 100 years after the event, and well before the in-depth histories written about the event that delved into the the perspectives and cultures of the Aravaipa and Pinal Apaches, the Tohono O’olhams, the Mexicans (recently made American’s after the Gadsden Purchase), the AZ Territory Americans of Tucson, and the US Army 3rd Cav stationed at Camp Grant. In that sense, the book is triumphant, as I did not expect to be taken in so completely by the book. I marveled at Elliott’s ability to get into the heads of all groups and individuals concerned, including Royal Whitman and Eskeminzin.

The history surrounding the massacre also is extremely interesting, as evidenced by the some four other books written about the CGM in the past 10-15 years, with more coming out soon, including a biography of Captain Chiquito, and hopefully soon thereafter a publication of Royal Whitman’s as yet unpublished personal journal of the event. The book, despite being historical fiction and preceding the many indepthy studies, overall does pretty well at capturing the event.

Interestingly, the book could have continued on another two to three hundred pages to review what happened to Whitman, the Aravaipa and Pinal Apaches, both Eskeminzin and Chiquito, through the trial of the Tucsonites, the subsequent Reservation years, well up to the present, when the people of Tucson apologized for what the founding fathers of the city did to the Aravaipa Apaches some 125 years later. I can make an argument that it’s motion picture, perhaps even a mini-series, waiting to happen. It offers arguably far more to a modern audience than, let’s say, The Last of the Mohicans, as we try to deal with a diverse multi-racial America with a waning majority white dominance of the electorate.

Let me end by quoting, in part, the “Minority Report” like jury instructions from Judge Titus to the jurors of Tucson deciding the fate of 100 of the Camp Grant Massacre perpetrators, some of whom were or soon became leading citizens and founding fathers of Greater Tucson:

“… To kill one engaged in actual unlawful hostilities, or in undoubted preparation with others for active hostilities, would not be murder. In a country like this, the resident is not bound to wait until the assassin, savage or civilized, is by his hearth, or at his bed-side, or at his door, or until the knife of the assassin is at his throat. If he has undoubted evidence that others are preparing, alone or in combination, to destroy him and his property, he may anticipate his foe and quell or destroy him to secure his own personal safety. In a country like this, with few people, with none or very little police, filled with murderous savages far more numerous than the orderly and peaceful, that I charge you is the law. Any other rule of human life and action would place the quiet citizen in the power of his deadly and lawless enemy.

The law which constitutes our code, criminal as well as civil, has grown up in quiet, populous and strongly policed communities very different from this. It is the same in principle here as there. Here, however, in cases such as this, the administration of law requires peculiar care and caution to avoid judicial murder. The circumstances which constitute and control human motives here, are far graver than those of old, quiet communities with law supported by numerous population and adequate police. There the safety of the man is secured by others charged with the personal security of all the citizens. Here, amid innumerable perils, the citizen must take care of himself. Under heaven he has no one else to look to. In Arizona, arms are as necessary in travel and even in the isolated home or camp, as food or clothing. The farmer and herder carry them at the plow, and with the herd or the flock. By day they are on the person; by night, at the hand of the sleeper.

Men thus schooled possess characters and convictions of right and wrong very different from those of old and quiet communities. It is the bold, restless and adventurous who come here. No others cut loose from the place where they were cradled and all the amenities of home. Subject such persons to the trials above detailed, and you have exactly the characters belonging to one class of these defendants, painfully alert, fearful with the fears of brave men, and there is nothing more painful, suspicious and ready to meet deadly conflict for self or for a comrade. It was to trace, if possible, the motives of the defendants, to the acts for which they stand indicted, that I permitted the very considerable range the testimony of this case has taken.

If there ever was a case in which the law of life–Thou shalt not kill–announced in the oldest and most revered of all known codes, and repeated in everyone promulgated since, should be most cautiously applied, it is the present one in which the defendants have been schooled to agonizing apprehension, where the blood red line of a “a troubled frontier” is expanded into a vast domain of blood, where the very roads are traced by the gore and the graves of fallen wayfarers, where every copse may shelter its skulking murderers, where the very atmosphere is heavy with death, and where brave and honest men are compelled by stealthy night travel to avoid the light of day, lest it should guide the lead or steel of the assassin to the heart or the brain of his victim. I do not mean that–here or elsewhere–the boundaries of right and wrong should vibrate like a weaver’s shuttle, but in a case such as the present, we should test the motive of the defendants by every actuating circumstance, to ascertain whether that motive was malice, or morbid apprehension, or a maddening sense of wrong, or misconceived right, or intolerable suffering, or gloomy despair, or conflicting impulses, involving these defendants in moral darkness, and impelling them in spite of themselves to do the deed charged in the indictment…

It is alleged in the indictment that the Apaches at the time the assault charged was made, were prisoners of war and thus under the protection of the United States. For all the purposes of the present case, this may be accepted as a true statement of their condition. Every government owes protection to all person within its limits and jurisdiction, while they are obedient to its laws and at peace towards other persons within the same limits. If they violate these laws or assail other persons subject to the common government, it is its duty to punish or restrain the law breakers and to prevent the assaults. All persons forfeit the right of government protection, who persist in infringing its law, or in assailing, murdering and despoiling other persons entitled to the same protection. It is the duty of government to protect all persons and classes of persons within its limits and jurisdiction from the wrongs and assaults of all other persons within the same. This is necessary to prevent civil and social conflict and bloodshed. If, however, government allows one class of persons within its limits and jurisdiction persistently to assail and spoil another, then, the injured class is remitted to its natural right of self-defense, and may use force enough for this purpose…

It is alleged in the indictment that the Apaches at the time the assault charged was made, were prisoners of war and thus under the protection of the United States. For all the purposes of the present case, this may be accepted as a true statement of their condition. Every government owes protection to all person within its limits and jurisdiction, while they are obedient to its laws and at peace towards other persons within the same limits. If they violate these laws or assail other persons subject to the common government, it is its duty to punish or restrain the law breakers and to prevent the assaults. All persons forfeit the right of government protection, who persist in infringing its law, or in assailing, murdering and despoiling other persons entitled to the same protection. It is the duty of government to protect all persons and classes of persons within its limits and jurisdiction from the wrongs and assaults of all other persons within the same. This is necessary to prevent civil and social conflict and bloodshed. If, however, government allows one class of persons within its limits and jurisdiction persistently to assail and spoil another, then, the injured class is remitted to its natural right of self-defense, and may use force enough for this purpose.

The application of these rules of law to the present case is clear. The government of the United States owes its Papago, Mexican and American residents in Arizona protection from Apache spoliation and assault. If such spoliation and assault are persistently carried on and not prevented by the government, then the sufferers have a right to protect themselves and to employ force enough for the purpose. It is also to be added that if the Apache nation or any part of it persists in assailing the Papagos, or American, or Mexican residents of Arizona, then if forfeits the right of protection from the United States, whether that right is the general protection which a government owes all persons within its limits and jurisdiction, or the special protection which is due to prisoners of war, as the Apaches killed on the 30th of April of last, are claimed to have been in the indictment... “

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Ted Cruz: Bad for Texas, Bad for America

Born Rafael Edward, reared in Canada, called lil’ “Felito” most his life, know to us as “Ted”, “Lyin’ Ted” to the man whose boots he licked, Senator Cruz shouted from the back of a pickup the weekend before the insurrection he claims he did not foment, “We will not go quietly into the night. We will defend liberty.”

The Donald’s nickname for him may prove most astute. There’s a lot of cognitive dissonance present with Ted. A  self-proclaimed anti-establishment Tea Party American patriot, he didn’t renounce his Canadian citizenship until well into his second year as a US Senator, at age 44, a wee bit before he announced his Presidential candidacy. Irony, his father regularly spouted untrue birtherism against Obama.

When Ted announced for President he said “It is a time for truth.” But how truthful has Ted been?

He made his name as an uncompromising conservative, someone John McCain called a “Wackobird!” His career to date has not proved him statesman, more like “gratesman,” rubbing colleagues the wrong way, like his 2013 filibuster against Obamacare, reading Cat in the Hat in the Senate, helping shut down the federal government for 16 days. He ran for President in 2016 to repeal Obamacare, and voted in 2017 to get rid of it, yet utilized it to obtain health care for his family when his wife quit her job and they lost their healthcare.  

About Trump, he called him a “pathological liar,” “a rat”, a “trainwreck”, “utterly amoral”, a “sniveling coward” and “can’t be trusted” in 2016. Then in 2017, Cruz became one of his staunchest defenders, doing his bidding, through the Capitol attack, backing Trump’s claim of voting fraud. He did so notwithstanding watching 60 cases brought to contest the election, not one producing evidence of fraud, and in most Trump’s own lawyers not bothering to allege any.

So, “come on, Ted,” where’s the fraud? It’s Cruz himself.

Recall that Cruz, a Harvard trained lawyer who clerked for the Supreme Court, knows better, especially after a Trump appointee deemed this election the safest ever, and Trump’s Attorney General, William Barr, often acting more like Trump’s personal attorney, found no credible evidence of voter fraud.

And yet, Cruz, without proof, led the effort to require the Senate to appoint a federal electoral commission to conduct an emergency audit of state voting because, as he said “tragically 39% of Americans believe the election was rigged.” And who made Americans believe this?  

We need look no further than Trump, and Cruz, as they engaged in Don and Ted’s Most Excellent Anti-Democratic Adventure. This, notwithstanding most all Senate Republicans, including Mitch McConnell, had given up contesting the election a month earlier. Yet Cruz played along as Trump tried to shakedown the GA Secretary of State the first weekend in January, and continued to do the President’s bidding through the moment of insurrection, doing serious damage to our democracy with deadly consequences, pushing a federal election audit that had no chance of passage.

So where is the fraud? It’s Ted, who knew he was defrauding the public from the Senate floor. Unswayed by the riot, Cruz joined seven other Republican senators that night in refusing to certify Biden. And, while the chaos of the riot spiraled out of control, he sent an automated fundraising text: “Ted Cruz here. I’m leading the fight to reject electors … unless there is an emergency audit of election results. Will you stand with me?” We should not, but we should do more than text him back our dissatisfaction.  

In the days since the attack, Cruz has tried to distance himself from Trump, calling the attack “despicable and horrific,” blaming Trump’s rhetoric for contributing to the violence, while insisting Ted was not to blame, yet failing to call for Trump’s resignation, instead he’s continued to play to the Trump base: “The president’s language and rhetoric was reckless. And it was not helpful. That’s not what I was saying.” Denying he was in any way responsible for making democracy itself a betting chip in playing his own political hand, he’s clearly smoking his own dope. He’s abandoned Lincoln’s concept of government of, by and for the people and forgotten his sacred oath to “support and defend the Constitution,” ignoring the need to tell truth to both power and the people. With his false flag political stunt, Ted has forfeited our trust. He helped lead a treasonous mob to the Capitol door, welcoming them to that point, but won’t take any responsibility for what they then did inside.

Cruz claimed he was merely “debating matters of great import” in the Senate, although that amounted to making false allegations that there were voting irregularities meriting federal intervention. He helped turn Trump’s “Big Lie” into an insurrection, claiming the election was “rigged”, despite a total lack of evidence. He egged on the insurrection from the Senate floor, saying: “I want to take a moment to speak to my Democratic colleagues. I understand your guy is winning right now.” That wasn’t a call for collegiality, but rather a call to action to those assaulting the Capitol. By nurturing the mob’s delusions, he helped foment insurrection.

Critics rightfully say Cruz is 100% complicit for backing Trump’s fraudulent claims. The Houston Chronicle, his home town paper, demanded: “Resign, Mr. Cruz, and deliver Texas from the shame of calling you our senator.”

What was he thinking? Why do this? Cruz’s cost-benefit analysis concluded that catering to the president was a benefit to Cruz’s own presidential aspirations well worth any costs to American democracy. His objections thus were motivated by a desire to outflank Senator Josh Hawley in the 2024 race, positioning himself as heir apparent to the Trump base. Former Republican Senator Corker observed: “Everyone can see through, and look: understand {he’s} running for president.”

Ted’s was a Faustian bargain in deed and fact. Notwithstanding his federalist principles, Ted asked to throw out state electoral votes, as Chip Roy (R-TX) said, in an attempt “to unconstitutionally insert Congress into the center of the presidential election process.”

Ted of course has been eyeing a shot at the White House, so stoking Trumpists with the red meat of fraudulent voting claims served that aim. But if Trump’s rhetoric results in more violence, Cruz will have blood on his hands that can’t be washed out, and a political albatross around his neck that should sink his presidential aspirations like an anchor. As some commentators note, Lyin’ Ted’s political fortunes are now inextricably linked to the man he once reviled, but whom he followed into breaching the rule of law and our democractic norms. This was indeed a stunt too far, beyond the pale, and Cruz has become what ails the body politic and needs excising.

There’s a petition circulating to strip him of his TX bar status for violating Texas’s rules of ethics, that no lawyer shall “engage in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation.” Some 11,000+ lawyers and law students have signed. Others are circulating a petition asking him to resign, stating “despite dozens of failed court challenges and no evidence of fraud whatsoever,” Cruz claimed, straight face and indignant, the election results of battleground states were suspect. A MoveOn.org petition states “Sen. Cruz has blood on his hands. This was a political game where he put his future opportunity to run for president above the people of Texas. He has lost the right to represent Texans in the U.S. Senate.”

Even members of “Cruzworld” are disgusted by his choosing to back Trump’s absurd claims of widespread election fraud. Their view – he sold his principles down river, in fealty to Trump. Their former boss is unrecognizable to them, and they ask “was he always this way,” was his unwavering “constitutional conservatism” an act, to be discarded for political expediency, tossing the Constitution and federalism to the wind? That would explain how he could be so craven as to try to cancel the votes of millions, defiling his prior principles of states’ rights, federalism and constitutionalism.

Where and when did he lose his principles? Many point to the 2016 Republican National Convention when he urged Republicans to “vote their conscience,” but was booed, heckled, and rebuked by Texas delegates for his betrayal of Trump. That’s when his knees got wobbly and he sold out, and his blind ambition kicked in, as he started to play to Trumpists. His cold calculation was – follow the Don John wherever that took him. Since 2017 Cruz has been Trump’s #1 bootlicker, kneeling at Trump’s altar, shinning his shoes. He dismissed Trump’s vile personal attacks on him when Trump called his wife ugly and accused his father of being part of the plot to kill JFK. Cruz since has curried Trump’s favor, even agreeing to represent him before the Supreme Court in a scurrilous post-election lawsuit. Cruz abandoned his conservatism for political expediency, proving he’d do just about anything. Don’t let him.

His close personal friend, Chad Sweet, who served as his 2016 campaign chairman, broke with him after Cruz objected to electoral votes, saying that due to Cruz’s undermining of our democracy, he “must be denounced!”

A Harvard law classmate called him out in a Dallas Morning News op-ed: “You know… there is no evidence of voter fraud or misconduct… more than 60 courts [including the Supreme Court] have considered all valid arguments and ruled against them… if successful, the ultimate outcome of your actions — the federalization of elections to the detriment of states’ self determination — runs entirely counter to your once-held conservative principles… You chose to undertake an incredibly crass and irresponsible political ploy. You decided … you personally are better off to mislead the very voters you represent. You let raw ambition blind you to the irrevocable damage you are doing to party and nation… You have lost your way… stop baselessly misleading Americans.”

There is no doubt Cruz aided and abetted Trump, amplifying his voter fraud lie, and in doing so he helped foment an insurrection that may prove a modern storming of the Bastille, but one against a democratic election of, by and for the people. Doing so, Cruz fell into a political trap of his own making for any future presidential bid. Because when you go all in with Trump, and sell your soul, there is no road back from Perdition. Cruz has now revealed himself to be a craven, calculating pol who will do anything, even incite an insurrection, to advance his own power agenda. For a guy alleged to be a savvy smartass, he’s proved pretty dumb, falling for his own bull. I mean, my goodness, even Mitch McConnell conceded the election long before the insurrection.

He now faces GOP charges that he incited violence in the name of political opportunism. Senator Toomey (R-PA) accused Cruz of “directly” undermining peoples’ rights to elect their leaders. Mitt Romney (R-UT) said he “will forever be seen as being complicit in an unprecedented attack against our democracy. [The] whole antic … is … built on a lie… To the degree that perpetuating this lie helped incite the crowd, that’s a responsibility that Ted … owns, along with Donald Trump.” Senator Murkowski asked Cruz, “Has ambition so eclipsed principle?” And the take of conservative Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV): “There’s no way {Cruz} cannot be complicit in this. {He} can’t just walk away saying, ‘I just exercised my right as a senator?’ I don’t know how you can live with yourself right now knowing that people lost their lives.”

The consistent thread here – everything Trump touches, dies, and with Cruz’s infatuation with Trump, carrying the water for him, so too has Ted’s presidential aspirations. A true principled conservative, George Will, says Cruz’s insurrection against constitutional government will be an indelible stain on the nation, and he will have to deal forever more with wearing a scarlet “S” as a seditionist. Will notes Trump needed others in his party to defend and support him, make excuses, go silent, attack his critics, advance his conspiracies, and pretend his lawlessness and impeachable offenses were perfectly fine. He needed men to check their morals at the door to carry out his agenda. And who led the “Sedition Caucus,” the “Dirty Dozen,” none other than Rafi, lil’ Felito, Cruz, a man who knew better, and who does not deserve to continue representing the great and diverse people of Texas. Let’s let Cruz learn the consequences of his power play, his deal with the devil. Strip him of his committee assignments, launch a recall, censure him, but most definitely vote him out. It’s true – 2024 cannot come too soon.  

And as for the calls of healing, there can be no reconciliation without full accountability. Trump enablers must be shunned and voted out. Ted thought his was just a little bit of political theater, playing to the Trump base, that democracy was a game, not a way of life that merited sacred treatment and protection. Because Cruz committed the fraud of telling the nation that the election was stolen, diminishing democratic norms and the tradition of the peaceful transfer of power, he needs to pay for his fealty to Trump over democracy. His blow to the soul of the republic in pursuit of his own personal ambitions, what fellow Republican Senator Ben Sasse equated with pointing a loaded gun at legitimate self-government, acting as democracy’s arsonist, should cause him to pay a high price. If there’s justice, then he should forfeit his right to serve the democracy he sought to undermine.  

And how did it all end? – with looters in the Senate chamber, rifling through confidential notebooks, mumbling to themselves, “I think Cruz would want us to do this; I think we’re good.” It’s time to tell Ted it’s not all good, and to take his brand of demagoguery and slink back into the dark night from whence it came.   

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Reads & Reviews

Learned this evening that FB is shutting down notes, my favorite place to keep track of my readings… So I published this note tonight that keeps track of my “Readings” since 2015… Let’s see if I can keep track here, going forward… TBD… Here’s where I left off …

ROSS BLAIR·SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2020· Since I started noting the books I’ve read with a short blurb review, here’s a list… Tracking so I can keep track, and maybe do a better job of reading the classics that are still MIA…

2024

  1. ‘The Three-Body Problem’ by Cixin Liu. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0TUT6Ytn3yaWrREWKUomHVLERxHZTGvCG3wCX9QzGta81V2RMVXQsADJCdvjc9q2Ll
  2. ‘Tom Lake’ by Ann Patchett. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02YmSTac5U2hXV9VbWN2CAfiiYeitv6Pd9HpWCdTLL76ay2hWDfuGvr4Ahq5iwrBt7l
  3. ‘The Christmas Appeal’ by Janice Hallett. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02SaMsqMGQ79k8dtciGYyqtnBjtaEckAq5VRUz35PDgP65xZmrjxa8bJAubW1i4wRpl
  4. ‘The Dog of the North’ by Elizabeth McKenzie. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0snMgugoVd44SchhPeB7AHDPrgC9Cy42vGTCUgz52VNJTZQ66xpM799DgRnus81NZl
  5. ‘Things My Son Needs to Know About the World’ by Fredrik Backman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02LtSaAgFMjqZ5ZfojXDpcK9eeJaf8FLxCLnYQpbcfBTBJaozHFEyTUb8BbMWQVjmgl
  6. ‘My Grandmother Asked Me To Tell You She’s Sorry’ by Fredrik Backman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02iRGAaq7vX4FkXxzP7GkTD3LaKrQHZmdFZqH8bNN5FLqfPY4jUGTN8RBh4RBQEQpsl
  7. ‘The Sunset Years of Agnes Sharp’ by Leonie Swann. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02STAWkZN6LkrfqkwRmByMWqHDDf4rYusyMLCryTUNDnYyns8Stmt2aeF1jbkLhyqwl
  8. ‘The Wishing Game’ by Meg Shaffer. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0pG37s5bz9cJwWCQJ1U8zQEaav6ynnm6TtGoihf74AgnAmMse6yDrvDRb6smPaPZMl
  9. ‘On Disinformation: How to Fight for Trust and Protect Democracy’ by Lee McIntyre. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02EigSr61Q4vqCPWfsF4t6PV3c1KQvzDaRJhrXMQVjFS1HxPGbWxuY4sZCHDfzwMiDl
  10. “THE CHAOS MACHINE: The Inside Story of How Social Media Rewired Our Minds and Our World” by Max Fisher. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02BEeNhoE3TgNnzJprX2w7seK3NgkK93597awyzjZB2u3uJWi6LFobDFcieTYudsYyl
  11. ‘Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West’ by Dee Brown. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02b6fpD2f6m6Tojggp9FUfqX6FqrCdv13sP562FQ51zUn5W5ipDZRsWnXbQwyH3NUKl
  12. ‘What You Are Looking For Is in the Library’ by Michiko Aoyama. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02G2opVaa8FfmaVPNhxy3YMMb2AUTEBYTtpvhDL2Q16vqL4TkRFJ2GcHxsvBm5h32bl
  13. ‘Indigenous Continent: The Epic Contest for North America’ by Pekka Hämäläinen. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0jXphG11pMvXjma9aPCWWGJmGic5gF7QtRZnurVZdJ5nczdYyA5oYFFDUPVPEbZt6l
  14. ‘Fire Weather: A True Story From a Hotter World’ by John Vaillant. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0HFoFPwtQAJ8ENt8B977PT7vWffUNguu1huiaaqWiqExabpkuurrL7hiVkkJQZEEZl
  15. ‘Heart of Darkness’ by Joseph Conrad.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0sMNk6KuYku7AyGsWT8JHb4nNU5B36ikz4fGh8eLa51uhGmBQdPDqQDn13BR612MBl
  16. ‘Our Ancient Faith: Lincoln, Democracy, and the American Experiment’ by Allen C. Guelzo. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0buXdrxaBu6S1Gkrh6Be1UgMGLxQ8NpvMtJHzTALPbGVNzeptcCyCfjxWuD4hiRyFl
  17. ‘The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story’ edited by Nikole Hannah-Jones, Caitlin Roper, Ilena Silverman and Jake Silverstein. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02mUKiJkt3Y4LVxPbEhr9qPqhwoXzzggXSDFZj3r8bguz5uHfVQdeVcn4R2HuBmm9Sl
  18. ‘Prophet Song’ by Paul Lynch. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0WTA226PyFAD4bqgesnxqLM1ZoSQhoPJFZdKuxYLhhp8ufwqRB3U1diKWWRgGQe4Ul
  19. ‘Rebecca’ by by Daphne Du Maurier. https ://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0RgkNBne6RH5ojM1Pgx6AdrxGtKebWxjxKtLCy41nWyF5ooUaSDEUrjk41QXoc2ACl
  20. ‘Atlas of AI: Power, Politics, and the Planetary Costs of Artificial Intelligence’ by Kate Crawford. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0tNN7unzLLnGGH796H4eQJL6Bg8S4oRjjM8VdNwWT1ZQD7s8nZQAY7ntbYgrZr5nTl
  21. ‘The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery’ by Eric Foner. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02osa3jqRTodTLyxQ7Hfo5FSL6QRJMVepeoG2XqZc9cUvY3rpohqR37z2PxP2YxYMTl
  22. ‘World Order: Reflections on the Character of Nations and the Course of History’ by Henry Kissinger.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02mbm76DLCXvTrKNJc5yfvAoJFe1ob1eNgTGpkp6BoiSGiDQB5tiFuVuycjmXToptrl
  23. ‘The Swedish Art of Aging Exuberantly: Life Wisdom from Someone Who Will (Probably) Die Before You’ by Margareta Magnusson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02fBnsFvhpWYD4DhW8HHSgck5TRKJgMZShVqLzsnFHLrr7uKFYzm1z4gJRW5hc9tncl
  24. ‘The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared’ by Jonas Jonasson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0A8aM28gifXtdzHjGPk54e6MrQMVMboGusGiY6x22iD9GozmsmcmLgaFRbs6d34mFl
  25. ‘Tyranny of the Minority: Why American Democracy Reached the Breaking Point’ by Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02rkMHpFD9KvhzRb63Esz5Jk8H6Q1zD1dNeyXNH1qHKp8kMVfMj6TGUSqi1SwQu8V8l
  26. ‘Wandering Stars’ by Tommy Orange. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0254NTYPgd9zVG9aH9XpGQVATqFNcgX7WPnT8QsK5nS9cCaaSyaetxYbbxxceosB3tl
  27. ‘The Light Pirate’ by Lily Brooks-Dalton. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0JTdCDb4v2k7VVj5N25mR6RnvFPay8mhW6oPkwqPrgYFc7S3YvqyW1HkTzJvpHDJtl

2023

  1. ‘Parable of the Sower’ by Octavia Butler. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0gJJXSqpkMLMNasykpDK2M947eQwzTj8WXE9cMcDcdXPwg7rffXRE1LaDkX9wZ1xyl
  2. ‘Present Tense Machine’ by Gunnhild Øyehaug. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02TVEfNfi2HyDd3wMGMm9tKyCbNEkYUhRUWW59B2RHqG36t8ioCSx4yrPADDmYJNn4l
  3. ‘The Stolen Book of Evelyn Aubrey’ by Serena Burdick. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02fH1FTvVyDAfj2ETURPdRnT4venn5WFxb7ttpSbkCmvWmNcv6WrFCJdrvMU7BvmZXl
  4. ‘The Paris Apartment’ by Lucy Foley. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02eATkE9TAYbQWWJdvDJPn19ZAzixhgnhRG7sXRdJrPeuRcsGtqYbW33tsd4AwL7pDl
  5. ‘Liberation Day’ by George Saunders. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02G3nx6vr5QAr6d5Do39AK5VmpjhLbSA7DZ5TegDvFg1xvRwqRNfiFjrgaj8rreMJhl
  6. ‘Life on the Mississippi: An Epic American Adventure’ by Rinker Buck. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid03DkCXNjhrFAh2mhrdvP2Ccd977KDCVBASHLMhN7LmXvgHY24JAFd1sTjXGC7dMuJl
  7. ‘We Spread’ by Iain Reid. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02jE8a513weYEkb8QpW8e4aec3BmUq71ZzeZFcGpDegneGUFSu5iMAjMkspDWZjHAjl
  8. ‘How to Take Over the World: Practical Schemes and Scientific Solutions for the Aspiring Supervillain’ by Ryan North.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid029hSEc2vGoQaCyWnoiCo2dXiVxMGC41DB6XeuQjgWRxd1A3nJu7ZBi93VKeK6dXtul
  9. ‘The Thursday Murder Club’ by Richard Osman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0baCf95kG3kdCG4J69SpkFY3Y9fNhWhvXPAK8bRPArSXjSJdrzFaaHPjuM4rCR9W3l
  10. ‘Path Lit by Lightning: The Life of Jim Thorpe’ by David Maraniss. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0RXtx56yermUiCUh7jWbeaAFmYrgZavnG2NJjHAratd7gwanwzcqXtoqnzPhHff1rl
  11. ‘The Bullet That Missed’ by Richard Osman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid07mwGGyiFFGx6fb3PiWRbor8XBAwtrqhmF9wN9bJpKC3GsSwi5Sz5avd6cLff9wHFl
  12. ‘We Lie Here’ by Rachel Howzell Hall. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02DnDAvjv8yyCm6kQSR4anDUGh4GY9Nzu6Rjgt3RNTZJj1vSoGnunt52RP86xfisN3l
  13. ‘The Age of AI and Our Human Future’ by Henry A. Kissinger, Eric Schmidt and Daniel Huttenlocher. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0KEGNEV257ZzcpEY34wB96SG1ut6ig6AvajL2KKxwD7as6C19RvKPSDuz8mGWbG7pl
  14. ‘FALTER: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out?’ by Bill McKibben. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02UyePYUP9rQ43LCm5DhodcV68qV3hFFb8fDbbXr7PHScqjqFHfX4B3N74F79n18Lal
  15. ‘The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo’ by Taylor Jenkins Reid. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02Jbo7JZutt27UkTpYuxZzERCEhLhKRzJcuiC5KQGLpjFBdr1UjB2VLeJC145Wk9Nwl
  16. ‘Longitude: The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time’ by Dava Sobel. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02LUU6Th2ZZVGnSLNCi9QS7J7DXKMnhdiDaTwtudx3YEcQtdf9FsUtcPwaz3mCW5hil
  17. ‘The Old Woman with the Knife’ by Gu Byeong-mo. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0ZvSwMbtDFCSkua5qZvctMKbfuTCshr9jH3iA8oe4Ux7CysF6DM2XBsqf7ZSTLs2Ml
  18. ‘Do Robots Make Love?: From AI to Immortality, Understanding Transhumanism in 12 Questions’ by Laurent Alexandre and Jean-Michael Besnier. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02i1wYZebAsouG6V61jMjktg9iQP5YCKQ4V7HH42W4oiggWGhBTvCziAsFptoUN85Nl
  19. ‘The Anomaly’ by Hervé Le Tellier.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid028F9oViRNCBTVPLoYkaB9YBZaLdQid4pynpsknid75JRbug9iBE6y8rJtLqQjLNBRl
  20. ‘The Power of Geography: Ten Maps That Reveal the Future of Our World’ by Tim Marshall. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0MpzgWyygtE4C3ofDhiAyYAkhEKg9QY6HmUvMDDTQzDbGabE9AxqKYC7utV6ryKi1l
  21. ‘The Guest List’ by Lucy Foley. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0ANEVPLuXuCLYWwWGp3cDVnKysxDqkhxatCNgG7HVkvfj6HdSpbJ99sozjcR49Ks1l
  22. ‘The Bluest Eye’ by Toni Morrison. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02NiscENyUptFAafLVYjwCNgRXz2MepUL3kHkwvuiHXAQcfLyZ7oj28nKgPYq8ytqql
  23. ‘Last Summer on State Street’ by Toya Wolfe. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02ZCC21R4BVHAKTsQkD3tDXWCR9DQJj8p8uRP5dMZxX7Lw29LqKUuv3NPZhexSX7Kul
  24. ‘A World Without Work: Technology, Automation, and How We Should Respond’ by Daniel Susskind.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid022HWqyKsh6MZ8X6deFpbyLS8oEY4ke4UBR9nuReGbfSXkaVhTPQArcYefrY2GBAktl
  25. ‘House on Mango Street’ by Sandra Cisneros. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02cPRLpKAAULbBAWRztXm6rUHPdLQ4EHNgBEdTgTgEj41TLGe1ZQ17b4USBEpzMw7Vl
  26. ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ by Margaret Atwood.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0LzXtQ3pCRN5eEji5UHNUDubL5DZm4oT6dY4ZCRCXvFBMyjF8DfzRKjkbNnWzxc64l
  27. ‘The Windsor Knot’ by SJ Bennett. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0eRbnQM9hGY3Wbf5vSfdfj7HX6woF3ki6pV2ezBANe7nGQ5GJPdydvFP7LJxzv83hl
  28. ‘Code Name Verity’ by Elizabeth Wein. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0fntQKV65GD1yzUJ8uaeYU998U4i2FTzAWbmJCZdbEsRx8SN65A8W4XaQSApvqvpDl
  29. ‘Breaking the Age Code: How Your Beliefs About Aging Determine How Long and Well You Live’ by Becca Levy. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid026jhj9fTS9A7mckULNGXfBLhxz6W2g1EY2auPYgaNEDpQfHUxsSedNAaawJXSDxjCl
  30. ‘The Woman In The Library’ by Sulari Gentill. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid033K3xQSAvtKE8x78duXvXgNxQD76pzt1sZW3dhyj5nTYfcyKAmpEB52BMsHNBRzJQl
  31. ‘Maybe You Should Talk to Someone: A Therapist, Her Therapist, and Our Lives Revealed’ by Lori Gottlieb. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02sosKPa2PQMchqxNHdBSBjyG3AXLq6CHKVaMb6HbkzuqJ6rxhR41VVmXJCDt3StTDl
  32. ‘True Biz’ by Sara Novic. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0zLjVAcD44AppXA39QiJjUTjrUdxZ2h2NohRf1h8V2EVkxDMd79aSsdT84Tf5Cis6l
  33. ‘Why We Sleep: The New Science of Sleep and Dreams’ by Matthew Walker. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02FAsfJzhX6HrkbcdfhdaEhkS6hZgrta3tbu7yswMSrCjEfAcXKJqYBa68B1LDr7JCl
  34. ‘Beartown’ by Fredrik Backman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02FcDDZFSLK9u16LSjUE3xdUYWCeuYArSB5HEWbvuoFpu96VXG1dD2jjfidTk9NaCHl
  35. ‘Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea’ by Jules Verne. https://developers.facebook.com/docs/plugins/embedded-posts/?prefill_href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2FRoss.W.Blair%2Fposts%2Fpfbid02nwhQwQ1Pue6zoekViNBaBjmExLNJGMXsZWdimdra8k9jPLhqqAAddsDaAFieTmSwl#code-generator
  36. ‘Mr Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore’ by Robin Sloan. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0r7cF3ut2iPMDnMyYJDsbBwUZhf3mYonJbNQEpP5EMY5V1hMAQzfGumedvQtfM2VEl
  37. ‘History of the Rain’ by Niall Williams.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02yMrMXfxYCjrRK63kaP3uxna4xXq6CtbM9bzhVkjjucdAwe3S9SwJv9avKTJWqfPul
  38. ‘Alias Emma’ by Ava Glass.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0269LgizHVGXPDsnfSnbEkoot1wNhvfkdUqr2XcEffdriXT52qwKzhYak6w76u43G6l
  39. ‘Us Against You’ by Fredrik Backman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0gzH7Lvx8aLpLMcKmv7dm9jdySnoJAR1uf9pHCeR3He2yEAAGZYrmN6ys25Qp3tYgl
  40. ‘1984’ by George Orwell. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0yzTjAisjpGNzkJRGg2JczSaduR27TZ4PdqLhZZBCCwhgzfA9xf17YKKaomZhhcf7l
  41. ‘The WInners’ by Fredrik Backman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid09VKUNfwKd11vTsbMUp9m6iaQ4iWJkoqnx3LUau25VAeVxG6CGBQUmyWmmweJooqvl
  42. ‘Animal Farm’ by George Orwell. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02JMonjTEXaTJCRuw2MnpY9umSNm4pMaPUjBex2iskkbMS9zq78FCFamwp1agbgAhSl
  43. ‘9 Rules for Humans in the Age of Automation’ by Kevin Roose. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02UHnQppmBCen7AbzwDwLiYXAk74VfFnQJFfh1zLcwtWa52bQ78xq6QgnzkrGvR2mGl
  44. ‘The Land of Short Sentences’ by Stine Pilgaard. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0vJJdqy6Tt5Ya5fu9oehoWvtg8eaBkYkvbcDnyJ53PaLrhJWUP8neRM8zv3T6Goegl
  45. ‘The Testaments’ by Margaret Atwood. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0yMnMeeox9i7HtMWHW8Pca7MY1wen1iNGitB683QEMizRpuBpvpJXFtJC6tVLJTXCl
  46. ‘Lessons in Chemistry’ by Bonnie Garmus. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid035HoRr4qgCFbEyJqgNJvepoW3Z8ALUaz7uFGwiDLKtgiU3p6JfCkia6Ef9YWiTXwnl
  47. ‘Pride and Prejudice’ by Jane Austen.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02Hb42ygGpyAuGhp8aetdnvEYYbagFnxqbtYKyu1JobpcsCBJjydn1SFPr7CQ8kSZ3l
  48. ‘Prisoners of Geography: Ten Maps That Tell You Everything You Need to Know About Global Politics’ by Tim Marshall. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0292GEzjrm5yPdztf8dro9yFGAhPDg9nKVpVdVYPcQRK77hnef7aydJsgbUJ185BwBl
  49. ‘Rule of the Robots: How Artificial Intelligence Will Transform Everything’ by Martin Ford. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0skMM7w65zRdYHBXi8h6deqBHvDkxq4h1ZyV8tcsvSWxRrGWrqmi2XLCjSSdigvUnl
  50. ‘Hello Beautiful’ by Ann Napolitano. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02X1WY1Hu5f79ckXfWDtoMyifpwt1q7zoRPpNE5NJo7S2fp4gePFoN8xMNkhtV75Ygl
  51. ‘The Bookish Life of Nina Hill’ by Abbi Waxman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02MCxrs9JmvYrUhnYGSNBCzibwryGCUTHuzwTevDXJLwattqFAXUawk9V15s2dH4Kml
  52. ‘Hamnet: A Novel of the Plague’ by Maggie O’Farrell. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0PqXn7Va6Hd6nXn29F7i7pPJQAMQCf21KgLBEbGoKXXw7xZviSVBm49Sw3hqPAVL4l
  53. ‘Daisy Jones & The Six’ by Taylor Jenkins Reid. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0wSqp89axWQw2JMwJtv6ufKC5jMNXzHd1ZgtGnGxN4C3YGSJi5xh9CGaiP8ZrPefLl
  54. ‘The Marriage Portrait’ by Maggie O’Farrell. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02HD7oZssxGWePyoFUHAsGnagrN9dFBRDyfV2AdXov6PKke3cCCK1WC36ZzDtCXELCl
  55. ‘Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow’ by Gabrielle Zevin. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02DMthgPZWqpvyharVs5NsSVDz2RgKG2mcGZhjLz3jqfK4ZoHwmSJytzRqx2fEZT4Kl
  56. ‘The Last Devil to Die’ by Richard Osman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0HHvbKFdJPVM4H1evNYbZ4SeLmwxdRi8mgFncbmdUBDmrzn8Mar6ujVU4GviRewNvl
  57. ‘Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers’ by Jesse Q. Sutanto. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0zMuj9XGVmvz226E4XjhzavRpcYLAfpYB3FWrmTVfWCqH6NF9J7fVSVwPM8sZ54Qfl
  58. ‘The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race’ by Walter Isaacson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid04HWWAh56ATnsNEA7asjKZLGxT4J5JmRx8jdLVKEuaWamMkfH9Py2F2v9BDpz3mM2l
  59. ‘A Most Agreeable Murder’ by Julia Seales. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02d6w1316189KS8C5RsYupVJsd3YRhyNgShSsSDcR8zuUMg9waRsZ7i1bDFBWJ1Cjsl
  60. ‘The Dictionary of Lost Words’ by Pip Williams. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02kjTKe6PbbN8YCZi4hxqNHou5AB9UwTjNA5Eqsb4nyUPriRqXThxmSGuBdiJdKKnNl
  61. ‘The Puzzle Master’ by Danielle Trussoni. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0N9otpdRjY7V4B7ePr8mb4AweLvixJbLwu8MVVsHaoznbGY8Paa1szr9qekd13Gqjl
  62. ‘Klara and the Sun’ by Kazuo Ishiguro. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02BGFLLKTJhmkeZw7ZHvfUMBzyVat9Z3BufcFgsVK8rGnz6b3HaM8R7DjGBHyqcUual
  63. ‘Born to Run: The Hidden Tribe, the Ultra-Runners and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen’ by Christopher McDougall. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0nohX4LNRsvciS2fe8ePjj8bWMeQoKmsRTErJm8mFH5tpFsNLcj54ooatd6Su9cbbl
  64. ‘The Maid’ by Nita Prose. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0j2jXQTQWB4MZGtzuB118svySBWDPDuMoruY6NVwGDLyzfq6SuC1JgKrMU5a6yJWel
  65. ‘A City on Mars: Can We Settle Space, Should We Settle Space, and Have We Really Thought This Through?’ by Kelly and Zach Weinersmith. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02LU5FsxUPqsvSY3oBPaxvN6C8JnbPCesfR8NouqWJjXF4devrPaU7EFrW2q3N9PGsl
  66. ‘The Christmas Guest: A Novella’ by Peter Swanson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid09iVBqekjohqoGPSzfkCLbD2paLKn8YwVwpu2mcyF4wLWKC2zz8R8ck8SanxJDJzxl
  67. ‘The Christmas Jigsaw Murders’ by Alexandra Benedict. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02w1kd4msgKa33BYFWXynhGAGMYemtMTqjueFm5AmDVVJTQU2WBgWqC76HX5qt441cl

2022

  1. ‘Th e Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History’ by Elizabeth Kolbert. https://www facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223971692372869
  2. ‘Last Best Hope: America in Crisis and Renewal’ by George Packer. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223972603715652
  3. The Midnight Library’ by Matt Haig. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223973263092136
  4. ‘How to Stop Time’ by Matt Haig. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224007862717105
  5. ‘The Ten Thousand Doors of January’ by Alix E. Harrow. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224046802970587
  6. ‘How the Word Is Passed: A Reckoning With the History of Slavery Across America’ by Clint Smith. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224047157259444
  7. ‘Less’ by Andrew Sean Greer. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224082882872562
  8. ‘Robert E. Lee and Me: A Southerner’s Reckoning With the Myth of the Lost Cause’ by Ty Seidule. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224086994255344
  9. ‘Infinite Country’ by Patricia Engel. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224110739408958
  10. ‘What Were We Thinking: A Brief Intellectual History of the Trump Era’ by Carlos Lozada. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224147144039051
  11. ‘So You Want to Talk About Race’ by Ijeoma Oluo.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224175643551521
  12. ‘Writers & Lovers’ by Lily King m/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224175866317090
  13. ‘The Scout Mindset: Why Some People See Things Clearly and Others Don’t’ by Julia Galef. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224203379764909
  14. ‘Divided We Fall: America’s Secession Threat and How to Retore Our Nation’ by David French. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224217411075683
  15. ‘Beloved’ by Toni Morrison. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224217541438942
  16. ‘This America: The Case for the Nation’ by Jill Lepore. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224278992135171
  17. ‘The Fire The Next Time’ by James Baldwin. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224288783139940
  18. ‘Leave the World Behind’ by Rumaan Alam. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224310912613163
  19. ‘Invisible Man’ by Ralph Ellison. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224311221980897
  20. ‘The Summer of 1787: The Men Who Invented the Constitution’ by David O. Stewart. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224413706342942
  21. ‘Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Authoritarianism’ by Anne Applebaum. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224474834031096
  22. ‘Lessons from the Edge’ by Marie Yovanovitch. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224474165894393
  23. ‘Housekeeping’ by Marilynne Robinson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224547971779494
  24. ‘A Tree Grows in Brooklyn’ by Betty Smith.. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224548116983124
  25. ‘Iron Curtain: The Crushing of Eastern Europe, 1944-56’ by Anne Applebaum. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224555297962644
  26. ‘What Is Populism?’ by Jan-Werner Müller.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224590046711341
  27. ‘In Wartime: Stories From Ukraine’ by Tim Judah. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10224590237996123
  28. ‘The Cat That Saved Books’ by Sosuke Natsukawa. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0hsFjsHbX2MgUDijxGh3b8q7STC9ACkrgN9A5SaTWZfFyv5o4YGqmzFVbit6Divofl
  29. ‘The Paris Library’ by Janet Skeslien Charles. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02jpwiWTDM4VV2ZhSgNS4ochLgtMFb3KQX8M6g5itru5YByUPpxQuskU9cqSRhizyMl
  30. ‘The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry’ by Gabrielle Zevin. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid025BCWzQQCFLkPbZAeUPNF6Yr5Trts1eZpAzAHPsHhJMVQ1EdHKFJAUBLZyWFAHYk5l
  31. ‘Somebody’s Daughter’ by Ashley Ford. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02qX6c3EQfMEQ1gwErHMVJq913M3mhEKq9bPTMsakmr8XaQszSGhQupw5hBLBzAWYPl
  32. ‘The Last Bookshop in London: A Novel of World War II’ by Madeline Martin. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid026g8gK91QGQTCTNdHJS72BVHpbZLXcpTPc5gDhK6ULfsbrEgBCh9zvVNmfcDheRykl
  33. ‘Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking’ by Malcolm Gladwell. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid021JFLAfdVnXtGcGYQiABmAdy7XPQJ45zne8tpvGb51ennXmWtLCGWoJB3qpatVyY6l
  34. ‘The Road to Unfreedom: Russia, Europe, America’ by Timothy Snyder. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0oukCQAdeqyWuQyPaHpKrrGY7wctvzwnn4MWpYfpsLVjpepaJu8orwMGTeAWE9eJrl
  35. ‘Nudge: The Final Edition’ by Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0UG8wQ6LKU7qEmMPwkuZigrNn4vPtQYpVPQTMnSUAkVrys718kbbnupfZqiqMyjvwl
  36. ‘The Four Winds’ by Kristin Hannah. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02XGmGUAttLZW7ouJ9JGnCt1EUcjRJHUBgGuBuwBb9di42fpm896FGcNcQrNVFaNcSl
  37. ‘How You Say It: Why You Talk the Way You Do—And What It Says About You’ by Katherine Kinzler. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid06NTgusnWF29Tv3DDW8hQ3BZShjoCY8LRrYd1VKCeaFeE4U4DWrpa2Bdr3fhjKnKJl
  38. ‘Carry Me Home’ by Janet Fox. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid026Z43aK6Urz7b1w6H9F4vYqW3CbyNMyiAMMzSu9TuL6NkTWSR4pSPCxQRRxkzYmbtl
  39. ‘The Rose Code’ by Kate Quinn. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0pP4Mz3Ab8VDSASDMWYueRWgsYxM8AKAa6FTvW3NgjfyQq2p5cxZ49T18i5yk6HnHl
  40. ‘The Southernization of America: A Story of Democracy in the Balance’, by Frye Gaillard and Cynthia Tucker. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02QRuTEt3AqTZi1KTi93i7jqZz2Xos3DYLwLwpFBEjFTtssMpQsvANYpkasaYWPgf9l
  41. ‘Uncivil Agreement: How Politics Became Our Identity’ by Lilliana Mason. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid026F3YjK43iSiFr5wcsUE7kpybSHULsyPUWCCCzee25DArGMp6YNEXRV9DNJK3sKazl
  42. ‘Sisu: The Finnish Art of Courage’ by Joanna Nylund. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0iSq1PEExuhXCRFj2SywApo8qeMiy5ShRtayYkzeXmTNwL2AQonSwt7izdyTG4edVl
  43. ‘Blood and Thunder: The Epic Story of Kit Carson and the Conquest of the American West’ by Hampton Sides. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0GJLk7LPVxtmLdZ2Bcm8wPYCXeTwLrKK4r9wKob3rJ5W4JAiMXPRthe1p2Q7QgqhKl
  44. ‘A Lot of People Are Saying: The New Conspiracism and the Assault on Democracy’ by Nancy Rosenblum and Russell Muirhead. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0Tmmdimu82aUcGqQqYJH6Qu1Gnrr9NbH96kcgEAVV1noMpPSh9X4r6VfoxuvWmpN4l
  45. ‘THE BIG SORT: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America Is Tearing Us Apart’ by Bill Bishop with Robert G. Cushing. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0fudTtyAbNFjkhwtk4ipb9Y7SgG6XrVVvrD86e7MBUR4sofwSBMmDoR2aGqYFRL82l
  46. ‘The Alice Network’ by Kate Quinn.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0fudTtyAbNFjkhwtk4ipb9Y7SgG6XrVVvrD86e7MBUR4sofwSBMmDoR2aGqYFRL82l
  47. ‘Nomad Country: How Climate Migration Will Reshape Our World” by Gaia Vince. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02vEcg25ZP1hR3oEF8RPNWDogjCRn6ep9umCe1FkspaQKJGinbeGcSkKfP42DcuGyjl
  48. ‘The Nightin­gale’ by Kristin Han­nah.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0RidWM8dv8G257DhBoZYvfX56tCZ14kNQreancgJeV8dAEsR2JMqh4i5fJfLiuPkFl
  49. ‘Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations’ by Amy Chua. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid027mDLdrVjGm9RvtpdCCarmmJy6sTxLP3rELQbXAJAnyrdY8UXra1Bv8q8TpJ2jJjil
  50. ‘Sea of Tranquility’ by Emily St. John Mandel. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0jc2dnrmvDaUhyVmuCcny6Ktk8hExh91mDDf4BaTYShS8eFdhENF3ZtKjHRbDt4FSl
  51. ‘The Librarian Spy’ by Madeline Martin. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid082qBr4KfTaVrMxXM1R45XbUYYXmszqgti8RziDHGxPZ9ozZMfWqB4Z8Z9Nn3X6P6l
  52. ‘Forget the Alamo: The Rise and Fall of an American Myth’ by Bryan Burrough, Chris Tomlinson, and Jason Stanford. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02mBmwBzV4SinqdW85h9L9eEThaDu7xDCf914V1GPkQrhK1DNTceBfPtxAQ1r9qngUl
  53. ‘Rebel With a Clause: Tales and Tips from a Roving Grammarian’ by Ellen Jovin. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02A6RhrsVLRQcHfRr2PvaDUrvRwGh7PY8f5DzpxZPkyGy5yNj1UteehxNfBxQoZrGml
  54. ‘Small Things Like These’ by Claire Keegan. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid038KE4ZF84Eazy6cHQvEkHafeCif349PbNR4NVJim1xQj457rnJ3MBoJbMfXLjJoPvl
  55. ‘The Appeal’ by Janice Hallett.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02KhwyRqop9EkYwX9LAo8Gss2yf3vDG4QRAg9Y6t9RuBwqgnWdyEBVxPsNdA3T2z29l
  56. ‘Thank You for Your Servitude: Donald Trump’s Washington and the Price of Submission’ by Mark Leibovich. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02z662X2Kp2jJUD2aeYvW5utwy1RAKg3aJavgBkDghHZ8ZGZoBYiGnQYsTSVKkcRdjl
  57. ‘Sparring Partners’ by John Grisham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02RZpD4twTdHwx4wy3ZCVtg3L57FnZjkQ2cdQvautgGyBFt4dJwi2f4uNzkrmZATtgl
  58. ‘Read Dangerously: The Subversive Power of Books in Troubled Times’ by Azar Nafisi. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02bwtaUCnyj4BAdRdod1cFEqmLe3P4KFBEhVntHdy3UBC5nDURGQS4La7dWEva8RLYl
  59. ‘Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones’ by James Clear.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid0bPMtf2Xj3rnUZZZdYMqYxzRdeSCLnxSD79y46zZytjRynzPkVBe6HvhSMooX4TYol
  60. ‘Thank You for Listening: A Novel’ by Julia Whelan. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02FghGLXUjvjZ2xKCDZKbKzUfNDbM4HkvB5P5KquyqxuNTUBYd8NWCAvKnczsLyhrjl
  61. ‘The Man Who Died, Twice’ by Richard Osman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02sGDiRwCKU934fjGMGyT2NrA8ERNX5cie1yf2fXc2MFxvXhn9Yt3DStkhKAoiAu2Gl
  62. ‘Killers of a Certain Age’ by Deanna Raybourn. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/pfbid02DSQc5yiiDorMzabpcErouULWAJkVSyQVabq49JmgjRZ9tALqYCb2JwPBrUcFB3hfl

2021

  1. ‘The New Map: Energy, Climate, and the Clash of Nations’ by Daniel Yergin. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10221767271063714
  2. ‘A Promised La nd ‘ by Barack Obama. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10221913825367480
  3. ‘The Camp Grant Massacre’ by Elliott Arnold. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222099921819775
  4. ‘Manual For Survival: A Chernobyl Guide to the Future’ by Kate Brown. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222108603116802
  5. ‘The Ones We’ve Been Waiting For: How a New Generation of Leaders Will Transform America’ by Charlotte Alter. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222274553105448
  6. ‘A Time for Mercy’ by John Grisham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222329627682278
  7. ‘Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You’ by Jason Reynolds and Ibram X. Kendi. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222329699924084
  8. ‘The End of White Politics: How to Heal Our Liberal Divide’ by Zerlina Maxwell. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222481226512154
  9. ‘How to Be an Antiracist’ by Ibram X Kendi. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222482760670507
  10. ‘The End of White Christian America’ by Robert P. Jones. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222493076208389
  11. ‘Leading Without Authority: How the New Power of Co-Elevation Can Break Down Silos, Transform Teams, and Reinvent Collaboration’ by Keith Ferrazzi. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222568347610127
  12. ‘Saving Justice: Truth, Transparency, and Trust’ by James Comey. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222568465933085
  13. ‘Our Team: The Epic Story of Four Men and the World Series that Changed Baseball’ by Luke Epplin. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222568652897759
  14. ‘Hiding in Plain Sight: The Invention of Donald Trump and the Erosion of America’ by Sarah Kendzior. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222616478333365
  15. ‘Caste: The Origin of our Discontents’ by Isabel Wilkerson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222700779240835
  16. ‘White Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity’ by Robert P. Jones. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222701923389438
  17. ‘We the Corporations: How American Businesses Won Their Civil Rights’ by Adam Winkler. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222780637357238
  18. ‘The Secret Wisdom of Nature: Trees, Animals, and the Extraordinary Balance of All Living Things: Stories from Science and Observation’ by Peter Wohlleben. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222791078578262
  19. ‘The Culture Code: The Secrets of Highly Successful Groups’ by Daniel Coyle. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222829168610489
  20. ‘Girl Waits with Gun’ by Amy Stewart. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222915040597235
  21. ‘The Invention of Wings’ by Sue Monk Kidd. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222919177780662
  22. ‘Precious and Grace’ by Alexander McCall Smith. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222988156985099
  23. ‘Antitrust: Taking on Monopoly Power From the Gilded Age to the Digital Age’ by Amy Klobuchar. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10222999722874239
  24. ‘Nature’s Best Hope: A New Approach to Conservation that Starts in Your Yard’ by Douglas Tallamay.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223105547079778
  25. ‘The Vanishing Half’ by Brit Bennett. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223151963440158
  26. The Feather Thief: Beauty, Obsession, and the Natural History Heist of the Century’ by Kirk Wallace Johnson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223152020961596
  27. ‘On Juneteenth’ by Annette Gordon-Reed.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223185565800196
  28. ‘Committed: A Skeptic Makes Peace With Marriage’ by Elizabeth Gilbert. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223261629901751
  29. ‘The Order of Time’ by Carlo Rovelli. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223319652192272
  30. ‘Wicked Plants: The Weed That Killed Lincoln’s Mother & Other Botanical Atrocities’.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223408276487824
  31. ‘The Premonition: A Pandemic Story’ by Michael Lewis. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223446571365172
  32. ‘Sooley’ by John Grisham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223468458472336
  33. ‘Seven Brief Lessons on Physics’ by Carlo Rovelli. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223481382875438
  34. ‘Cosmic Queries: StarTalk’s Guide to Who We Are, How We Got Here, and Where We’re Going’ by Neil DeGrasse Tyson with James Trefil. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223491107878557
  35. ‘The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters’ by Priya Parker. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223495787475544
  36. ‘Lady Cop Makes Trouble’ by Amy Stewart. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223616111163561
  37. ‘Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood’ by Trevor Noah. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223617944569395
  38. “The Whole Town’s Talking” by Fannie Flagg. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223682860512253
  39. ‘The Race to Save the Romanovs’ by Helen Rappaport.  https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223736558654673
  40. ‘Subscribed: Why the Subscription Model Will Be Your Company’s Future—and What to Do About It’ by Tien Tzuo. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223812767839855
  41. ‘The Economists’ Hour: False Prophets, Free Markets and the Fracture of Society’ by Binyamin Appelbaum. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223867045156754
  42. ‘Dune’ by Frank Herbert. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223867421006150
  43. ‘The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the Second World War’ by Malcolm Gladwell. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223907674492462
  44. ‘Kindred’ by Octavia Butler. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223907985340233
  45. Under A White Sky: The Nature of the Future’ by Elizabeth Kolbert. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10223912824301204
  46. ‘Underland: A Deep Time Journey’ by Robert MacFarlane. https://www.facebook.com/1014457098/posts/10223022413721496/
  47. ‘Mrs. Sherlock Holmes: The True Story of New York City’s Greatest Female Detective and the 1917 Missing Girl Case That Captivated a Nation’ by Brad Ricca. https://www.facebook.com/1014457098/posts/10223795842096722/
  48. ‘The Undoing Project: A Friendship That Changed Our Minds’ by Michael Lewis. https://www.facebook.com/1014457098/posts/10223361411356225/

2020

  1. Talking To Strangers’ by Malcolm Gladwell. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218710540807368
  2. ‘Agent Running in the Field’ by John le Carré. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218710742172402
  3. ‘Frida Kahlo: The Story of Her Life’ by Vanna Vinci. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218767399188792
  4. ‘The Guardians’ by John Grisham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218772191868606
  5. ‘A Warning’ by Anonymous. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10219314643109548
  6. ‘She Came to Slay: The Life and Times of Harriet Tubman’ by Erica Armstrong Dunbar. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10219314809953719
  7. ‘The Body: A Guide for Occupants’ by Bill Bryson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10219314910276227
  8. ‘Leadership: Lessons from the Presidents for Turbulent Times’ by Doris Kearns Goodwin. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10219838169797388
  9. ‘A Short History of Nearly Everything’ by Bill Bryson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10220415723315865
  10. ‘Nature’s Mutiny: How the Little Ice Age of the Long Seventeenth Century Transformed the West and Shaped the Present’ by Philipp Blom. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10220415899520270
  11. ‘Camino Winds’ by John Grisham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10220433949891518
  12. ‘The Lost Man’ by Jane Harper. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10220525866309371
  13. ‘Chemistry’ by Weike Wang. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10220587709975424
  14. ‘Where the Crawdads Sing’ by Delia Owens. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10220683180162119
  15. ‘A Gentleman in Moscow’ by Amor Towles. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10220752708540285
  16. ‘On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century’ by Timothy Snyder. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10220807178101990
  17. ‘The Alchemist’ by Paulo Coehlo. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10220967400707455
  18. ‘Mrs. Everything’ by Jennifer Weiner. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10220985731685718
  19. ‘Educated’ by Tara Westover. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10221067606292532
  20. ‘The Threat: How the FBI Protects America in the Age of Terror and Trump’ by Andrew G. McCabe. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10221067920860396
  21. ‘Time to Start Thinking: America in the Age of Descent’ by Edward Luce. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10221075297564809
  22. ‘The Rules of Civility’ by Amor Towles. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10221186214737669
  23. ‘THE SPLENDID AND THE VILE: A Saga of Churchill, Family, and Defiance During the Blitz’ by Eric Larson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10221514031092873
  24. ‘The Red and the Blue: The 1990s and the Birth of Political Tribalism’ by Steve Kornacki. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10221731179321443

2019

  1. ‘Packing My Library: An Elegy and Ten Digressions’ by Alberto Manguel. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10215938340824101
  2. ‘Narcissa Whitman on the Oregon Trail’ by Lawrence Dodd. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10215957211375853
  3. ‘Little Fires Everywhere’ by Celeste Ng. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/102159574905028312018
  4. ‘The Retreat of Western Liberalism’ by Edward Luce. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216008767344720
  5. ‘Hana’s Suitcase – A True Story’ by Karen Levine. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216064852426812
  6. ‘Al Franken: Giant of the Senate’, by Al Franken. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216162791195220
  7. ‘God Save Texas: A Journey Into the Soul of the Lone Star State’ by Lawrence Wright. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216211663657001
  8. ‘The Restless Wave: Good Times, Just Causes, Great Fights, and Other Appreciations’ by John McCain and Mark Salter. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216308368634565
  9. “Go Tell It On the Mountain” by James Baldwin. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216384499337785
  10. ‘Refuge: Rethinking Refugee Policy in a Changing World’ by Paul Collier and Alexander Betts. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216488887627427
  11. ‘American Dialogue: The Founders and Us” by Joseph J. Ellis. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216638660211648
  12. ‘The American Spirit: Who We Are and What We Stand For’ by David McCullough. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216670109957872
  13. ‘Big Sycamore Stands Alone: The Western Apaches, Aravaipa, and the Struggle for Place’ by Ian Record. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216733492542397
  14. ‘Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right”’, by Jane Mayer. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10216795838981019
  15. ‘K: A History of Baseball in Ten Pitches’, by Tyler Kepner. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217055883001957
  16. ‘Fear: Trump in the White House’, by Bob Woodward. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217056007605072
  17. ‘The Fifth Risk’, by Michael Lewis. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217207757678729
  18. ‘21 Lessons for the 21st Century’, by Yuval Harari. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217272682141800
  19. ‘A Few Red Drops: The Chicago Race Riot of 1919’, by Claire Hartfield. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217304739143205
  20. ‘The Library Book’ by Susan Orlean. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217335764958831
  21. ‘The Influencing Machine’ by Brooke Gladstone and Josh Neufeld. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217342657531141
  22. ‘A Velocity of Being: Letters to a Young Reader’, edited by Maria Popova and Claudia Bedrick. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217365028570403
  23. ‘The Pioneers: The Heroic Story of the Settlers Who Brought the American Ideal West’, by David McCullough. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217424149328385
  24. ‘Anti-Social Media: How Facebook Disconnects Us and Undermines Democracy’ by Siva Vaidhyanathan. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217467317047551
  25. ‘Upheaval: Turning Points for Nations in Crisis’ by Jared Diamond. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217612903967133
  26. ‘Vast Domain of Blood: The Story of the Camp Grant Massacre’, by Don Schellie. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217804334432775
  27. ‘The Reckoning’ by John Grisham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10217851241165414
  28. ‘Becoming’ by Michelle Obama. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218027530852546
  29. ‘Best Friends’ and ‘Real Friends’ by Shannon Hale and LeUyen Pham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218030236920196
  30. ‘Midnight in Chernobyl’ by Adam Higginbotham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218151514992072
  31. ‘Code Girls: The Untold Story of the American Women Code Breakers of World War II’ by Liza Mundy. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218166679971187
  32. ‘Democracy in the Poetry of Walt Whitman: Social Issues in Literature’ by Thomas Riggs and company, book editors. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218337039870078
  33. ‘Dreams of El Dorado: A History of the American West’ by H.W. Brands. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218391818999522
  34. ‘Facts and Fears: Hard Truths From a Life in Intelligence’ by James Clapper. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218457639444992
  35. ‘Democracy for Realists: Why Elections Do Not Produce Responsive Government’ by Christopher H. Achen and Larry M. Bartels. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218521119191946
  36. ‘Writer, Sailor, Soldier, Spy: Ernest Hemingway’s Secret Adventures, 1935–1961’ by Nicholas Reynolds. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10218526109236694

2018

  1. ‘When Breath Becomes Air’ by Paul Kalanithi. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10213163218407775
  2. ‘What Unites Us: Reflections on Patriotism’, by Dan Rather. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10213243581296797
  3. ‘We Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy’, by Ta-Nehisi Coates. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10213284258273696
  4. ‘Words Will Break Cement: The Passion of Pussy Riot’, by Masha Gessen. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10213356645883341&id=1014457098
  5. ‘Origin’, by Dan Brown. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10213401645768310
  6. ‘The Black Book’, James Patterson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10213451471973934
  7. ‘My Own Words’ by Ruth Bader Ginsburg with Mary Hartnett and Wendy W. Williams. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10213582405887200&id=1014457098
  8. ‘Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI’ by David Grann. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10213681009032217
  9. ‘Poems of Democracy’ by Walt Whitman. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10213700905449615
  10. ‘The Zhivago Affair: The Kremlin, the CIA, and the Battle over a Forbidden Book’ by Peter Finn and Petra Couvée. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10213753326280103&id=1014457098
  11. ‘The Last Black Unicorn’ by Tiffany Haddish. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10213850261703428&id=1014457098
  12. ‘Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher: The Epic Life and Immortal Photographs of Edward Curtis’ by Timothy Egan. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10213971568296017&id=1014457098
  13. ‘Massacre at Camp Grant: Forgetting and Remembering Apache History’ by Chip Colwell-Chanthaphonh. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10214040190171521&id=1014457098
  14. ‘Leonardo da Vinci’ by Walter Isaacson. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10214147073403535&id=1014457098
  15. ‘A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies and Leadership’ by James Comey. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10214194086978845
  16. ‘The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society’ by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10214201310839437
  17. ‘Can It Happen Here? Authoritarianism in America’ by Cass Sunstein. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10214208079808657
  18. ‘A Delicate Truth’ by John le Carre. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10214243725579779&id=1014457098
  19. ‘Sapiens: a Brief History of Humankind’ by Yuval Noah Harari. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10214252758845605
  20. ‘The Dictator’s Handbook: Why Bad Behavior is Almost Always Good Politics’ by Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Alastair Smith. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10214475447252676
  21. ‘Fascism: A Warning’ by Madeleine Albright. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10214689652927684
  22. How Democracies Die’ by Steve Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10214726907699030
  23. ‘On Whitman’ by C.K. Williams. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10214748701883871
  24. ‘The Girl Who Takes an Eye for an Eye’ by David Lagercrantz. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10214887549874984
  25. ‘Prague Winter: A Personal Story of Remembrance and War, 1937-1948’ by Madeleine Albright. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10215210195220916
  26. ‘Home Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow’ by Yuval Noah Harari. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10215636780285276
  27. ‘Shadows at Dawn: An Apache Massacre and the Violence of History’ by Karl Jacoby. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10215637185215399
  28. ‘The Soul of America: The Battle for Our Better Angels’ by Jon Meacham. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10215843730658906&id=1014457098
  29. ‘Of Plymouth Plantation’ by William Bradford. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10215855673717475

2017

  1. ‘Ukraine’, by Steven Otfinoski, part of the Nations in Transition series. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209872953393206
  2. ‘Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End,’ by Atul Gawande. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209891429055086
  3. ‘Dreams of a Great Small Nation: The Mutinous Army that Threatened a Revolution, Destroyed an Empire, Founded a Republic, and Remade the Map of Europe,’ by Kevin J. McNamara. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209986191544089
  4. ‘If You Can Keep It: The Forgotten Promise of American Liberty’ by Eric Metaxas. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10210154240545209
  5. ‘The Whistler’, by John Grisham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10210198151962967
  6. ‘Bill O’Reilly’s Legends and Lies: The Real West’ by David Fischer and Bill O’Reilly.
  7. ‘Empire of Cotton: A Global History’ by Sven Beckert. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10210661969318111
  8. ‘The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics’, by Daniel James Brown. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10210819799503767
  9. ‘In the Kingdom of Ice: The Grand and Terrible Polar Voyage of the USS Jeannette’ by Hampton Sides. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10210925727031889
  10. ‘The Daily Show (The Book): An Oral History as Told by Jon Stewart, the Correspondents, Staff and Guests,’ by Chris Smith. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10211415519316390
  11. My Favorite Thing Is Monsters by Emil Ferris. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10211805600308171
  12. ‘White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America’ by Nancy Isenberg. www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10211826992122953
  13. ‘Camino Island’ by John Grisham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10212196360796939
  14. ‘Thank You for Being Late: An Optimist’s Guide to Thriving in the Age of Accelerations’ by Thomas Friedman. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10212441595607656&id=1014457098
  15. ‘The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America’s Great Migration’ by Isabel Wilkerson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10213068196912297

2016

  1. ‘Gray Mountain’, by John Grisham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206915965030345
  2. ‘The Girl in the Spider’s Web’, by David Lagercrantz. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206939188450916
  3. ‘Guns across America: Reconciling Gun Rules and Rights” by Robert Spitzer. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207044372600454
  4. “Crippled America: How to Make America Great Again”, by Donald J. Trump. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207165686633229
  5. “My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me: A Black Woman Discovers Her Family’s Nazi Past,” by Jennifer Teege and Nikola Sellmair. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207181700793573
  6. “Between the World and Me,” by Ta-Nehisi Coates. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207195105048671
  7. “The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan”, by Rick Perlstein. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207214861702575
  8. “A Just and Generous Nation: Abraham Lincoln and the Fight for American Opportunity”, by Harold Holzer and Norton Garfinkle. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207247272752831
  9. ‘Go Set A Watchman’, by Harper Lee. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207295209071209
  10. “The Map Thief: The Gripping Story of an Esteemed Rare-Map Dealer Who Made Millions Stealing Priceless Maps” by Michael Blanding. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207508624886471
  11. “Cleopatra: A Life”, by Stacy Schiff. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207679953609582
  12. “Rain: A Natural and Cultural History’, Cynthia Barnett. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207686093083065
  13. “Rogue Lawyer”, John Grisham. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207764717648630
  14. “Bucky F*cking Dent”, David Duchovny. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10207785648811896
  15. “Modern Romance” by Aziz Ansari and Eric Klinenberg. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208121423246047
  16. “THE OREGON TRAIL: A New American Journey”, by Rinker Buck. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208145506768120
  17. ‘The First Congress: How James Madison, George Washington and a Group of Extraordinary Men Invented the Government’, by Fergus Bordewich. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208152658466908
  18. ‘Lafayette in the Somewhat United States’, by Sarah Vowell. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208160295977841
  19. “City of the Soul: A Walk in Rome”, by Walter Murray. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208194078182375
  20. “Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates: The Forgotten War That Changed American History”, by Brian Kilmeade and Don Yeager. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208316245316477
  21. ‘The Tsar of Love and Techno’, by Anthony Marra. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208478640176247
  22. ‘Lolita’, by Vladimir Nabokov. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208535166669374
  23. ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’, by Gabriel García Márquez. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208644504962763
  24. ‘THE INEVITABLE: Understanding the 12 Technological Forces that Will Shape Our Future’, by Kevin Kelly. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208651490337393
  25. ‘The Invention of Russia: From Gorbachev’s Freedom to Putin’s War’, by Arkady Ostrovsky. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208828275356908
  26. “The Crucible”, Arthur Miller. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10208988137993374
  27. ‘American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J Robert Oppenheimer”, by Kai Bird and Martin J Sherwin https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209026859481387
  28. ‘The Wright Brothers’, by David McCullough. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209065458366335
  29. ‘Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies’, by Jared Diamond. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209402948323373
  30. ‘Don’t Give Up, Don’t Give in: Lessons from an Extraordinary Life,’ by David Rensin and Louis Zamperini. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209480262936190
  31. ‘The Way of the Gun – A Bloody Journey into the World of Firearms,’ by Iain Overton. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209526246805758
  32. ‘Dispatches from the Edge: A Memoir of War, Disasters and Survival,’ by Anderson Cooper. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209616553103359
  33. ‘The Witches: Salem, 1692’ by Stacy Schiff. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209687402554551
  34. ‘Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis’, by J. D. Vance. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10209811906507072

2015

  1. ‘All the Light We Cannot See’, by Anthony Doerr. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10204572042153738
  2. ‘The Secretary: A Journey with Hillary Clinton from Beirut to the Heart of American Power’, by Kim Ghattas. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10204836192797339
  3. ‘Life Itself’, by Roger Ebert. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10204995623263001
  4. 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus, by Charles Mann. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10205444847693331
  5. ‘The Scorch Trials, by James Dashner. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10205511021187627
  6. ‘Dead Wake, by Eric Larson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10205724520804984
  7. ‘Lives in Ruins: Archaeologists and the Seductive Lure of Human Rubble”, by Marilyn Johnson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10205858851563169
  8. ‘Candide’, by Voltaire. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10205949513069650
  9. ‘Allegiant’, by Veronica Roth. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10205969094759180
  10. “The Innovators: How a Group of Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution”, by Walter Isaacson. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206021968280985
  11. ‘THE COLDEST WINTER: America and the Korean War’, by David Halberstam. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206226763640741 Cynthia Barnett’s “Rain: A Natural and Cultural History”
  12. ‘The Goldfinch’, by Donna Tartt. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206264841712669
  13. “1864: Lincoln at the Gates of History” by Charles Bracelen Flood. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206334917384517
  14. ‘Rebel Yell: The Violence, Passion and Redemption of Stonewall Jackson,’ by S.C. Gwynne. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206465176160905
  15. “The Death Cure”, by James Dashner. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206554823642036
  16. “Killing Patton: The Strange Death of World War II’s Most Audacious General”, Bill Reilly. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206555168210650
  17. “Gottland: Mostly True Stories From Half of Czechoslovakia”, by Mariusz Szczygiel. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206624186136055
  18. “Black Elk Speaks – The Complete Works”, by John Neihardt. https://www.facebook.com/Ross.W.Blair/posts/10206760348940040

The Ever-Growing Case Against Trump (for Undecideds, If Any) ~ as of High Noon, CST 8-7-2020

Cannon Fodder, if needed, for a home-town paper “Letter to the Editor”

Dear Editor, Your Home-Town Paper, USA:

While it’s unclear if there are any American voters who have yet to decide how they’ll vote for President this fall, just in case there are, I’d ask them to consider the following when deciding if Donald John Trump deserves four more years:

There’s no other way to describe The Donald’s handling of the Covid pandemic by any objective standard other than to say it’s been and continues to be “incompetent,” with proof in American death count compared to any other country. The body count, Trump’s “death count,” has proven he’s a covid pandemic “serial mis-manager,” notwithstanding America’s vast resources and superior medical technologies. What’s most important to remember here is that it just didn’t have to be this way, and it didn’t need to be this bad.

Convinced? Well then, no need read further.

Unconvinced and undecided? If you are still not sure, giving Trump the benefit of the doubt on his handling of the Covid pandemic, then buckle up buckaroo – let me count the ways his leadership and Administration falls grossly short:

Character Traits & Personality Faults: Trump clearly prizes personal loyalty, he’s said as much, to the point that he rewards and demands loyalty over competence, integrity, and patriotism. He’s proven himself to be a volatile, impulsive, truculent, weak, bully, and a misogynist too. He bluffs, broods, boasts, bemeans, belittles, bears false witness, bullshits, bullies, and breaks promises. According to Doris Kearns Goodwin, the traits of an effective leader are: humility; acknowledging errors; shouldering blame; learning from mistakes; empathy; resilience; collaboration; connecting with people; and controlling unproductive emotions. That’s the exact opposite of Trump and explains why The Donald is such an ineffective leader.

Multilateral Disengaged Affairs: There’s his legion of international relations shortcomings, impressively all committed in less than four years’ time, including: prizing dictators over democracies – he’s befriended Putin, Erdogan, Orbán, Kim, and Duarte, and picked fights with allies Australia, Canada, France, Mexico, and even Denmark – come on, who does that? He’s mismanaging the international order and trade system that America created after WWII, and doing same by executive fiat. He’s chasing away our allies, so that they’re inclined to go it alone, since under Trump they can’t trust US to do the right thing in support of the international order we built. Canadian Foreign Minister Freeland said: “The fact that our friend and ally has come to question the very worth of its mantle of global leadership puts into sharper focus the need for the rest of us to set our own clear sovereign course.” 

The Age of Pax Americana,” intact when he entered office, has been dismantled for Americae facit magna,” and we’ve entered a trumped-up Age of “Packed Up ‘n Gone America.” The US is no longer a guarantor of the international order we created 75 years ago and that’s served us and the world so well, economically and politically. He’s creating, and will be leaving us, a legacy of weakened and corrupt institutions while deserting America’s world leadership position, which amounts to a self-inflicted potential mortal wound to American hegemony. We may never be able to pick up the Pottery Barn broken pieces of America’s reputation for leadership and international diplomacy.

Bilateral Botched Relations: Even in bilateral relations his leadership is lacking – so far, he’s botched:

(a) North Korean nuclear disarmament talks to the point that North Korea doesn’t want to talk to US anymore;

(b) China and Taiwan relations, both, to the point that we’re in a most dangerous and precarious position with many potential flashpoints with China — Tik Tok, a time bomb is ticking;

(c) Iranian relations by withdrawing the US from the Iran multilateral nuclear deal resulting in Iran increasing its uranium stockpiles, making US and the rest of the world a far more dangerous place;

(d) our position in Syria, grossly, to the point that his American withdrawal made things far worse, and Syria and Russia have seized American bases and military assets – oh, and many of our allies in Syria, Kurds and others, have been captured and tortured or killed;

(e) talks with the Taliban, crazily inviting them to make a deal on American soil at Camp David; and

(f) our standing up to the Saudis for their state killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi on Turkish soil; and (g) the process of withdrawing the US from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty with Russia, with no replacement game plan seriously being pursued. 

Let’s just put Afghanistan to the side, since that’s what he’s done more or less with his withdrawal plans – although duly noted that just in the past few days he committed another negotiating sin, rolling over and undermining American diplomats, by stating a draw down to under 5,000 without requiring the Taliban make concessions or honor peace treaty commitments. 

All this amounts not to leadership, but “made-for-TV” posturing (an “all bark, no bite” president), setting our national interest and safety back literally decades.

Executive Orders and Domestic Agendas: His domestic policy and leadership also has been dismissal:

  • he’s used executive orders (executive fiat our conservative fellow Americans would complain if he was a Democrat) to roll back consumer friendly environmental regulations, like Clean Power, Clean Water, Clean Air, and he removed the US from the Paris Accord, rolled back Methane Greenhouse Gas regulations, and made regulatory policy changes favoring coal that are known (by his own Administration’s calculations) to increase American deaths, while, not surprisingly, air pollution has increased for the first time after a seven-year decline;
  • he’s tried to cut Medicaid, Medicare, Food Stamps, and Social Security, hurting seniors, vets, service member families, and the working poor – thus further the have – have-not divide and shrinking the American middle class even further;
  • his tax cuts provided a windfall to wealthy donors, but barely helped the average American whose tax benefits will soon expire (the 1%’s tax reductions will not);
  • he’s partially repealed the Dodd-Frank Act, designed to prevent another 2008 financial system debacle;
  • he’s emasculated the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau preventing it from protecting consumers, especially students and seniors, from predatory pricing and other detrimental practices;
  • he botched his attempted repeal of the Affordable Care Act – even John McCain, his fellow Republican, gave him the thumbs down, and now he’s looking to get rid of it again, or not fund it, in the middle of a pandemic — just when Americans have lost their jobs and ergo their employer-provided health care;
  • his tariffs and trade wars have hurt farmers, forcing the Federal Gov’t to practice an elevated level of extreme socialized farming, handing out billions in additional Farm Aid to big-agri corporate farm companies, but not so much to small, family owned farmers, and yet he’s unwilling to back the average American needing financial support in the covid pandemic that he’s exacerbated with his conduct and statements (the pandemic relief has literally kept the economy and American families afloat, and now he wants to sink the very economy he demands we open damn the cost in lives;
  • under him, foreign investment in the US is way down, our trade imbalance is the worst ever, and we now have the highest deficit ever, even before Covid relief spending kicked in;
  • he botched his attempted Muslim Ban – it was held illegal – and what his Administration has subsequently implemented by executive order after two or three attempts has crippled our immigration worker policies to the point that some farm produce has been left rotting in the fields for lack of farm hands;
  • he failed to do anything constructive about our overall immigration crisis, unless you think that putting kids in cages and hanging the DACA kids out to dry was, or is, a good thing;
  • he shut down the federal government to get more border “wall” dollars, but has only built a total of 16 new miles of “wall” where there was no border barrier before, all while ignoring our outdated, crumbling national infrastructure – our dams and bridges are literally crumbling before our eyes;
  • he’s botched bringing back manufacturing to the US – just look at Carrier where workers say he pulled the wool over our eyes; and
  • he’s botched relief for Puerto Rico, failing to adequately aid our fellow Americans; and he refused to help at first, and then only helped begrudgingly, California deal with its unprecedented wildfires – for political reasons – who does that to their countrymen? It would seem he’s working to remove the word “United” leaving us simply the desperate, disparate, disunited “States of America.”

Staffing with “Be Best” People: He’s proved an executive nincompoop when it comes to staffing – to the point of running either a “three ring circus” or a “clown show” – depending on whether the hat you wear is MAGA red. His 2016 campaign staffers Manafort, Flynn, Stone, Cohen and others have served jail terms for lying under oath and proved to not be the “best” kind of people; his own conduct, trying to exact a quid pro quo from Ukraine’s President, resulted in his Impeachment – just the third President ever to suffer such ignominy and embarrassment; he’s failed to properly staff the State Dept or the Ambassador corps, to the point that many positions are still unfilled after 3.5 years – how do you get decent trade deals, relations, or eyes and ears on the ground without at least staffing up?; he’s failed to keep his Cabinet intact as demonstrated by record setting departures – Sessions – AG, Tillerson – State, Mattis – Defense, Zilke – Interior, Acosta – Labor, Price – HHS, Perry – Energy, and Nielson – Homeland Security, plus Prebus, Kelly, and Mulvaney – Chief of Staff; and then there’s the embarrassingly strange case of Presidential Physician, Dr. Ronny Jackson, withdrawn from Veterans Affairs before his nomination ever got going, and the even more embarrassing and singularly bizarre case of Scaramucci as WH Comms Director; he’s fired multiple non-partisan Inspector Generals, who are there to protect the American taxpayer and our democracy from executive transgressions – seriously, who but dictators in banana republics do that kind of stuff?; and he fired the Vinman Bros., Comey, Yates, McCabe, Sessions (ironic since Jefferson Beauregard was the first big name to endorse him), and the highly competent Marie Yovanovitch, among others (don’t forget his campaign donor, Gordon Sondland!). He claimed to fire John Bolton, but Bolton says he quit first – now who do you believe with Trump’s track record for telling whoppers?

Lacking in Domestic Tranquility: When it comes to domestic affairs, he’s had many, including payouts of payola to porn stars, and he believes there are very fine people on either side of race relations issues, giving a boost, a literal vote of confidence, to David Duke and other domestic White Supremacists. With Trump defending the confederate flag, amazingly, he’s now even on the wrong side of the State of Mississippi. He’s refused to support mail-in ballots to accommodate concerns of voters during the pandemic, and yet he’s also against proposed domestic election integrity legislation, including paper ballots, for a national election he’s intimated he might suspend, and says he claims he’s been unfairly treated when it comes to what looks like his Administration’s favoritism toward Putin’s Russia, which, ironically, is known to be working to interfere with our elections. His policies and positions, overall, have been so bad, for various reasons, that the following groups have written public letters (signing their names for all the world to see) denouncing his policies: American college presidents, American foreign policy experts, American national security experts, West Point alums, and even republican party leaders.

Covid-19 Irresponsibility: And then came Corona… And no, he didn’t ever have it under control as he claimed, although he truly “doesn’t take responsibility at all” for his poor handling of the pandemic, to date, because, perhaps, he’s not man enough to take responsibility for much of anything. With the buck never seeming to stop at his door, or on his desk, it’s safe to say he’s no “Harry Truman.”

The man:

– doesn’t read intelligence briefs, but has time to golf, at taxpayer expense, at his properties padding his pockets, and apparently relies on biased Fox News personalities for information on which to make policy;

– refuses to follow democratic norms, like disclosing his past and current personal tax returns — how much of a crook or a deadbeat is he if he can’t even live up to Dick Nixon’s precedent of disclosing his taxes (resulting in Nixon being caught in a tax evasion scheme while claiming he wasn’t a crook)?; and

– lacks an ethical bone in his body, so much so that he fires ethics and government watchdog experts.

He’s a democratic norm breaker, creating dangerous precedents, to the left and right, but mostly to the right. He tolerates staffers without security clearances, using insecure communications. He’s the most “fact challenged” President in American history. He claims the Free Press, the backbone of our democracy, is nothing but “Fake News.” And he’s weakening the foundation of our democracy, the rule of law, by, for example, claiming judges are biased against him, to the point Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts had to issue a public statement, that: We do not have Obama judges or Trump Judges, or Bush Judges or Clinton Judges. What we have is an extraordinary group of dedicated judges doing their best to do equal right to those appearing before them. That independent judiciary is something we should be thankful for. He’s concocting constitutional crises by trying to do unwelcome federal policing of state and local matters without invitation. Think of his “photo op” at St. John’s Episcopal Church across from the White House, and how he used his unmarked federal police force to illegally remove protestors – literally tear gassing American citizens, denying them their First Amendment rights of assembly and speech. Then think about how he’s abused the Emoluments Clause by all his investment conflicts of interest and favors, from foreign dignitary stays at his Trump hotels to his “Mar-a-Lago” gang disclosures of classified information. And then there are those pardons of war criminals and his convicted cronies, like Roger Stone. It’s like a dictator ruling by personal edict, without checks and balances, no?

If the Republican Senate doesn’t have the spine to check Trump’s foibles, “We the People” need to check them at the ballot box – put an end to his “American Carnage.” When Carter failed to show strong crisis leadership, we voted him out. Trump’s failure to show strong covid crisis leadership should be reason enough to vote him out too. Winston Churchill once said that Americans will always do the right thing, but only after they have tried everything else. Let’s not go that far, please. Let’s just change horses while at least the rider is still above water, not drowning in any more bad decisions and misconduct. Let’s do The Donald a favor, schedule him permanent “executive time.” Historians say they’d rank him 45th of 45 Presidents. Let’s give him back the rank of private citizen and get him back to running his personal empire, and stop running our country like it was just that. We know how that goes, given his bankrupt airline, casinos, university, vodka brand, who knows what else. Let’s not let him do that to US – let’s end Trump’s “American Carnage,” our collective “American Tragedy.”

Please vote this fall like your life depends on it because Trump’s pandemic mishandling demonstrates it does. It’s time to say good night, good luck, and good riddance, now that we have the answer to his question “What have you got to lose?” – our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor — really, our world — and America’s position in it.

Yours,

A Concerned American Who Votes

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‘Vast Domain of Blood: The Story of the Camp Grant Massacre’, by Don Schellie

‘Vast Domain of Blood: The Story of the Camp Grant Massacre’, by Don Schellie, foreword by Barry Goldwater. Written in 1968, the first of five books written about the Camp Grant Massacre of which I’m aware, ‘Vast Domain of Blood’ is an account of the massacre and subsequent trial. On April 30, 1871, some 146 men from the Tucson area (six Anglo-Americans, 48 Mexican-Americans, and 92 Tohono O’odham) massacred approximately 130 Apaches from the Aravaipa and Pinal bands, all but two of which (an old man and teen male) were women and children, who at the time were residing at Camp Grant, a make shift US Army reservation in Arizona Territory. The author, using resources available at the time (more have come available since ’68), recreates the event and trial using journals, newspaper accounts, military records, and the trial transcript, taking some fictional liberties for historical flavoring (a la Jeff Shaara). Some 98 men (80 Tohonos, 12 Mexican-Americans, and six Anglos) were put on trial for the massacre at the insistence of President US Grant (who’d vowed to impose martial law if the grand jury failed to delivery an indictment leading to the trial). All defendants were acquitted, in just 12 minutes, by a jury of their peers, their fellow Tucson townsmen. The book’s title, Vast Domain of Blood, is a direct quote from the jury instructions given by the presiding judge, Arizona Territory Chief Justice John Titus, delivered at the end of the December 1871 trial of the defendants (on three counts of conspiracy to commit murder and one count of murder). The penultimate paragraph of the Judge’s instructions, quoted below, reads more or less like judicial justification for the massacre, as if it were justifiable homicide, a type of legalized murder that would make the writers of the Minority Report movie proud (there is nothing fictional about the following quote):

‘… If there ever was a case in which the law of life–Thou shalt not kill–announced in the oldest and most revered of all known codes, and repeated in every one promulgated since, should be most cautiously applied, it is the present one in which the defendants have been schooled to agonizing apprehension, where the blood red line of a “a troubled frontier” is expanded into a vast domain of blood, where the very roads are traced by the gore and the graves of fallen wayfarers, where every copse may shelter its skulking murderers, where the very atmosphere is heavy with death, and where brave and honest men are compelled by stealthy night travel to avoid the light of day, lest it should guide the lead or steel of the assassin to the heart or the brain of his victim. I do not mean that–here or elsewhere–the boundaries of right and wrong should vibrate like a weaver’s shuttle, but in a case such as the present, we should test the motive of the defendants by every actuating circumstance, to ascertain whether that motive was malice, or morbid apprehension, or a maddening sense of wrong, or misconceived right, or intolerable suffering, or gloomy despair, or conflicting impulses, involving these defendants in moral darkness, and impelling them in spite of themselves to do the deed charged in the indictment…’

Big Sycamore Stands Alone: The Western Apaches, Aravaipa, and the Struggle for Place’ by Ian Record

May 4, 2019, 2019 Book #13: ‘Big Sycamore Stands Alone: The Western Apaches, Aravaipa, and the Struggle for Place’ by Ian Record. This is the third modern historical work that I’ve read that discusses the Camp Grant Massacre, what once was viewed as an obscure vigilante perpetrated massacre against reservation Apache Indians that has now received extensive review. Thanks to this 2008 book, and the other two, I feel I have a comprehensive view of what happened there and why, and the enduring consequences of the Massacre, what my great great grandfather, Royal Emerson Whitman called a “most vile transaction.” (The other two books are Karl Jacoby’s ‘Shadows at Dawn: An Apache Massacre and the Violence of History’ (focusing on the event from the perspectives of the four different ethnic groups involved, the Tohono O’odhams, the Mexicans, the Anglos, and the Apaches) and Chip Colwell-Chanthaphonh’s ‘Massacre at Camp Grant; Forgetting and Remembering Apache History’ (each chapter addresses a different perspective of historiography on the event, with the final chapter providing perspectives on justice and reconciliation and the benefits and detriments of both remembering and forgetting history).) In Big Sycamore, the author, Record, approaches the event as an ethnographer, weaving together the lives of the Western Apache, present and past, focusing on the Western Apaches’ view of place, the Aravaipa Canyon, and how their relationship with “Arapa” (their name for this land), their sacred homeland, continues to evolve and shape Western Apache society. The central event of Western Apache history, and the focus of the book is the Camp Grant Massacre. Leading to it and from it, Record provides a review of the historical record of the event, contemporary oral histories of individuals from the San Carlos reservation (where the Western Apache were relocated after the massacre), and detailed reporting of Western Apache economic, political, and social organization in pre-reservation times. It should be noted that the Western Apaches were more agrarian than the Eastern Apache bands which were far more involved in the Indian Wars (e.g. Cochise, Geronimo, and the Chiricahua Apaches). The book provides detailed insights into Western Apaches’ complex subsistence strategies of farming, hunting, and gathering, and provides background on the various forces fueling the Anglo, Mexican, and Tohono O’odham vigilantes’ decision to attack the Western Apaches resident at the make-shift Camp Grant reservation. The book probably has the best explanation of the economic forces driving the hostilities of Tucsonites against US Army policy, propelling locals toward encouraging, planning, perpetrating and defending the Massacre. One interesting fact reported by Record is that at the time of the Massacre 1/10th of the entire US Army was stationed in the Arizona Territory, trying to keep the peace and/or round up or eradicate the various Apache bands off reservation.

https://nni.arizona.edu/publications-resources/publications/books/2008/big-sycamore-stands-alone?fbclid=IwAR364BS2-sqGPbWxG2N81yFEp0yE8SaIWn7RDYE_hCY3HFZebdtu6Vm91M0

https://southernarizonaguide.com/big-sycamore-stands-alone-a-book-review/?fbclid=IwAR2PvZp4w282QZwqdEqOxZQcGi1v6u7JG_5rClypRkwcyIXdeFkcc2tTJS0

 

‘Narcissa Whitman on the Oregon Trail’ by Lawrence Dodd

2019 Book #2: ‘Narcissa Whitman on the Oregon Trail’ by Lawrence Dodd. This monograph of Narcissa’s life focuses on her Oregon Trail trip of 1836, commenced the day after her wedding. While well suited to make the trip, riding mostly horseback the latter half of the trip (unheard of for women of the time) while pregnant (unprecedented and heroic), Narcissa and Marcus Whitman chose to mission to a tribe, the Cayuse, that was less than welcoming (compared to the Nez Perce), and the influx of settlers after their successful trek helped lead to the flood into Oregon, caused them to care more for the white emigres arriving every fall than the native Cayuse, leading ultimately to Whitman mission’s ultimate demise at Cayuse hands at the time of a severe, deadly smallpox outbreak.

http://www.womenhistoryblog.com/2012/08/narcissa-whitman.html?fbclid=IwAR3bPulrp0J5sAxfzdZFUP93TgJQSRxgkmpGkgtCMfUimIM1vlQ1xBB2ceU

‘Of Plymouth Plantation’ by William Bradford

December 30, 2018, 2018 Book #29: “Of Plymouth Plantation” by William Bradford. This was a labor of love, a book started summer 2017, and a very tough sled, documenting Bradford’s recollections of nearly 30 years of Pilgrim history. Stationed on my nightstand, this helped lull me to sleep for nearly a year and half – making it just a few pages at a time. Bradford’s entries have been updated into modern English, but were never intended to do more than record, in journal style, the pilgrim story. He starts in 1607 and the Pilgrims’ initial departure for Holland, then the subsequent return to England, the organization of the trip to the New World, finding land, settling Plymouth, surviving the first winter, Squanto and the first Thanksgiving, the failure of the pilgrim experiment in communal service – abandoned after surviving the first few years, complaints about England not sending the best settlers, and subsequent trials and tribulations. Noticeable are the firsts in the colony, such as murder of a colonist, murders of natives, gun sales to natives, disputes with English partners, swindles, lost ships and supplies, executions, Indian wars, etc., all with the pilgrims living on the edge of life and wilderness. It makes you appreciate the daunting task and how far we’ve come in 400 years.

https://historyofmassachusetts.org/of-plymouth-plantation/?fbclid=IwAR2S5JsH_OSivAMW7180CEico1LetPkmk21BBYeNqlMG5UzbJC7lW-S6r78

‘Shadows at Dawn: An Apache Massacre and the Violence of History’ by Karl Jacoby

December 2, 2018, 2018 Book #27: ‘Shadows at Dawn: An Apache Massacre and the Violence of History’ by Karl Jacoby. A very interesting take on the Camp Grant Massacre, which with the number of books written about it can no longer be called an obscure event. The author divides the book into two parts told from four different perspectives: the lead up to massacre and then the aftermath, told from the perspectives of the four groups involved: the O’odham (then identified as Pimas or Papagos), los vecinos (Mexican-Americans (those residing in the area of the Gadsden Purchase when it was made), whites (Americans) and Nnee (Apaches). The depth of research is impressive and the overall effect, very successful, in viewing history from various perspectives, stepping into the shoes of those involved – the three perpetrating groups, the O’odham, Vecinos and Whites of the Tuscon area, trying to understand their motivations, as well as the victims, the Arivaipa Apache (a subset of the Western Apache). This is an excellent history of the borderlands clash of cultures and violence endemic in the settling of the Old West.

https://www.npr.org/2008/12/13/98229863/shadows-uncovers-indian-massacre?utm_campaign=storyshare&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=social&fbclid=IwAR1kaza317OYxCILvy92qWjXZUs1bJt66mqVnFZSW_JzSHzpUEja6txk4Xo

 

‘On Whitman’ by C.K. Williams

August 9, 2018, 2018 Book #23: ‘On Whitman’ by C.K. Williams. I learned more about Whitman in this short, highly readable book by Poet C.K. Williams than any other I’ve read. Simply marvelous.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/bookreviews/7817785/On-Whitman-by-C-K-Williams-review.html?fbclid=IwAR0KeZKVE1x4SPlo5CQOPAakdOocxTXwmeBIPNgGjxeCVTUAWpX2ZAeSOfM