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Author Archives: Lopaka

Miracle at Midway

25 Friday Jun 2021

Posted by Lopaka in History, Military and War, Reading

≈ 2 Comments

Miracle At Midway
by Gordon W. Prange, Donald M. Goldstein, and Katherine V. Dillon 1983
 / 469 pgs Military History

The battle of Midway is known as the turning point of the Pacific War.  The story is well known to those that have read about World War II.  The Imperial Japanese Navy lost four Aircraft Carriers, and the U.S. Navy losing the U.S.S. Yorktown (CV-5).  With the Japanese Carriers sunk and the loss of their very experienced pilots was to prove a disaster for the Empire that would never be on the offensive for the duration of the war.

The two movies about Midway tell a simplified version of what happens.  However, like all movies, there is more to the story than can be put on the film.  Miracle At Midway is a detailed account of the battle.  Unlike, At Dawn We Slept, there is not as much depth of the political games that brought the Japanese to this crucial battle. 


The fascinating section of the story is not what you would know from the movies, but the details that are left out of any standard Midway telling.  For example, how B-17’s and B-26’s from the USAAF bombed the Japanese fleet.  Their impact was minimal to nil; however, most people don’t know that any USAAF bombers were used in the battle. 

Another fascinating part that is lost to history was the first American aircraft to score a hit on the Japanese at the battle.  It wasn’t a carrier-born aircraft as most stories and even the movies tell.  It was a P.B.Y. Catalina rigged with a torpedo and scored a hit on the Akebono Maru in the Invasion Force.  The Catalina didn’t do much damage. Interestingly, it was the only successful U.S. torpedo attack during the entire battle!.  The P.B.Y. wasn’t the only aircraft that was rigged with a torpedo.  The USSAF rigged a torpedo to the B-26; however, their attack was unsuccessful.   

These are just a few of the fascinating and detailed stories that tell the whole narrative about the Battle of Midway.  Just like any History/War book, if it’s your cup of tea, you would enjoy this book.  If not, I would stay away from it.  I enjoyed reading it; it’s not as good as At Dawn We Slept. However, if you want a good read on the Battle of Midway, I would recommend it. 

Enjoy a good cup of coffee and get lost in an excellent book,

Lopaka

Next – A Night to Remember

Invisible Man

14 Monday Jun 2021

Posted by Lopaka in African American, Reading

≈ 1 Comment

Invisible Man
by Ralph Ellison 1952
 / 592 pgs Bildungsroman/African American Literature

Invisible Man has been popping up on my radar a few times to read.  It is a challenge to devour.  However, it is an outstanding novel.  It will make your butt squirm in the chair as your comfortability is questioned.  It can also make you upset and feel with the character, which is the point behind the writing. It’s not supposed to be an easy, simple read.  It makes you think about yourself and the struggle of others; this is the gift of the Invisible Man.       


The narrator is unnamed, the Invisible Man (IM), who is challenged about who he is around every corner.  In the beginning, he gives a valedictory speech at his high school graduation. He is invited to give the same address at a meeting of the town’s leading men.  He prepares vigorously to give the speech.  After arriving at the ballroom to provide his address, he is forced to participate in a boxing battle royal, even blindfolded before he can give the speech.  He doesn’t win; however, in the end, he is told to give his address, and he does with a mouth full of blood.  After, he is given a briefcase and a scholarship at a local African American university. Is he a great speechwriter or just a man that entertains?  He thought his speech was inspiring, yet, he was there for another reason he didn’t know.  He was a IM used for other purposes, and once it was complete, he was no longer needed. 

After arriving at the school and working on his studies, he believes he’s moving in the right direction.  He has his goals and beliefs in who he is.  His Grandfather’s last words haunt him.   However, his life starts to change as his beliefs are questioned in every chapter.  He is challenged by the very leaders he admires and those that came before him.  Warning after warning is made by people in a position of power.  The IM begins to understand that even when he does all that everyone asks, he is only good for them for a limited time, then he is nothing.  While trying to change to be what everyone else asks, he isn’t himself.  In the end, he is just an IM.

This novel is about the race challenges that African Americans have experienced and are still going through.  It opens one’s eyes to why so many are upset.  Change hasn’t happened.  Even in the book, change is challenged at the Brotherhood’s speed, led by whites, desiring it to grow slowly and scientifically. Raz the Exhorter who wants no white influence and demands change immediately.  It is still sound to how change is happening today in the United States.

Invisible Man is a classic, and I would absolutely recommend it.  Forwarn, it’s not a page-turner.  Although it can be challenging to read, it still is an excellent story.  It starts slow and builds up; it slows down and becomes dry to bear through a few times; however, it eventually moves over you like a steam roller when it starts to pick up. 

Enjoy a good cup of coffee and get lost in an excellent book,

Lopaka

Firestarter: A Novel

26 Wednesday May 2021

Posted by Lopaka in Horror, Reading, Sci Fi

≈ 1 Comment

Firestarter: A Novel
by Stephen King 1980
 / 499 pgs Sci-Fi Horror

MKUltra was the C.I.A experimentation that utilized drugs like L.S.D. as tools for newer torture or interrogation techniques.  Many people were unaware of the true intention for these (and many times illegal) experiments.

Stephen King uses this and builds upon it in this Sci-Fi Horror classic.  Andy McGee and Vicky Tomlinson are college students that are low on money and partake in an experiment at the school that would give them $200 each. They’re informed that mild hallucinogenic drugs will be administered to them, and naturally, the results recorded.  However, it’s a drug called Lot Six designed to give them powers like telekinesis by a secret government organization called The Shop.  Most of the 12 students that volunteered don’t survive the effects of the experiment for too long.  However, Andy and Vicky have mild effects and eventually get married and have a daughter, Charlie McGee, the Firestarter.

Eight-year-old Charlie McGee and her father are on the run because The Shop knows they have powers and want to exploit her abilities.  The story begins and builds up with the Firestarter and what she truly can do.

One of King’s classics takes the reader on many twists and turns.  In the middle of the book, the plot changes from what the reader believes will happen.  There are a few suspensions of beliefs within the story; however, remember this is about a girl who can light things on fire with her mind.  Overall, it’s a good read and won’t disappoint.  For the first time in any King novel that I’ve read so far, one scene, in particular, and I’ll only say The Farm for you dear readers, made me sit up in my chair and think, Oh My Goodness, this is sweet!
After I read it, I needed to watch it on Youtube to see if it happens in the movie.

Would I recommend Firestarter to read?  It’s not on my list of first Stephen King choices to read.  However, I would say I did enjoy it and would recommend it if someone desired to dive into it. 

Enjoy a good cup of coffee and get lost in an excellent book,

Lopaka

Project Hail Mary

16 Sunday May 2021

Posted by Lopaka in Reading, Sci Fi

≈ 1 Comment

Project Hail Mary
by Andy Weir
2021 / 481 pgs Sci-Fi

From the author’s imagination which brought us The Martian and Artemis, comes his next space story, Project Hail Mary.   
A computer is asking him a simple mathematical question.  As he awakens from his deep sleep, his mind is lost about where he is and what is going on.  The computer keeps asking him the same question until he can answer it.  Then, the same computer voice asks another question.  He is still lost.  Why are all these tubes in me, and where am I?  As the questions flow, he finally receives the question he can’t answer. However, it’s so simple that anyone could answer, what is your name?

A flashback, as his memory slowly starts to come back to him, gets him the answer he’s looking for.  Dr. Ryland Grace.  As he begins to explore his environment, each flashback explains more and more of where he is and why he’s there.  Slowly, he realizes Project Hail Mary, appropriately named, is humanity’s last hope from a danger that threatens the extinction of all life on earth.  While Dr. Grace is trying to work on what he needs to do, he realizes that he is not alone…

Naturally, I don’t want to give away the plot.  It’s a quick read as I finished it in about 14 total hours.  Like his previous two novels, there are lovely science explanations that don’t bog your mind in trying to decipher in his illustrations.  Just enough to whet the appetite for the reader to understand and move the plot forward.  The only downside is there are flashbacks throughout the main plot.  Dr. Grace’s flashbacks are explained why he has them; however, they serve as a plot voucher for the next scene.  Which sometimes makes it seem like, really nice segway for the story.  It, in all honestly, doesn’t ruin the overall plot, and the story flows well.  It just makes the reader think, nice flashback, and what a convenience for Dr. Grace. 

Would I recommend Project Hail Mary? Yes. It’s what I expect from Andy Weir.  If you have never read any of his three books, I would recommend in order The Martian, Project Hail Mary, then Artemis.

Enjoy a wonderful cup of coffee and a good book! 
   
Lopaka

The Hero Code

13 Thursday May 2021

Posted by Lopaka in Military and War, Reading

≈ Leave a comment

The Hero Code: Lessons Learned from Lives Well Lived
by Admiral William H. McRaven
2021 / 143 pgs Military and War Biography

From the author of Make Your Bed comes another fast read and simple classic explaining how we should live, The Hero Code.

Just like Make Your Bed, McRaven uses his life experiences from his time as a Naval Officer to give examples of the ten principles of The Hero Code.  For military members, many of these are not surprising as they’re codified in our Core Values.  For a civilian, this is an excellent code to live our everyday lives.  They are not complicated at all.  However, living by them can be challenging even for the best of us. 

For each code, he uses two examples.  One is from his life, and one is from someone in history or another individual that also exemplifies the principle.  For those who never learned from other organizations like Boy/Girl Scouts with the Scout Oath and Law and many others, this book is an excellent foundation for understanding The Hero Code.  For some, even if they know the code, it’s a beautiful reminder of how we should all live. 

It’s a fast read, as the physical book is smaller them most books.  I was able to read it in about 2 hours.  Like Make Your Bed, I would recommend this book as a good reminder of the codes on how we should conduct our everyday lives.         


Enjoy a good cup of coffee and get lost in an excellent book,


Lopaka

The Wright Brothers

07 Friday May 2021

Posted by Lopaka in History, Reading

≈ 1 Comment

The Wright Brothers
by David McCollough
2015 / 321 pgs History

December 17th, 2003, while onboard an E-3B Sentry, I watched small dots on the monitor move one by one over the location designated as Kill Devils Hill, North Carolina.  Each dot was an different aircraft that spanned over 100 years.
Witnessing the centennial of flight and flying at the same spot the Wright Brothers did 100 years prior causes one to pause and smile.  In 2015, my family visited Kill Devils Hill and saw the Wright Brothers’ exact location of that historic flight.

Naturally, I was eager to read the story of the Wright Brothers, Wilber, and Orville.  This book doesn’t disappoint.  It starts with their birth and then their final move to Dayton, Ohio.  Then moves into their early years as newspaper publishers and then eventually to bicycle builders.  After Wilber contracts Typhoid and is recovering, he read about a German aviator’s experiment in powered flight, that planted the seed that would change the brother’s destiny.

They set themselves to solve the challenges of powered flight.  After four years of experiments, trials, tribulations, and setbacks.  On a sandy hill in North Carolina with Orville at the controls, the Wright Flyer 1903 took off and flew 120 feet in 12 seconds.  They flew three more flights that day, the last one lasting 59 seconds.
  

The rest of the book is about their continued experiments, building the Wright Flyer’s II and III.  Then their public
displays of flights to sell the planes to the United States, Germany, and French governments.  Also, some of the
accidents at the beginning of aviation, including the first passenger who died in an aircraft accident, also the first military officer, Lt Thomas Selfridge. 

Anyone interested in the early days of flight would find this book exciting.  The first 108 pages, up to the first flight
on December 17th, 1903 was thrilling to read. After this section, the story slows down although, not challenging to
get through, sometimes it could be difficult. I’ve been to Kill Devils Hill, been on the aviation path in Dayton, Ohio, visited Huffman Prairie Field where the Wrights experimented and improved on the 1903design.  Finally, the Smithsonian and visited the original 1903 Wright Flyer brought a smile as I read about many of the
locations and aircraft that I got to see over the years.  

I would only recommend this to history or aviation buffs.  If those don’t strike your fancy, this isn’t a book for you.  I enjoyed it, even in the challenging sections.         

Enjoy a good cup of coffee and get lost in an excellent book,

Lopaka

Fahrenheit 451

27 Tuesday Apr 2021

Posted by Lopaka in Classic, Sci Fi

≈ 1 Comment

Fahrenheit 451
by Ray Bradbury
1953 / 165 pgs Classic Sci Fi

Censorship is the last vestige of a society afraid of the written word and what challenges it could bring against them.  Even in our community today, some novels/stories are banned for various reasons.  Many people or organizations are afraid of undue influence and possible independence that the written words might create.  This is what Ray Bradbury cautioned would happen eventually.  He foretold that censorship, even to please a minority offended by a word or segment of any novel, is wrong.  Yet, we see this today with Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884) that many people disapprove of because of the language and choice of words, normal in its time, and how people are characterized because not everyone is written in the positive light.  Because of the portrayal and language of none whites, John Steinbeck’s Tortilla Flat was criticized in his time even though it’s today considered one of his classics. 

Everything that is happening today to make everyone happy was what Fahrenheit 451 warns against.  Millions of books are banned because they don’t portray the happiness that everyone wants.  Anyone that’s offended, the book was banned.  Firefighters don’t put out fires. They burn books as many political and religious groups have done in the past, like the Nazis in 1933 and the burning of the Library of Alexandria by various groups. 

Bradbury’s classic is a warning of where we could go as a society when we allow censorship for various reasons.  Just because a book doesn’t agree with philosophy doesn’t mean that it should be banned or censored to appease.  As mentioned in the novel, books have 3 points that many don’t want to be utilized, “1. The Quality of Information in the story. 2.  The Leisure to digest it. 3.  The right to carry out the actions based on what is learned.” – Ray Bradbury

Bradbury also warned of getting lost in the simplicity of life.  In the novel, society is lost in simple stories/music that is streamed into their ears.  They don’t see what is going on around them as they want to remain happy and not do any critical thinking.  Wonder what Bradbury would think if he saw everyone lost in tablets and phones.  Simple entertainment like Youtube and instead of diving into a story and see what the author tells desire to wait for a movie to come out.     

This book should be required reading, especially today!  It is a haunting read and simple story that makes one reflect on what is happening and where we could be going.


I absolutely recommend this, along with 1984! 

Enjoy a good cup of coffee and get lost in an excellent book,


Lopaka

Around the World in 80 Days

25 Sunday Apr 2021

Posted by Lopaka in Classic, Reading

≈ Leave a comment

Around the World in Eighty Days
by Jules Verne 1873 / 252 pgs Classic

It’s incredible how many classics start from a bet—Green Eggs and Ham, for example.  Yet, a £20,000 (roughly £2,200,00 in today’s currency) wager made at a club and our hero, Mr. Philias Fogg, are off with his servant French Passepartout to journey around the world in eighty days.

The Journey would go east from London and utilize mainly Steamers and Trains. However, an elephant ride in India does change the story.  As Mr. Fogg had the Journey planned out, it doesn’t go quite a planned as any incredible adventure does, and it goes off course several times.  The team rescues a woman in India from being sacrificed in a funeral pyre.  All the while, Mr. Fogg is being pursued by Detective Fix, who believes that Mr. Fogg was the thief that stole £50,000 from the Bank of England and desired the reward money. 

This novel is a classic of Vernes that, once I picked up, I couldn’t put down.  It is a beautiful read with twists and turns that keeps the reader on their nerves.  He does world descriptions like Journey to the Interior of the Earth.  However, not in nauseating details like 20,000 Leagues under the Sea.  Just enough to make the story even more believable.


I would recommend this book for a good journey with Mr. Vene. 

Enjoy a good cup of coffee and an excellent book,


Lopaka

Night Shift

23 Friday Apr 2021

Posted by Lopaka in Horror, Reading

≈ 1 Comment

Night Shift by Stephen King
1978 / 342 pgs Horror

Night Shift is a collection of twenty short stories.  Some of these stories appeared in magazines that Stephen King submitted to publish to make money before Carrie became a best seller.  A few of these stories were made into movies, Children of the Corn, Truckers (Maximum Overdrive), Quitters Inc and The Ledge (Cat’s Eye), Graveyard Shift, and finally The Mangler.  The Lawnmower Man was also a movie that just used the title to Stephen King’s story and nothing of the plot.

A few were also made into T.V. Mini Series.  Some of the stories are the classic creepy suspense that King is famous for, and some are decent readings.  The stories are in order, Jerusalem’s Lot, Graveyard Shift, Night Surf, I am the Doorway, The Mangler, The Boogeyman, Gray Matter, Battleground, Trucks, Sometimes They Come Back, Strawberry Spring, The Ledge, The Lawnmower Man, Quitters Inc, I know what you need, Children of the Corn, The last rung on the Ladder, The man who loved Flowers, One for the Road, and finally, The Woman in the Room. 

Of these, my favorites are Quitters, Inc, Battleground, The Ledge, and Children of the Corn.

Quitters, Inc is about Morrison, a man who wants to stop smoking.  When he sees a friend at the airport that he attended college with and smoked, he asked him how he quit smoking.  He mentioned Quitters, Inc.  Morrison contacts them, and they state they can guarantee they can stop him from smoking.  They say the method is they torture and beat the family until he stops.  After ten failures, the final solution is used….


            The battleground is about a guy that receives a G.I. Joe box that little green men with helicopters, jeeps and even a rocket launcher comes out of to kill him….

            The Ledge is a story about a tennis pro that is caught sleeping with a wealthy man’s wife.  The Richman makes a wager that the tennis pro could walk around the ledge of the 26 stories building, and he would get $20,000, the wife, and his freedom.  If he doesn’t, the police will arrest him with the heroin that was stashed in his car….


            Children of the Corn are about children in a cornfield in Nebraska that kill any adults who enter their small town and anyone over 18 years old, including the children raised in the corn….

I would recommend this collection of stories to read. It’s not on top of my King list, but some good ones will make your skin crawl.

Enjoy a good cup of coffee and an excellent book,

Lopaka

Team of Rivals

15 Thursday Apr 2021

Posted by Lopaka in History, Reading

≈ 1 Comment

Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln
by Doris Kearns Goodwin
2006 / 917 (755 reading) pgs History

One hundred fifty-six years ago, today, at 10:14 pm. John Wilkes Booth pointed a .41 Deringer at the back of President Lincoln’s head and shot him.  Similarly, the RMS Titanic, which struck an Iceberg at 11:40 pm on the 14th of April, didn’t sink until the 15th of April at 0220; Lincoln died 9 hours later, the 15th of April 1865 at 7:22 am.  As I read about the Assassination, it didn’t dawn that I was reading it on the anniversary.  The death of Lincoln is naturally the final chapter of a book about him.  What a book it is!

            Team of Rivals focuses on Abraham Lincoln’s rise in politics and his ability to use his allies and enemies at their most significant potential. He utilized his storytelling gift by employing the exemplary anecdote that would best illustrate what he means and is trying to convey. He would bring people together and also put them at ease.  Lincoln understood better than most the power and influence he had as President and used every means to defeat the Confederacy and unite the US as one nation.  Using the best people, even his rivalries, in the best positions, Lincoln built an army, rally them around him, and kept the US economy moving forward.   

            Team of Rivals is written in loose chronological order.  It starts with the four main characters that will impact the Lincoln administrations running of the war.  These are three men that all felt they should be the President and all ran against Lincoln in the 1860 election.  William Seward, who would become the Secretary of State.  Salmon Chase, Secretary of the Treasury and then Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.  Judge Edward Bates, Attorney General.  Finally, also a family that was very influential in the mid to late 1800’s, the Blair’s.  Interestingly, this family-owned what is known today as the Presidential Guest House, the Blair House.

            The book details these families, where they come from, what influence they had, and why they felt they should be the Republican nominee for President in 1860.  Once Lincoln won the election, the story naturally moves through the civil war, focusing on the Lincoln administration.  The fight between Gen McClellan and Lincoln on how the war should be conducted is spelled out nicely in this book.  As the war has its ups and downs, it shows the impact it has on Lincoln, and the decisions and the timing for each as Lincoln was a master of political timing.  Naturally, the last chapter is what is already mentioned, the Assassination.

This story is beautifully told and is an outstanding read.  If you want to know the Civil War from the battles and impacts, I would recommend Battle Cry of Freedom.  If you want to know the inside story, read Team of Rivals. It’s not a seriously dense history book. It’s a beautiful story told in a straightforward narration.  Naturally, I would recommend this book!

Enjoy a good cup of coffee and a good book!

Lopaka

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