The 6:20 Man by David Baldacci

This confrontation threatens to dredge secrets from Devine’s past in the army unless he participates in an undercover investigation into his firm.

This role will take him from the impossibly glittering lives he once saw only through a train window and even the expected routine of the financial world he is now part of to the darkest corners of the country’s economic halls of power.

As he commutes to work on the 6:20 train and looks out the window, he knows the killer may live there. He is now part of a high-stakes conspiracy, and Devine has a target on his back.

Work Matters: It Takes Technology, Insight And Strategies For Job Seekers In This Evolving World

By Brent M. Jones

One review said about this book:

"This book is so timely to the world today."

Another reviewer said:

‘You may not be looking for a new job currently, but odds are you will at some point in your career. This book is a great place to start to help you navigate the new world of job searching. It is probably one of the most valuable and helpful books I’ve read. Every young person just leaving college or high school and preparing to enter the workforce should read this book.”

This book follows Work Matters: Insights & Strategies for Job Seekers in a Rapidly Changing Economy, published on August 25, 2020. The Pandemic was the elephant in the room when that book came out, but the new book, over 1/3 longer, focuses on how the task of changing a career, finding a dream job, or even finding the right employee has changed. Of course, it will continue to change, but the new reality and the headline for the article about this is:

"Technology is the significant change for Job Hunters.”

No Time Left, by David Baldacci

A short story and a little unusal from Baldacci. This short story is about an assassin who at first seems kind of interesting. Usually you expect a short story by a big author will have a deep message or a real twist of irony.

This killer is somewhat stoic about his job. That leads us to thinking again that the story will be a real surprise. I have seen other reviews where the reviewer in the name of bordom reveal the plot. Pretty easy to do that because it has a short plot. I won’t be doing that. I won’t tell you that it is a little surprise who is kill target winds up being and where the target is.

The story could have been a useful part of a bigger novel and Baldacci is very capable of having done that. So why didn’t he? Maybe he just wanted to sell a cheap ebook? Even if he does he won’t make much at the cheap price and he will not gain new readers just make some of his old ones made.

I probably need to apoligize if you already know. Too bad. The story isn’t bad, after all Baldacci is a good writer. Even so I am giving it 3 stars. I am a generous reviewer. .

Literature of Belief Sacred Scripture and Relitious Experience edited by Neal E. Lambert

The Literature of Belief focuses on sacred literature, some considered holy scripture, and concludes the nature of religious experience by looking at the sacred texts of several of the world's significant religions. This, along with studying the scriptures of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, opens the book's writings for comparison and often some reasons for the differences.

William James' definition of religion, "the feelings, acts, and experiences of individual men in their solitude, so far as they apprehend themselves to stand about whatever they may consider the divine," the very center of his definition of religion," is presented at the beginning of the book and was a practical reference point of looking at the various literature gave.

At the foundation of great religions lie holy books. Not all religious texts have the sacredness of scripture, but few religions survive and thrive without creating a literature of belief.

This book contained overviews of the writings of Jewish, Christian, Islamic, Hindu, Buddhist, Taoist, and Latter-Day Saint Scripture. The respect shown for each religion is clearly of the most importance to this book.

The Storyteller by Dave Grohl

I liked this book. He seemed to write for me rather than a particular genre audience.

Dave Grohl, the twice-inducted Rock & Roll Hall of Fame member for his work with Nirvana and the Foo Fighters, decided to tell stories about his life and music on social media. The book gives a unique perspective on the grunge movement and the rock scene from the 80s.

Grohl says writing his first book, “The Storyteller,” was a familiar experience since it felt like his stories were individual songs. The book starts with Grohl’s love of the drums. He taught himself by watching others, using pillows for drums, and an account of how the young Grohl goes from grinding his jaws rhythmically to using them as drum beats.

He dropped out of high school with his mother’s support and approval. He joined Scream, a hardcore punk band from Washington, D.C. Eventually, Scream is suddenly defunct, and Grohl hears that Nirvana – then merely well-regarded was interested in him. He moves in with Kurt Cobain, who is home sleeping on the couch. The story includes Nirvana’s remarkable rise to fame.

In 2022 Dave Grohl’s net worth is $320 million. Not bad from starting from nothing at age 17 and 36 years later, wow!

Cobain dies from drugs, the band dissolves, and Grohl’s debut is a Foo Fighters album made in a home studio, playing every instrument himself.

I found the title “Storyteller ”rang true. The book is a well-written overview of a series of events and band groups that will be an education for some and others a trip down memory lane.

Write For Your LIfe, by Anna Quindlen Review

Anna Quindlen is an author that makes you better because you read her work. My own goal is to read her latest book, whatever that is, each year to recharge. She shows us how anyone can write and why everyone should.

In her book, Write For Your Life, she tells us what matters in life and where we can find our humanity. She answers that we see what matters to us through our writing. Quindlen says she wrote this book for “civilians,” who use the written word to become more human, more themselves.

Write for Your Life shows how writing connects us to ourselves and those we love in our lives. She encourages us to record our daily lives in writing.

Those thoughts resonated for me, having recently written the book: “Why Life Stories Change: As You Look At Your Own Life Story You See Yourself Differently” The book presents the thought that “We have a choice in putting together the narrative of who we are and who we become. We can pick which of the events we connect with, what we conclude about them, and then weave and reweave them into our story. As my story changes with the retelling, it changes me. I become different because of how I see the story.”

Writing gives you something to hold onto in a changing world. “To write the present,” Quindlen says, “is to believe in the future.

Source: https://connectedeventsmatter.com/blog/202...

Choose Your Story, Change Your Life: Silence Your Inner Critic and Rewrite Your Life from the Inside Out by Kindra Hall

When we consider our lives and the vast number of experiences we have had, it is clear that those events are stories, and we supply the plot lines and even the conclusions for many of them. Over time we create our decisions, and with each tale repeated, we reinforce our findings. The message of “Choose Your Story” is summed up in a quote by Seth Godin: “ We are not who we are because of our atoms, our molecules, our DNA. We’re who we are because of the stories we tell ourselves- about our pain, the hopes, and the dreams we live with.”

The author lays out the components that make stories stick and shows how we construct the beliefs and use them to prop up our conclusions. This allows us to catch glimpses of our subconscious at work, creating false assumptions.

The book offers a solution to findingour authenticl self in what turns out to be an approach that most anyone could follow.

This author is an inspriation and her life validates her book.

Efficiency and Organization: To Achieve More in Life by Ruszanna Krdilyan Hernandez Ed.D

The author’s stated purpose for the book is to show how to “achieve more in life, to guide, inspire, and give step-by-step strategies for building organizational skills that will lead to efficiency, which will lead to a more balanced life. The goal of balance is woven into all 15 chapters, and the chapters end with a checklist of practical steps and states of what needs to be done based on what is presented.

This book is based on the experiences of an immigrant woman who, by staying focused, having determination, and self-discipline, was able to develop the skills necessary to accomplish more in one day than an average person can achieve in two or three days. She did it out of necessity but built some remarkable organizational skills along the way.

This author is still young and has many years ahead of her, so when she tells us, describing her approach, that she values authenticity and truthfulness and has been open and honest about her challenges, we know that. We know it because we read her book, and it just shines through that this isn’t the standard list of platitudes for the genre but is clearly who this author is as a person.

Quantum Physics for Beginners by Michael Rutherford

The book, Quantum Physics, is an excellent step to finally understanding the basics of this subject, but it seems clear after finishing it that I need to reread it and or find other beginner books. The easy part was the theory and explanation of how quantum dysfunctions function in our everyday lives.

Also, more essential conclusions that seemed beyond basics were presented throughout the book. We learn that quantum physics is a branch of science that focuses on quantum mechanics and quantum mechanics is the set of principles used to explain the behavior of matter and energy.

Quantum mechanics is also part of this book because it explains how the universe works at a scale smaller than atoms. On the other hand, the process is also called quantum physics or quantum theory. Mechanics is the part of physics that explains how things move, and quantum is the Latin word for 'how much. Quantum mechanics describes how the particles that makeup atoms work."

It isn't fair to rate a book when you don't fully understand the subject. Was it five stars because I could understand it or two stars because I couldn't? I conclude that it probably is a 4-star because it is clear the author knows a lot more than I do, and I did learn a lot.