Saturday, December 24, 2011

Graph of the Day - December 24th

(Source: MaddowBlog via Robert Frank chart by way of Ezra Klein)


Vocabulary Review: "Median" does not mean average...it means exactly in the middle. If there were a total of 3 workers, it's worker in the #2 spot. If the are 101 workers, then it's worker #51. A median worker has an income smack dab in the middle of all workers. The same goes for median rent.


For Baby Boomers to insinuate that current (young) workers have it so much better off and that they are merely squandering their income on unnecessary toys is insulting and counterproductive to any discussion of economic reality. Not only do Baby Boomers as a group speak from a chronologically privileges position (older workers hold a disproportionate percentage of jobs above the median due to number of years on the job, tenure, experience, etc), they also reference their past with false equivalency.


And a note about the "standard of living" argument. This is not 1950. You can't get ahead through social networking by asking everyone you meet for a card and storing it in your Rolodex. A smart phone is a near necessity if you want to get above that median during your life. Most decent jobs now require applications complete with PDF downloads, uploads, customized cover letters, and more information about your past than one person can possibly remember. Let's not forget that just the cost of attending college has grown at a far faster pace than inflation or wages.


Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Graph of the Day - December 6th

(Source: CNNMoney)

Mancession? He-covery?
(Update: I hadn't heard the term "he-covery" but a little Googling finds a good early source in the NYT.)

During the peak of the Great Recession many economists and labor experts commented on the gendered nature of job losses. Some coined it the "mancession" because men were losing jobs much faster, so fast that at one point the number of working men and women in the American economy was equal. The graph above illustrates that well. There is more behind it though. Newsweek pointed out in July 2009 that it didn't mean it was all roses and daffodils for working women.

The basic gist: women on average hold more part time jobs and are paid less and the Recession hit hardest on "male" jobs, full time jobs, and higher paying jobs.

So men are recovering faster in the job market? I am sure with more research I would understand it better, but I am more interested in the "what it means" rather than the "why." The new jobs created in the "he-covery" tend to be lower paid than the jobs that were lost. If it is the case that men are taking these jobs then as whole we should see the income of men lowered. Does this mean the gap between average pay for men and women will shrink, but not because women have increased towards parity? Just a thought.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Arkansas Republicans start 'em young....

Arkansas College Republicans probably think they were being cute and clever by taking a picture of Governor Beebe out of context and using it to score cheap social media points.

TalkBusiness.net called it "Vile Attacks and Lies by Some Arkansas Republicans" and I couldn't agree more.

@ArkCr @GovBeebeMedia thinks Obamacare is best for Arkansas. Is that him or the booze talking? twitpic.com/7o23s4 #crnc #arleg

@ArkCR @GovBeebeMedia expects Arkansans to follow his lead, yet he is so drunk he cant even stand! #arleg twitpic.com/7o23s4 #crnc

@ArkCR: While thousands of Arkansans can’t find work, @GovBeebeMedia gets hammered drunk. PICTURE: http://t.co/JnAm58kf #arleg




These College Republicans could have still used this picture to go after Gov. Beebe. "Gov. Beebe pours the wine and entertains the upper class while thousands of Arkansans can't even afford Bud Light." Or "Gov. Beebe has champagne taste on Arkansas' beer budget."

Perhaps Young Democrats of Arkansas should seize on the poor taste of their Arkansas counterparts. "Governor Beebe: Servant of the People." "Governor Beebe: Serving up good times."

As for his effort in serving a white wine, it leaves something to be desired:


Monday, November 14, 2011

Monday's Song from Hell - November 14th

Not because it is an annoying song that you can't stop humming. Because music can sometimes cement itself in the minds of people and become a common expression of their values or opinions. That's why this song might become hell for those who stand in the way of the 99% of Americans who are not being served by our political, economic, and financial systems.

Now Makana's new song "We Are The Many" can be criticized as being from hell because of the very simple rhyming pattern of the verses (AAAA), but at least the end of the chorus makes clear the whole point of the Occupy Wall Street and 99% movement.

Lyrics below the video thanks to Honolulu Civil Beat.




We Are The Many Lyrics & Music by Makana Makana Music LLC © 2011

Ye come here, gather ’round the stage
The time has come for us to voice our rage
Against the ones who’ve trapped us in a cage
To steal from us the value of our wage

From underneath the vestiture of law
The lobbyists at Washington do gnaw
At liberty, the bureaucrats guffaw
And until they are purged, we won’t withdraw

We’ll occupy the streets
We’ll occupy the courts
We’ll occupy the offices of you
Till you do
The bidding of the many, not the few

Our nation was built upon the right
Of every person to improve their plight
But laws of this Republic they rewrite
And now a few own everything in sight

They own it free of liability
They own, but they are not like you and me
Their influence dictates legality
And until they are stopped we are not free

We’ll occupy the streets
We’ll occupy the courts
We’ll occupy the offices of you
Till you do
The bidding of the many, not the few

You enforce your monopolies with guns
While sacrificing our daughters and sons
But certain things belong to everyone
Your thievery has left the people none

So take heed of our notice to redress
We have little to lose, we must confess
Your empty words do leave us unimpressed
A growing number join us in protest

We occupy the streets
We occupy the courts
We occupy the offices of you
Till you do
The bidding of the many, not the few

You can’t divide us into sides
And from our gaze, you cannot hide
Denial serves to amplify
And our allegiance you can’t buy

Our government is not for sale
The banks do not deserve a bail
We will not reward those who fail
We will not move till we prevail

We’ll occupy the streets
We’ll occupy the courts
We’ll occupy the offices of you
Till you do
The bidding of the many, not the few

We are the many
You are the few

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Song from Hell, for a Saturday

This came about from a conversation with my good friend Gayathiri. She finally got to spend some actual time with one of my acquaintances, Jason. She said that he was really nice. I totally agreed. Jason is honestly a positive person. He is an excellent people person when it's his job to listen and work with others. He has impressed several of the volunteers with whom he is working at our local Center. He is actually a joy to be around. A different acquaintance I know dislikes him, but we figured out why: that guy is a person who is just ugly, inside and out, who dislikes Jason because he is a cute, positive, and competent person.

So describing to Gayathiri, I said, "ya, he is just sunshine and lollipops all the time." UGH...that is all it took! Know I am stuck with it in my head...and now you are.


Monday, April 25, 2011

Monday's Song from Hell - April 25th



The back story on how this was pulled off in the Oregon legislature. I wish more legislative bodies treated each other with the respect required to build the kind of trust it must take to do something like this. That legislature is probably able to come to compromises

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Harps adds bulk food section

Seen today at the Wedington St. Harps store. First time I have seen it.


Ozark Natural Foods has some competition now. Bulk foods is what I buy the most of at ONF. Though Harps is not offering the huge selection of organic bulk food, I will probably start buying some of my bulk food here. Most of this selection is nuts, dried fruit, and oats. I mostly buy almonds, pumpkin seeds, oats, and lentils by bulk.

Why bulk? Well...for one, you decide how much you want. It's slightly cheaper too. Less packaging. Supposedly more sustainable...even if you are buying in small quantities, the super thin produce bag is less intensive than whatever extra crap marketers incorporate into packaging in hopes of higher sales.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Map of the Day - April 5th

This is my proposed redistricting map for Arkansas. I did this to illustrate that you can basically do anything you want with redistricting as long as the districts have equal population and don't dilute minority voting rights (not much of a concern in Arkansas). I started this map with two ideas: give each district an equal length of state border and have them all meet in the middle of the state. This map would be a big change for many cities, but gives each district a share of urban and rural areas.

(Bentonville, Fayetteville, Fort Smith, Hot Springs together in a district. Rogers, Springdale, Russellville and Conway in another. Jonesboro, West Memphis, North Little Rock, and Pine Bluff in another. Little Rock, Saline County, Texarkana in the last one)

There has been much hullabaloo about the congressional redistricting that is happening in Arkansas this spring. The main controversy is about moving Fayetteville out of the 3rd CD and into the 4th CD. "Fayetteville to the Fourth" one of the plans has been called. I oppose moving Fayetteville to the 4th CD if there is another way of creating equal population districts that are more compact. This opinion is not very popular with many Democratic party leaders, officials, elites, and activists. Some have said that moving Fayetteville is best because it gives Democrats more opportunities to win Congressional seats....I support compact districts over partisan success. Some have accused a few Fayetteville Democrats of this plan because those elected officials want to run for Congress in a district that is much more likely to elect a Democrat....again, I support compact districts over the success of any individual politician.

There have been many maps from many people. I hope someone creates a website to archive all the possible maps created by legislators and by citizens during this session. I think far too many people during this session simply said "the 3rd has to lose voters" then accepted whatever was put in front of them. There are plenty more than one way to skin that cat. High schoolers with access to the internet can create all kinds of maps that are equal population that satisfy legal challenges. UPDATE: The most recent map to pass the AR Senate!

Make your own redistricting map with this online tool. It maps and counts the voters in districts that you create yourself!

Friday, March 18, 2011

Map of the Day - March 18th


Thanks Tin Can Tabloid for the inspiration for today's map.
Tin Can Tabloid: CNN Races Fox To The Bottom...

They switched San Fransisco and Los Angeles. What a bunch of morons. They are off by 350 miles....with two of the largest metro areas in the United States. And San Fransisco is kind of hard to mess up...it's got that huge body of water with a very particular shape..call SAN FRANSISCO BAY. 350 miles...that's not a small mistake. That's like mistaking Miami for Jacksonville.

Perhaps I should get a job at CNN. My degree in geography would qualify me. Actually, my ability to throw darts at a map seems to qualify me.




Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Where to put your compost pile

I am a compost convert...I am completely sold on the idea of closing the nutrient cycle of everything that grows and comes onto someones property. Of course apartment dwellers can't do this easily, but so many people live on suburban lots. There are lots of excuses why people don't compost and most of them are crappy ones. Basic knowledge shouldn't be one of those excuses. You can find all kinds of advice...everything from detailed scientific or pro-farmer experiences all the way down to average yokels like me. Here is one simple lesson.

Where to site your pile is a common question. Common pointers: not near trees (roots will suck nutrients), not in the shade (heat helps decomposition), close to your garden (for convenience). Sometimes they add "close to your kitchen." Well...guess where mine is? Not close to my kitchen. Look below:

All the way at the back of the lot near the corner of the neighbor's fence.

Do you know why they recommend putting it near the kitchen? Because this is what you collect to put in the pile:

Not exactly what you want lingering in your kitchen.

Now Northwest Arkansas has mild winters...but this one was extreme. We had four snows in a six week period. The first was the dusting above.

The second was several inches..okay, normal. And usually it melts off fast.


The third was a very decent snow by our standards. And some very cold weather to go along with it.


The fourth snow was 14 inches at our house. A record during my lifetime for Fayetteville. And BITTER COLD for days. (don't the raised beds look like shallow graves covered in snow?)

Well guess what happens when you don't want to trudge through knee high snow at 4 degrees?


PILEUP!!!!!



Lesson learned.


Monday, March 7, 2011

The Garden Awakes!

After a bitterly cold winter with far above average snows, Northwest Arkansas is getting a taste of a traditional spring. We had several warm days that saw 70 degrees and sun. We have had several VERY rainy days complete with thunderstorms and hail. Cloudy, mild days into the 50s feel like normal. It's enough to warm the hearts of gardeners and the soils of their gardens. Seed orders are coming in and we are already procrastinating on the indoor seeding. I took a walk around the garden and realized that it has awoken, despite the hard winter.


Garden looks pretty boring here...depressing even. Notice the newer beds on the outer edges. These additions add 176 sq ft of raised beds, bringing the total close to 400 sq ft.

Garlic is up and ready for warm days. As opposed to last year, I got these in the ground in the late fall rather than waiting until the spring. That is the way it is supposed to be done evidently. These overwinter just fine. I have a challenge among a few friends for the best garlic to be pulled on July 4th.

Parsley overwintered just fine and is starting new growth. Curly leaf parsley on the left, flat leaf (Italian) parsley on the right. You can't see it but behind the parsley the chives are pushing up mounds of soil in their effort to break through.


This bed is the permanent strawberry bed. It was started last year with just one row up front of everbearing plants. The rest of the box was filled in the late fall with first year transplants from our friend's borrowed box in our garden and his pots. We needed to dump a lot of new compost in his bed and I feared the small pots would not protect the plants during the winter. The potted strawberries also had many runners that had rooted into the rest of the box. The whole thing was a mess....the friend hadn't visited his plot in months. So his have now filled the back of the bed. Some were everbearing and some June. Kyle added 3 or 4 inches of compost right on top of the plants and the existing mulch.....I feared that this would hurt the strawberries, but I think it actually provided great insulation. He was careful to make sure he gathered the plant leaves up and spread the compost all around them. I imagine as perennial plants with quick rooting, the strawberries will just gradually raise their root level and thrive. Let's hope.


Brand new growth of strawberries. They are ready for spring!


Mint. This is a 2x5 raised bed that is completely segregated from the rest of the garden. Mint can be very invasive, so we planted it away...in the shade...and we kind of ignored it as it is just far enough out of sight and hard to reach with the hose. It didn't do very well at all last year, but we sort of don't mind. We dumped 3 or 4 inches of compost on top and just let it sit during the winter. All kinds of new growth...but we may have killed one or two of the varieties planted in this box. We will see.

Is anything waking up in your garden/farm?

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Map of the Day - March 6th


Sure...it looks like just a map of "Western" Europe. But there is something super groovy about it. Take a closer look at the title block.


Perhaps it is too small to notice. This map is from 1950. It's a classic from NatGeo. I saw it on the wall of a new friend's living room. I knew it was old from first glance, but then I saw something that excited me even more. This map has the Allied occupation zones of post-WWII Germany delineated. This map reminds me of three ideas of geography...or history...or whatever. The third is my favorite of the three.

1) The victors write the history books. Notice that this map cuts off right at Berlin on the east side of the map? The definition of "Western" Europe was written by the non-communist Allies....and it doesn't include East Germany...oh ya, except for Berlin....only because the non-communist Allies all controlled territory in Berlin.

2) History repeats itself. Those occupation zones really make it evident that maps tell stories...and they are biased. This map says that who "occupies" a pseudo-sovereign nation is important. Check out the occupation zones in Iraq in 2003.

3) The transmission of information through people keeps happening...accurately or not. THe zone of occupation for the United States was in the south of Germany. That area includes Bavaria and Baden-Wurttemburg, and High German language. You may not recognize any of that...but I bet you will recognize a few other things. Lederhosen...strudel...snowy mountains...yodeling...nutcrackers...cuckoo clocks...the Black Forest. Those are all "German" things that really are centered in the south of Germany...not ALL of Germany. Whether you learned it in basic grade school texts or from movies like Heidi or The Sound of Music or National Lampoon's European Vacation, you probably learned a biased image of German culture.

Why does understanding regional differences and history matter? Let's start with Germany. It could be as simple as what you will imbibe if you go to Germany. Germany=beer, right? It is true that all of Germany has high beer consumption, but the south has far higher wine consumption than the north. You may go over thinking beer but come home with a suitcase full of wine. Remembering past divisions is important to understanding the political environment as well. Former communist East Germany is the home of the current German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Chancellor Merkel grew up in a country that was far less developed than the rest of Germany and still to this day struggles. It's like the American South after Jim Crow allowed respectable companies to enter from other parts of the United States. Surely hailing from the "backwoods" colors one's perspective on national politics.

Now back to Iraq since I mentioned it previously. Iraq is not as simple as one outlined box of sandy beige on a (mislabeled) Fox News map. Northern Iraq is far different from central Iraq and Baghdad. The Kurds aren't even Arabs...and heck, they aren't even just in Iraq. There are more Kurds in Turkey than Iraq and probably more in Iran than Iraq as well. Knowing that the Iraqis in Kirkuk have more cultural similarities to their brethren over the borders in Turkey and Iran than to their compatriots in Baghdad is an important thing. It certainly has mattered in the occupation of Iraq. It wouldn't be a perfect comparison, but imagine this: Mexican-Americans whose families have lived for 150 years in south Texas may share more cultural values with Mexicans across the border than they do with Lithuanian-Americans in Chicago.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

PICTURES: Walker Park Community Garden

Today was a great day to get outside and help out with the Walker Park Community Garden. This Fayetteville Community Garden Coalition's brand new garden at the Fayetteville Senior Activity and Wellness Center on South College Ave.

I went today mainly to get some exercise, but also just to give them some much needed help with the labor. I remember how long it took Kyle and I to transport our compost...no one should have to do it alone. Our backyard is plenty big enough for us, so I didn't sign up for a plot. I did want to help though, because this is a perfect example of public-private partnership between the city and a non-profit. Many hands make light work!

Beginning: Due to poor soil, the garden will be in raised beds on top of this cardboard.


The crowd (free labor)


Mayor Jordan talking and turning the first shovel


Lots of high school students helped. Lot's of girl power. They could be a road construction crew, easily!


First layer was "top soil"...NWA top soil, meaning it was hardly better than the clay we were avoiding, but it helps to raise the beds.


Second layer was compost from the City of Fayetteville.


For walkways between the permanent beds, mulch from the City.


Strings outlined the beds. Cardboard, top soil, compost.


Shovels dug, wheel barrows transported, and rakes spread.



Mulched walkways finished off the project.

Though there was a lot of organizing work that went into the project ahead of time, two and a half hours was all it took to make this garden. 4 beds, 4' x 40'. Not sure how big the plots are, but if you want one you better jump on it!

(yes, I know my finger was in some of the pictures. I was trying to hold my shovel, plus my gloves, and sometimes my coffee....yes, I did more watching than work probably. I dug in whenever a spot wasn't occupied, but gave the high schoolers plenty of access to the task at hand.)







Saturday, February 26, 2011

Is this healthy for my soil?

Remember the beautiful compost I was so excited about? I commented that I found a few pieces of glass in it, but that I was still happy with it. All it took was a few rains for the truth to come out...our UP rather.


So we spread about 4 cubic yards of this stuff in 400 square feet of raised beds. This much glass has come up so far...and I imagine there is a lot more of it in the soil. The rain will settle it but how much of the soil's rising crap does this represent? Just the first inch or so, right? We put 5-7 inches in most of the boxes. Is there really five or six times as much glass still left in our soil?

I am a little disappointed in the quality of the compost from the City of Fayetteville. I guess we will continue to pull glass piece by piece for years to come. There goes running my hands through soil....without gloves at least.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Benton County OK's HIV Clinic

(cross posted at NWA Center for Equality blog)

Washington County is losing their HIV Clinic…and gaining the Northwest Arkansas Regional HIV Clinic! This is long in the making, but now it is official. The NWA Times reports that the Benton County Quorum Court (it’s like city council but for the entire county) voted yesterday to form an intergovernmental agreement with Washington County and form a board of directors that will govern the newly named clinic.

The Fayetteville clinic has existed for years and has been funded by both counties and Washington Regional Medical Center, though the funding has not been equal to the share of cases. This agreement should lead to greater accountability (with the appointed board) and greater cooperation on a problem that crosses county lines.

A few questions though: Who will populate this new board? HIV/AIDS is still a health concern that disproportionately affects segments of the LGBTQ population. Should we insist that the board has some kind of representation from communities that struggle with this problem?In NWA, target communities for prevention might be Latino/as, especially women, and gay men, but care may be a bit different. Should at least one person on that board be HIV-positive, in order to have personal insight into HIV care experience?

According to an article last summer, the Clinic has 625 patients. Why is thorough treatment important to the larger community? As I reported last World AIDS Day, “treatment on anti-retroviral drugs reduces the total average viral load in a community…lower viral load in community lowers the transmission rate.” So good treatment means a healthier community..and less HIV.

Washington County HIV Clinic 3270 North Wimberly Drive Fayetteville, AR 72703 (501) 973-8450.

Here’s a rough look at the numbers provide in the article.

(Washington County HIV Clinic does treat one or two patients from Madison County)

Northwest Arkansas HIV Clinic
Washington County provides 38 percent of the clinic’s money, Washington Regional Medical Center provides 36 percent and Benton County provides 16 percent. The rest of the clinic’s money is from other sources, such as insurance reimbursements and donations. Benton County’s share in 2010 was $34,000. Benton County residents accounted for 39 percent of the clinic’s caseload, according to a survey.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Graph of the Day - February 24th


I appreciate this because it attempts to plot these potential candidates on more than one characteristic. If I had to make a bet right now, I would bet on Huntsman. I see the battle of the Republican primary as basically being between the upper left corner and the lower right corner. I think the person in the upper left who best contorts themselves to attract the support of the lower right will be the nominee.

First, the area of each candidate’s circle is proportional to their perceived likelihood of winning the nomination, according to the Intrade betting market.
...
Finally, the color of each circle reflects the region the candidate is from: blue for the Northeast, red for the South, green for the Midwest, and yellow for the West.

**NOTE: "Graph of the Day" is a series that may include graphs, charts, and other visuals that communicate data.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Three motivations that drive me as a "farmer"

These are not all the motivations, but they are contradicting ones that battle for primacy in the hierarchy of vegetable garden planning. I stumbled over three articles in the same online publication and thought it odd that the ideas compete with each other to some degree.


vs


vs



The first person to say "You don't have to sacrifice those things" will get a boot to the head. If I had one square foot to plant in, I would have to make a decision. One corn plant...one sweet potato slip...two crops of spinach....or early radish and late beets. There are always decisions and they do weigh on people, especially beginning growers.

Identifying your own personal goals is probably more fulfilling than ignoring them. My roommate likes variety. I tend more towards the quick producing and volume. I am far more interested in doing back to back crops of early and late vegetables than growing Mint or Basil.

My green beans are quick, prolific, and voluminous (in fiber, but not calories really). Probably why I like them.


Thursday, February 17, 2011

Graph of the Day - February 17th

Long time away from writing, but I certainly have been thinking a lot. More garden related blogs to come in the next few days, but today's is political.

Arkansas Republicans (and a few turncoat Democrats) want to give a massive tax break to wealthy Arkansans while looking into a budget that cuts education and services to children and the poor.

Here is their plan to cut state capital gains taxes. I say if they are looking to cut 55-65 million dollars in taxes this year they should go ahead and completely eliminate the food tax.


For more on this read the press release from Arkansas Advocates for Children & Families. It has a link to their entire report on this issue and how it hands money to the wealthiest Arkansans.

Saturday, January 1, 2011

2010 in reading

To recap my reading in 2010, in a word: lackluster. I only read 18 books, which is probably my lowest total since sometime in high school. In this number I did not include several books for the heaviest of my grad classes that required several separate books as text. 10 fiction, 7 non-fiction, and one autobiography (of sorts). Additionally I re-read the 7th Harry Potter book in English and Spanish to prepare for the final editions of the film series.

The biggest new trend was that I attempted to get a basic primer in classic 20th century science fiction. Some of the modern science fiction movies are based novels that are quite good and I took a stab at a few of them. I enjoyed them and plan to read more of the seminal works in science fiction.

Everyone should read: Red Families V. Blue Families, Naomi Cahn and June Carbone
Everyone should read this...red...blue...those well-educated...those less-educated. I warn that those less-educated my be offended by some of the premises of the the "red" family model. Hell, everyone will probably point out that they don't fit the models laid out, but I figure that well-educated folks will understand how statistically you can differ from a model, but the model is still sound and you fit into it somewhere. This book has good research then a decent dose of throwing ideas out there that the research does tend to support.

The authors propose that much of American political "tension" and much of opposing American cultures are shaped by two family cultures. "Red" families marry early and often, have children early and often, and have lower levels of education (especially investment in education of 'girls'). "Blue" families postpone marriage and childbirth, but are more educated when they do marry and start families. The book digs into the kind of values each culture has that is related to the kind of families they tend to have. If sex MUST be in a marriage and marriage is for procreation, then it makes sense that "red" families don't really see the needed for marriage equality. "Blue" families may not understand why abstinence education is important to the culture of "red" families because "blue" families view avoiding unplanned pregnancy as a far more important goal than preventing unwed sex. This book does a good job of covering MANY reasons why these cultures differentiate and addresses how assumptions of these groups are sometimes wrong. African American families may vote blue in this case, but much of their family culture is "red" for instance. Good book. Every person should read.

Biggest Disappointment: Green Metropolis, David Owen
Though the main thesis is pretty sound, it is presented with a sense of moral superiority. Living in dense, efficient cities is "greener" than living in the suburban or exurban greenscapes, but someone from a big city telling those of us with few other choices that we must change is just annoying. Good theory, weak on strategies for transitioning and implementing policies to encourage efficient city living en masse.

Best Read, Fiction: Have Spacesuit - Will Travel, Robert Heinlein
This is a shorter novel by one of the seminal sci-fi authors. It's simple, straight forward and amazingly enjoyable. Readers who have seen the film of Starship Troopers will enjoy Heinlein's book by the same title, but this novel tells a simpler story and one likely to interest young readers.

Best Read, Non-fiction: 538 Ways to Live Work and Play like a Liberal, Justin Krebs
How is this one "best read" not in my highly recommended? Because not everyone wants to be or support liberal causes, though I imagine they would still like half of the daily activities in this book. This is the kind of book you have in the bathroom or kitchen or on your night stand or in your purse for times when you have 5 minutes to read. A little bit at a time, you read about things that philosophically or practically line up with what modern American liberalism (progressivism) espouses. I made a mental list of habits I ought to adopt because they build the kind of community that supports good policy. It may be as simple as planning shared rides or inviting neighbors over for a BBQ, but these things are what makes us build links with the world instead of walling ourselves away. (I also like it because I met the guy who wrote it and got to talk to him!)

The reading list. Those bolded I highly recommend


The Map That Changed the World Simon Winchester
Skeleton Coast Clive Cussler
Primary Colors Anonymous
Starship Troopers Robert Heinlein
Plague Ship Cliver Cussler
I, Robot Isaac Asimov
Contact Carl Sagan
The Chase Clive Cussler
Green Metropolis David Owen
The Color Purple Alice Walker
The Case Against Hillary Clinton Peggy Noonan
The Blueprint: How the Democrats Won Colorado Adam Schrager, Rob Witmer
Girl, Interrupted Susanna Kaysen
Red Families V. Blue Families Naomi Cahn and June Carbone
The Squandering of America Robert Kuttner
Have Space Suit - Will Travel Robert Heinlein
Love in the Time of Cholera Gabriel Garcia Marquez
538 Ways to Live Work and Play like a Liberal Justin Krebs