Monday, November 20, 2006

thunderstruck -- Erik Larson

I recently finished reading Thunderstruck, Eric Larson's latest historical crime thriller. As in The Devil in the White City, Larson uses the true story of a notable crime to paint a much broader picture of social history. Some random thoughts:
  • All people are broken--successful business leaders, brilliant inventors, national leaders, murderers, ordinary men and women. None of us is quite normal.
  • Even the most cold-blooded criminal is a sympathetic figure when viewed from a certain light.
  • For some crimes, capital punishment is absolutely appropriate.
  • Society owes a large degree of its success in technological advancement to ego.
  • Society suffers a large degree of its failure in relationships because of ego.
  • People living today have no idea how much slower the world moved prior to the era of electronic communication.
  • Eric Larson has a genius for taking simple history and turning it into a book that I can't put down.
  • I really need to read Isaac's Storm.

1 comment:

Ben said...

Your first two bullets reminded me of Crime and Punishment - a chilling book because we really get a feel for the mind of the murderer, and sometimes it seems too familiar.