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Short Essays for Inquiring Minds
Posted by Literary Titan

Short Essays for Inquiring Minds is a collection of fifty-plus short pieces that grew out of Ronald Gruner’s Substack, written between late 2024 and the end of 2025. He groups them into broad themes like COVID and public health, presidential leadership, economic and foreign policy, democracy under pressure, artificial intelligence, media and culture, plus a final grab-bag of lighter topics. You move from the discovery of viruses in sick tobacco plants to the Spanish Flu and COVID, from Eisenhower’s highways and McCarthy’s witch hunts to Trump’s tariffs and shutdowns, from Iranian coups and the Berlin Airlift to AI chatbots and culture-war skirmishes at Cracker Barrel, all in compact essays meant to be read in one sitting.
Gruner writes like an engineer who turned into a storyteller, steady and calm, and he likes a clean narrative more than rhetorical fireworks. He starts with scenes, not abstractions. A teenager in Washington state quietly coding a COVID tracker on his holiday break, a five-year-old in a Mexican village who becomes “patient zero” for the Swine Flu, a Russian botanist staring at mottled tobacco leaves and discovering viruses when the filtered sap keeps killing plants. The history is detailed but not stuffy, and he breaks down technical things like virology or air-traffic control with simple explanations and little asides about coffee cups, noisy radars, or Uber’s driver app. Even when I did not care deeply about the specific policy question, the human setups pulled me along and the data and charts felt like they belonged in the story rather than being dropped in to impress me. Sometimes, the tone slips into lecturing, and you can feel the Substack cadence, that weekly “lesson,” which makes a few essays blend together, but most of the time, the clarity and the pacing keep it lively.
The author is obsessed with the tug-of-war between public health and personal liberty, and he uses everything from the Spanish Flu to George W. Bush’s forgotten pandemic plan and the COVID lockdown fights to poke at that tension. He has little patience for grifters selling miracle cures or for pundits declaring pandemics a hoax, and he is blunt about how “alternative facts” and media bubbles corrode trust. At the same time, he tries hard not to preach only to one tribe. His essays on Trump, Social Security, trade wars, and the federal deficit criticize but also explain how we got here, and his background in technology shows up in the AI chapters, which run through the history of the field and ask what happens when algorithms start shaping news and opinion. I did feel some whiplash as the book hopped from Iranian oil politics to an Uber driver’s paycheck to the inner life of a golf ball. The range is a strength, but it also means not every topic gets the depth it hints at, and readers who want a tight single argument might find the experience more like browsing an unusually thoughtful news magazine.
I found the “A Trade War over Chickens” very timely, because it takes what sounds like a quirky footnote in history and shows how it still shapes what we drive and what we pay today. The way Gruner walks through Johnson’s 25 percent “Chicken Tax” on light trucks, the VW buses full of hippies, and the slow drift toward giant pickups that now rule American roads felt almost like a magic trick, simple story at first, then the wider picture snaps into place. I thought about current tariff fights on Chinese EVs and solar panels and realized I had the same uneasy feeling. Short-term win, long-term lock-in.
I would recommend Short Essays for Inquiring Minds to readers who like current affairs, American history, and big-picture policy issues, people who do not mind some hard numbers with their stories, and who are open to having their priors nudged. If you want short, well-told pieces that try to be fair and still take a stand, this collection is a solid fit.
Pages: 380 | ASIN : B0GK37CV8C
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Posted in Book Reviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, current affairs, current events, ebook, economic and foreign policy, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, Public Health, read, reader, reading, Ronald Gruner, Short Essays for Inquiring Minds, story, writer, writing
Longevity for the Lazy
Posted by Literary Titan

Longevity for the Lazy is a clever, practical, and surprisingly compassionate guide to extending your life without overhauling your entire existence. Dr. Richard Malish, a military physician turned longevity strategist, uses his deep knowledge of public health, cardiology, and human nature to offer a framework he calls the “Longevity Mental Model.” Rather than pitching another trendy diet or rigid routine, the book helps readers understand the major causes of early death, namely atherosclerosis and cancer, and how to fight them with minimal effort. It blends scientific research, history, and strategy into a mental map for living longer, even for those of us who’d rather do the bare minimum.
What I like most about this book is its voice. It’s equal parts seasoned doctor and war-hardened realist, but with an unexpected sense of humor and humility. Dr. Malish writes like someone who’s seen behind the curtain and is now giving you the straight truth without fluff. He acknowledges up front that most people are lazy, and rather than judging it, he embraces it. The book is packed with practical advice, yet it’s never preachy. The core message, kill your killers early and often, lands hard, but he delivers it with enough compassion and realism that I didn’t feel overwhelmed. I appreciated that he doesn’t idealize superhuman health habits. Instead, he arms the reader with simple strategies that don’t require daily marathons or going vegan overnight.
At times, I found myself surprised by how motivating the book was, especially considering its “lazy” theme. It made me feel less guilty for being myself. The military metaphors, enemies, campaigns, and offensive weapons worked better than I expected. They added urgency without melodrama. The science is solid but never dense, and the recurring “Take-Home Messages” made the lessons stick. That said, if you’re looking for glossy photos, flashy life hacks, or someone to tell you aging is optional, this isn’t the book. It’s grounded in reality, and that’s what makes it powerful. It respects your time and your intelligence.
If you’ve ever felt overwhelmed by wellness advice, or if you know what you should be doing but never seem to get around to it, this book is for you. It’s also a great fit for skeptics, minimalists, and anyone who wants to understand the science of longevity without feeling shamed into perfection. Longevity for the Lazy won’t guilt you into green smoothies and CrossFit. Instead, it’ll make you think smarter, act sooner, and want to live better.
Pages: 203 | ASIN : B0DGDBFZ94
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Dr. Richard Malish, ebook, goodreads, guide, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Longevity for the Lazy, medical, Medicine & Psychology, nonfiction, nook, novel, Popular Psychology & Medicine, Public Health, read, reader, reading, self help, story, writer, writing
COVID-19 AFRICA, HAITI, AND THE U. S. VIRGIN ISLANDS
Posted by Literary Titan

The Covid-19 pandemic took the world by surprise. Nations were caught unaware and people scrambled to find ways to slow down the spread and stop the rapid loss of lives. There was a lot of misinformation, technical information mixed in with the truth. Scientists were busy studying and passing on information as quickly as they could to a world of people trying to grasp what was going on.
Dr. Hugues Fidel Batsielilit watched with the rest of us as the world crumbled from what seemed like a common flu. The only difference is that he watched with an expertise’s eye. He saw how the world reacted and the different measures countries took to protect their citizens. Dr. Batsielilt focused his interest on Africa, Haiti and the US Virgin Islands. His aim with this book is to analyze the response of both people and governments as well as the lull after the height. He also aims to make some projections, provide the reader with some idea of what the future might look like from an expert’s point of view.
The one thing you will note about this book is the detail with which this book is written. The author is direct and provides all the information to his readers. He makes sure that readers have the full story and the data to fully grasp what he is discussing. This combined with in-depth research leads to the revelation of interesting discoveries. Not all the discoveries he found were beneficial, he uncovered a lot of conspiracy theories and discusses those as well in order to debunk the myth for readers.
COVID-19 AFRICA, HAITI, AND THE U. S. VIRGIN ISLANDS by Dr. Hugues Fidele Batsielilit approaches the pandemic from a critical and scientific eye. As someone that has a medical and emergency management perspective the author has provided readers with information in a nonbiased and objective manner with a logical flow and clear explanations. These are important qualities in a book about a sensitive subject whose available information is either too technical or insufficient and designed for sensationalism. He has provided the reader with a simple explanation and analysis of the situation.
Pages: 251 | ASIN : B09JQ9QLSV
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: africa, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Communicable Diseases, COVID-19, COVID-19 AFRICA, ebook, goodreads, haiti, health, Hugues Batsielilit, kindle, kobo, nonfiction, nook, pandemic, Public Health, read, reader, reading, science, story, Viral Diseases, Virgin Islands, writer, writing







