Sunday, August 22, 2010

Mailbox Monday

Hi, and thanks for stopping by.  The mailman stopped twice this week.  He delivered:
Love, CharlestonLove, Charleston which I reviewed here for the BookSneeze program.

Running Around (And Such) (Lizzie Searches for Love, Book 1)Running Around (And Such) (Lizzie Searches for Love, Book 1) which is an Amish novel written by an Amish author.  Hopefully I'll have a review up this week.

What about you?  What did the mail bring you?  To see what other book bloggers got, stop by Chick Loves Lit. 

BookSneeze Review: Love, Charleston by Beth Webb Hart

Love, Charleston Reading the back of Love, Charleston would make you think it is a romance novel--boy meets girl etc. to happily ever after.  While Love, Charleston does have the romance intimated by the back it really isn't a romance as much as it is the story of three women and the men in their lives (though one of the women turned out to be a very minor character)

Love, Charleston explores the themes of responding to God's call, waiting for God's promised good and the sanctity of marriage.

While I found it to be a light enjoyable read, it was too ambitious, trying to cover too much ground in too few pages.  The romance got almost no pages--we know it was conducted almost entirely by email but we aren't privy to the emails and other than feeling called by God, we don't know what these two saw in each other than they hadn't seen in others.

While it seemed for a while that there would be conflict with a new pastor coming to a church that is culturally different than he is, that conflict never really materializes; it all goes too smoothly.

The main conflict comes from the thread on post-partum psychosis.  While one of the characters says before it happened that you never know what exactly goes on in other people's marriages, the husband's behavior seemed out of character for who he appeared to be before the incident.

So, in closing, I'll say it was an engaging enjoyable story, but one that left me slightly unsatisfied at the end.  Grade:  B

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson Publishers as part of their BookSneeze.com book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255 : “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”




My Review: HealthScare

Health Scare: The Truth Behind America's Health Care CrisisHealth Scare: The Truth Behind America's Health Care Crisis is a relatively short book which outlines what the author, Rene P. Moret, believes is wrong with healthcare in the U.S. today, and how he would propose to fix it.

Reviewing non-fiction, particularly non-fiction about contentious issues, requires a reviewer to look at both the book and the opinions put forth therein.  Health Scare: The Truth Behind America's Health Care Crisis is highly readable.  Moret clearly lays out what he considers to be the problems, and clearly proposes a solution.  His arguments are cogent--the only problem is that I don't agree with him.  He does a good job of showing that economic forces drive most decision making.  He decries the employer-sponsored health-insurance system that is prevalent today stating that it unnecessarily increases the costs of goods and services.  He points out that the free market is generally pretty good about creating needed goods and services at affordable prices and that health insurance is the only insurance to which claims are submitted as a normal course of action in normal life circumstances.  However, after all that writing about the free market, his solution is government-funded healthcare for all.  Basically we'd all get money from the government to buy private health insurance, and that insurance would require us to use a primary care physician to coordinate our care.  That physician would receive bonuses not only for keeping his/her patients healthy but also for keeping costs  below target ranges.  His idea is that the physician knows whether treatments/tests are needed, or useful, or superfluous, or even harmful.

My brother isn't the most highly educated person in our family, but he can come out with home-spun wisdom on occasion.  One of his sayings I have found to be true is his Golden Rule "He who puts out the gold makes the rules".  When it comes to healthcare--or just about anything else concerning myself or my family, I want to be the one making the rules.  Moret postulates that physicians won't undertreat patients because they will want to keep them as customers.  He also would have the physicians responsible for meeting certain health targets aimed at keeping people healthy.  I just question how much good that would do.  Yes, there are people who do without needed preventative care because of the cost; however health issues he mentioned included obesity and smoking.  He thinks that if doctors were paid more for counselling time, they could convince people to achieve optimum weight and not smoke.  Speaking just for myself, I know I have  a weight problem and when I get ready to do something about it, I can spend an hour a week at Weight Watchers for a lot less than the cost of a doctor's visit--and the reality is I don't really need to go there either, all I need to do is eat less and exercise more; its just that the bottom line is I don't want to badly enough.


Bottom line:  Any easy to read book that advocates rationing by the primary care physician as the way to control medical expenses, and payment by the government as the way to finance it.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Sunday Snippets--A Catholic Carnival

I'd like to welcome you to Sunday Snippets--A Catholic Carnival.

What did you post about this week?  Create a post entitled "Sunday Snippets--A Catholic Carnival and in it highlight your posts from this week.  Include a link to this post.  Then, sign Mr. Linky so we can all check it out.  Don't forget to visit other folks.  If you'd like a weekly reminder to post, join our yahoogroup. 

Another slow blogging week.  I did read and review one book, which got me thinking about something I've noted with the sub-genre of Urban Christian Fiction.  Other than that, I spent my evenings attending a Girl Scout Service Unit meeting, a church "Safe Environment" meeting and a Daisy Girl Scout meeting.  Then today I had the pleasure of an extra half-day in the office.  I do have a couple of reviews to get up so poke around a little and see if I get to them later tonite or tomorrow.

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