MY WORLD OF TRUTH

Wednesday 29 May 2019

TEN BOOKS TO READ IN THE MONTH OF JUNE

Lauren Acampora, The Paper Wasp (Credit: Credit: Grove Press)
Lauren Acampora, The Paper Wasp
Abby and Elise are girlhood best friends in Michigan (“like the Bronte sisters, we’d created our own womb of imagination”). In middle school they are both drawn into surreal-indie filmmaker Auguste Perren’s work. When Elise begins her ascent as a Hollywood starlet, Abby is abandoned to an isolated life, making bizarre outsider art, and rarely leaving her bedroom. The two renew their loving bond at their tenth high-school reunion. Soon Abby is living in Malibu as Elise’s assistant, providing emotional support while envying her success. Elise has joined Perren’s artistic incubator, which Abby secretly joins to explore her own talents. Acampora’s kaleidoscopic narrative shifts fluidly from Abby’s strange, shimmering images to Elise’s descent into tabloid erasure, artfully tracking the unexpected power shift between them. (Credit: Grove Press)
Aleksandar Hemon, My Parents / This Does Not Belong to You (Credit: Credit: MCD/Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Aleksandar Hemon, My Parents / This Does Not Belong to You
Novelist Hemon brings his piercing sardonic vision to a perfectly matched dual book. The first is a loving memoir of his parents, who were displaced by the war in Bosnia, and relocated to Hamilton, Canada. The second is a collage of indelible memories of growing up in Sarajevo – “pondering the unattainability of girls,” discussing Pink Floyd, practicing Jerry Lewis moves. “When sorrow comes it comes not as single spies, but in battalions,” he writes in a section describing the death of his mother’s older brother and Yugoslavia’s entry into World War Two. By the end of This Does Not Belong to You, as six-year-old Hemon drives with his father across a flooded road into the “unpaved future ahead”, we’ve witnessed the birth of an unparalleled storyteller. (Credit: MCD/Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Catherine Chung, The Tenth Muse (Credit: Credit: Ecco)
Catherine Chung, The Tenth Muse
The mathematical genius who narrates Chung’s second novel identifies with the tenth muse, who gave up immortality to sing her own songs, instead of in the voices of men: “she is the tale embodied,” Chung writes. By the age of eight or nine, Katherine, the daughter of a Chinese mother and a US veteran, has discovered her purely intuitive gift for maths and its attendant pattern-making. Late in life, she is on the cusp of the solution to the Riemann hypothesis, which “predicts a meaningful pattern hidden deep within the seemingly chaotic distribution of prime numbers”. It is the eighth of 23 unsolved mathematical problems first presented in 1900, a mystery Katherine believes she was born to unravel. But first, she must solve the question of her birth, her parents, and her identity. (Credit: Ecco)
Dominic Smith, The Electric Hotel (Credit: Credit: Sarah Crichton Books, FSG)
Dominic Smith, The Electric Hotel
We meet 85-year-old Claude Ballard, in 1962 in the lobby of Hollywood’s faded Knickerbocker Hotel. He’s a silent-film-era pioneer, now making his way by foraging mushrooms and herbs. Claude’s backstory unspools in meticulous silver-toned detail through interviews with Martin Embry, a film student eager to hear about his lost masterpiece, The Electric Hotel. Claude’s first viewing of a Lumiere reel in 1895 in Paris sets his path. Encounters with a legendary French actress, Sabine Montrose, Australian daredevil stuntman Chip Spalding, and a loyal crew create the filmmaking team that sets up in Fort Lee, New Jersey. But there’s a glitch. Thomas Edison is determined to squash the competition through patent law. A glorious ode to the luminous art that ushered in Hollywood’s film era. (Credit: Sarah Crichton Books, FSG)
Helon Habila, Travelers (Credit: Credit: WW Norton)
Helon Habila, Travelers
Habila’s latest is a resonant, relevant novel narrated by a Nigerian-born graduate student relocated to Berlin in the fall of 2012. His US wife is on an art fellowship to create a series of portraits she calls “Travelers”, based on images of real migrants. His own encounters with African asylum seekers evoke dislocation, deprivation and brutal poverty. There’s Mark, a Malawian film student squatting with friends in an old church in Kreuzberg, until it’s raided by police; Manu, who works as a bouncer at the Sahara Nightclub to support his 12-year-old daughter, and Portia, the disillusioned daughter of an exiled Zambian poet, whose resistance led to prison and then international literary fame. The narrator’s experience in an Italian refugee camp sets up the devastating final section. (Credit: WW Norton)
Liza Wieland, Paris, 7 AM (Credit: Credit: Simon & Schuster)
Liza Wieland, Paris, 7 AM
In this intriguing, obliquely told tale of complex mother-daughter ties, Wieland delves into mysteries and questions about a year in Elizabeth Bishop’s life – a crossroads in 1937 after graduation, when she’s living in Paris with college roommates. It’s one of the few years not covered in Bishop’s journals, at a time when she was writing early poems influenced by the rise of fascism (including the early poem that Wieland takes as her title). It’s also shortly after the death of her mother, who had been in a mental institution since Bishop was five. Bishop meets expatriates like Sylvia Beach, and also a woman who convinces her to come with her to Normandy to help save Jewish infants in occupied France because, she explains: “The children cannot help themselves.” (Credit: Simon & Schuster)
Cara Black, Murder in Bel-Air (Credit: Credit: Soho Crime)
Cara Black, Murder in Bel-Air
It’s October 1999. Paris-based private investigator Aimée Leduc is set to give the keynote at a tech conference, pitching her agency’s new computer-security services, when she receives an urgent message. Her mother, Sidney, once on Interpol’s most wanted list, has disappeared. Aimée must pick up her daughter Chloe from her Bel-Air playgroup out in the 12th arrondissement. There, Aimée discovers a homeless woman knifed to death, and learns from a waiter that the woman met regularly with Sidney. Searching for her mother, Aimee is forced to fight for her life as she uncovers a circle of international players, including a South African Foreign Legion operative, a promising presidential candidate from the Cote d’Ivoire, a French “shadow puppeteer” and the son of a former French president. (Credit: Soho Crime)
Tim Mason, The Darwin Affair (Credit: Credit: Algonquin)
Tim Mason, The Darwin Affair
Mason sets the stage for his engaging historic mystery with a brief scene in December 1859, when Queen Victoria’s Honours List recommends that Charles Darwin – whose On the Origin of Species had been published three weeks earlier to “enormous uproar” – be knighted at year’s end. But it is not to be. The following June, while Queen Victoria and Prince Albert are at a public appearance in the West End, she survives an assassination attempt – one of eight during her nearly 64-year reign. Chief Detective Inspector Charles Field, immortalised by Charles Dickens in his 1853 Bleak House as the morally ambiguous Detective Inspector Bucket, is charged with unravelling what turns out to be a far-reaching conspiracy. Darwin’s theories are the reason for murder and mayhem, led by Decimus Cobb, “death dressed up like a man.” (Credit: Algonquin)
Deborah Shapiro, The Summer Demands (Credit: Credit: Catapult)
Deborah Shapiro, The Summer Demands
Emily is turning forty, grieving after a miscarriage, when she inherits her aunt and uncle’s deteriorating summer camp in Massachusetts, where she had gone as a girl. She and her husband David settle into the former director’s house, and contemplate reviving the fading grounds. One hot July day while walking through the woods, she discovers Stella, a 22-year-old waitress, who has created a makeshift home in one of the cabins. Emily begins to fantasise about Stella, wondering how she might view this place, with its faded wallpaper, smooth wood floors, and framed images on the mantles, all their “comforts and calculations.” Drawing from Emily’s memory, her grief, her attraction to Stella, and her confusion about her marriage, Shapiro shapes a mysterious and evocative novel. (Credit: Catapult)
Malin Persson Giolito, Beyond All Reasonable Doubt (Credit: Credit: Other Press)
Malin Persson Giolito, Beyond All Reasonable Doubt
International lawyer Persson Giolito addresses the question of guilt in provocative ways in her new thriller, translated from the Swedish by Rachel Willson-Broyles. She opens in 1998 with Katrin, a nervous 15-year-old, dressing to welcome a date to her parents’ home for dinner. Within hours a neighbour calls the patrol car because her dog is barking crazily. Convicted of Katrin’s murder and of molesting his own daughter, Stig Ahlin, a Karolinska Institute researcher, becomes one of Sweden’s most notorious inmates. Challenged by her former law professor, Sophia Weber takes his case 13 years after his life term begins. Is Stig Ahlin a cold-blooded killer? Or the victim of “the greatest judicial scandal in modern Swedish history”? Persson Giolito maximises suspense by toggling between the original investigation and Sophia’s ever more ambivalent follow-up. (Credit: Other Press)
posted by Davidblogger50 at 04:50 0 comments

Monday 20 May 2019

HOW YOUR FRIENDS CHANGE YOUR HABITS- FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

We often think that self-control comes from within, yet many of our actions depend just as much on our friends and family as ourselves. Those we surround ourselves with have the power to make us fatter, drink more alcohol, care less about the environment and be more risky with sun protection, among many things.
This is not simply peer pressure, in which you deliberately act in a certain way to fit in with the group. Instead, it is largely unconscious. Beneath your awareness, your brain is constantly picking up on cues from the people around you to inform your behaviour. And the consequences can be serious.
It is now well accepted that our personal sense of self is derived from other people. “The more of your identity you draw from a group, even when you’re not around that group, the more likely you are to uphold those values,” says Amber Gaffney, a social psychologist from Humboldt State University. “If a big part of how you identify is as a student from a certain university, or like me an academic, then that’s what you take with you into most interactions with others. I see things first through my lens as an academic.” Students, for instance, tend to have stronger attitudes towards things like legalising drugs or supporting environmental sustainability than the rest of the population.
These are called social norms. And while these norms are usually stable, some interesting things happen if just one person in the associated group acts out of character.
(Credit: Getty Images)
Environmental options like cycling are popular among students - but hearing a single dissenting voice can alter your perceptions of the social norm (Credit: Getty Images)
Consider the following study, which found that people were likely to change their opinion on green travel if they found out their peers were acting hypocritically.
The students from Humboldt State University reside in a small, socially liberal town in northern California which takes pride in its environmental credentials. The students there are largely very environmentally conscious, too. You would expect that a peer’s disregard for carbon emissions would not go down well.
After listening to an interview with a student at the university who stressed the importance of walking or cycling short distances rather than taking a car, and then later admitting to driving to the interview, the participants were asked about their own environmental views. They did this while sat next to an actor. The actor took the role of either a third student wearing a university sweatshirt, or a professional in smart clothing. When the hypocrisy of the interviewee was revealed, the actor either made a negative remark about their behaviour or stayed quiet.
How the participants judged the importance of walking or cycling short distances was dependent on who they listened to the interview with, and how that person reacted. When sat with someone they thought was another student, and who shared their environmental values, the participants reiterated the importance of cycling. When sat with an outsider it wasn’t so clear cut.  
An outsider who commented on the hypocrisy of the interviewee elicited the strongest environmental feelings in the participants. By defending the interviewee from criticism, they reinforced their own view that cycling was important. This is perhaps because they felt the interviewee might normally be more environmentally responsible. Conversely, if the outsider stayed quiet, the participants judged the importance of cycling the lowest. So, how an outsider judges our peers has a big impact on whether we back them up or not.
“This was an interesting study,” adds Gaffney, “because we were able to make some people care less about the environment. Normally this isn’t something that we would actively want to do, but understanding where these views come from could help us to nudge people in the other direction.”
In the face of criticism by a stranger, we might come to the aid of our peers. But if left to form our own opinions, we interpret the hypocritical behaviour as a sign that we can relax our own views. This is called vicarious dissonance.
“Vicarious dissonance is when you see someone behave in a way inconsistent with your attitudes, so you change your attitudes,” says Gaffney. “I should be embarrassed by seeing you act in a non-environmental way, but that doesn’t always happen. I won’t necessarily start copying you, but I will change my attitudes to reflect your behaviour because I feel similar to you and I see you as an extension of myself.”
This study was inspired by several pieces of work in Australia on vicarious dissonance around sun protection use. Again, someone acting hypocritically would relax people’s attitudes around applying protection, where the norm is to be extremely vigilant.
(Credit: Alamy)
The dangers of sun exposure are well known - but our friends' behaviour can lead us to forget the risks (Credit: Alamy)
How we talk about our health choices with friends can also have a significant impact on our decisions, both positively and negatively. Talking about an anti-smoking campaign with friends reduced people’s cigarette intake, perhaps because those conversations gave smokers the opportunity to work out which information was most relevant to their lifestyles – and then act on it. This is supported by a meta-analysis of 28 studies totalling 139,000 participants.
“The leading cause of death is preventable health behaviours like smoking and obesity, and we have access to a vast amount of information online but we still smoke and we still don’t exercise,” says Christin Scholz of the University of Amsterdam. “Anything our friends do influences us in ways that we are conscious of or not. Their presence can decide whether we act on that health information or ignore it.”
Scholz asked college students in the US if they had talked to anyone about a recent experience involving alcohol, and whether those conversations were positive or negative. If they had talked positively about alcohol consumption they were more likely to drink more the next day, and vice versa. These patterns are highly influenced, though, by the social circumstances that we find ourselves in.
When we make decisions we are constantly reassessing the value we might get from each choice – a process called value maximisation. Our decision to take the stairs rather than a lift is dependent on how much we ate at lunch, if we have already been for our daily run and whether we walked into the building with our triathlete colleague. No effect of a conversation with friends can ever be viewed in isolation. And that is why our willpower fluctuates.
“Say I have a conversation with a friend the day before about some of the negative sides of alcohol but the next day I am in a bar with other people – I would still argue that conversation has some form of influence on me,” says Scholz. “However, it’s a pretty simple representation of human decision making. We’re not always [very] rational – we make these decisions pretty quickly. The importance of certain types of information changes through the day.”
Our choices are influenced by who we are with when we are asked the question, how those people reacted, any conversations we might have had beforehand and our fundamental understanding of what is normal for that group of friends. But, if we’re still in doubt, the easiest thing to do is to look at what others are doing and copy them. We do this all the time, and we might not realise the impact it has.
When we eat with people who eat a lot, we eat more
“When we eat with others we have a natural tendency to use their behaviour as a guide,” says Suzanne Higgs, who studies the psychobiology of appetite at the University of Birmingham. “Lots of studies have shown that when we eat with people who eat a lot, we eat more. People aren’t often aware they are being influenced in that way. They might say it was the taste or the price or hunger levels rather than the people around them.”

(Credit: Getty Images)
The other diners at a restaurant may decide whether you eat your veg (Credit: Getty Images)
The phenomenon was first described based on an analysis of food diaries by John de Castro in the 1980s. These detailed diaries listed what people ate, but also where, when and who with. He was then able to control for the effects of celebratory meals, whether alcohol was consumed, if the meal took place at the weekend and any other factors that might have influenced the amount of food eaten.
These effects have since been repeated in laboratories. Higgs asked students to eat lunch either with a friend or in isolation in a lab. It appears to happen even when you are eating with one other friend in a very controlled environment. But, this effect only occurs with people that you know well.
The presence of another person clouds our ability to pick up on cues from our bodies that we are satisfied
Higgs suggests that the presence of another person clouds our ability to pick up on cues from our bodies that we are satisfied. The normal process of feeling full is disrupted by feeling stimulated by our friends. Other distractions, like watching TV, have been shown to increase food consumption.
Next, Higgs took her research into the field to see if eating behaviours could be influenced by other social cues. She wanted to encourage people to choose vegetable side dishes by providing information about the choices of other diners using posters. “Of course we know that explicitly saying ‘Vegetables are good for you’ doesn’t work,” says Higgs. Instead, the posters displayed fabricated data about which side dishes most customers bought. Higgs put a vegetable side dish at the top.
“These posters just described the behaviour of other people – and that’s enough for some,” says Higgs. “When we enter a new environment, we look for cues about how to behave. So, to see that a certain choice is the most popular really helps us out.”
The effect was seen even after the posters were taken down. Higgs had created a new norm.
“There is good reason to believe that when we use normative behaviour it makes us feel good because we’re connecting with a social group,” says Higgs. “If you are with a new social group, you are more likely to imitate behaviours.”
Our decisions might not always be in our hands. But this also means we can use our influence for good. “The same way a negative behaviour can spread through a network of people a positive one can spread through a network,” says Scholz. “We’ve evolved to live in a group to spread positive actions and to seek the approval of others.”
posted by Davidblogger50 at 21:49 0 comments