#AcademicRunPlaylist - 8/1/25

The skyscrapers of Shinjuku seen in the late afternoon from a bright green lawn. Bushy trees dot the grass starting about 100 meters away, withe the huge buildings shaded a light shade of orange in the fading light. A few whisps of white clouds are blowing across the sky from the left.

Luckily the typhoon missed Tokyo but helped cool things down a bit, and while enjoying the sane temperature I listened to a talk/book combo for my #AcademicRunPlaylist!

First was a great talk by Timothy E. Brown on ethical issues in neuroscience at the University of Washington eScience Institute https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nql_vSJSnzY

Last was "Our Beloved Kin: A New History of King Philip's War" by Lisa Brooks. I hadn't heard of King Philip's War until I moved to Massachusetts, and even then it was only because I regularly passed signs around the state referencing one of its battles or key players. This despite it being one of the important wars of colonial North America, with its denouement impacting not just the continent but eventually reverberating through European fortunes as well. Other books mostly cover this conflict and its genesis in passing, but Brooks sets the stage with rigorous, incredible research to lay out the state of New England on the eve of the war and then methodically follows it to its disturbing conclusion. Her work combining a wide variety of Native American and colonial sources is impressive, and adds significant depth of understanding to the geographic and political landscape of the period.

Having now lived in New England for the majority of my life, understanding a formative period of history underlying many of the places that I spend my time was illuminating and sobering - many of the place names here mean something to me, and over the years I have already happened upon many of the sites that are referenced here. For people who don't have that connection to New England or are interested in Native American or colonial history, this book might be too in the weeds. If you're in this group, however, it's mandatory reading. Highly recommend https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300244328/our-beloved-kin/