#927
Title: Swimming in Uncharted Waters: Reports from Cambodia
Author: Gina Wijers
Publisher: AnyPress, The American Book Center
Year: 2009/2011
177 pages
A collection of essays based on letters home (or perhaps simply those letters) from a development worker in Cambodia. The author raises many useful questions and explores pertinent issues. A little more editing would enhance the English edition.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Title: Ambassadors Before They Knew It: Song Kosal and Tun Channareth of the Cambodia Campaign to Ban Landmines 1994-2011
#926
Title: Ambassadors Before They Knew It: Song Kosal and Tun Channareth of the Cambodia Campaign to Ban Landmines 1994-2011
Authors: Hannah Cole, Molly Mullen, Tess O'Brien, Denise Coghlan
Publisher: Jesuit Refugee Service
Year: 2011
63 pages
A montage of photos, reports, brief speeches, and other ephemera related to Cambodian activists' work toward establishing a worldwide landmine ban. The collection is well-organized and is moving to read.
Title: Ambassadors Before They Knew It: Song Kosal and Tun Channareth of the Cambodia Campaign to Ban Landmines 1994-2011
Authors: Hannah Cole, Molly Mullen, Tess O'Brien, Denise Coghlan
Publisher: Jesuit Refugee Service
Year: 2011
63 pages
A montage of photos, reports, brief speeches, and other ephemera related to Cambodian activists' work toward establishing a worldwide landmine ban. The collection is well-organized and is moving to read.
The True Meaning of Smekday
#925
Title: The True Meaning of Smekday
Author: Adam Rex
Publisher: Hyperion
Year: 2007/2009
423 pages
A very funny, often arch YA F&SF novel of alien invasion. Rex plays with typical expectations for both content and form, resulting in an enjoyable and sometimes surprising story. I enjoyed the ending, though [highlight for spoiler] it was a little too The Trouble with Tribbles to be completely excellent.
Title: The True Meaning of Smekday
Author: Adam Rex
Publisher: Hyperion
Year: 2007/2009
423 pages
A very funny, often arch YA F&SF novel of alien invasion. Rex plays with typical expectations for both content and form, resulting in an enjoyable and sometimes surprising story. I enjoyed the ending, though [highlight for spoiler] it was a little too The Trouble with Tribbles to be completely excellent.
The Trivia Lover's Guide to the World: Geography for the Lost and Found
#924
Title: The Trivia Lover's Guide to the World: Geography for the Lost and Found
Author: Gary Fuller
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Year: 2012
288 pages
Entertaining geography trivia, with related digressions. Since the chapters are short and self-contained, it's a good choice for an airplane, which is where I read it.
Title: The Trivia Lover's Guide to the World: Geography for the Lost and Found
Author: Gary Fuller
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Year: 2012
288 pages
Entertaining geography trivia, with related digressions. Since the chapters are short and self-contained, it's a good choice for an airplane, which is where I read it.
Afakasi Woman: A Collection of Short Stories from a "Real Samoan Woman"
#923
Title: Afakasi Woman: A Collection of Short Stories from a "Real Samoan Woman"
Author: Lani Wendt Young
Publisher: Amazon Digital Services
Year: 2012
Country: Samoa
92 pages
A collection of short stories and essays by a Samoan writer. It provides a good look at daily life and tensions.Some are very funny or astute; some portray aspects of culture even though they are not as well-constructed.
Title: Afakasi Woman: A Collection of Short Stories from a "Real Samoan Woman"
Author: Lani Wendt Young
Publisher: Amazon Digital Services
Year: 2012
Country: Samoa
92 pages
A collection of short stories and essays by a Samoan writer. It provides a good look at daily life and tensions.Some are very funny or astute; some portray aspects of culture even though they are not as well-constructed.
This is Our Georgia
#922
Title: This is Our Georgia
Author: John Simpson (Ed.) & Kutaisi Third School Students
Translator: Tinatin Kutivadze
Publisher: Amazon Digital Services
Year: 2012
Country: Georgia
55 pages
I'm trying to find a cover photo, though this seems to be available only as a Kindle book. This is a collection of folk narratives, history, and daily practices written by Georgian students. I found it informative, and the profit goes to help students.
I read this when I gave up on Sandro of Chegem, where the punchlines or points of the stories often seemed inexplicable.
Title: This is Our Georgia
Author: John Simpson (Ed.) & Kutaisi Third School Students
Translator: Tinatin Kutivadze
Publisher: Amazon Digital Services
Year: 2012
Country: Georgia
55 pages
I'm trying to find a cover photo, though this seems to be available only as a Kindle book. This is a collection of folk narratives, history, and daily practices written by Georgian students. I found it informative, and the profit goes to help students.
I read this when I gave up on Sandro of Chegem, where the punchlines or points of the stories often seemed inexplicable.
Legion
#921
Title: Legion
Author: Brandon Sanderson
Publisher: Subterranean Press
Year: 2012
88 pages
Very disappointing. The problem isn't the basic idea, which is fun and interesting to explore. It's that this isn't a novella. It isn't even a long short story. Rather, it reads like an excerpt of a longer work. Despite the fun ideas, there turns out to be no plot. Oh, there's action--things happen, and they're engaging. Then Sanderson just stops. I had to double-check online to make sure I didn't have a defective copy. When I say there's no plot, I mean that the action doesn't resolve. This is not a post-modern narrative that plays with form, but a conventional story that appeals to the reader, has what appears to be rising action and character development, then ends with not even a whimper. If this is an excerpt, market it as such. If it's supposed to be a novella, somebody needs to sit Sanderson down and explain what a "novella" is.
Title: Legion
Author: Brandon Sanderson
Publisher: Subterranean Press
Year: 2012
88 pages
Very disappointing. The problem isn't the basic idea, which is fun and interesting to explore. It's that this isn't a novella. It isn't even a long short story. Rather, it reads like an excerpt of a longer work. Despite the fun ideas, there turns out to be no plot. Oh, there's action--things happen, and they're engaging. Then Sanderson just stops. I had to double-check online to make sure I didn't have a defective copy. When I say there's no plot, I mean that the action doesn't resolve. This is not a post-modern narrative that plays with form, but a conventional story that appeals to the reader, has what appears to be rising action and character development, then ends with not even a whimper. If this is an excerpt, market it as such. If it's supposed to be a novella, somebody needs to sit Sanderson down and explain what a "novella" is.
Popol Vuh: The Sacred Book of the Maya: The Great Classic of Central American Spirituality, Translated from the Original Maya Text
#920
Title: Popol Vuh: The Sacred Book of the Maya: The Great Classic of Central American Spirituality, Translated from the Original Maya Text
Author: Allen J. Christenson & Anonymous
Publisher: University of Oklahoma
Year: 1701 (Popol Vuh)/2007
Country: Guatemala
327 pages
An engrossing religious and historical document, well-contextualized and commented upon by Christenson. Lots of linguistic and explanatory notes, as well as anthropological material. I confess to skimming the lists at the end, but I got the gist.
People are almost Soylent Green, in that they were created from maize.
Title: Popol Vuh: The Sacred Book of the Maya: The Great Classic of Central American Spirituality, Translated from the Original Maya Text
Author: Allen J. Christenson & Anonymous
Publisher: University of Oklahoma
Year: 1701 (Popol Vuh)/2007
Country: Guatemala
327 pages
An engrossing religious and historical document, well-contextualized and commented upon by Christenson. Lots of linguistic and explanatory notes, as well as anthropological material. I confess to skimming the lists at the end, but I got the gist.
People are almost Soylent Green, in that they were created from maize.
The Pattern in the Carpet: A Personal History with Jigsaws
#919
Title: The Pattern in the Carpet: A Personal History with Jigsaws
Author: Margaret Drabble
Publisher: Mariner Books
Year: 2009/2010
368 pages
A somewhat rambling, somewhat structured memoir/history of the jigsaw puzzle. I see the intent but it didn't work quite as well as I hoped. While I enjoyed reading it, it was also a slow read and I'm not sure why.
Title: The Pattern in the Carpet: A Personal History with Jigsaws
Author: Margaret Drabble
Publisher: Mariner Books
Year: 2009/2010
368 pages
A somewhat rambling, somewhat structured memoir/history of the jigsaw puzzle. I see the intent but it didn't work quite as well as I hoped. While I enjoyed reading it, it was also a slow read and I'm not sure why.
Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness
#918
Title: Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness
Author: Susannah Cahalan
Publisher: Free Press
Year: 2012
264 pages
A very good account of physiologically triggered psychosis and dementia that illustrates the importance of good clinical interviewing to determine etiology and, therefore, appropriate treatment. As Cahalan points out, without a good differential diagnostic process, she probably would have wound up on a back ward and, had the illness continued to progress, probably would have died young.
Cahalan does a good job of reconstructing her experiences. I appreciate her comments about the nature of memory. I'd have liked more medical data, but she outlines her situation coherently.
My only criticism is that she has a throwaway line about Sybil that uncritically repeats Nathan's claim, which is far from well-substantiated and is contested. If Cahalan weren't a journalist I wouldn't mention this, but it was jarring in that context.
Title: Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness
Author: Susannah Cahalan
Publisher: Free Press
Year: 2012
264 pages
A very good account of physiologically triggered psychosis and dementia that illustrates the importance of good clinical interviewing to determine etiology and, therefore, appropriate treatment. As Cahalan points out, without a good differential diagnostic process, she probably would have wound up on a back ward and, had the illness continued to progress, probably would have died young.
Cahalan does a good job of reconstructing her experiences. I appreciate her comments about the nature of memory. I'd have liked more medical data, but she outlines her situation coherently.
My only criticism is that she has a throwaway line about Sybil that uncritically repeats Nathan's claim, which is far from well-substantiated and is contested. If Cahalan weren't a journalist I wouldn't mention this, but it was jarring in that context.
Little Princes: One Man's Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal
#917
Title: Little Princes: One Man's Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal
Author: Conor Grennan
Publisher: William Morrow
Year: 2011
294 pages
One of the better exemplars of the callow-youth-becomes-activist genre. Don't be put off by Grennan's initial pages, where, though I think he intends to present himself as brutally honest, he instead comes off as a guy who is ill-prepared and not very funny. After the book gets rolling, though, he does a much better job. Later in the story, I appreciated his honesty about not really knowing how to set up a US-based non-profit organization, and here the self-deprecating humor rang more true.
This is intended to be a balance of coming of age and social service narrative. The balance sometimes works and sometimes does not. At its best, Grennan describes a transformative experience.
Title: Little Princes: One Man's Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal
Author: Conor Grennan
Publisher: William Morrow
Year: 2011
294 pages
One of the better exemplars of the callow-youth-becomes-activist genre. Don't be put off by Grennan's initial pages, where, though I think he intends to present himself as brutally honest, he instead comes off as a guy who is ill-prepared and not very funny. After the book gets rolling, though, he does a much better job. Later in the story, I appreciated his honesty about not really knowing how to set up a US-based non-profit organization, and here the self-deprecating humor rang more true.
This is intended to be a balance of coming of age and social service narrative. The balance sometimes works and sometimes does not. At its best, Grennan describes a transformative experience.
Snares without End
#916
Title: Snares without End
Author: Olympe Bhely-Quenum
Publisher: Longman Group United Kingdom
Year: 1982
Country: Benin
230 pages
This edition has a long, explanatory forward that includes multiple spoilers. Read it after reading the novel.
The first half of the novel flows nicely and is both coherent and somewhat existential. The latter portions are more disjointed, make less sense, and seem sloppier rather than suddenly artfully shifted to a different genre. As a whole, it reads as if the author set aside the manuscript for some time, then picked it back up and finished it without much reference to the style or tone of the first section. I found this problematic and uneven.
Title: Snares without End
Author: Olympe Bhely-Quenum
Publisher: Longman Group United Kingdom
Year: 1982
Country: Benin
230 pages
This edition has a long, explanatory forward that includes multiple spoilers. Read it after reading the novel.
The first half of the novel flows nicely and is both coherent and somewhat existential. The latter portions are more disjointed, make less sense, and seem sloppier rather than suddenly artfully shifted to a different genre. As a whole, it reads as if the author set aside the manuscript for some time, then picked it back up and finished it without much reference to the style or tone of the first section. I found this problematic and uneven.
Friday, November 9, 2012
Cowboys & Aliens
#915
Title: Cowboys & Aliens
Author: Joan D. Vinge
Publisher: Tom Doherty Associates
Year: 2011
369 pages
I'm not sure why Vinge, a good writer, agreed to novelize this. It's an uphill slog. The history appears to be that there was a 1980's screenplay, which was turned into a graphic novel, and then again into a graphic novel, and then a screenplay and film (with multiple writers), and then a novelization. I haven't seen the graphic novels or the movie, so I only have the novel to go on, and that novel is formulaic and boring. This is not at all what I expect from Vinge, so I have to assume that a big part of the problem is that she's stuck with having to be true to the movie (and possibly to previous incarnations of the story) rather than getting to add her own changes and interpretations.
Here's the thing: No good explanation is given for Jake's shackle/bracelet. Highlight to see spoiler: Yes, he got it by somehow not being quite as susceptible as every other human to the aliens' pulsing hypnosis light, so therefore he could lash out at the alien commencing to dissect him, and it just happens that on the instrument tray is an alien tool/weapon that reads human impulses as well as the aliens', and can be turned against the aliens? And this happens to snap itself onto his wrist when he happens to be the one guy who can fight the mind control? And the humans' ability to repel the aliens relies on Jake's lone shackle staving them off until dynamite and the shackle's self-destruct sequence can blow up the ship? That is weak by any plot construction standards. And if you were in Jake's shoes, wouldn't you look for more of these shackle/tool/weapons when you were in the dissection chamber?
The story as novelized is humorless and pretty boring. I assume Vinge was going for a "standard Western novel" feel, but instead created poor genre fiction. The fights are particularly badly rendered in wordy, non-urgent prose. In dialogue, what may be intended as laconic is instead flat. Again, she was probably stuck with the movie dialogue and action, which are not great even when read in a loud and pressured delivery by the audiobook's narrator.
IMDB has identified a number of anachronisms in the film that also appear in the book. These include the use of cardboard matchboxes and the name of the town now called Puerto Vallarta. To this I add that Vinge's use of the word "actinic," which, while accurately descriptive, seems like a jump from a character-centered limited-omniscient narration to an authorial one. "Actinic" was in use at the time (1844, says the OED), but I doubt it would be in Jake's or most other characters' vocabulary or conceptual/educational experience. This criticism highlights a writing problem that belongs to Vinge: Point of view shifts inconsistently between characters, sometimes confusingly. This detracts from whatever capacity the reader has to remain at the level of the story rather than needing to back up to figure out when and where the perspective shifted. This story needs all the breaks it can get, so it is not served by jumps in narrative stance.
Title: Cowboys & Aliens
Author: Joan D. Vinge
Publisher: Tom Doherty Associates
Year: 2011
369 pages
I'm not sure why Vinge, a good writer, agreed to novelize this. It's an uphill slog. The history appears to be that there was a 1980's screenplay, which was turned into a graphic novel, and then again into a graphic novel, and then a screenplay and film (with multiple writers), and then a novelization. I haven't seen the graphic novels or the movie, so I only have the novel to go on, and that novel is formulaic and boring. This is not at all what I expect from Vinge, so I have to assume that a big part of the problem is that she's stuck with having to be true to the movie (and possibly to previous incarnations of the story) rather than getting to add her own changes and interpretations.
Here's the thing: No good explanation is given for Jake's shackle/bracelet. Highlight to see spoiler: Yes, he got it by somehow not being quite as susceptible as every other human to the aliens' pulsing hypnosis light, so therefore he could lash out at the alien commencing to dissect him, and it just happens that on the instrument tray is an alien tool/weapon that reads human impulses as well as the aliens', and can be turned against the aliens? And this happens to snap itself onto his wrist when he happens to be the one guy who can fight the mind control? And the humans' ability to repel the aliens relies on Jake's lone shackle staving them off until dynamite and the shackle's self-destruct sequence can blow up the ship? That is weak by any plot construction standards. And if you were in Jake's shoes, wouldn't you look for more of these shackle/tool/weapons when you were in the dissection chamber?
The story as novelized is humorless and pretty boring. I assume Vinge was going for a "standard Western novel" feel, but instead created poor genre fiction. The fights are particularly badly rendered in wordy, non-urgent prose. In dialogue, what may be intended as laconic is instead flat. Again, she was probably stuck with the movie dialogue and action, which are not great even when read in a loud and pressured delivery by the audiobook's narrator.
IMDB has identified a number of anachronisms in the film that also appear in the book. These include the use of cardboard matchboxes and the name of the town now called Puerto Vallarta. To this I add that Vinge's use of the word "actinic," which, while accurately descriptive, seems like a jump from a character-centered limited-omniscient narration to an authorial one. "Actinic" was in use at the time (1844, says the OED), but I doubt it would be in Jake's or most other characters' vocabulary or conceptual/educational experience. This criticism highlights a writing problem that belongs to Vinge: Point of view shifts inconsistently between characters, sometimes confusingly. This detracts from whatever capacity the reader has to remain at the level of the story rather than needing to back up to figure out when and where the perspective shifted. This story needs all the breaks it can get, so it is not served by jumps in narrative stance.
The White Woman on the Green Bicycle: A Novel
#914
Title: The White Woman on the Green Bicycle: A Novel
Author: Monique Roffey
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2011
448 pages
A novel that starts off looking small--focusing on conflicts in a marriage--and gradually reveals its large scope--seeing the rifts in the marriage as a way of seeing conflicts and tension within Trinidad. There is some nice parallelism, many amusing. There is also some lovely description. What is best rendered, though, is the dialogue and behavior of people in a relationship who are punishing each other for reasons they can't articulate well.
4.5 stars, but I rounded down rather than up because at the last minute (literally--on the next to last page)--the protagonist spends a paragraph saying what we already know, in clunky exposition. If this had been mid-book it wouldn't have mattered, but it spoiled the momentum of the ending.
Title: The White Woman on the Green Bicycle: A Novel
Author: Monique Roffey
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2011
448 pages
A novel that starts off looking small--focusing on conflicts in a marriage--and gradually reveals its large scope--seeing the rifts in the marriage as a way of seeing conflicts and tension within Trinidad. There is some nice parallelism, many amusing. There is also some lovely description. What is best rendered, though, is the dialogue and behavior of people in a relationship who are punishing each other for reasons they can't articulate well.
4.5 stars, but I rounded down rather than up because at the last minute (literally--on the next to last page)--the protagonist spends a paragraph saying what we already know, in clunky exposition. If this had been mid-book it wouldn't have mattered, but it spoiled the momentum of the ending.
Some Things of Value: Micronesian Customs as Seen by Micronesians, Revised Edition
#913
Title: Some Things of Value: Micronesian Customs as Seen by Micronesians, Revised Edition
Author: The Students of the Community College of Micronesia & Gene Ashby (Ed.)
Publisher: Rainy Day Press
Year: 1985/1989
277 pages
An unexpectedly interesting anthropological compendium of Micronesian beliefs and customs showing responses to similar themes and events (birth, death, making a canoe, etc.) across islands. I enjoyed being able to compare practices and learn more about geographical/linguistic similarities that show how culture spreads. Written by community college students.
Title: Some Things of Value: Micronesian Customs as Seen by Micronesians, Revised Edition
Author: The Students of the Community College of Micronesia & Gene Ashby (Ed.)
Publisher: Rainy Day Press
Year: 1985/1989
277 pages
An unexpectedly interesting anthropological compendium of Micronesian beliefs and customs showing responses to similar themes and events (birth, death, making a canoe, etc.) across islands. I enjoyed being able to compare practices and learn more about geographical/linguistic similarities that show how culture spreads. Written by community college students.
Terrorists in Love: The Real Lives of Islamic Radicals
#912
Title: Terrorists in Love: The Real Lives of Islamic Radicals
Author: Ken Ballen
Publisher: Free Press
Year: 2011
305 pages
This is one I wish I'd read rather than listened to, because the narration contributed to my dissatisfaction. In particular, the one story told in the first person, by the least sympathetic person, was rendered in a thick accent, but the others weren't. The implicit racism of this troubles me.
Though I found this interesting, Ballen's sample were all people with reasons to say they had changed. (I know a couple didn't change perspective, but they did eschew violence, which I presume would be necessary for their release.) I would have appreciated a voice from a different perspective, from outside the treatment center.
Title: Terrorists in Love: The Real Lives of Islamic Radicals
Author: Ken Ballen
Publisher: Free Press
Year: 2011
305 pages
This is one I wish I'd read rather than listened to, because the narration contributed to my dissatisfaction. In particular, the one story told in the first person, by the least sympathetic person, was rendered in a thick accent, but the others weren't. The implicit racism of this troubles me.
Though I found this interesting, Ballen's sample were all people with reasons to say they had changed. (I know a couple didn't change perspective, but they did eschew violence, which I presume would be necessary for their release.) I would have appreciated a voice from a different perspective, from outside the treatment center.
Monday, October 29, 2012
Are You My Mother?
#911
Title: Are You My Mother?
Author: Alison Bechdel
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin
Year: 2012
289 pages
As Bechdel and her mother agree late in the text, this is a meta-book. Unlike Fun Home, there's a distance or caution about it, though Bechdel punctuates this with moments of great anguish. Some possible contributors to this distance:
--Bechdel's mother is still alive, so the negotiation about the book must include her, whereas in "the dad book," her father had died and her mother was an arbiter of his story.
--The story of Bechdel and her mother is still unfolding, rather than concluded and summed up.
--The revelatory content of the book is learning about what's missing in the relationship, whereas the discovery in Fun Home was of content-rich secrets.
--The book, as a self-conscious meta-book, distances the reader from the contents.
--The book is about processes more than about information.
Not that this distance is a bad thing (and it might make the telling more effective). However, one effect of this structural choice is that it's probably less appealing to memoir readers in general, though more appealing to analytic geeks such as myself.
I was completely absorbed by this memoir and very much enjoyed the overdetermination and synchronicity of meaning Bechdel creates, as in Fun Home, through her narrative, dreams, illustrations, and citations. The latter includes scaffolding by Winnicott with major appearances by Alice Miller's The Drama of the Gifted Child: The Search for the True Self, Woolf's To the Lighthouse, Mrs. Dalloway, and essays, Freud, Lacan, and others. (I should say as well that the ghost in the machine, the repressed content, is the chilren's book Are You My Mother?, from which the title presumably derives.)
All that plus a lot of analytic psychotherapy and it created some startling points of connection with my own life and processes. Much like Maso's The Art Lover, I frequently had the experience of reading about my twin separated at birth, and with her own experiences, but with a strange and brightly mirrored resonance with my own.
I also enjoyed reading this as a therapist. I frequently interrupted my partner (also a therapist) to point out frames that are so true to the therapeutic relationship that they made us laugh with recognition and admiration for Bechdel's observational skills.
I'm a great fan of Winnicott, too, so it was great fun to see him as a central meta-character in Bechdel's memoir. It's a fine use of introjection and a transitional object. He'd have liked that.
Title: Are You My Mother?
Author: Alison Bechdel
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin
Year: 2012
289 pages
As Bechdel and her mother agree late in the text, this is a meta-book. Unlike Fun Home, there's a distance or caution about it, though Bechdel punctuates this with moments of great anguish. Some possible contributors to this distance:
--Bechdel's mother is still alive, so the negotiation about the book must include her, whereas in "the dad book," her father had died and her mother was an arbiter of his story.
--The story of Bechdel and her mother is still unfolding, rather than concluded and summed up.
--The revelatory content of the book is learning about what's missing in the relationship, whereas the discovery in Fun Home was of content-rich secrets.
--The book, as a self-conscious meta-book, distances the reader from the contents.
--The book is about processes more than about information.
Not that this distance is a bad thing (and it might make the telling more effective). However, one effect of this structural choice is that it's probably less appealing to memoir readers in general, though more appealing to analytic geeks such as myself.
I was completely absorbed by this memoir and very much enjoyed the overdetermination and synchronicity of meaning Bechdel creates, as in Fun Home, through her narrative, dreams, illustrations, and citations. The latter includes scaffolding by Winnicott with major appearances by Alice Miller's The Drama of the Gifted Child: The Search for the True Self, Woolf's To the Lighthouse, Mrs. Dalloway, and essays, Freud, Lacan, and others. (I should say as well that the ghost in the machine, the repressed content, is the chilren's book Are You My Mother?, from which the title presumably derives.)
All that plus a lot of analytic psychotherapy and it created some startling points of connection with my own life and processes. Much like Maso's The Art Lover, I frequently had the experience of reading about my twin separated at birth, and with her own experiences, but with a strange and brightly mirrored resonance with my own.
I also enjoyed reading this as a therapist. I frequently interrupted my partner (also a therapist) to point out frames that are so true to the therapeutic relationship that they made us laugh with recognition and admiration for Bechdel's observational skills.
I'm a great fan of Winnicott, too, so it was great fun to see him as a central meta-character in Bechdel's memoir. It's a fine use of introjection and a transitional object. He'd have liked that.
Sunday, October 28, 2012
The Silver Scorpion
#910
Title: The Silver Scorpion
Authors: Ron Marz, Ian Edginton, Edison George
Publisher: Dynamite Entertainment
Year: 2012
144 pages
Download provided by NetGalley. This book collects six episodes of the comic but does not conclude the story arc. The premise of a teen Syrian superhero who has lost his legs and uses a wheelchair comes out of a summit of US and Syrian youth with disabilities. The storyline stresses themes of cooperation and respect without seeming pedantic or losing its momentum. Of note is the importance of mutual effort to fight individual arrogance and temptation.
The panel flow is natural and quick, in part because the drawing is clean and directs the eye forward. Colors and inking are also good. I can't evaluate the print production of the hard copy. Available athttp://www.scribd.com/doc/54720383/Silver-Scorpion
Title: The Silver Scorpion
Authors: Ron Marz, Ian Edginton, Edison George
Publisher: Dynamite Entertainment
Year: 2012
144 pages
Download provided by NetGalley. This book collects six episodes of the comic but does not conclude the story arc. The premise of a teen Syrian superhero who has lost his legs and uses a wheelchair comes out of a summit of US and Syrian youth with disabilities. The storyline stresses themes of cooperation and respect without seeming pedantic or losing its momentum. Of note is the importance of mutual effort to fight individual arrogance and temptation.
The panel flow is natural and quick, in part because the drawing is clean and directs the eye forward. Colors and inking are also good. I can't evaluate the print production of the hard copy. Available athttp://www.scribd.com/doc/54720383/Silver-Scorpion
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Looking for Jake
#909
Title: Looking for Jake
Author: China Miéville
Publisher: Del Rey
Year: 2005
320 pages
A collection of short stories that benefit from being read together, in this order, as Miéville uses their relationship to mirror, distort, or amplify aspects of each other. While a couple of the stories founder, perhaps because they are not in Miéville's typical style, most hold up nicely. In his novels, we become familiar with the logic of each setting; here, because the stories are short, the reading experience often is of disorientation. Since most of his protagonists are similarly discombobulated, the existential confusion is heightened.
Buildings and streets play a surprisingly large and active role in many of these pieces, as does the sense that mere anarchy has been loosed upon the world--or, at least, that the world is fraying, and not only does that mean something, but the shape of the threads means something, too. In many cases, characters struggle mightily either to make sense of what they experience, or to push away their understanding.
Best gooey imagery: "The ball room" (a story of an IKEA gone crazy), "Familiar." Creepiest: "Foundation." Most poignant: "Looking for Jake," "Details," "The tain." Least effective: "'Tis the season," "On the way to the front." Most evocative of Poe: "Entry taken from a medical encyclopaedia."
<b>Table of contents</b>
Looking for Jake
Foundation
The ball room
Reports of certain events in London
Familiar
Entry taken from a medical encyclopaedia
Details
Go between
Different skies
An end to hunger
'Tis the season
Jack
On the way to the front
The tain
Title: Looking for Jake
Author: China Miéville
Publisher: Del Rey
Year: 2005
320 pages
A collection of short stories that benefit from being read together, in this order, as Miéville uses their relationship to mirror, distort, or amplify aspects of each other. While a couple of the stories founder, perhaps because they are not in Miéville's typical style, most hold up nicely. In his novels, we become familiar with the logic of each setting; here, because the stories are short, the reading experience often is of disorientation. Since most of his protagonists are similarly discombobulated, the existential confusion is heightened.
Buildings and streets play a surprisingly large and active role in many of these pieces, as does the sense that mere anarchy has been loosed upon the world--or, at least, that the world is fraying, and not only does that mean something, but the shape of the threads means something, too. In many cases, characters struggle mightily either to make sense of what they experience, or to push away their understanding.
Best gooey imagery: "The ball room" (a story of an IKEA gone crazy), "Familiar." Creepiest: "Foundation." Most poignant: "Looking for Jake," "Details," "The tain." Least effective: "'Tis the season," "On the way to the front." Most evocative of Poe: "Entry taken from a medical encyclopaedia."
<b>Table of contents</b>
Looking for Jake
Foundation
The ball room
Reports of certain events in London
Familiar
Entry taken from a medical encyclopaedia
Details
Go between
Different skies
An end to hunger
'Tis the season
Jack
On the way to the front
The tain
The End of the Affair
#908
Title: The End of the Affair
Author: Graham Greene
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 1951
192 pages
Although this dragged a little at times, it still showed Greene's fine understanding of psychology, particularly the psychology of jealousy.
Title: The End of the Affair
Author: Graham Greene
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 1951
192 pages
Although this dragged a little at times, it still showed Greene's fine understanding of psychology, particularly the psychology of jealousy.
The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History
#907
Title: The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History
Author: John M. Barry
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2004/2005
560 pages
Don't, as I did, make the mistake of reading this on a plane, or you, too, will have an influenza/Twelve Monkeys experience of others' ubiquitous pathogens.
Barry is repetitive at times. I didn't mind the long tangential segments that provided background for his flu-based sections. It felt grand and sweeping rather than disconnected. It probably helped that I read this as an audiobook, so it kept moving along. However, there was a lot of dramatic buildup for what felt like an anticlimactic conclusion.
Title: The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History
Author: John M. Barry
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2004/2005
560 pages
Don't, as I did, make the mistake of reading this on a plane, or you, too, will have an influenza/Twelve Monkeys experience of others' ubiquitous pathogens.
Barry is repetitive at times. I didn't mind the long tangential segments that provided background for his flu-based sections. It felt grand and sweeping rather than disconnected. It probably helped that I read this as an audiobook, so it kept moving along. However, there was a lot of dramatic buildup for what felt like an anticlimactic conclusion.
Vagina: A New Biography
#906
Title: Vagina: A New Biography
Author: Naomi Wolf
Publisher: Ecco
Year: 2012
400 pages
One wonders what factors other than randomness lead to winning this book as a Goodreads giveaway. I look forward to carrying this around at work.
***
While reading: While some reviewers find this "dry," I'm not finding it dry enough, as in: Science. I'm in a chapter on neurotransmitters that contains much information that appears to be overgeneralized or just misunderstood. Wolf begins many sections with a piece of science, then rapidly draws overinclusive or anecdotal conclusions from it. It's both reductive and weirdly amorphous. Her central idea may be worth considering, but it's oversimplified and made mysterious by turns. Also, if she and the female lab tech feel sad for the rat that's getting an opioid inverse agonist, then this isn't a controlled experiment since they know which rat gets which injection. And might not Wolf and lab tech's moods affect the rats'? And might not some of the rats be not melancholic, but rather, happy to read for awhile, maybe take a bath, and go to sleep instead of mating? There is much anthropomorphism in the lab.
As a woman, I do not see my experiences mirrored here in any profound or affirming ways. As a feminist, I do not see my feminism here. Frankly, I have been around for a long time, including the much-maligned 1970's, and I have never heard a feminist disparage any kind of orgasm. I'm not saying that none have, but political rhetoric at a podium or in a text and what people actually believe and say to each other are different things. As one of my feminist theory professors once said, "Irigaray ('When Our Lips Speak Together') isn't saying that women literally have orgasms just by walking around. That would be stupid. She's making a symbolic point."
And I keep being astonished by Wolf's revelatory experiences. She really didn't know until she was older than 46 that all female mammals have a clitoris? Goodness. I'm so distracted by this sort of anecdote that I forget what she was discussing.
I'll keep reading, but at 70 pages in, this seems to be getting sloppier, not cleaner.
***
The middle sections are crisper, but they're not well-integrated. So far it reads like this:
1st hundred pages: I have a really cool idea! It's too cool for real methodical exploration! I'll keep saying it, and quote anecdotes from my gynecologist.
2nd hundred pages: This is where I write like you remember, and it's about vaginas in literature. Relational pornography is better than zipless fuck pornography, which relates to my cool idea. Plus, anecdotes from my gynecologist.
***
I skimmed the last third, starting when I encountered one too many repetitive statements. It worked on the assumption that what had been asserted in the first 2/3 was solidly supported, then continued on this shaky base. While I have no opinion about the veracity of her premise, I just can't see that she substantiated it.
A few notes:
Both masturbation and orgasm by clitoral stimulation here get, in some ways, the same bad rap they got from Victorian medical culture--they're inferior. It's probably just as well that Wolf stuck to heterosexual women, because I can't imagine how she'd account for lesbian sexuality. That happened to Freud, too.
"Cooter" and "poon" are not "funny little sibling [names]" that "young lexicographers" give their vaginas (p. 209). "Poon" is a shortened form of "poontang." Here's the first hit I got for "poontang etymology", from Online Etymological Dictionary: c.1910, probably via New Orleans Creole, from Fr. putain "prostitute," from O.Fr. pute "whore," probably from fem. of V.L. *puttus (cf. O.It. putta "girl"), from L. putus, with derogatory sense. But also possibly from O.Fr. put, from L. putidus "stinking" on notion of the "foulness" of harlotry, or for more literal reasons (among the 16c.-17c. slang terms for "whore" in English were polecat and fling-stink). Shortened form poon is recorded from 1969. From the same source, cooter is: name for some types of freshwater terrapin in southern U.S., 1835 ...from obsolete verb coot "to copulate" (1660s), of unknown origin. The turtle is said to copulate for two weeks at a stretch. I could go dig out the OED or keep searching to substantiate that this is the origin of "cooter" for vagina (I can trace it to the 1980's for this use), but I'm not going to. If this is the quality of Wolf's research on such easily discoverable information, I really worry about the rest of it.
"Specific scents have been found to boost vaginal blood engorgement: cucumbers and Good 'n Plenty candies both are at the top of the vaginal-engorgement-activating scents, according to one study (and both are phallic in shape)" (p. 284). Really? So is a turd, but I'll bet it's not at the top of the vaginal-engorgement-activating scent pyramid. I'll bet a silicone dildo isn't either, though it arguably has more in common with a phallus than does a Good 'n Plenty.
Finally, "[S]everal [women] reported that they believed, in retrospect, that this [swallowing semen] may have affected their mood to some extent--the sugar rush..." (p. 316). However, I will point out that "Each teaspoon of ejaculate has about 5 - 7 calories" (according to http://goaskalice.columbia.edu/nutrit...), and according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ejaculation, "The ... amount of semen that will be ejected during an ejaculation will vary widely between men and may contain between 0.1 and 10 milliliters," or a maximum of two teaspoonfuls. That's a max of 14 calories. That's the amount of calories in 3.5 ounces of cucumber, or 4 Good 'n Plenty pieces (http://caloriecount.about.com/calorie...). That's really not the stuff of a sugar rush, especially since some of that's protein, not sugar. How much sugar, you ask? Fructose is the main sugar in semen, which is good news if you're watching your glycemic load ("load" is not a joke, nor is "dry," above). Bad news for the sugar rush, though. Wikipedia quotes WebMD as saying that in semen analysis, the normal level is "at least 3 mg/ml." In our theoretical two-teaspoon ejaculate above, that just isn't a lot.
If further scientific inquiry is required: Eliasson, R. (1965). Accurate determination of glucose in human semen. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility, 9, 325-330: "The mean concentration [of glucose] in semen samples] was 7.24 mg/100 ml" or an average of 0.724 mg in the maximum ejaculate above.
That's all. I wish this were a better book.
Title: Vagina: A New Biography
Author: Naomi Wolf
Publisher: Ecco
Year: 2012
400 pages
One wonders what factors other than randomness lead to winning this book as a Goodreads giveaway. I look forward to carrying this around at work.
***
While reading: While some reviewers find this "dry," I'm not finding it dry enough, as in: Science. I'm in a chapter on neurotransmitters that contains much information that appears to be overgeneralized or just misunderstood. Wolf begins many sections with a piece of science, then rapidly draws overinclusive or anecdotal conclusions from it. It's both reductive and weirdly amorphous. Her central idea may be worth considering, but it's oversimplified and made mysterious by turns. Also, if she and the female lab tech feel sad for the rat that's getting an opioid inverse agonist, then this isn't a controlled experiment since they know which rat gets which injection. And might not Wolf and lab tech's moods affect the rats'? And might not some of the rats be not melancholic, but rather, happy to read for awhile, maybe take a bath, and go to sleep instead of mating? There is much anthropomorphism in the lab.
As a woman, I do not see my experiences mirrored here in any profound or affirming ways. As a feminist, I do not see my feminism here. Frankly, I have been around for a long time, including the much-maligned 1970's, and I have never heard a feminist disparage any kind of orgasm. I'm not saying that none have, but political rhetoric at a podium or in a text and what people actually believe and say to each other are different things. As one of my feminist theory professors once said, "Irigaray ('When Our Lips Speak Together') isn't saying that women literally have orgasms just by walking around. That would be stupid. She's making a symbolic point."
And I keep being astonished by Wolf's revelatory experiences. She really didn't know until she was older than 46 that all female mammals have a clitoris? Goodness. I'm so distracted by this sort of anecdote that I forget what she was discussing.
I'll keep reading, but at 70 pages in, this seems to be getting sloppier, not cleaner.
***
The middle sections are crisper, but they're not well-integrated. So far it reads like this:
1st hundred pages: I have a really cool idea! It's too cool for real methodical exploration! I'll keep saying it, and quote anecdotes from my gynecologist.
2nd hundred pages: This is where I write like you remember, and it's about vaginas in literature. Relational pornography is better than zipless fuck pornography, which relates to my cool idea. Plus, anecdotes from my gynecologist.
***
I skimmed the last third, starting when I encountered one too many repetitive statements. It worked on the assumption that what had been asserted in the first 2/3 was solidly supported, then continued on this shaky base. While I have no opinion about the veracity of her premise, I just can't see that she substantiated it.
A few notes:
Both masturbation and orgasm by clitoral stimulation here get, in some ways, the same bad rap they got from Victorian medical culture--they're inferior. It's probably just as well that Wolf stuck to heterosexual women, because I can't imagine how she'd account for lesbian sexuality. That happened to Freud, too.
"Cooter" and "poon" are not "funny little sibling [names]" that "young lexicographers" give their vaginas (p. 209). "Poon" is a shortened form of "poontang." Here's the first hit I got for "poontang etymology", from Online Etymological Dictionary: c.1910, probably via New Orleans Creole, from Fr. putain "prostitute," from O.Fr. pute "whore," probably from fem. of V.L. *puttus (cf. O.It. putta "girl"), from L. putus, with derogatory sense. But also possibly from O.Fr. put, from L. putidus "stinking" on notion of the "foulness" of harlotry, or for more literal reasons (among the 16c.-17c. slang terms for "whore" in English were polecat and fling-stink). Shortened form poon is recorded from 1969. From the same source, cooter is: name for some types of freshwater terrapin in southern U.S., 1835 ...from obsolete verb coot "to copulate" (1660s), of unknown origin. The turtle is said to copulate for two weeks at a stretch. I could go dig out the OED or keep searching to substantiate that this is the origin of "cooter" for vagina (I can trace it to the 1980's for this use), but I'm not going to. If this is the quality of Wolf's research on such easily discoverable information, I really worry about the rest of it.
"Specific scents have been found to boost vaginal blood engorgement: cucumbers and Good 'n Plenty candies both are at the top of the vaginal-engorgement-activating scents, according to one study (and both are phallic in shape)" (p. 284). Really? So is a turd, but I'll bet it's not at the top of the vaginal-engorgement-activating scent pyramid. I'll bet a silicone dildo isn't either, though it arguably has more in common with a phallus than does a Good 'n Plenty.
Finally, "[S]everal [women] reported that they believed, in retrospect, that this [swallowing semen] may have affected their mood to some extent--the sugar rush..." (p. 316). However, I will point out that "Each teaspoon of ejaculate has about 5 - 7 calories" (according to http://goaskalice.columbia.edu/nutrit...), and according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ejaculation, "The ... amount of semen that will be ejected during an ejaculation will vary widely between men and may contain between 0.1 and 10 milliliters," or a maximum of two teaspoonfuls. That's a max of 14 calories. That's the amount of calories in 3.5 ounces of cucumber, or 4 Good 'n Plenty pieces (http://caloriecount.about.com/calorie...). That's really not the stuff of a sugar rush, especially since some of that's protein, not sugar. How much sugar, you ask? Fructose is the main sugar in semen, which is good news if you're watching your glycemic load ("load" is not a joke, nor is "dry," above). Bad news for the sugar rush, though. Wikipedia quotes WebMD as saying that in semen analysis, the normal level is "at least 3 mg/ml." In our theoretical two-teaspoon ejaculate above, that just isn't a lot.
If further scientific inquiry is required: Eliasson, R. (1965). Accurate determination of glucose in human semen. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility, 9, 325-330: "The mean concentration [of glucose] in semen samples] was 7.24 mg/100 ml" or an average of 0.724 mg in the maximum ejaculate above.
That's all. I wish this were a better book.
Blood of Montenegro
#905
Title: Blood of Montenegro
Author: Bajram Angelo Koljenovic & James Nathan Post
Publisher: Writers Club Press
Year: 2002
Country: Montenegro
413 pages
Koljenovic describes his family's and his own experiences, perhaps, as ethnic Muslims in Montenegro over the last century, interspersing the personal story with historical events, notably the rise of Tito.
I have relatives who worked in the region over several decades. One once told me, "The tradition of strong oral history there means that grievances and slights of hundreds of years ago are still felt to be immediate and fresh." That assessment is certainly supported here, where both long-ago massacres and current verbal offenses casting aspersions on one's mother are reasons to kill a man.
This book characterizes itself as "semi-autobiographical historical creative non-fiction, that is, work incorporating some historical facts and persons, and some of which are fictionalized." While I appreciate the disclaimer, this makes it difficult to know what I'm reading. If it's mostly fiction, then the long excursions into Montenegrin and Balkans history are, while interesting, lengthy and not sufficiently integrated with the personal story. This ambiguity of genre seems to have made it difficult for Koljenovic to focus his story, and its self-published nature doesn't help because no formal editor has shaped it.
If this is mostly non-fiction, then the personal sections increasingly read like James Frey, where the narrator frequently asserts how dangerous and successful he and his friends are. They may be, but it's hard to determine. If the balance is more toward fiction than memoir, it seems boastful rather than informative. Koljenovic insists on committing interpersonal violence in the name of his code of honor, but insists that his economic crimes against both persons and states don't make him less patriotic. Again, without knowing what's fiction and what's not, it's hard to respond to this.
The language is frequently stilted and dialogue overly formal and expository. Problems of tense, spelling, and missing words are consistent but not too frequent and don't detract overall. The omission of diacriticals makes it harder to pronounce names and places. Read this not for literary quality but because it provides a window on Montenegrin life and politics in the 20th century.
Title: Blood of Montenegro
Author: Bajram Angelo Koljenovic & James Nathan Post
Publisher: Writers Club Press
Year: 2002
Country: Montenegro
413 pages
Koljenovic describes his family's and his own experiences, perhaps, as ethnic Muslims in Montenegro over the last century, interspersing the personal story with historical events, notably the rise of Tito.
I have relatives who worked in the region over several decades. One once told me, "The tradition of strong oral history there means that grievances and slights of hundreds of years ago are still felt to be immediate and fresh." That assessment is certainly supported here, where both long-ago massacres and current verbal offenses casting aspersions on one's mother are reasons to kill a man.
This book characterizes itself as "semi-autobiographical historical creative non-fiction, that is, work incorporating some historical facts and persons, and some of which are fictionalized." While I appreciate the disclaimer, this makes it difficult to know what I'm reading. If it's mostly fiction, then the long excursions into Montenegrin and Balkans history are, while interesting, lengthy and not sufficiently integrated with the personal story. This ambiguity of genre seems to have made it difficult for Koljenovic to focus his story, and its self-published nature doesn't help because no formal editor has shaped it.
If this is mostly non-fiction, then the personal sections increasingly read like James Frey, where the narrator frequently asserts how dangerous and successful he and his friends are. They may be, but it's hard to determine. If the balance is more toward fiction than memoir, it seems boastful rather than informative. Koljenovic insists on committing interpersonal violence in the name of his code of honor, but insists that his economic crimes against both persons and states don't make him less patriotic. Again, without knowing what's fiction and what's not, it's hard to respond to this.
The language is frequently stilted and dialogue overly formal and expository. Problems of tense, spelling, and missing words are consistent but not too frequent and don't detract overall. The omission of diacriticals makes it harder to pronounce names and places. Read this not for literary quality but because it provides a window on Montenegrin life and politics in the 20th century.
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Rainbows End
#904
Title: Rainbows End
Author: Vernor Vinge
Publisher: Tor
Year: 2006/2007
400 pages
A lot of hard science and world-building anchors this novel in the near future--an as-yet-unreached future, but one that's plausibly at hand. Robert Gu is an enjoyable protagonist and his actions, including a variety of betrayals he perpetuates, make sense in relation to his character and the events he's experienced. The book provides a good example of relationships between small, local phenomena and the larger-world perturbations and repercussions that follow from them.
Action lags somewhat in the middle but picks back up, including a clash of belief circles that has the buildup of Stephenson's Snow Crash without that book's disappointing slump. Some loose ends are acceptable, such as Lena's lack of reply to Robert, whereas others are not. Rabbit's identity is not revealed and thus he/it is left a disappointing deus ex machina. Here's hoping for a sequel to wrap up some egregiously loose threads in an otherwise fine and engaging story.
Title: Rainbows End
Author: Vernor Vinge
Publisher: Tor
Year: 2006/2007
400 pages
A lot of hard science and world-building anchors this novel in the near future--an as-yet-unreached future, but one that's plausibly at hand. Robert Gu is an enjoyable protagonist and his actions, including a variety of betrayals he perpetuates, make sense in relation to his character and the events he's experienced. The book provides a good example of relationships between small, local phenomena and the larger-world perturbations and repercussions that follow from them.
Action lags somewhat in the middle but picks back up, including a clash of belief circles that has the buildup of Stephenson's Snow Crash without that book's disappointing slump. Some loose ends are acceptable, such as Lena's lack of reply to Robert, whereas others are not. Rabbit's identity is not revealed and thus he/it is left a disappointing deus ex machina. Here's hoping for a sequel to wrap up some egregiously loose threads in an otherwise fine and engaging story.
Rivers of Babylon (Rivers of Babylon #1)
#903
Title: Rivers of Babylon (Rivers of Babylon #1)
Author: Peter Pišťanek
Translator: Peter Petro
Publisher: Garnett
Year: 2007
Country: Slovakia
259 pages
Pišťanek takes a romp through an almost-post-Communist state in which Communism and capitalism are equally and cynically skewered. The anti-hero protagonist mulishly pursues his own ends and tragicomically winds up a slightly anxious bourgeois with soft hands, a big house, and a cultured wife. I'd give it four stars but for the tremendous reduction of women's roles to virgin (one) or whore (all the rest), including gleeful exploitation of and violence toward virtually all. Not that men aren't exploited and hit, but they are portrayed as agents as well as objects.
Title: Rivers of Babylon (Rivers of Babylon #1)
Author: Peter Pišťanek
Translator: Peter Petro
Publisher: Garnett
Year: 2007
Country: Slovakia
259 pages
Pišťanek takes a romp through an almost-post-Communist state in which Communism and capitalism are equally and cynically skewered. The anti-hero protagonist mulishly pursues his own ends and tragicomically winds up a slightly anxious bourgeois with soft hands, a big house, and a cultured wife. I'd give it four stars but for the tremendous reduction of women's roles to virgin (one) or whore (all the rest), including gleeful exploitation of and violence toward virtually all. Not that men aren't exploited and hit, but they are portrayed as agents as well as objects.
Manhood for Amateurs
#902
Title: Manhood for Amateurs
Author: Michael Chabon
Publisher: Harper
Year: 2009
320 pages
This collection of essays is generally engaging and interesting, even where I don't agree with Chabon's interpretations and opinions. There's a certain amount of schmaltziness, but I'm not sure if that can be avoided when writing about one's children.
Title: Manhood for Amateurs
Author: Michael Chabon
Publisher: Harper
Year: 2009
320 pages
This collection of essays is generally engaging and interesting, even where I don't agree with Chabon's interpretations and opinions. There's a certain amount of schmaltziness, but I'm not sure if that can be avoided when writing about one's children.
Jim Henson's Tale of Sand
#901
Title: Jim Henson's Tale of Sand
Authors: Jim Henson & Jerry Juhl
Illustrator: Ramon Perez
Publisher: Archaia Entertainment
Year: 2011
120 pages
A rather sophomoric script by the late Jim Henson brought to life by clean, interesting graphics with good use of space, frame, and color. Fragments of Henson's typed and amended text appear in some sequences, to good effect. Fun for an afternoon; not a work for the ages.
Title: Jim Henson's Tale of Sand
Authors: Jim Henson & Jerry Juhl
Illustrator: Ramon Perez
Publisher: Archaia Entertainment
Year: 2011
120 pages
A rather sophomoric script by the late Jim Henson brought to life by clean, interesting graphics with good use of space, frame, and color. Fragments of Henson's typed and amended text appear in some sequences, to good effect. Fun for an afternoon; not a work for the ages.
Wildlife of the Okavango: Common Animals and Plants
#900
Title: Wildlife of the Okavango: Common Animals and Plants
Author: Duncan Butchart
Publisher: Struik Nature
Year: 1995/2000
126 pages
A handy quick reference, but you'll want a larger guidebook, such as Withers and Hosking's Wildlife of Southern Africa for more than casual spotting as well as for a broader swath of Botswana and surrounding areas. The photos are of adequate size and generally good quality. A notable deficit is the lack of scientific names, which are included in the index but not the text itself. Since local common names don't always match other sources, this is a significant omission.
***
I think my numbering is off by one book somewhere; if I can find it, I'll eventually correct it.
Title: Wildlife of the Okavango: Common Animals and Plants
Author: Duncan Butchart
Publisher: Struik Nature
Year: 1995/2000
126 pages
A handy quick reference, but you'll want a larger guidebook, such as Withers and Hosking's Wildlife of Southern Africa for more than casual spotting as well as for a broader swath of Botswana and surrounding areas. The photos are of adequate size and generally good quality. A notable deficit is the lack of scientific names, which are included in the index but not the text itself. Since local common names don't always match other sources, this is a significant omission.
***
I think my numbering is off by one book somewhere; if I can find it, I'll eventually correct it.
Dark Star Safari
#899
Title: Dark Star Safari
Author: Paul Theroux
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2003
495 pages
I so enjoy Theroux's writing, but this one goes beyond curmudgeonly. Read it for the descriptions of landscape and people, but ignore the opinions (as, at 7:47 in the audiobook, he appears to advocate for letting children starve rather than providing aid).
As a reader, Thoroux makes you feel damned if you do, damned if you don't. Damned if you visit Africa, damned if you don't. Damned if you try to be helpful, damned if you don't. But definitely damned if you fly somewhere rather than take a bus. Damned if you look at "attractions" (unless you're Theroux). Damned if you generalize (unless you're Theroux). Damned if you're a white tourist, though non-white tourists seem to figure very little. Damned if you spoil his tourist experience by being in his way, asking questions, taking risks, or not taking risks. The impact of AIDS on national development is minimized. Everything was better when he was younger.
The audiobook reader adds a pompous, sarcastic element to Theroux's already generally snide pontification. The print version may give less tonal offense.
I may decide only to read older Theroux and his novels. This was rather tedious.
Title: Dark Star Safari
Author: Paul Theroux
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2003
495 pages
I so enjoy Theroux's writing, but this one goes beyond curmudgeonly. Read it for the descriptions of landscape and people, but ignore the opinions (as, at 7:47 in the audiobook, he appears to advocate for letting children starve rather than providing aid).
As a reader, Thoroux makes you feel damned if you do, damned if you don't. Damned if you visit Africa, damned if you don't. Damned if you try to be helpful, damned if you don't. But definitely damned if you fly somewhere rather than take a bus. Damned if you look at "attractions" (unless you're Theroux). Damned if you generalize (unless you're Theroux). Damned if you're a white tourist, though non-white tourists seem to figure very little. Damned if you spoil his tourist experience by being in his way, asking questions, taking risks, or not taking risks. The impact of AIDS on national development is minimized. Everything was better when he was younger.
The audiobook reader adds a pompous, sarcastic element to Theroux's already generally snide pontification. The print version may give less tonal offense.
I may decide only to read older Theroux and his novels. This was rather tedious.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
The Casual Vacancy
#898
Title: The Casual Vacancy
Author: J.K. Rowling
Publisher: Little, Brown
Year: 2012
512 pages
Spoilers.
Does this sound about right? “Rowling’s refusal to conform to happy endings demonstrates the fact that The Casual Vacancy is not meant to be entertainment. She wants to deal with real-life issues, not the fantasy world to which women writers are often confined. Her ambition is to create a portrait of the complexity of ordinary human life: quiet tragedies, petty character failings, small triumphs, and quiet moments of dignity. The complexity of her portrait of provincial society is reflected in the complexity of individual characters. The contradictions in the character of the individual person are evident in the shifting sympathies of the reader. One moment, we pity Stuart, the next we judge him critically.”
Actually, that’s a summary of Eliot’s Middlemarch with a few names and tenses changed (actual quote at http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/middlem...). Some online reviewers, especially those who read the free previews, have rated this book low on Amazon and elsewhere and stated that it was boring so they did not continue. These reviews may be translated as “tl;dr” comments. The readers might say the same of Middlemarch.
Many of the early professional reviews also seem to me to miss the mark, perhaps because the reviewer had to read the book in a few hours with a phalanx of Little, Brown lawyers on hand. They seem to have skimmed for easy quotes and have missed much of the context that situates what they’ve plucked from the text. Like some of the the sample-only readers, they have not taken the very obvious cues of the novel’s opening that it will build gradually. Unlike the Harry Potter series, this is not action/adventure, or even mystery.
The Casual Vacancy indeed starts slowly. Because the novel at first presents itself as a comedy of manners, it’s no surprise that Rowling takes some time to introduce the large cast of characters as they first react to Barry's death. While most people are initially socially appropriate (at least in public), the death inspires both noble and self-serving thoughts. Like the people of Pagford, the reader only discovers these aspirations and interpretations as the story and relationships unfold. The vacancy left by Barry turns out to be anything but casual.
We see families interacting with their members and with other families. The genre gradually shifts to become more plot- and action-driven as thoughts become deeds, sometimes not for the better. The reader sees several slow train wrecks in the offing as events inexorably roll on.
This is not a happy book, and it is not uplifting. Most of the characters are unlikable, though as their stories unfold, their complexity in some cases increases the reader’s sympathy and identification. There is a great deal of swearing, shagging, smoking, and drug use (none of which would have been particularly shocking from another author). There are many mean, small-minded acts. Yet none of this is glamorized (most of it falls in the faintly absurd to somewhat gross spectrum), and it is matched by many characters’ sad evaluations of their own relationships, longing to be closer to (or farther from) other people, agony over acne and hair, helplessness, and fear. People wish they had each others’ families. Triangulation, insults, secrets, and violence occur behind closed doors. Rowling realistically depicts pettiness, teenage angst, teen and adult posturing, and the sometimes stifling and intrusive nature of small towns and their politics. It is like being at your social services job day and night. It is depressing. It is also very funny, though this is only occasionally presented in character’s actions and is more frequently evident in surprising adjectives, comparisons, or characters’ thoughts that veer from what is expected. There are, though, events that are deeply, wonderfully absurd, and all the more so for the earnestness and self-absorption with which they are enacted.
Grief is a constant theme--grief for lost people and lost opportunities. Rage, both acute and simmering, appears time and again. The major actions catalyzed by Barry’s death and its initial implications can be characterized as The Long Secret meets anti-Potter. What happens when teenagers take matters into their own hands? Generally speaking, the outcome is not good. Where Harry saves his world, the adolescents of Pagford destroy it. Most of the adults, who strive to assuage their inchoate longings with gossip, sexy boy bands, and reading posts by Barry’s ghost, and who regularly misinterpret motives and are often wounded by each other, are no better or more mature. More complex than Harry Potter, this story ends without tidy wrap-ups, and more like The Rocky Horror Picture Show. The ghost indeed exacts his due, though Jesus-like Barry might be horrified by this misuse of his legacy.
Barry’s saintliness probably would have showed more tarnish had he been alive and present through the book; he serves as a symbol of, among other things, the other characters’ longing for a Jesus-like figure to hold their need for absolution. However, redemptions are few and far between, with the only unequivocal example being the river-dunking of Sukhvinder Jawanda.
A few criticisms:
Like the Harry Potter series, this is structured as a chiasmus. The reader who guesses or observes this may find the events of the end of the book too predictable.
After the second incident, the third time a teen trashed an adult online seemed reductive and mechanical.
While I’m not familiar with UK law, I will imagine that had Parminder Jawanda aided Howard during a medical emergency, she would have been in the clear. Why Kay would violate a client’s confidentiality several times, with no consequences, I cannot say, but it seemed like an easy way for Rowling to share information without straightforward exposition.
Exposition is one of Rowling’s stylistic weaknesses in Harry Potter, and there was still much telling rather than showing here. However, The Casual Vacancy is an improvement. Characters have more interiority, and even though this sometimes has the feel of interior exposition (as when Fats ruminates over an “authenticity” most reminiscent of Sartre’s Nausea), there is somewhat less told about the characters by an impersonal narrator. The shifts of perspective throughout the novel contribute immensely to Rowling’s ability to give us characters in action rather than words about characters and pronouncements about their actions. In this regard, it's better than Harry Potter.
Title: The Casual Vacancy
Author: J.K. Rowling
Publisher: Little, Brown
Year: 2012
512 pages
Spoilers.
Does this sound about right? “Rowling’s refusal to conform to happy endings demonstrates the fact that The Casual Vacancy is not meant to be entertainment. She wants to deal with real-life issues, not the fantasy world to which women writers are often confined. Her ambition is to create a portrait of the complexity of ordinary human life: quiet tragedies, petty character failings, small triumphs, and quiet moments of dignity. The complexity of her portrait of provincial society is reflected in the complexity of individual characters. The contradictions in the character of the individual person are evident in the shifting sympathies of the reader. One moment, we pity Stuart, the next we judge him critically.”
Actually, that’s a summary of Eliot’s Middlemarch with a few names and tenses changed (actual quote at http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/middlem...). Some online reviewers, especially those who read the free previews, have rated this book low on Amazon and elsewhere and stated that it was boring so they did not continue. These reviews may be translated as “tl;dr” comments. The readers might say the same of Middlemarch.
Many of the early professional reviews also seem to me to miss the mark, perhaps because the reviewer had to read the book in a few hours with a phalanx of Little, Brown lawyers on hand. They seem to have skimmed for easy quotes and have missed much of the context that situates what they’ve plucked from the text. Like some of the the sample-only readers, they have not taken the very obvious cues of the novel’s opening that it will build gradually. Unlike the Harry Potter series, this is not action/adventure, or even mystery.
The Casual Vacancy indeed starts slowly. Because the novel at first presents itself as a comedy of manners, it’s no surprise that Rowling takes some time to introduce the large cast of characters as they first react to Barry's death. While most people are initially socially appropriate (at least in public), the death inspires both noble and self-serving thoughts. Like the people of Pagford, the reader only discovers these aspirations and interpretations as the story and relationships unfold. The vacancy left by Barry turns out to be anything but casual.
We see families interacting with their members and with other families. The genre gradually shifts to become more plot- and action-driven as thoughts become deeds, sometimes not for the better. The reader sees several slow train wrecks in the offing as events inexorably roll on.
This is not a happy book, and it is not uplifting. Most of the characters are unlikable, though as their stories unfold, their complexity in some cases increases the reader’s sympathy and identification. There is a great deal of swearing, shagging, smoking, and drug use (none of which would have been particularly shocking from another author). There are many mean, small-minded acts. Yet none of this is glamorized (most of it falls in the faintly absurd to somewhat gross spectrum), and it is matched by many characters’ sad evaluations of their own relationships, longing to be closer to (or farther from) other people, agony over acne and hair, helplessness, and fear. People wish they had each others’ families. Triangulation, insults, secrets, and violence occur behind closed doors. Rowling realistically depicts pettiness, teenage angst, teen and adult posturing, and the sometimes stifling and intrusive nature of small towns and their politics. It is like being at your social services job day and night. It is depressing. It is also very funny, though this is only occasionally presented in character’s actions and is more frequently evident in surprising adjectives, comparisons, or characters’ thoughts that veer from what is expected. There are, though, events that are deeply, wonderfully absurd, and all the more so for the earnestness and self-absorption with which they are enacted.
Grief is a constant theme--grief for lost people and lost opportunities. Rage, both acute and simmering, appears time and again. The major actions catalyzed by Barry’s death and its initial implications can be characterized as The Long Secret meets anti-Potter. What happens when teenagers take matters into their own hands? Generally speaking, the outcome is not good. Where Harry saves his world, the adolescents of Pagford destroy it. Most of the adults, who strive to assuage their inchoate longings with gossip, sexy boy bands, and reading posts by Barry’s ghost, and who regularly misinterpret motives and are often wounded by each other, are no better or more mature. More complex than Harry Potter, this story ends without tidy wrap-ups, and more like The Rocky Horror Picture Show. The ghost indeed exacts his due, though Jesus-like Barry might be horrified by this misuse of his legacy.
Barry’s saintliness probably would have showed more tarnish had he been alive and present through the book; he serves as a symbol of, among other things, the other characters’ longing for a Jesus-like figure to hold their need for absolution. However, redemptions are few and far between, with the only unequivocal example being the river-dunking of Sukhvinder Jawanda.
A few criticisms:
Like the Harry Potter series, this is structured as a chiasmus. The reader who guesses or observes this may find the events of the end of the book too predictable.
After the second incident, the third time a teen trashed an adult online seemed reductive and mechanical.
While I’m not familiar with UK law, I will imagine that had Parminder Jawanda aided Howard during a medical emergency, she would have been in the clear. Why Kay would violate a client’s confidentiality several times, with no consequences, I cannot say, but it seemed like an easy way for Rowling to share information without straightforward exposition.
Exposition is one of Rowling’s stylistic weaknesses in Harry Potter, and there was still much telling rather than showing here. However, The Casual Vacancy is an improvement. Characters have more interiority, and even though this sometimes has the feel of interior exposition (as when Fats ruminates over an “authenticity” most reminiscent of Sartre’s Nausea), there is somewhat less told about the characters by an impersonal narrator. The shifts of perspective throughout the novel contribute immensely to Rowling’s ability to give us characters in action rather than words about characters and pronouncements about their actions. In this regard, it's better than Harry Potter.
Friday, September 28, 2012
Exile from Latvia: My WWII Childhood - From Survival to Opportunity
#897
Title: Exile from Latvia: My WWII Childhood - From Survival to Opportunity
Author: Harry G. Kapeikis
Publisher: Trafford
Country: Latvia
Year: 2007
314 pages
A self-published memoir that, while not well-written or literary, is an interesting and useful narrative of Kapeikis's family's flight from Latvia to Germany, then through two DP camps to the US. I don't read many non-Jewish autobiographies of this sort, so it was useful for comparison, if sometimes tediously descriptive of Boy Scouting activities.
Read with From Tajikistan to the Moon.
Title: Exile from Latvia: My WWII Childhood - From Survival to Opportunity
Author: Harry G. Kapeikis
Publisher: Trafford
Country: Latvia
Year: 2007
314 pages
A self-published memoir that, while not well-written or literary, is an interesting and useful narrative of Kapeikis's family's flight from Latvia to Germany, then through two DP camps to the US. I don't read many non-Jewish autobiographies of this sort, so it was useful for comparison, if sometimes tediously descriptive of Boy Scouting activities.
Read with From Tajikistan to the Moon.
The Ship of Fools
#896
Title: The Ship of Fools
Author: Cristina Peri Rossi
Publisher: Readers International
Country: Uruguay
Year: 1989
224 pages
There's some enjoyable and often amusing language:
The best way to get to know a city is to fall in love with one of its women, someone inclined to mother a man far from home and also appreciative of different pigmentation. She will trace him a path that does not figure on any map and instruct him in a language he will never forget. She will show the stranger the bridges and the secret corners of the place, and, nurturing him like a babe, teach him to lisp his first words, take his first steps, and recite the names of birds and trees. Actually, I am not quite sure about this last point: in the big cities where we live the names of birds and trees are no longer familiar, and anyway, for all the notice we take of them, the trees could be made of plastic, like the tablecloths. p. 33.
There's also a beautiful section about identifying with ducks and water. However, a lot falls flat. Though I am a person with a few learned degrees, who has managed Irigaray and Kristeva and Wittig in graduate semiotics and women's studies courses, I can't quite make sense of this book, and from the limited reviews I can find in English, it's not clear that anyone else can, either. The best spin I can put on this is that it's an anti-novel, one that undoes itself (as the protagonist Ecks [X?] triumphantly undoes his/the imaginary king's virility by shouting "virility!", as the tapestry representing creation is incomplete). See the problem? I'm not going to put spoiler tags on this because it's pre-spoiled, a pastiche of genres, foci, tones, and, relentlessly, no particular plot except Ecks's ongoing travel. I began to admire how relentlessly it managed not to cohere. Perhaps that's its point.
Title: The Ship of Fools
Author: Cristina Peri Rossi
Publisher: Readers International
Country: Uruguay
Year: 1989
224 pages
There's some enjoyable and often amusing language:
The best way to get to know a city is to fall in love with one of its women, someone inclined to mother a man far from home and also appreciative of different pigmentation. She will trace him a path that does not figure on any map and instruct him in a language he will never forget. She will show the stranger the bridges and the secret corners of the place, and, nurturing him like a babe, teach him to lisp his first words, take his first steps, and recite the names of birds and trees. Actually, I am not quite sure about this last point: in the big cities where we live the names of birds and trees are no longer familiar, and anyway, for all the notice we take of them, the trees could be made of plastic, like the tablecloths. p. 33.
There's also a beautiful section about identifying with ducks and water. However, a lot falls flat. Though I am a person with a few learned degrees, who has managed Irigaray and Kristeva and Wittig in graduate semiotics and women's studies courses, I can't quite make sense of this book, and from the limited reviews I can find in English, it's not clear that anyone else can, either. The best spin I can put on this is that it's an anti-novel, one that undoes itself (as the protagonist Ecks [X?] triumphantly undoes his/the imaginary king's virility by shouting "virility!", as the tapestry representing creation is incomplete). See the problem? I'm not going to put spoiler tags on this because it's pre-spoiled, a pastiche of genres, foci, tones, and, relentlessly, no particular plot except Ecks's ongoing travel. I began to admire how relentlessly it managed not to cohere. Perhaps that's its point.
Preludes and Nocturnes (The Sandman, #1)
#895
Title: Preludes and Nocturnes (The Sandman, #1)
Author: Neil Gaiman
Illustrators: Sam Kieth, Mike Dringenberg & Malcolm Jones III
Publisher: Vertigo
Year: 2010
240 pages
Surprisingly good, with some illustrations (covers?) that are simply gorgeous. The last story sounded like Gaiman, and indeed, in the afterward he says that he found his voice in that installment. This first volume concerns the ensnaring of the god of dreams and his subsequent quest to re-acquire his symbols and sources of power. Sandman is portrayed as a sympathetic protagonist. Interactions with humans are sometimes limited by the genre (horror), sometimes formal, and often funny because of the disjunction of attitudes each party brings to the transaction.
Title: Preludes and Nocturnes (The Sandman, #1)
Author: Neil Gaiman
Illustrators: Sam Kieth, Mike Dringenberg & Malcolm Jones III
Publisher: Vertigo
Year: 2010
240 pages
Surprisingly good, with some illustrations (covers?) that are simply gorgeous. The last story sounded like Gaiman, and indeed, in the afterward he says that he found his voice in that installment. This first volume concerns the ensnaring of the god of dreams and his subsequent quest to re-acquire his symbols and sources of power. Sandman is portrayed as a sympathetic protagonist. Interactions with humans are sometimes limited by the genre (horror), sometimes formal, and often funny because of the disjunction of attitudes each party brings to the transaction.
The Abandoned Baobab: The Autobiography of a Senegalese Woman
#894
Title: The Abandoned Baobab: The Autobiography of a Senegalese Woman
Author: Ken Bugul
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Year: 1984/2008
180 pages
Senegal.
Without at all intending to diminish the importance of post-colonialism as a destroyer of group and individual identity in this disconnected, often anguished memoir, there appears to be more going on than that. Whether her account is accurate or heightened for literary purposes, Bugul would seem to have a personality disorder as well as cultural disruption and dissonance. Certainly both forms of alienation and fragmented identity could co-occur and heighten each other. Her behavior and emotions are so extreme and self-harmful that, rather than being wrenched by the conflicts of post-colonial existence, the reader may simply see Bugul as dangerous to be close to.
Bugul uses symbolism and returns to pivotal events that are reductive and serve more as emblems than explanations. The style is poetic but the descriptions and assertions are often ultimately incoherent. As an artifact of drug abuse and emotional splintering, it's vivid. Ultimately, though, African writers such as Alain Mabanckou, Abdourahman A. Waberi, and Donato Ndongo express themselves more effectively in similar styles. Granted, Mabanckou and Waberi are also sardonic and poke fun at themselves, so there is an ironic distance. Bugul's anger and apparent disorientation may not provide sufficient separation from the subject for her to craft an effective narrative.
Title: The Abandoned Baobab: The Autobiography of a Senegalese Woman
Author: Ken Bugul
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Year: 1984/2008
180 pages
Senegal.
Without at all intending to diminish the importance of post-colonialism as a destroyer of group and individual identity in this disconnected, often anguished memoir, there appears to be more going on than that. Whether her account is accurate or heightened for literary purposes, Bugul would seem to have a personality disorder as well as cultural disruption and dissonance. Certainly both forms of alienation and fragmented identity could co-occur and heighten each other. Her behavior and emotions are so extreme and self-harmful that, rather than being wrenched by the conflicts of post-colonial existence, the reader may simply see Bugul as dangerous to be close to.
Bugul uses symbolism and returns to pivotal events that are reductive and serve more as emblems than explanations. The style is poetic but the descriptions and assertions are often ultimately incoherent. As an artifact of drug abuse and emotional splintering, it's vivid. Ultimately, though, African writers such as Alain Mabanckou, Abdourahman A. Waberi, and Donato Ndongo express themselves more effectively in similar styles. Granted, Mabanckou and Waberi are also sardonic and poke fun at themselves, so there is an ironic distance. Bugul's anger and apparent disorientation may not provide sufficient separation from the subject for her to craft an effective narrative.
Redshirts
#893
Title: Redshirts
Author: John Scalzi
Publisher: Tor
Year: 2012
317 pages
Many of Scalzi's books are like the block print Indian bedspreads you buy in a head shop--they're colorful, they have a lot going on, and they serve their purpose. At the same time, the closer you look, the blurrier and less differentiated the details appear, and the weave is loose.
Redshirts is fun for Trekkies, probably more fun for adolescents, and a reasonable way to spend a few hours poking fun at schlock SF writing. It cost about the same as the bedspread and gives the same amount of pleasure.
Title: Redshirts
Author: John Scalzi
Publisher: Tor
Year: 2012
317 pages
Many of Scalzi's books are like the block print Indian bedspreads you buy in a head shop--they're colorful, they have a lot going on, and they serve their purpose. At the same time, the closer you look, the blurrier and less differentiated the details appear, and the weave is loose.
Redshirts is fun for Trekkies, probably more fun for adolescents, and a reasonable way to spend a few hours poking fun at schlock SF writing. It cost about the same as the bedspread and gives the same amount of pleasure.
The Simpsons/Futurama Crossover Crisis
#892
Title: The Simpsons/Futurama Crossover Crisis
Author: Matt Groening & Bill Morrison
Publisher: Harry N. Abrams
Year: 2010
208 pages
As others have remarked, both The Simpsons and Futurama are funnier in motion than statically presented. However, the comic format allows time to explore visual details. The production on this volume is of high quality with crisp inking. Line, color, and composition seem slightly pitched toward the Simpsons style.
Title: The Simpsons/Futurama Crossover Crisis
Author: Matt Groening & Bill Morrison
Publisher: Harry N. Abrams
Year: 2010
208 pages
As others have remarked, both The Simpsons and Futurama are funnier in motion than statically presented. However, the comic format allows time to explore visual details. The production on this volume is of high quality with crisp inking. Line, color, and composition seem slightly pitched toward the Simpsons style.
Te Korokarewe
#891
Title: Te Korokarewe
Author: Tebuai Uaai
Illustrator: Buatia Kauea
Publisher: University of the South Pacific, Institute of Education
Year: 1987
20 pages
The Gilbertese version of Cutting Toddy in Kiribati, which I'm using as my updated Kiribati book for my world challenge. Purchased at the University of the South Pacific bookstore in Suva, Fiji, visiting which had been a goal of mine since I began ordering Pacific island books online from USP several years ago. It's a wonderful bookstore and I would have browsed for hours quite happily had we not used up much of our time in Suva by walking to campus from the Fiji Museum.
Title: Te Korokarewe
Author: Tebuai Uaai
Illustrator: Buatia Kauea
Publisher: University of the South Pacific, Institute of Education
Year: 1987
20 pages
The Gilbertese version of Cutting Toddy in Kiribati, which I'm using as my updated Kiribati book for my world challenge. Purchased at the University of the South Pacific bookstore in Suva, Fiji, visiting which had been a goal of mine since I began ordering Pacific island books online from USP several years ago. It's a wonderful bookstore and I would have browsed for hours quite happily had we not used up much of our time in Suva by walking to campus from the Fiji Museum.
Givers of Wisdom, Labourers Without Gain: Essays on Women in Solomon Islands
#890
Title: Givers of Wisdom, Labourers Without Gain: Essays on Women in Solomon Islands
Author: Alice Aruhe'eta Pollard
Publisher: Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific
Year: 2000
112 pages
A set of essays on women's issues in the Solomons by a scholar and advocate who is herself a Solomon Islander. Readable, informative, and a useful glimpse into a changing culture and its challenges for women.
Title: Givers of Wisdom, Labourers Without Gain: Essays on Women in Solomon Islands
Author: Alice Aruhe'eta Pollard
Publisher: Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific
Year: 2000
112 pages
A set of essays on women's issues in the Solomons by a scholar and advocate who is herself a Solomon Islander. Readable, informative, and a useful glimpse into a changing culture and its challenges for women.
Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk: A Modest Bestiary
#889
Title: Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk: A Modest Bestiary
Author: David Sedaris
Illustrator: Ian Falconer
Publisher: Little, Brown
Year: 2010
159 pages
I generally like Sedaris, and this was an interesting idea, but I didn't enjoy it. The first piece that ended with a shocking twist was fresh, but the same mechanism was used repeatedly and reductively. I get it--people are awful and not cute and benign like little bunnies. If I want to read stories that simply provide repetitive examples of this idea, I'll read Chuck Palahniuk.
Title: Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk: A Modest Bestiary
Author: David Sedaris
Illustrator: Ian Falconer
Publisher: Little, Brown
Year: 2010
159 pages
I generally like Sedaris, and this was an interesting idea, but I didn't enjoy it. The first piece that ended with a shocking twist was fresh, but the same mechanism was used repeatedly and reductively. I get it--people are awful and not cute and benign like little bunnies. If I want to read stories that simply provide repetitive examples of this idea, I'll read Chuck Palahniuk.
In a Sunburned Country
#888
Title: In a Sunburned Country
Author: Bill Bryson
Publisher: Broadway Books
Year: 200/2001
335 pages
Bryson's enjoyable peregrinations in Australia, which were not only enjoyable to read while there, but also gave me something to chat about with the Australians with whom I shared a table while on tour in the South Pacific. It's true--mention funnel webs or croc attacks and you won't have to say another word for the whole meal as Aussies regale you with anecdotes about their poisonous and/or toothy creatures for hours. Bryson, like Twain and Theroux, brings in a lot of history and natural history, which I appreciate in a travelogue.
Title: In a Sunburned Country
Author: Bill Bryson
Publisher: Broadway Books
Year: 200/2001
335 pages
Bryson's enjoyable peregrinations in Australia, which were not only enjoyable to read while there, but also gave me something to chat about with the Australians with whom I shared a table while on tour in the South Pacific. It's true--mention funnel webs or croc attacks and you won't have to say another word for the whole meal as Aussies regale you with anecdotes about their poisonous and/or toothy creatures for hours. Bryson, like Twain and Theroux, brings in a lot of history and natural history, which I appreciate in a travelogue.
Cutting Toddy in Kiribati
#887
Title: Cutting Toddy in Kiribati
Author: Tebuai Uaai
Illustrator: Buatia Kauea
Publisher: University of the South Pacific, Institute of Education
Country: Kiribati (replacement)
Year: 1987
20 pages
Kiribati.
A basic low-level reader, made more interesting b the fact that it's from Kiribati and about toddy production. If you're not from a community that collects and ferments palm sap, this is a good illustration of how inexplicable even an easy reader can be when it's culturally incongruous.
Title: Cutting Toddy in Kiribati
Author: Tebuai Uaai
Illustrator: Buatia Kauea
Publisher: University of the South Pacific, Institute of Education
Country: Kiribati (replacement)
Year: 1987
20 pages
Kiribati.
A basic low-level reader, made more interesting b the fact that it's from Kiribati and about toddy production. If you're not from a community that collects and ferments palm sap, this is a good illustration of how inexplicable even an easy reader can be when it's culturally incongruous.
The Full Cupboard of Life (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #5)
#886
Title: The Full Cupboard of Life (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #5)
Author: Alexander McCall Smith
Publisher: Anchor
Year: 2005
198 pages
Okay enough, but what would have kicked it to a 3 or 4 star book for me is if the wedding had actually been Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni's idea, revealed as a surprising twist at the end of the novel. About those orphans--what are they, props? They barely figure in the narrative at all.
Title: The Full Cupboard of Life (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #5)
Author: Alexander McCall Smith
Publisher: Anchor
Year: 2005
198 pages
Okay enough, but what would have kicked it to a 3 or 4 star book for me is if the wedding had actually been Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni's idea, revealed as a surprising twist at the end of the novel. About those orphans--what are they, props? They barely figure in the narrative at all.
The Kalahari Typing School for Men (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #4)
#885
Title: The Kalahari Typing School for Men (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #4)
Author: Alexander McCall Smith
Publisher: Anchor
Year: 2002
201 pages
Another "eh" installment, suffering the lack of an adequate editor. What happened to Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni's depression? It's alluded to, but functionally gone. What about Mma Makutsi's excellent work at the garage? It just seems to disappear, as does the work ethic she appeared to have instilled in the apprentices? Why does Mma Makutsi give up on her love interest for no particular reason? And I could swear that in the second book she said she didn't like bush tea, yet she's drinking it constantly. It would be very easy to make this hang together more tightly, but I don't see that happening in this series.
Title: The Kalahari Typing School for Men (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #4)
Author: Alexander McCall Smith
Publisher: Anchor
Year: 2002
201 pages
Another "eh" installment, suffering the lack of an adequate editor. What happened to Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni's depression? It's alluded to, but functionally gone. What about Mma Makutsi's excellent work at the garage? It just seems to disappear, as does the work ethic she appeared to have instilled in the apprentices? Why does Mma Makutsi give up on her love interest for no particular reason? And I could swear that in the second book she said she didn't like bush tea, yet she's drinking it constantly. It would be very easy to make this hang together more tightly, but I don't see that happening in this series.
Awareness Raising on Court Rules Relating to Domestic Violence in Vanuatu
#884
Title: Awareness Raising on Court Rules Relating to Domestic Violence in Vanuatu
Author: Shirley Randell
Publisher: Blackstone
Year: 2003
72 pages
A grant report on programs intended to increase ni-Vanuatu awareness of changes in legal definitions of and remedies for domestic violence. Interesting for this reason, but also as an example of outcome reporting (including quotes from participants in Bislama with English translation). Includes recommendations based on participant feedback.
If you need a book from Vanuatu for a challenge, this one is available as a PDF at http://www.sria.com.vu/docs/dvpcocolour.pdf
Title: Awareness Raising on Court Rules Relating to Domestic Violence in Vanuatu
Author: Shirley Randell
Publisher: Blackstone
Year: 2003
72 pages
A grant report on programs intended to increase ni-Vanuatu awareness of changes in legal definitions of and remedies for domestic violence. Interesting for this reason, but also as an example of outcome reporting (including quotes from participants in Bislama with English translation). Includes recommendations based on participant feedback.
If you need a book from Vanuatu for a challenge, this one is available as a PDF at http://www.sria.com.vu/docs/dvpcocolour.pdf
Morality for Beautiful Girls (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #3)
#883
Title: Morality for Beautiful Girls (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #3)
Author: Alexander McCall Smith
Publisher: Anchor
Year: 2002
227 pages
Light fun, but it didn't hold together as well as Tears of the Giraffe. Smith has trouble keeping his characters consistent and showing their changes over time. Like a weekly sitcom, they seem to revert. I don't buy Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni's depression, for example--it appears to exist solely to be a plot complication.
Title: Morality for Beautiful Girls (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #3)
Author: Alexander McCall Smith
Publisher: Anchor
Year: 2002
227 pages
Light fun, but it didn't hold together as well as Tears of the Giraffe. Smith has trouble keeping his characters consistent and showing their changes over time. Like a weekly sitcom, they seem to revert. I don't buy Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni's depression, for example--it appears to exist solely to be a plot complication.
The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet
#882
Title: The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet
Author: Reif Larsen
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2009
375 pages
While I enjoyed this very much, I thought it ended with a whimper when even the same action could have been a bang. I'd recommend it anyway as an ambitious and entertaining piece that falls just short of its promise.
Title: The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet
Author: Reif Larsen
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2009
375 pages
While I enjoyed this very much, I thought it ended with a whimper when even the same action could have been a bang. I'd recommend it anyway as an ambitious and entertaining piece that falls just short of its promise.
Wan Sapraes Blong Mama
#881
Title: Wan Sapraes Blong Mama
Author: Aukusitino Tualasea
Illustrator: Josefa Uluinaceva
Translator: Viran Moah
Publisher: University of the South Pacific, Institute of Education
Year: 1989
1996 pages
An early reader in Bislama, a creole spoken on Vanuatu. It's not too hard to understand if you immerse yourself for awhile (and remember that save is derived from French or Portuguese and means "know"). It's not clear from the scant traces of this book online, but my best guess is that the English A Surprise for Mum was the first and that O se meaalofa mo Tina (in Samoan), Wanfala Sapraies Fo Mami (in a different pidgin or creole), and this volume are translations.
Title: Wan Sapraes Blong Mama
Author: Aukusitino Tualasea
Illustrator: Josefa Uluinaceva
Translator: Viran Moah
Publisher: University of the South Pacific, Institute of Education
Year: 1989
1996 pages
An early reader in Bislama, a creole spoken on Vanuatu. It's not too hard to understand if you immerse yourself for awhile (and remember that save is derived from French or Portuguese and means "know"). It's not clear from the scant traces of this book online, but my best guess is that the English A Surprise for Mum was the first and that O se meaalofa mo Tina (in Samoan), Wanfala Sapraies Fo Mami (in a different pidgin or creole), and this volume are translations.
Are You There Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea
#880
Title: Are You There Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea
Author: Chelsea Handler
Publisher: HarperEntertainment
Year: 2007
264 pages
I've never heard Chelsea Handler, and I imagine that timing would play an important role in the delivery of these (I presume) monologues. Handler is at best entertaining, but over-relies on obscenity and scatology for her humor. This is too bad because it's clear that she's smart and observant, which would be sufficient on its own and arguably more enjoyable.
Title: Are You There Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea
Author: Chelsea Handler
Publisher: HarperEntertainment
Year: 2007
264 pages
I've never heard Chelsea Handler, and I imagine that timing would play an important role in the delivery of these (I presume) monologues. Handler is at best entertaining, but over-relies on obscenity and scatology for her humor. This is too bad because it's clear that she's smart and observant, which would be sufficient on its own and arguably more enjoyable.
A Queer and Pleasant Danger: The True Story of a Nice Jewish Boy Who Joins the Church of Scientology and Leaves Twelve Years Later to Become the Lovely Lady She is Today
#879
Title: A Queer and Pleasant Danger: The True Story of a Nice Jewish Boy Who Joins the Church of Scientology and Leaves Twelve Years Later to Become the Lovely Lady She is Today
Author: Kate Bornstein
Publisher: Beacon Press
Year: 2012
280 pages
An enjoyable though at times heartbreaking memoir, recounting Borenstein's intertwined journeys in gender, religion, and self-knowledge. It's interesting to speculate about the course of her life if she hadn't been booted out of Scientology, where she seemed pretty happy and productive.
The latter section where she addresses her daughter directly didn't work as well for me. It may still be too close to Bornstein's heart to receive the same slightly distanced, slightly ironic treatment that gave the rest of the book its compelling tone.
Title: A Queer and Pleasant Danger: The True Story of a Nice Jewish Boy Who Joins the Church of Scientology and Leaves Twelve Years Later to Become the Lovely Lady She is Today
Author: Kate Bornstein
Publisher: Beacon Press
Year: 2012
280 pages
An enjoyable though at times heartbreaking memoir, recounting Borenstein's intertwined journeys in gender, religion, and self-knowledge. It's interesting to speculate about the course of her life if she hadn't been booted out of Scientology, where she seemed pretty happy and productive.
The latter section where she addresses her daughter directly didn't work as well for me. It may still be too close to Bornstein's heart to receive the same slightly distanced, slightly ironic treatment that gave the rest of the book its compelling tone.
In the Shadow of the Banyan
#878
Title: In the Shadow of the Banyan
Author: Vaddey Ratner
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Year: 2012
336 pages
Received as a giveaway from Goodreads First Reads. I don't think I've read a novel set in Cambodia yet, though I've read plenty of non-fiction, memoirs, travel books, and bird guides.
***
After reading: Ratner chose to fictionalize her lived experience rather than writing a straight memoir. While I imagine I'd appreciate her memoir as well, her decision means that she was able to change events for greater narrative coherence, symbolic resonance, and lyricism. In the Shadow of the Banyan is both more clearly structured and more literary than any of the memoirs I've read of the Khmer Rouge time. While the rawness and veracity of the memoirs holds the readers' attention, Ratner comes at the same content as fiction, which opens other possibilities to engage and hold the reader's attention. A strong effort, and I look forward to her future work.
Title: In the Shadow of the Banyan
Author: Vaddey Ratner
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Year: 2012
336 pages
Received as a giveaway from Goodreads First Reads. I don't think I've read a novel set in Cambodia yet, though I've read plenty of non-fiction, memoirs, travel books, and bird guides.
***
After reading: Ratner chose to fictionalize her lived experience rather than writing a straight memoir. While I imagine I'd appreciate her memoir as well, her decision means that she was able to change events for greater narrative coherence, symbolic resonance, and lyricism. In the Shadow of the Banyan is both more clearly structured and more literary than any of the memoirs I've read of the Khmer Rouge time. While the rawness and veracity of the memoirs holds the readers' attention, Ratner comes at the same content as fiction, which opens other possibilities to engage and hold the reader's attention. A strong effort, and I look forward to her future work.
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