Friday, March 30, 2012

Outcast But Not Forsaken: True Stories from a Paraguayan Leper Colony

#794
Title: Outcast But Not Forsaken: True Stories from a Paraguayan Leper Colony
Author: Maureen Burn [Ethnographer]
Publisher: Plough Publishing House
Year: 1986
Country: Paraguay
168 pages

An ethnography of a Bavarian-born Paraguayan woman with leprosy, collected and expanded upon by a Hutterite sister. Illustrated throughout with line drawings by the narrator, Doña María, as well as others. Interesting both for its descriptions of life in the leper colony and the very present animosity of the Roman Catholic majority for the "Evangelicals," Protestants, and Salvation Army adherents in their midst. Doña María describes being chastised for reading the Bible (as far as I can tell, the implication is that she dares to do so without requiring an intercessor to interpret it for her.)

Oddly, in none of the illustrations, whether by Doña María or others, does anyone appear to have leprosy, though hands and feet are often roughly sketched. On p. 46 there's an illustration where a woman has 6 toes, but I imagine this is accidental rather than deliberate.

I have the paperback edition. If I can, I'll scan that cover.

Read with Nalalelua and Bowman, No Footprints in the Sand: A Memoir of Kalaupapa to compare to the experience of a Hawaiian leper colony. 

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Shadows in Flight (Shadow #5; Ender's Saga #12)

#793
Title: Shadows in Flight (Shadow #5; Ender's Saga #12)
Author: Orson Scott Card
Publisher: Tor
Year: 2012
237 pages

Audiobook.

Review hidden. Highlight to see spoilers. The most recent installment in Card's Shadow series, this reads more like an extended short story than a novella or short novel, despite its length. There aren't really enough plot points to warrant the length, so I infer that Card's purpose was not only to move Bean and his three genetically-modified children away from Earth, forward in time through near-light speed travel, and into an encounter with the Formics, but to take some time for character development. The set-up here is a bit like Ender Wiggins's family in that a bossy male child dominates a placating female and a somewhat preoccupied male sibling. Unlike in the original Ender's constellation, this younger brother (also named Ender) puts his domineering brother in his place. Unfortunately, the exchanges between Bean and these children are reminiscent of Lazarus Long's with his also-preternaturally intelligent, wise-cracking daughters (actually, clones), including discussions of intra-group reproduction and sage theory/advice from the old coot (though Bean is in his mid-20s, he's clearly become an old coot in the Heinlein tradition) as they speed in their ship through time and space. Unlike the creepy Long twins ("It’s time for you to impregnate us"; "Both of us"), child Carlotta is fairly disgusted by the notion of reproducing, even at an extracted ovum level, with her family members.

Though almost incidentally the problem of Anton's Key is solved here, the big twist introduced in this installment is that at least some of the Formic subspecies do have independent thought, which contradicts what the Hive Queen told Ender in the first series. This raises a troubling ethical challenge that I presume Card will address as he wraps up this series. Meanwhile, Bean has enjoined his children to modify their intestinal biota so they can eat food on the planet they appear about to colonize with the Formics. This may mark the beginning of human/Formic co-civilization and genetics.

There are two aspects of this volume I found poignant. The first is Bean the giant lying down to die on the grass in the Formic colony ship, an image which resonates across time and space to Ender's game and the giant he discovers later in the first series. The second is that, through Bean's eyes, Ender becomes more clearly the object of sympathy, and his embodiment of the Wandering Jew archetype is more pronounced.

Half of a Yellow Sun

#793
Title: Half of a Yellow Sun
Author: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Publisher: Knopf
Year: 2006
433 pages

Audiobook.

I enjoyed this novel of Biafra, which was both sweeping and very personal. The audiobook reader did a very nice job with voice characterizations. I found the action somewhat melodramatic, and felt the ending was rushed. 

Monday, March 26, 2012

Sir Hereward and Mister Fitz: Three Adventures

#792
Title: Sir Hereward and Mister Fitz: Three Adventures
Author: Garth Nix
Publisher: Nix Entertainment Pty Ltd
Year: 2011
96 pages

Ebook.

A cute little e-collection from Garth Nix, with a novella (the best of the set) and two short stories. Its strength is in the world-building and Nix's deft character development, particularly for Mister Fitz. However, this definitely has the feel of a work in progress; at the moment it's picaresque and the action, while entertaining and enjoyable, doesn't seem to advance the plot or maturation (though it's hinted that Mister Fitz becomes a darker character, and Sir Hereward more ambivalent about him and their mission over time). While not a young adult piece, I really fail to see why it needs a warning that it's intended for adults. Yes, there are some gooey deaths and references to sexual behavior, but it's pretty tame compared to something like Bella and Edward's pillow-snapping sex in Breaking Dawn.

Birds of the Fiji Bush

#791
Title: Birds of the Fiji Bush
Author: Fergus Clunie
Illustrator:Pauline Morse
Publisher: Fiji Museum
Year: 1984/2007
147 pages

A very attractive little guide to Fijian birds, with much helpful information about habits, breeding, and other behaviors. Beautiful, large, plentiful illustrations.

Unfortunately, the text is extremely garbled at times. My guess is that this edition was scanned from a previous one and not then proofread. A few examples:

bright yell edging
the short tail hidden by Ion) hairy feathering
and at bizarre when moulting
Foral between ground and canopy

These are all from one description, and aren't the only errors in it. This is one of the more intelligible descriptions; though not all are compromised, some are so rife with errors that a mental running start is necessary to understand them. It makes me want to volunteer to read proofs for the next edition. 

Blood Diamonds: Tracing the Deadly Path of the World's Most Precious Stones

#790
Title: Blood Diamonds: Tracing the Deadly Path of the World's Most Precious Stones
Author: Greg Campbell
Publisher: Basic
Year: 2004
280 pages

A bit on the hard-drinking, crazy journalist side for my taste, though the evidence of this style is more subdued than is often the case. As an explanatory text on blood diamonds (a.k.a. conflict diamonds), it does a very good job of following the money, exposing both corrupt and ineffective systems, and describing the trafficking/enslavement and mutilation or execution of disenfranchised and disempowered people. In this regard, it helps answer some questions about why some African countries have failed to thrive in the post-colonial period, instead becoming embroiled in civil strife.

Many gory parts--not for the faint of heart.

Silent Terror: A Journey into Contemporary African Slavery

#789
Title: Silent Terror: A Journey into Contemporary African Slavery
Author: Samuel Cotton
Publisher: Writers & Readers Publishing
Country: Mauritania
Year: 1999
192 pages

I'll need to do some more reading, but this looks like a book to teach with. Cotton, a journalist and graduate student, flew to Senegal and Mauritania to substantiate reports of ongoing chattel slavery of black Africans to Muslim/Arab Africans. I think Bales's Disposable People: New Slavery in the Global Economy will be a good and more recent follow-up.

Shimmer

#788
Title: Shimmer
Author: Eric Barnes
Publisher: Unbridled Books
Year: 2009
288 pages

Ebook.

I confess that I covertly read this on my phone when I was supposed to be paying attention. It is also the first book I've read on a phone.

Shimmer has reasonably smooth writing and the plot progresses at a good pace. The tone is pleasant despite the protagonist's stress. It is essentially a black box novel in which the box is never opened for the reader; instead, a certain amount of deus ex machina resolves the conflict.

The Faith Sector and HIV/AIDS in Botswana: Responses and Challenges

#787
Title: The Faith Sector and HIV/AIDS in Botswana: Responses and Challenges
Editors: Lovemore Togarasei, Sana K. Mmolai, & Fidelis Nkomazana
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Year: 2011
260 pages

An uneven professional anthology, but the unevenness was fascinating in and of itself, since it illustrated both organizational and linguistic differences between academic cultures. Several chapters were excellent, including one on evangelical churches and another on traditional healers' responses to HIV.

Because the majority of religions in Botswana are Christian-based (or Christian-based syncretic), there is little variation in the espoused definitions of sin (even if what constitutes a sin varies slightly). One chapter is from a Muslim perspective, and while better written than some, seemed more dogmatic. It was one of only two chapters, I think, to mention homosexual transmission, and I'm not sure that any discussed IV drug use (though iatrogenic transmission was). The only reference to substances I recall was about disinhibition, not about routes of transmission. This provides a very interesting cognitive dissonance for the reader of US-produced popular press materials on HIV, which historically have focused on men who have sex with men and IV drug users.

I'm looking forward to learning about which faith-based prevention and intervention strategies have worked in this country.

The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives

   #786
Title: The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives
Author: Leonard Mlodinow
Publisher: Pantheon
Year: 2008
256 pages


Audiobook.

My bone to pick with this popular stats/probability text is that Mlodinow indulges in the same sloppy examples and logic that marred so many of my math and science classes. If you're going to talk probability, stick with dice. As a nerd from the early days of Dungeons and Dragons, I completely understand the difficulty of generating random numbers on your scientific calculator because the one guy who made polyhedral dice wasn't feeling well and there wasn't a dodecahedral die to be had in all the land. Believe me, nothing pleases me more than an extended discussion of the normal distribution. And I'm happy to hear about Bayesian analysis and its place in the science of probability. False positives in HIV testing? Bring it on. But please, don't confuse the issue with examples about humans and their behavior. To put it another way: Any example that you're going to have to keep qualifying by removing variables isn't a good example. All athletes don't have equal abilities. All of management isn't luck of the draw. The freewheeling omission of factors such as capacity, motivation, and personality doom these examples and muddy rather than clarify the concepts. Mlodinow further obscures his points with anecdotes about writing his child's paper and getting only a 93. What a shocker! In a move repeated throughout the book, Mlodinow confuses two variables. An instructor is not only making a judgement about the excellence of an essay in and of itself, if even at all. In my experience, it's more likely that the instructor is also, or entirely, evaluating whether the student followed instructions for presentation, content, and organization. That's not the same thing. By the way, if I ever catch Mr. Mlodnow's child turning in a paper written by his father for one of my classes, they will find that I regard this less as entertainment and more as a matter for the academic conduct office.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

The Innocents Abroad

#785
 Title: The Innocents Abroad
Author: Mark Twain
Publisher: Modern Library
Year: 1869/2007
560 pages

I gave up on the audiobook about 3/4 in. The narrator's voice has an annoying combination of atonal hoarseness and nasalness that never stopped bothering me.

I enjoy Twain's use of language and dry humor, but had not yet read his travelogues. Since they predate his famous novels, it's interesting to see his early style, which is less assured than it would become but still confident.

I'd characterize this narrative as less racist than xenophobic, though Twain is clearly sometimes truly unhappy and at other times exaggerating for comedic effect. Sometimes the object he's aiming for is to poke fun at the American tourist's narrowness of thought and ethnocentrism.

In the context of the first real pleasure cruise (a side-wheel steamboat, if memory serves), Twain and companions were remarkably adventurous, defying quarantine, for example, and scrambling for hours at night over crumbly Greek hills and through dog-patrolled vineyards in order to see the Parthenon.

Having visited many of Twain's destinations (and many of that number by ship), I thoroughly enjoyed his observations, whether or not I agreed about places, peoples, or cultural quirks.

Aya (Aya #1)

#784
Title: Aya (Aya #1)
Author: Marguerite Abouet
Illustrator: Clément Oubrerie
Publisher: Drawn & Quarterly Publications
Year: 2007
105 pages

An enjoyable graphic novel that follows Aya, a teen in Ivory Coast, and her friends. It has an initial light feel that becomes more grim, as well as less-overt representation of problematic societal themes, such as corruption and the commodification of women. The teens are realistically portrayed, the action moves alone, and the graphics are colorful and have a lot of motion. I tend to prefer graphic novels that have the same author/illustrator, but this was a pleasing example of a collaboration. I'd like to read the others in this series as well.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Tree of Codes

#783
 Title: Tree of Codes
Author: Jonathan Safran Foer
Publisher: Visual Editions
Year: 2010
139 pages

Foer here uses die-cut pages a form of collage/assemblage to produce a story from within a story--"a dream that The Street of Crocodiles might have had," as he says in his afterword. It's not only a dream of that novel, but a dream of the dream, with cut-outs framing full or partial words and phrases from later in the book so that for page upon page, the reader sees below the current text "darkness" or "his eyes darkened and suffering." The effect of this palimpsest is a powerful sense of foreboding.

Tom Phillips played with a similar technique in multiple renditions of  A Humument: A Treated Victorian Novel. There, Phillips extracts text by blocking or partially blocking text on an intact page with drawings and colors. As with Tree of Codes, other text is often evident, though in Phillips's work it's the contextual language whereas in Foer's it's only the extracted text to come, and thus more self-referential.

A fun experiment, and a fun "found" text. Its contribution to literature is more in its form than its substance.

99 Drams of Whiskey: The Accidental Hedonist's Quest for the Perfect Shot and the History of the Drink

#782
Title: 99 Drams of Whiskey: The Accidental Hedonist's Quest for the Perfect Shot and the History of the Drink
Author: Kate Hopkins
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
Year: 2009/2010
320 pages

Blogger Hopkins travels to Ireland, Scotland, Canada, and the US to trace the development of whiskey. Imagine my envy. Kate and friend's travels are enjoyably documented, the history of whiskey is reasonably well incorporated, and her tasting notes are entertaining.

The book might have warranted another star if it had been edited more effectively. Some chapters are cleaner than others, but there are a number of typos, awkward constructions, repeated words, and incorrect words ("provence" for "provenance," "affect for "effect," etc.) that an editor should have caught. Absent from her bibliography is anything from Michael Jackson, whose Complete Guide to Single Malt Scotch is very useful and whose Whiskey: The Definitive World Guide in many ways parallels Hopkins's project.

Hopkins didn't taste my favorite light single malt, Glenmorangie's Cellar 13, nor the one I find most entertaining (Tormore 12-year-old, which tastes of fudge and artichokes). De gustibus non est disputandum.

African Kings: Portraits of a Disappearing Era

#781
Title: African Kings: Portraits of a Disappearing Era
Author: Daniel Laine
Publisher: Ten Speed Press
Year: 2000
160 pages

A large format, beautifully photographed collection of portraits of African kings. "King" is a misnomer as they're primarily clan heads and other group leaders, some titular and others actually powerful. The Introductory essay, "Origins of the African Kingdoms" by Pierre Alexandre, is dense but very useful for putting the portraits in context. It's also helpful for understanding the notes on each portrait, which are not well-organized.

It's interesting to see similarities and differences in ceremonial garb, retinue, and other visual details. For example, several wear headpieces with strings of beads obscuring their faces. I'd have liked clearer commentary about how different groups and customs are related, and a map would have helped a lot.