Sunday, July 29, 2012

Tears of the Giraffe (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #2)

#859
Title: Tears of the Giraffe (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #2)
Author: Alexander McCall Smith
Publisher: Pearson
Year: 2003
233 pages

Better than the first in the series, or perhaps, now having been to Botswana, the images are more vivid and the relationships more culturally nuanced. The parallelism is a bit thick, but I was entertained. Audiobook narrator Lisette Lecat does a lovely job of differentiating characters not only by vocal tone but by how they pronounce Setswana words.

The Autobiography of Black Hawk

#858
Title: The Autobiography of Black Hawk
Author: Black Hawk & J. B. Patterson (Ed.)
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Year: 1975
160 pages

Audiobook from Audible. Black Hawk's story of duplicity by the US. While I assume he is disposed toward his own positive account of himself, he also acknowledges his errors at many points. Given the execrable conduct of the US government in its dealings with native people, I'll presume a reasonable degree of accuracy. Black Hawk is clear and even-handed, and I enjoyed reading this despite the sorrow provoked by its content.

The Basque History of the World: The Story of a Nation

#857
Title: The Basque History of the World: The Story of a Nation
Author: Mark Kurlansky
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2000
400 pages

I'm more a fan of natural history than straight up human history, but Kurlansky's Basque history forms a reasonable triptych with his Cod: A Biography of the Fish that Changed the World and Salt: A World History--Cod because of the relationship of the Basque to the cod trade and Salt because of its descriptions of pre-national Europe.

Though some sections dragged a bit (for example, the contemporary political scene, which bogged down in details), this was, overall, an enjoyable and sympathetic history, portraying the Basque as more than a furtive people with a terrorist arm who were slaughtered at Guernica. Recipes abound.

Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety

#856
Title: Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
Author: Daniel B. Smith
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Year: 2012
212 pages

Received as a Goodreads First Reads giveaway.

Smith isn't just anxious, he's clinically anxious--an important distinction of quality as well as quantity. This well-written and often amusing memoir also poignantly captures the debilitating nature of his disorder.

John Dies at the End

#855
Title: John Dies at the End
Author: David Wong
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Year: 2009/2010
480 pages
If your idea of fun is to have a drunk, immature adolescent male making up a rambling, internally inconsistent horror story larded with body fluids while playing a video game and laughing because he thinks he's hilarious, knock yourself out. Or just knock yourself out, which might be preferable to reading this.

Old Before My Time: Hayley Okines' Life with Progeria

#854
Title: Old Before My Time: Hayley Okines' Life with Progeria
Author: Hayle Okines, Kerry Okines, & Alison Stokes
Publisher: Accent Press
Year: 2011
224 pages
Before reading:
Won as a first reads ARC. Author's home page: http://hayleyspage.com/

HGPS is a tragic disease that is, or resembles, or mimics, premature aging. I'm hoping the book will strike a good balance between personal story and scientific information.

After reading:
More personal than scientific, the storytelling alternates between Hayley and her mother. The writing is not highly polished, making it a good teaching text. Because there are so few people with progeria, and because Hayley has been participating in clinical trials, the book provides a unique perspective.

Trail of Feathers: In Search of the Birdmen of Peru

#853
Title: Trail of Feathers: In Search of the Birdmen of Peru
Author: Tahir Shah
Publisher: Arcade Publishing
Year: 2003
288 pages

Shah turns a pretty phrase, even when it's about shrunken heads or disgusting food. Here he pursues the legend of the birdmen, a quest that includes colorful and sometimes alarming fellow travelers, grave robbing, hallucinogenic vines, crumbling textiles, matter-of-fact mystics, and the Nazca lines. Shah is neither a curmudgeonly character like Theroux nor a macho creep like some travel writers whom out of delicacy I shall not name. Instead, he lets the reader in on his hopes, his discomforts, and his apparently genial willingness to subject himself to traditional treatments for a variety of discomforts, including parasites in his pants, as he seeks answers to many, sometimes related, questions. Readable and quick-paced, it will cause the reader to be actively delighted that she isn't eating rat stew or picking wolf spiders out of her hair.

Fifty Shades of Grey (Fifty Shades, #1)

#852
Title: Fifty Shades of Grey (Fifty Shades, #1)
Author: E. L. James
Publisher: Vintage
Year: 2011
514 pages

It’s neither as good nor as bad as more extreme reviews might suggest. Much time is spent on contractual disputes, lending it a legalistic air similar to the first segment of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. Less is spent on sexual expression, which is more vanilla than the narrative’s titillation would have you think and written in a classic medium-core pornographic style. The characters make no sense to me; as others have noted, the avowedly clumsy virgin sex goddess and the formal yet crude no-good-for-you unfathomable rich guy aren’t compelling. What’s interesting here are the aspects of the story that amplify or warp Twilight. Here, the female protagonist more readily asserts her power and the male is more clearly rigid and in need of lightening up. Here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y3qZLrC7Ot4
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xqmofb_saturday-night-live-fifty-shades-of-grey_shortfilms

Old Man's War

#851
Title: Old Man's War
Author: John Scalzi
Publisher: Tor
Year: 2006
314 pages

Not Haldeman, not Heinlein, but a fun space opera with light shades of both. Straightforward science fiction, often humorous, not deep, though it raises entertaining and interesting questions.

A Confusion of Princes

#850
Title: A Confusion of Princes
Author: Garth Nix
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
Year: 2012
337 pages

I enjoyed this freestanding novel, a coming-of-age story with nods to other juvenile science fiction and not a little of the end of Robert Charles Wilson's Darwinia. However, Nix is somewhat out of his element in science fiction, and his lack of facility sometimes shows. Though this story isn't picaresque, it feels like it is in that elements don't always seem to have adequate explanations and aren't all well-integrated into the ploy. This looseness of weave contributes to the feeling that it's a video game script (and indeed, there's an associated video game). It sprawls a bit, but I can live with that, and it's fun to see Nix stretch.

Extra Virginity: The Sublime and Scandalous World of Olive Oil

#849
Title: Extra Virginity: The Sublime and Scandalous World of Olive Oil
Author: Tom Mueller
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Year: 2011
238 pages

A very enjoyable natural and political history of olive oil. It has inspired me to spring for a can of Merula and begin to sample oils at a local specialty store.

On the down side, the audiobook reader is not up to par. He mispronounces words like "cuneiform" and engages in sporadic yet really annoying voice characterizations. The last hour or so of the audio is the glossary and website list being read aloud. Attach it as a PDF and be done. Please.

This Child Will Be Great: Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President

#848
Title: This Child Will Be Great: Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President
Author: Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
Publisher: Harper
Year: 2009
315 pages

Memoir and history intertwine here, usually engagingly and sometimes with a degree of detail that's a little boring to those not conversant with recent Liberian politics. Still, Sirleaf has had an amazing life with surprisingly good outcomes, considering how chutzpahdik she's been when confronted by threats of imminent torture, rape, or death. It's quite an astonishing story.

Read with Blood Diamonds: Tracing the Deadly Path of the World's Most Precious Stones to see how the Charles Taylor years affected nearby countries, and with The House at Sugar Beach for another, and different, story of a "Congo" woman surviving the Liberian conflicts.

Maphead: Charting the Wide, Weird World of Geography Wonks

#847
Title: Maphead: Charting the Wide, Weird World of Geography Wonks
Author: Ken Jennings
Publisher: Scribner
Year: 2011
276 pages

It's about, well, maps. And a little about the history of cartography. And the geography bee. And Jennings's childhood. If you thought one of the best aspects of Dungeons & Dragons was creating the terrain on hex paper, you'll enjoy this.

I was shocked to discover one day that my recently-purchased world map was missing Bahrain. Over time, I determined that 6 countries had been omitted. I'm not talking Palestine or the then-not-yet segmented Sudan, but countries like Cape Verde. I tore it down and bought a new world map. If you'd have done so, too, you'll enjoy this book.

Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?

#846
Title: Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?
Author: Jeanette Winterson
Publisher: Grove/Atlantic
Year: 2011/2012
230 pages

A fascinating autobiography that illuminates the author's Oranges are Not the Only Fruit. Winterson knows how to turn a phrase, and though this story sometimes spends too long on philosophical abstractions and psychodynamic interpretation as it nears its end, it still holds together nicely. A good adoption narrative in its own right, and one requiring a level of detective perseverance on the author's part that is reminiscent of Homes's in The Mistress's Daughter



Distrust That Particular Flavor

#845
Title: Distrust That Particular Flavor
Author: William Gibson
Publisher: Putnam
Year: 2012
272 pages

Essays, with afterwords, on a pretty good range of topics. There are some fun ideas, but the best reason to read this collection is Gibson’s quirky and pleasing language. After reading this I’m more likely to re-read some of his post-Sprawl novels, many of which have struck me as similar to leafing through a Williams-Sonoma catalogue while waiting for a plot to arrive.

Golden Bones: An Extraordinary Journey from Hell in Cambodia to a New Life in America

#844
Title: Golden Bones: An Extraordinary Journey from Hell in Cambodia to a New Life in America
Author: Sichan Siv
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Year: 2009
352 pages

Siv’s memoir begins in his childhood; by the time of the Khmer Rouge takeover he was an adult. Thus, his memoir provides a different perspective from those of writers such as Loung Ung, whose stories of this period reflect a child’s perspective. I enjoyed reading about Siv’s trajectory from refugee to government official in the US. Of less reading pleasure was his jingoistic conservatism and Bush boosterism. I wonder how he would feel if, reading my hypothetical memoir, he read that I agreed with President X’s values of xenophobia and not spending US dollars on refugees; perhaps he’d know then how I felt when reading his praise of the Republican version of “family values” that exclude my family.

Understanding Everyday Setswana: A Vocabulary and Reference Book: Tlotlofoko Le Kumako Buka (5th ed.)

#843
Title: Understanding Everyday Setswana: A Vocabulary and Reference Book: Tlotlofoko Le Kumako Buka (5th ed.)
Author: Pam Wilken
Publisher: Maskew Miller Longman
Year: 1994/2009
100 pages

This appears to be geared to English-speaking South Africans. There are some puzzling vocabulary choices and omissions, and no grammar notes at all, which was surprising. There's very little vocabulary that reflects the practices (for example, foods or aspects of village life) of Batswana. However, it's functionally the only somewhat easily accessible Setswana guide.

The Enchantress (The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel, #6)

#842
Title: The Enchantress (The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel, #6)
Author: Michael Scott
Publisher: Delacorte
Year: 2012
509 pages

A somewhat lackluster end to a generally successful series. Scott doesn't think through his time travel sufficiently--he's outside his genre here. The ending [isn't as strong as it could be because too many of the main characters live. And what happened to the tension about Josh's intentions from the other books in the series? I was disappointed in the unconvincing, flabby non-resolution of this important character and plot element. (hide spoiler)] It may be that there are too many people, places, and things for Scott to bring together in a satisfactory manner.

Wabi-Sabi: For Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers

#841
Title: Wabi-Sabi: For Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers
Author: Leonard Koren
Publisher: Stone Bridge Press
Year: 1994
96 pages

The irony of trying to say something categorical about wabi-sabi isn't lost on this author. As a Western, modernist, taxonomically-driven type, I appreciated it, however antithetical it may be to the essence of wabi-sabi. Generally enjoyable as a pensee or exercise. It ends rather suddenly, which I found harsh given the tone. I read it on Danish modern furniture, but reflected on it in the overgrown garden with the stone patio my mother prefers "When it's gukhy, not clean." Honeysuckle wilts. The kiwi hides the moon.

Escaping the Invasion

#840
Title: Escaping the Invasion
Author: Huda M. Al-Medlej
Publisher: CreateSpace
Year: 2012
Country: Kuwait
58 pages

It's hard to find Kuwaiti literature. My other choice was in the military/medical e-mails home, collected as a self-published book genre, and I've read enough of those recently. Escaping the Invasion is a short and simple narrative of the author and her family's escape from Kuwait, beginning with the invasion and ending shortly thereafter at the Saudi border. It's illustrated with photos, though I can't identify the source for most of them. It appears to be intended for a teen reader, and would be a good way to personalize a history lesson with a brief personal story.

Bitterblue (Graceling Realm, #3)

#839
Title: Bitterblue (Graceling Realm, #3)
Author: Kristin Cashore
Publisher: Dial
Year: 2012
563 pages

A very good novel, and a wrap-up for the trilogy that should satisfy everyone (except those who can't do without everyone pairing off at the end). The reader's experience mirror's Bitterblue's in that the story is somewhat twisty, hard to concentrate on at times, and (even if you've read Graceling and Fire), hard to tease apart. Because Cashore is such a skillful writer, I took this as parallelism to Bitterblue's own befuddled efforts to understand her kingdom and grasp the import of events that appeared disconnected but felt related. [Bitterblue's immediate emotional relationship with Fire seemed to me to be the answer to the plaint that Bitterblue is not hooked up. She's far from alone, and there are many kinds of love.

Brandwashed: How Marketers and Advertisers Obscure the Truth, Manipulate Our Minds, and Persuade Us to Buy

#838
Title: Brandwashed: How Marketers and Advertisers Obscure the Truth, Manipulate Our Minds, and Persuade Us to Buy
Author: Martin Lindstrom
Publisher: Crown
Year: 2011
256 pages

I have a lot of criticisms of this, but I'll stick with my gravest. First, the way Lindstrom interprets psychological and other research doesn't always match how I'd interpret it. For example, if you were to hook me up to a plethysmograph (you can't, but that's not the point), you might find that I was physiologically aroused by a stimulus. That's a far different phenomenon than my acting on that arousal. Lindstrom consistently conflates the two. Second, his idea of consumers as essentially mindless bumpkins who are easily suckered and misled doesn't inspire my trust his motives. Third, based on this world view, Lindstrom assigns warrantless motivations to consumers. For example, he asserts that we don't choose the first item from a shelf but reach behind it for the second because we think it's cleaner. To test this hypothesis, I surveyed random family members and friends in situ at the grocery. I didn't interview those who took the first item. They are evidently outliers, even though it was true of most of them. I asked those who reached behind for the second item why they were doing so. Nobody said it was because it was cleaner. For perishables, they said it was because items with a longer time to pull date were further back. For shelved items, they said it was because the ones in the front were dented or dinged (which they were). The only person to cite cleanliness pointed out the filthy children being allowed to paw at the lower cans and boxes. I'd like a million dollars for my fab-o study, please.

There's not a lot here that's not obvious or that you didn't read in an expose 40 years ago. Producers want to sell things. Advertisers misrepresent their products. I'm as easy to influence as anybody, but my behaviors aren't those of Lindstrom's herds of moo-cow consumers who don't seem to read the labels or Consumer Reports, or consider whether products actually work.

Andean Journeys: A Bilingual Anthology of Contemporary Bolivian Poetry

#837
Title: Andean Journeys: A Bilingual Anthology of Contemporary Bolivian Poetry
Author: Ronald Haladyna (Ed.)
Publisher: Trafford
Year: 2011
Country: Bolivia
256 pages

I tended to find the poems by women more engaging. My impression was that a number of the men wanted to use shocking imagery to show their grittiness, while the women's poems seemed both less violent and less obscure.

An e-reader may not be the best technology for facing-page bilingual poetry collections. While it was interesting to jump about recursively in each poem, switching languages as I did, it made for a jumbled cognitive experience.

An African in Greenland

#836
Title: An African in Greenland
Author: Tété-Michel Kpomassie
Publisher: New York Review Books
Year: 1981/2001
Country: Togo
300 pages

Togo. There's more of Greenland than of Togo, but Kpomassie's childhood and early adolescence provide the background for this tale. It's an adventure narrative, though not an impulsive one. Rather, it's a testament to a man who had a goal and slogged his way toward it over a number of years. Read with Gretel Ehrlich's This Cold Heaven: Seven Seasons in Greenland for two views of sometimes-similar experiences.

Pocket Guide: Birds of Southern Africa

#835
Title: Pocket Guide: Birds of Southern Africa
Author: Ian Sinclair
Publisher: Struik Publishers
Year: 2011
144 pages

Not read straight through, but first skimmed, then relentlessly consulted to the point where everything has been read several times. Te best of the pocket birding guides (though, like Pocket Guide to Birds of Southern Africa, it lacks taxonomic names). Includes clear photos, distribution maps, descriptions, habitat, status, voice, migration, breeding, and behavior notes.

Will Grayson, Will Grayson

#834
Title: Will Grayson, Will Grayson
Author: John Green & David Levithan
Publisher: Dutton
Year: 2010
310 pages

Cute and at times moving YA fiction (not science fiction). I thought the ending wasn't quite as believable or as emotionally significant as it should have been.

Zeitoun

#833
Title: Zeitoun
Author: Dave Eggers
Publisher: McSweeney's
Year: 2009
342 pages

Another--what?--ethnographic novel? assistive memoir? by Eggers. I appreciated the journalistic neutrality, but at times felt that this distance made Kathy seem more histrionic and Zeitoun more arrogant. If I were Eggers, I'd have ended with a quote from the Qur'an, since they were interspersed.

I read a World Book Night copy that I gave to someone who hadn't read it, who then asked me to read it so we could discuss it. I then handed it to another American in Africa.

Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly (updated edition)

#832
Title: Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly (updated edition)
Author: Anthony Bourdain
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Year: 2007
312 pages

Classic Bourdain, or ur-Bourdain. My preference is for his experiences of the foods of many lands, but his kitchen notes are entertaining and hold my attention. I will say only that I'm glad my mother is such a good cook; of course I have shallots in the house.

I think that I'll try one of his novels next.

The Ghost Map: The Story of London's Most Terrifying Epidemic--and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World

#831
Title: The Ghost Map: The Story of London's Most Terrifying Epidemic--and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World
Author: Steven Johnson
Publisher: Riverhead
Year: 2006
299 pages

I know I took notes on this, but I can't locate them. Johnson methodically describes the discovery of cholera, picking apart the truth and reality of Whitehead and Snow's contributions, as well as describing the context (sometimes at the broad historical level, sometimes house by house). Johnson unbalances the book's focus and proportions in his attention to bigger themes, some not as closely associated with cholera as one might wish. Johnson ought to have saved these musings for a separate book.

Of Beetles and Angels: A Boy's Remarkable Journey from a Refugee Camp to Harvard

#830
Title: Of Beetles and Angels: A Boy's Remarkable Journey from a Refugee Camp to Harvard
Author: Mawi Asgedom
Publisher: Little, Brown
Year: 2002
176 pages

A straightforward narrative, not very well written, with a moralizing tone I found tedious. I enjoyed learning about his life, but wasn't sure that, as told, it warranted a publication.

There's No Toilet Paper . . . on the Road Less Traveled: The Best of Travel Humor and Misadventure

#829
Title: There's No Toilet Paper . . . on the Road Less Traveled: The Best of Travel Humor and Misadventure
Author: Doug Lansky (Ed.)
Publisher:  Travelers' Tales
Year: 2005
216 pages

I just didn't find most of this very funny. It's hard to say why, but most of the anecdotes seemed dull.

Agent to the Stars

#828
Title: Agent to the Stars
Author: John Scalzi
Publisher: Tom Doherty Associates
Year: 2008
365 pages

Like much of Scalzi's work, this is often funny, easy to read, and enjoyable but not significant-feeling. The characters don't have terribly distinct personalities, and the cleverness of some plot elements is what carries the book.

Tinderbox: How the West Sparked the AIDS Epidemic and How the World Can Finally Overcome It

#827
Title: Tinderbox: How the West Sparked the AIDS Epidemic and How the World Can Finally Overcome It
Author: Craig Timberg & Daniel Helperin
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2012
421 pages

I found this a useful summary of recent advances in our understanding of HIV, its origins, and its prevention. I read it after Epstein's The Invisible Cure: Africa, the West, and the Fight Against AIDS, which covers some of the same points. Together they provide a good update or review. Add Dow and Essex's Saturday Is for Funerals and you've got a pretty good seminar reading list.

I read Tinderbox because I was on my way to sub-Saharan Africa for an HIV seminar and I wanted to be sure my knowledge was up to date. Of as much interest as the book were the significant number of vituperative reviews on Amazon. I can't comment on those that accused Timberg and Halperin of writing a worse book than Pepin's The Origins of AIDS, since I haven't yet read it. A few reviewers assert that only condoms prevent AIDS. I will merely say that this simply isn't true and move on. The troubling reviews go like this: Halperin is falsely representing male circumcision as an effective HIV prevention technique because he is Jewish and has the agenda of somehow Judaizing Africa. Some of these reviews are quite anti-Semitic.

As I say, I was in sub-Saharan Africa, so I thought I'd ask. Specifically, I asked several experts, ranging from government health representatives to heads of medical centers treating HIV. Here's a typical conversation:

Me: "A new book in the US supports male circumcision, saying that it decreases HIV acquisition by the circumcised males."

Expert: "Yes, this is true. The foreskin has receptors that HIV attaches to easily, so circumcision decreases the male's likelihood of becoming HIV+."

Me: "Some people in the US believe that the results of the Orange Farm study are not statistically valid. They say that the one of the authors is promoting male circumcision for religious reasons."

Expert: [Puzzled frown.]

Me: "They say that because he is Jewish he is trying to convert Africans to Judaism."

Expert: 1) "Do they not know that Islamic men are circumcised?" or 2) "But that wouldn't make a man Jewish" or 3) "Actually, many of the groups in this region practiced adolescent circumcision prior to the introduction of Christianity" or 4) [bewildered stare].

Me: "So if I were to reply to these allegations, what would you like me to say?"

Expert: "We would like you to say that African medical professionals are satisfied with the results of the Orange Farm study."

There you go. I'm not going to post it on Amazon, but I report it here. And I'm not going to argue about it.

Insurgent (Divergent #2)


#826
Title: Insurgent (Divergent #2)
Author: Veronica Roth
Publisher: HarperCollins
Year: 2012
525 pages

While this advances the story to an interesting point, I found it hard to get through. The timing seemed off (push, push, push, then sudden sagging, listless moments of teen bickering or love) and the characters very similar to each other in tone (though the Dauntless are hotheaded, Abnegation self-sacrificing, etc.). The trickiness of the story (for example, who's a spy, who's a counter-spy, etc.) was wearing after awhile and became hard to follow. Through it all, Mary Sue Tris is heroic, self-evaluative, insightful, smart, and impossible to wound in any meaningful way.

At its best, it moves from themes of identity and group pride (in Divergent) to ability and empathy here. That's a good direction for a YA novel, especially one about factions, belonging, and complexity.