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. 

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

Following the Equator: A Journey Around the World

#877
Title: Following the Equator: A Journey Around the World
Author: Mark Twain
Publisher: Dover
Year: 1897/1979
712 pages

Not quite as enjoyable as Twain's The Innocents Abroad. The latter is more pitched toward travelogue, whereas this is a blend of travel, history, politics, and amusing digressions. This is not to say that it's not a good book, but that it ranges about in a way that readers of Oliver Sacks's Oaxaca Journal may recognize.

Readers who complain of Twain's racism seem to me to be missing the point. Give that this is a man whose childhood was before the US Civil War, he is remarkably respectful and appreciative of the people he meets. What some readers seem to miss is that he exaggerates for effect; that the effect sought is to render the racist/colonial/imperialist perspectives of the majority people absurd through exaggeration; and that he mocks everyone. I'm not suggesting that some of his comments aren't problematic by today's standards, but they are less so than much of what I read in US newspapers.

Tales from the Torrid Zone: Travels in the Deep Tropics

#876
Title: Tales from the Torrid Zone: Travels in the Deep Tropics
Author: Alexander Frater
Publisher:  Knopf
Year: 2007
400 pages

Could be used for Vanuatu in a read-the-world challenge, which is useful because it's both more available and easier to engage with than Grace Mera Molisa's Black Stone, the only other ni-Vanuatu book I've found.

Pretty much what it says--tales from the tropics, not so much a memoir as little memoirs, or pensees, or recollections. The book is framed by stories of bells associated with his grandfather's church. More stories than not take place in or around Vanuatu; others range farther afield. Some of Frater's travels were for work, some for pleasure, and some the circumstances of his birth and family life. Some chapters cohere more effectively than others; some seem very loosely constructed. It's sometimes languid, sometimes torpid. Read a chapter at a time, in a hammock.