#1006
Title: The Journal of Best Practices: A Memoir of Marriage, Asperger Syndrome, and One Man's Quest to Be a Better Husband
Author: David Finch
Publisher: Scribner
Year: 2012
225 pages
An
entertaining memoir by a man with high-functioning Asperger's. While I
agree with some reviewers that some of what he describes is just human
behavior within normal limits (they say man behavior but having
lived with men, this seems too sweeping a dismissal), some is quite
clearly in the Aspie range. Read with Robison's Look Me in the Eye for comparison.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge
#1005
Title: Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge
Author: Mike Resnick
Publisher: Phoenix Pick
Year: 1994/2012
46 pages
A nice idea with poor execution and lackluster writing. I'm surprised that it was an award winner.
Title: Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge
Author: Mike Resnick
Publisher: Phoenix Pick
Year: 1994/2012
46 pages
A nice idea with poor execution and lackluster writing. I'm surprised that it was an award winner.
The Ramayana
#1004
Title: The Ramayana
Author: Anonymous
Translator?: Bulbul Sharma
Publisher: ? Audible edition
Year: 2012
Country: India
~180 pages
The rating is for this version, not for the Ramayana per se. Though entitled "The Ramayana," this is a gloss of the text into a narrative told at about a middle reader level. While it tells me the story, I have no idea whether the details are accurate. Certainly the structure has been altered and I have no sense of the meter.
Title: The Ramayana
Author: Anonymous
Translator?: Bulbul Sharma
Publisher: ? Audible edition
Year: 2012
Country: India
~180 pages
The rating is for this version, not for the Ramayana per se. Though entitled "The Ramayana," this is a gloss of the text into a narrative told at about a middle reader level. While it tells me the story, I have no idea whether the details are accurate. Certainly the structure has been altered and I have no sense of the meter.
Labels:
Asia,
audiobook,
in-country author,
India,
poetry,
religion/myth,
world books
The Upanishads
#1003
Title: The Upanishads
Author: Anonymous
Translator: Juan Mascaró
Publisher: Penguin Classics
Year: 500 BCE/1965
Country: India
144 pages
This is unlike most Penguin volumes in that there are no explanatory notes. Instead, there is a rambling religious essay by the translator, the gist of which is that if you're a right-thinking person, you'll understand that the religious views espoused in the text are correct. This perspective is supported by quotes from other religious texts, Shakespeare, and poets. Not impressive and not what I expect from Penguin.
Title: The Upanishads
Author: Anonymous
Translator: Juan Mascaró
Publisher: Penguin Classics
Year: 500 BCE/1965
Country: India
144 pages
This is unlike most Penguin volumes in that there are no explanatory notes. Instead, there is a rambling religious essay by the translator, the gist of which is that if you're a right-thinking person, you'll understand that the religious views espoused in the text are correct. This perspective is supported by quotes from other religious texts, Shakespeare, and poets. Not impressive and not what I expect from Penguin.
Labels:
Asia,
in-country author,
India,
poetry,
religion/myth,
world books
Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon #1)
#1002
Title: Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon #1)
Author: China Miéville
Publisher: Del Rey
Year: 2000/2003
640 pages
As always, wonderful world-building, terrific descriptions, great characters, heavy internal parallelism, and a fine narrative voice. There's some unresolved moral ambiguity, and a character or two fades away non-threateningly at the end, but otherwise tightly constructed. Lovecraft plus Stephenson, perhaps, with much invocation of Victorian/steampunk scientific laboratories, both in reality and as envisioned by Stephenson. Miéville does a great deal with the meaning of wings, and sex with bug-ladies.
Title: Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon #1)
Author: China Miéville
Publisher: Del Rey
Year: 2000/2003
640 pages
As always, wonderful world-building, terrific descriptions, great characters, heavy internal parallelism, and a fine narrative voice. There's some unresolved moral ambiguity, and a character or two fades away non-threateningly at the end, but otherwise tightly constructed. Lovecraft plus Stephenson, perhaps, with much invocation of Victorian/steampunk scientific laboratories, both in reality and as envisioned by Stephenson. Miéville does a great deal with the meaning of wings, and sex with bug-ladies.
Climbing the Mango Trees: A Memoir of a Childhood in India
#1001
Title: Climbing the Mango Trees: A Memoir of a Childhood in India
Author: Madhur Jaffrey
Publisher: Knopf
Year: 2005/2006
320 pages
An enjoyable childhood autobiography, followed by an extensive set of recipes. This is a memoir of a life with its ups and downs and personal experiences--World War II and the Partition play a role but are background to Jaffreys's reflections.
Title: Climbing the Mango Trees: A Memoir of a Childhood in India
Author: Madhur Jaffrey
Publisher: Knopf
Year: 2005/2006
320 pages
An enjoyable childhood autobiography, followed by an extensive set of recipes. This is a memoir of a life with its ups and downs and personal experiences--World War II and the Partition play a role but are background to Jaffreys's reflections.
Labels:
Asia,
in-country author,
India,
memoir/autobiography,
world books
A Dead Hand: A Crime in Calcutta
#1000
Title: A Dead Hand: A Crime in Calcutta
Author: Paul Theroux
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Year: 2009/2010
288 pages
An uneven novel from Theroux, ranging from 2 to 5 stars. Low stars for repetition, unconvincing character development with abrupt changes, and obvious plot with a limp conclusion; high stars for parallelism (albeit sometimes heavy handed), rich description, and overall idea. A good edit would have tightened this up considerably. Good enough for a plane trip, not good enough to recommend.
Title: A Dead Hand: A Crime in Calcutta
Author: Paul Theroux
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Year: 2009/2010
288 pages
An uneven novel from Theroux, ranging from 2 to 5 stars. Low stars for repetition, unconvincing character development with abrupt changes, and obvious plot with a limp conclusion; high stars for parallelism (albeit sometimes heavy handed), rich description, and overall idea. A good edit would have tightened this up considerably. Good enough for a plane trip, not good enough to recommend.
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