Sunday, August 3, 2014

Something to Declare: Essays

#1081
Title: Something to Declare: Essays
Author: Julia Álvarez
Year: 1998/1999
Publisher: Plume
Pages: 314

Autobiographical essays by Álvarez, those of her earlier life in the Dominican Republic being most compelling. A good companion to her novels, the writing of several of which is a topic here.

At the Mountains of Madness

#1080
Title: At the Mountains of Madness
Author: H. P. Lovecraft
Year: 1931 (orig.)
Publisher: ?
Pages: 142 

An incorrect cover, but I like it best of the choices.

While entertaining, and the world-building is fun, I agree with early Lovecraft critics that this is pulp. Most noticeable is the layering of description that means nothing--a thing is horrible because the narrator tells us so, though rarely for any reason other than that it is tautologically horrible. I was pulled repeatedly from my suspension of disbelief by the narrator's ability to effortlessly and seamlessly interpret pictographic murals to make unsupported and narratively suspect inferences about the emotions and motivations of aliens. This assertion of the meaning of things builds the narrator's surface credibility as a reporter and, as for Poe and Wells, I love the pseudo-scientific "factual" presentation of the story. However, it's immediately evident to the reader that Lovecraft is a sloppier writer than Poe or Wells, which dampens the effect significantly.

Two or Three Things I Know for Sure

#1079
Title: Two or Three Things I Know for Sure
Author: Dorothy Allison
Year: 1995/1996
Publisher: Plume
Pages: 112

An extended essay/set of essays that are memoirs of family, and also very much convey their origins as spoken word performances. There's something of Spalding Gray here, though Allison always seems more permeated with a defense against helplessness.

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Dominican Republic - Culture Smart!: The Essential Guide to Customs & Culture

#1079
Title: Dominican Republic - Culture Smart!: The Essential Guide to Customs & Culture
Author: Ilana Benady
Year: 2010
Publisher: Kuperard
Pages: 168

A reasonable introduction, though very much focused on the majority culture Dominican and woefully deficient on the culture and experience of the many non-majority, poor, disenfranchised Dominicans of Haitian ancestry (for example, in the southwest). Not at all useful for that part of the country, where some French phrases and descriptions of Haitian customs would have made a positive difference in my travel experience.

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Cutting for Stone

#1078
Title: Cutting for Stone
Author: Abraham Verghese 
Year: 2009
Publisher: Knopf
Pages: 541

I enjoyed this enough that I read another book by the author, but found it bloated for what it was. The parallelism of the different story elements grew predictable after awhile in a way that a shorter novel could have avoided. The protagonist's twin brother remains a mystery, but a strangely unremarked one given the ruminative character of this novel.

Friday, January 24, 2014

The Cure for Everything

#1077
Title: The Cure for Everything
Author: Severna Park
Year: 2013
Publisher: Author via Createspace
Pages: 288

Includes the author's eponymous Nebula Award-winning short story. While most of the eleven stories don't reference each other, many thematically revolve around wishes for something better, or for relief from vulnerability. Some of these stories have more explicitly SF/anthropological element than others; some are simply slightly uncanny. While my preference is for novels, Park deftly evokes character, setting, and stories that show glimpses of their larger, untold narratives.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Tea Time for the Traditionally Built

#1076
Title: Tea Time for the Traditionally Built (No. 1 Ladies Detection Agency #10)
Author: Alexander McCall Smith
Year: 2009
Publisher: Pantheon
Pages: 212

The death rattles of her white van perturb Mma Ramotswe, while
Mma Makutsi faces a threat from her nemesis, Violet. Against this backdrop, they investigate whether someone is deliberately losing soccer games. As alas, this is more about the reader's relationship with the characters than it is about the plot.