Monday, June 20, 2011

The Canterbury Tales

#653
Title: The Canterbury Tales
Author: Geoffrey Chaucer
Translator: J. U. Nicholson
Publisher: Dover
Year: 1990/2004
576 pages

Audiobook

I  was happy finally to read the complete set of stories rather than excerpted tales. It was entertaining to read "The Pardoner's Tale" again after having read  "The Tale of the Three Brothers" in The Tales of Beedle the Bard. I'd never have read the long, dry religious sections had I not been listening to an audiobook, and I would merely find them odd had not Tuchman's A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century given me the background and context I needed to understand why Chaucer included them. I now have a strong desire to re-read Calvino's The Castle of Crossed Destinies, and to bump The Decameron up my list.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

The Translator

#652
Title:  The Translator
Author: Leila Aboulela
Publisher: Grove Press
Year: 1999/2006
208 pages

I liked this author's language very much, I liked the set-up and how the story unfolded, and I thought the ending was wish fulfillment that required no compromise from the protagonist and complete capitulation by another character. This was disappointing and shifted the novel from literature to genre romance. All the way through I was anticipating reading more by this author; now I'm not sure I will.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Go the Fuck to Sleep

#651
Title: Go the Fuck to Sleep
Author: Adam Mansbach
Illustrator: Ricardo Cortés
Publisher:Cannongate Books
Year: 2011
32 pages

Read as an audiobook narrated by Samuel L. Jackson while watching the pages scroll on YouTube. Lovely illustrations and a very familiar, tragicomic story.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Strange Messenger: The Work of Patti Smith

#650
Title: Strange Messenger: The Work of Patti Smith
Author: Patti Smith, David Greenberg, and John W. Smith
Publisher: Andy Warhol Museum
Year: 2002
79 pages

This is the catalogue for one of Smith's art displays. I enjoyed the introductory notes, but was frustrated by the choice of a small size of the volume, which made it extremely hard to see the details under discussion. 

Monday, June 13, 2011

The Alchemist and the Executioness

#649
Title: The Alchemist and the Executioness
Author: Paolo Bacigalupi and Tobias S. Buckell
Publisher: Subterranean
Year: 2011
~200 pages
Audiobook

Two novellas set in the same universe and here packaged together. The universe was interesting, and the stories both all right. The claim is that the authors were answering a challenge to write in this genre about middle aged women; the assumption seemed to be that this hadn't been done, making me shake my head in wonder and think, Uh... Ursula K. Le Guin?! James Tiptree, Jr.?? Were it not for this introductory statement, I would not have divined this purpose, as it is not really well-realized in these two stories. The world of the stories is functionally that of Sleeping Beauty's castle surrounded by magic brambles; here, the brambles feed on magic. Of the two, Bacigalupi's story was the more interesting to me. Though it was about magic as a dangerous resource, it can be read as a broader ecological warning--we each think we have a compelling reason not to, say, recycle, and justify this with the comforting thought that our small act has no consequences. All of us, however, create a vast pool of actions, and the rich and powerful are even more brazen and wasteful. This is entwined in the plot but, though a vital element in the story, it seems discarded at the end by the protagonist, who does not seem to learn from this but instead responds to a different level of the story, for which reason I just thought, Good for you, but so what? Buckell's story might as well happen in any old fantasy world, and, though it could have been a nice psychological portrait, ultimately was just a sort of boring picaresque adventure, the kind that often forms the prologue or back history to the main narrative. So overall, okay but not great.

Report from Practically Nowhere

#648
Title: Report from Practically Nowhere
Author: John Sack
Illustrator: Shel Silverstein
Publisher: Backinprint.com
Year: 1959/2000
248 pages

A very engaging and amusing travelogue of Sack's visits to a good handful of tiny autononous or contested regions, some of which (like Monaco) are still states; others have become more firmly linked to a larger state, and some are of the likes of Swat, which I have known from an early age due to Lear's poem that begins, "Who, or why, or which, or what, is the Akond of SWAT?" Most of these teensy principalities come off looking rather absurd through Sack's choice of detail. Wikipedia's entry on the book includes links to the micro-countries described for one's historical and contemporaneous delectation. I conclude this review with a photo of Lundy's half-puffin coin, which I find profoundly engaging:

Saturday, June 11, 2011

A Rumor of War

#647
Title: A Rumor of War
Author: Philip Caputo
Publisher: Owl Books (Henry Holt)
Year: 1977/1996
378 pages

Early Caputo, a mid-1970's memoir of his time as a marine in the early part of U.S. military involvement in Vietnam. I wasn't aware of Caputo's legal difficulties and was riveted. Read it with Swofford's Jarhead and Kidder's My Detachment. 

Linguistic nitpick: Vietnamese is written in Roman letters, so there's no excuse for misspelling. Không, not khoung; cam on, not cam ong. That's the editor's job.