Saturday, October 1, 2011

The Man Who Ate Everything

#692
Title: The Man Who Ate Everything
Author: Jeffrey Steingarten
Publisher: Vintage
Year: 1987/1988
528 pages

Steingarten's essays on food, more or less, from Vogue.

Steingarten has a great ear for detail and makes many clever asides. He's funny when you agree with him, annoying when you don't. He has strong opinions about food, nutrition, and diets, often expressed in extremes, sometimes inaccurate (e.g., the man can assert all he wants that lactose intolerance doesn't include cheese, but he's never had to sprint with me to the bathroom after a nice Quiche Lorraine consumed sans Lactaid). The tone is usually genial, at least some of his over the top assertions are clearly tongue in cheek, and one admires his willingness to devote himself utterly to a recipe or process for weeks at a time.

I admit to skimming some of his recipes, since I know I'll never make them and I'm not that interested in, say, the perfect apple pie.

Sho's Apple Pie
Remove one frozen pie crust from the package. Fill with thinly sliced apples. sprinkle with cinnamon and a little lemon juice. Cover the edges with foil if you like, but I hate crust, so I just break it off before eating. Bake at around 350F until the apples are cooked through and the crust is brown.

There, that was much easier than Steingarten's 10 page (I kid you not) apple pie recipe, which may be delicious but perhaps not in proportion to the effort required.

Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain

#691
Title: Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain
Author: Oliver Sacks
Publisher: Knopf
Year: 2007
381 pages
Audiobook

Perhaps my favorite Sacks so far, because of the sustained focus on one topic but from a variety of perspectives. (I note that the first Sacks I ever read was Migraine, another single-topic book.) The first several chapters used case studies only as illustration for broader neurological points. I found them more interesting than most of the later, extended case studies, though the chapter on Williams syndrome had me leaping up for  Adams and Victor's Principles of Neurology, Ninth Edition. Yes, that's my idea of a good time. Either you're happy you're not married to me or you wish you were. There's very little in between.

Quantum of Solace: The Complete James Bond Short Stories

#690
Title: Quantum of Solace: The Complete James Bond Short Stories
Author: Ian Fleming
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2008
304 pages
Audiobook

A little pulp adventure genre cotton candy rendered even fluffier by the brevity of the pieces. While the literary Bond is a more interior fellow than his film avatar, there's still not a lot going on here. The stories aren't that salacious, though some make reference to more provocative literature, such as a novel Bond reads, the cover of which features a woman bound to a bed. It's always hilarious to see how movies diverge from the story; here, the short story "Octopussy" bears no resemblance to the film of that name, though there is a FabergĂ© egg elsewhere in the collection. 

Traditional Medicine of the Marshall Islands: The Women, the Plants, the Treatments

#689
Title: Traditional Medicine of the Marshall Islands: The Women, the Plants, the Treatments
Author: Irene J. Taafaki, Maria Kabua Fowler, & Randolph R. Thaman
Publisher: IPS Publications, University of the South Pacific
Year: 2006
Country: Marshall Islands
300 pages

Marshall Islands.

This is a surprisingly enjoyable and fascinating compendium centered on medicinal plants (though pumice and a couple of animal bits make brief cameos. The main portion of the book presents the plants with a color photo, genus and species, local name, and medicinal uses as described by one to several local practitioners. Other sections provide some focused history and explain how the data were collected. It's interesting to try to determine the mechanism of action of each specimen and preparation. Some can clearly be understood biochemically, some are symbolic, and some seem obscure and driven by the system of taboo rather than what westerners would think of as empirical outcomes. For the right reader, an engrossing volume published, like many, at ISP Publications at University of the South Pacific.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Iron and Silk

#688
Title: Iron and Silk
Author: Mark Salzman
Publisher: Vintage
Year: 1986/1987
224 pages

This is an easy to read account of Salzman's two years teaching in China. It was the 1980s, so his perspective on China (and the Chinese perspective on him) is different from that of Peter Hessler's in River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze in the next decade.

Salzman's encounters are charming and depict rural China very positively. One wonders when he found time to teach and prep his lessons, to say nothing of grading, between his various martial arts trainings, calligraphy lessons, and bouts of travel with fishing families. In all, a comparatively benign introduction to living and working in another country.

Friday, September 23, 2011

Abongui My People Cote D'Ivoire My Country America My Home: The Ethno-history of a Small African Kingdom

#687
Title: Abongui My People Cote D'Ivoire My Country America My Home: The Ethno-history of a Small African Kingdom
Author: Kouassi Pascal Soman
Publisher: iUniverse
Year: 2003
218 pages

Ivory Coast.

Soman chronicles his history from village boy to World Bank employee, using his own opportunities and obstacles to highlight some of the development issues faced by his community. More than many other memoirists, he draws attention to the role cultural values may play in community development, with the added credibility of his experience on both sides of the experience.

The initial chapters are more formal and somewhat stilted. My guess is that they were written last (and the number of word choice errors and typos supports this supposition). Bear with it until he gets to his own story, which is engaging and flows more naturally.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight

#686
Title: Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight 
Author: Alexandra Fuller
Publisher: Random House
Year: 2003
315 pages
 Audiobook.

Besides being an interesting memoir, it's a good example of how history can be conveyed and reflected upon through events and exposition by characters. Here, Fuller uses her mother's drunken soliloquies to hold the history of the end of colonial Africa.

Earlier sections were more compelling than those in the latter third of the book.