Tuesday, December 20, 2011

South of Broad **

By Pat Conroy.
Published 2009 by Nan A. Nalese a division of Random House.
512 pages.

This books has one of those covers I try to avoid.  You've seen them.  Their the ones you see on best selling hard cover books; shiny cover, realistic non-ironic illustration, author's name in large type almost as big as the title (I guess the name of the author sells in these types of books).  They have a certain look to them that says "commercial" that I generally pass over when I'm browsing books.  One of the author's previous works is The Prince of Tides, from which I believe a movie was made.  So I believe that the publishers are marketing it as a commercial, mainstream book.  A definite red flag. But the book does have it's charms.

The story starts out with a description of the main character -  Charleston, South Carolina.  The other main character, Leo, has to work out all the issues he has that stems from  his dysfunctional family traumatized by  a  horrific event he witnessed when he was a child. He's supposedly a loner and unattractive (though he's a little too charming to be believable as this type of character).  He befriends an assortment of oddball characters (two orphans from the mountains, an African American with a chip on his shoulder, a beauty queen and her twin gay brother whose father is an abusive homicidal maniac, and two socialites that were busted for drug use).  Through the sheer will of this "awkward" young man, these disparate characters put their prejudices behind them and become the greatest group of friends who have ever lived.

In the next section, the group has grown into adulthood and they embark on a variety of adventures. Meanwhile the book toggles back and forth between the present (of that section) and the past which was skipped over. At this point the quality of the book rises and falls.

At times the story is silly and overblown.  And at times it is tender and sweet.  The opening section of the book where Leo has his coming of age moments is one of those sweet, tender parts.  The beautiful Sheeba takes the virginity of the lonely and hideous Leo - every lonely boy's fantasy is fulfilled here - but it is well done. There's a particularly nice scene when there is an opening of the hearts of the characters while they are floating down a river.  You feel as though the characters have grown. 

This first section takes a dip at the end when Leo has his party and is able to smooth the unruffled feathers of the prejudice the characters show one another when encountered with various exotic backgrounds.  The rich kids don't like the orphans or the African American kids.  Leo, the lonely, unattractive and awkward boy, supposedly has the persuasive powers to knock away centuries of racial and class hatred and make every one friends.  I didn't buy it.  Perhaps kids from the south are so charming that even the pariahs of their society are charming and witty.

And then the book fast forwards to a later version of these friends and here is where the bulk of the story takes place.  I also think it is the least interesting part except for when the story flashbacks to show what happens in the intervening years.  The gay brother is missing in San Francisco during the height of the AIDS epidemic.  The beauty, Sheeba, who is now an Oscar winning actor, gets the group together to help find him.  The group flies off San Francisco and embarks on an adventure.  I think the silliest part of this section is how they resolve the problem. The actual problem its self is silly too.  Trevor, the gay man, is being held hostage by some thug collects checks that come from the family of the suffering AIDS victims.  Instead of calling the police, the group decides on rescuing Trevor and breaking him out.  Exciting perhaps, but not very realistic and really pointless and devoid of meaning.  What could the author possibly be trying to say with this excerpt except to say perhaops, "you see what good friensd they are and what lengths they will go to help each other?"


The story does toggle back to the group's last year in high school.  And I am supposed to believe that the  awkward and homely Leo is one of the stars of the team that goes all the way to the championship.  If that were the case, he should have not been lonely anymore.  Leo's way too charming and talented to be the "Toad" that every one says he is.

I suppose it is naivete, but one of the messages of this book that I liked perhaps is that Leo was so (relatively) successful in his life  because he was such a nice guy.  He might have been awkward (I don't believe it for a second - he was practically the leader of the group - leaders are not awkward) but he was soooooo nice.  I have to admit, I bought into it a little.  After reading this book, my personal philosophy has changed or at least been reinforced. I believe people should be nice - That simple!

Why can't we all be a little nicer?  This is a world where everyone has to be the best, or hyper manly or super cool (gosh, life feels like high school)  Why can't we just be nice?  There is so much meanness and pettiness these days.  You can watch two grown men on TV beat the crap out of each other on Ultimate Fighting matches. Role models for toughness and manliness but where are the role models of civility?     These people should be put in jail for assault, not revered as gods.  Thugs and brutality are celebrated today.  Maybe simply being nice is a way to avoid conflict and create some happiness in the world.  I think the world needs to know that and Leo might be able to teach us that.

The book ends nicely in a tender and charming way, though all the pieces do fall together a little too neatly.  The sacrifices he makes and his good will  earns him his just rewards. Predictable but nice.

 Here are some comments by the writer himself.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

The Liberation of Gabriel King **

By K.L. Going.
Copyright 2005 by  K.L. Going.
Published by Scholastic Inc. New York.
1st Edition by Scholastic 2008.

Young people books are rarely on the same level of sophistication of an adult book, so it's rare the juvenile book that can compete with the adult book for quality and transcend it's kin. So don't let the 2 star rating steer you away from the book.  It's really quite good.  Remember that 2 stars (if you look at my opening posting for this blog, it has the definitions of the ratings there) means pretty good on an adult standard.

It brings up a couple of interesting topics such as bullying, racism, friendship and loyalty. These topics are presented in a pretty obvious manner but the presentation is good enough. 

The story is about two friends who live in the deep south (Georgia?) in the summer of 1976.  So it's (recent) historical fiction.  The two friends are Frita Wilson, the daughter of an African American preacher and Gabriel King, the son of a working poor white family.  Frita is brave and athletic.  Gabriel is small and afraid of everything.  He gets bullied a lot.  Frita tries to protect him. 

It's summer before they enter fifth grade and Gabe does not want to advance because he is afraid of the two main bullies, Duke Evans and Frankie Carmen.  After one especially cruel incidence of bullying, Frita goes to Duke Evans and punches him in the nose and a fight ensues.  After breaking it up, the father of Duke scolds his son... for getting beat by a N..... girl.

Gabriel was still afraid of near everything.  I found this part a little hard too believe - he was afraid of EVERYTHING!  Frita came up with a plan.  Gabe would make a list of everything he was afraid of and through out the summer, and before they entered the fifth grade, they would scratch off as many items on the list by trying to do each thing on the list so they would not be afraid anymore. 

There was one humorous scene in which Frita asked if he was done with his list, but Gabe wasn't because he kept adding things to his list.  There was another scene that struck me as very true.  One of the fears that Gabe had was swinging off the rope in the local swimming hole.  Frita made him do it.  After that, he loved swinging off that rope.  It reminded me of my daughters when they are afraid of something,  One time on a water slide, Georgia my younger daughter, was afraid.  But after she went once, I couldn't stop her from going for the rest of the day.

Eventually Frita came up with her own list, which was much shorter than Gabe's.  One of her fears was of the bully Duke's father.  In an effort to face her fear, she approached him to apologize for the fight.  The author doesn't tell the reader what the father says, but she leaves the group of men very rattled.

There are some nice things in this book.  Not too many books are set in the 70's very often, especially kids books.  The 70's was an interesting era and I think that the author shows the feeling of the decade by describing the thoughts of one of the characters ( i forget which) when that character says or thinks about the racist remark that "this type of thing is very surprising to occur in this day and age."  But is it really?  I mean we are talking about less than a decade from the major period of civil rights.  I would guess that it occurred all the time.  Heck, racism even occurs today more than 30 years later, albeit less frequently and in much subtler ways..

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

The Remains of the Day ***1/2

By Kazuo Ishiguro.
Copyright 1988 by Kazuo Ishiguro.
Published by Vintage International Books, a division of Random House, 1993.
Originally published Faber and Faber Ltd., London  and Alfred A Knopf in U.S. 1989.
245 pages.

This book won the Man Booker award, I assume in 1988 or 1989.  I'm a fan of the Man Booker award because I think their choices are a little more edgier than the book awards given in the U.S., so I am always excited to be reading one.  I had heard of this book for a while and finally got around to it.

Ishiguro came from Japan to England when he was 6 years old.  I believe most of his books are about life in England, as opposed to life in Japan where he is originally from.  This book certainly does NOT have an Asian "feel" to it, or does it?

The main character is a traditional English Butler to one of the great households of English history.  The book starts off with his new American employer sending him off on a short vacation, since there is a lull in the work to be done at the house, and encourages him to make a short country drive in the rural parts of England in the owner's own car.  The butler, Stevens, is hesitant but decides to go ahead because they are a little short staffed at the house and decides to go to speak to a former employee, Ms Kenton, who happens to live out in the country to see if she wants to come back.  This is the basic plot line.  There are several themes that weave in and out of the narrative as the book continues.

A large part of the time, Stevens is contemplating, and musing on past events that he has lived through as a butler.  This activity probably takes up about 70% - 80 % of the book.  He starts off by musing about the "great Butlers" of the day.  It should be said that this story takes place in post WWII times so his ruminations tend to be nostalgic and take place in pre WWII times.  This train of thought leads him to believe that a great butler must have dignity and must belong to house of great gentleman.  In other words that he must have a great master.  A master who is noble and cares about the affairs of the day.  He believes his previous employer, Sir Darlington, was one of those people.  He believes that his master was engaging himself in events of world importance.  It was after all., before WW II and there was much international intrigue to get involved with.  He spends much time retelling the events that transpired at the behest of his master's concern and influence.  Great people of important stature visited the house to discuss important things.  Remember, this is England with a a strong tradition of nobility.  The nobility believed that they were to be the helmsmen of world affairs because of their great knowledge and education.  For the most part they were not believers in the ideals of democracy since they felt the masses to be simple and uneducated, so the responsibility fell to them.  That's why Stevens believed that the greatest butlers were attached to the greatest houses.  And when I say greatest houses, I mean the greatest masters or noblemen.  And Steven believes that his master Darlington was one of the great nobles of the day.

Meanwhile, Stevens is traveling through the country side and meeting a great many of these simpler people, and why he likes them, there is a distance that he puts between them and him.  In fact, because of his behavior and the car he drives (the owner's) people frequently mistake him for a nobleman and not a butler.  There are also some fine descriptions of the country side as travels through it.

Finally he arrives at the town where Ms. Kenton lives.  Stevens had assumed that Ms. Kenton might want to return since her letters to him tended to wax nostalgic and that she often complained about her marriage.  But she never really said that she wanted to come back.  Much of the contemplation he was doing was looking back at his working relationship between him and her.  She was in charge of all the maids and female servants while he was in charge of the whole household.  They were often at odds with each other.  She was prone to having a temper and speaking her mind, which really annoyed him since he was always striving for that "dignity" mentioned above.  He always had a professional attitude towards her.  He came off as rather cold, though we, the readers, had privy to his inner thoughts, and his background, and could understand why he was the way he was.

So at the end we get Ms. Kenton's story.  She had left Darlington Hall to get married, but the marriage was more about the doubt in her mind about whether she wanted to continue in the profession than about really being in love,  hence the marriage problems she was having.  After all the years in passing, she had learned to love her husband.  She would not be going back with Stevens.  This was a bigger disappointment to Stevens than he thought it would be.  He knew she never had said that she wanted to come back, but still I think he was hoping.  Perhaps there was love, perhaps he longed for the olden days.  But he was disappointed.  He was certainly saddened by the seemingly unhappy life Ms. Kenton had acquired.

Darlington's life had become riddled with controversy and scandal.  He may or may not have been involved with the enemies of England, though Stevens insisted that Darlington didn't realize what he was doing and acted out of sincerity and that he was an innocent.  So perhaps that's the saddest part of the book.  Everything Stevens had believed about being a butler and his employer, his identification, was thrown into doubt. Sad but not traumatic like the blurb suggests.

The themes and the material might seem kind of dry, and maybe because I'm a better reader or maybe because of the way the book was written, I had no difficulty reading the book.  I was able to understand the ideas and description and concepts very easily.  I read the book in less than 3 days.  Usually with material like this, I struggle and it takes longer to read.  I did not find this the case, and though I am not very good at speaking about the writing and language an author uses, this ease I had with the material speaks to the quality of his writing.

A trailer of the movie.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

High Fidelity **1/2

By Nick Hornby.

Copyright 1995 by Nick Hornby.
Published by the Penguin Group.
323 pages.

This is one heck of a funny book and I enjoyed it immensely.  It does drag on a little in the middle though.  The main character, Rob gets a little too whiny, he even admits it at one point, and tiresome.

This book is about a guy Rob, who has just broken up with this girlfriend.  He's the owner of a record store and feels stuck where he is because he's 39 and he feels like he hasn't grown since his college days.  He restless and cranky.

The book starts out with a list  and a description of his 5 worst break - ups. His last break-up, which is the focus of this story is not included in his list.  Though he claims it's not one of the top five, he seems to take it pretty hard, because all he does is wring his hands with regret and indecision.  He goes to work everyday at his records store called Empire Records.  There  he encounters much banter and tom foolery with his two store clerks who are record snob geeks/ perpetual bachelors.  Much of the humor comes from these conversations.

I could really relate to this book as I myself am somewhat of a record snob (surprising in know but it's true).  One of the concepts that the book discusses is how these people tend to push their opinions on other people, especially girlfriends. Lord knows I've been there, but in defense of this practice, don't I, a confessed music geek, have to put up with what I consider a lot of garbage?  I think it is only fair that I get my 2 cents and get to hear some of my preferred and obscurer music?  Where ever one goes, you can hear the strains of some (sorry) really horrible music.  I think if I am forced to listen to that, people should have to put up with what I like once in a while.  One of my favorite quotes from the book: "I want him to show the rest of us that it is possible to maintain a relationship and have a large record collection."  That really struck a chord with me.  Discussions like these are the parts I really enjoyed about the book.  I could really relate.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Founding Brothers - The Revolutionary Generation **1/2

By Joseph J. Ellis.
Copyright 2000 by Joseph J. Ellis.
Published Vintage Books a Division of Random House, 2002.
Originally published by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, 2000.
248 pages.

This is a book that won the Pulitzer prize so clearly I don't know what I'm talking about, but I'm not going to let awards and honors sway me from my opinion no matter how wrong I am.  The problem with much non-fiction, especially that of History, is that it is not always reader friendly.  There's tons of citations, quotations, notations and appellations in this book which always make for a difficult read..  This is especially true when the book is about the politics of the day, which this one is.

But the author tries to present the content in a different way.  He tries to write stories, or essays, in a roughly chronological order (apart from the 1st one which is later/ middle in the time period covered) and this does help a little.  I believe the author even uses the word "stories" in his introduction.  And certainly the book does start off with a riveting story.  It speaks about the infamous duel between Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton.  And that is a pretty riveting story, even when the author describes the circumstances that led to the duel, which are mostly political in nature.  They were in opposite political parties and Hamilton was pretty much libeling Burr.  Still this section of the book was very interesting.

But then the "stories" seem to be pretty flimsy constructs to hang a narrative.  Ellis might take one small event, a dinner party between rival politicians, to wax seemingly forever about the politics of the day.  A couple of the stories are not even stories  but simply concepts or themes.  Here are some example titles: The Silence, The Collaborators and The Friendship.  Not really stories, but themes.  Which is fine, but the author had me believing this would be more narrative oriented.

Not that I didn't enjoy all the information about the politics of the day.  There was much discussion about slavery, states rights vs Federal government power, and Federal banking.  All of them being intricately connected.  And I enjoyed those discussions, but I am probably a more patient reader than most.

The last two chapters center around Thomas Jefferson and John Adams and the book picks up here again.  They were friends during the Revolution, rivals in Politics, and then friends again in the waning years of their lives.  They wrote a series of letters to each other, even while Jefferson was President.  They wrote with the knowledge that they would be leaving these letters behind them after death for posterity and history.  Adams wrote that now that they were friends again, they should try to explain their differing opinions to each other, and consequently to History and the future.

I think the author war somewhat successful at making this book "reader friendly", but not completely.  And the above organization of information was helpful.  I can think of two books about History which I felt were reader friendly, so I do think it is possible to do, but admittedly rare.  One was a book about modern Mexico.  (The title escapes me but was one of my all time favorites)  It used themes to organize the information.  The book was highly readable and enjoyable.  Of course it wasn't strictly about politics, but it did have a chapter or two about that.  So maybe it is really hard to wrote a "reader friendly" book about political history.

Another book, which can be found on this blog was one about the Jamestown colony.  That was very interesting partly because it had extensive primary sources written by Captain John Smith himself.  Again this book is not strictly about the politics.  In this book, the author talked about the relationship with the Indians often.  Perhaps a bit more intriguing than strictly politics.

So, while this was an excellent book, I believe the readability suffered because of the focus on the politics and also some of the old fashioned language used in the quotes.  Maybe it's not possible to have a purely political book that is reader friendly, though I think this was a good attempt.  And of course, the content, no matter how difficult the reading, is always paramount in non-fiction and the content alone can sometimes be enough to keep a reader engaged.  Which it did for me.  I don't mind political history.

Here's some one else's opinion.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

The Death of Sweet Mister ***

By Daniel Woodrell.
Copyright 2001 by Daniel Woodrell.
Published G.P. Putnam' Sons, Penguin Putnam
Pages 196.

Woodrell is one of my favorite authors so I have read several of his books already.  This is fairly typical of his work, and I like his work, so of course I liked it!  He specializes in stories about the Appalachian Mountains and the people who live there.  His books are full of violence, drug abuse, poverty and a bit of black humor.  My kind of book! 

Here's the story.  It's about a dysfunctional nuclear family of three who live somewhere in the Appalachian Mountains.There's a mom, Glenda, her brutal husband/boyfriend, Red and a young 13 year-old chubby boy called Shug, who is also called by his mother the tile character - Sweet Mister.  That's the nickname that his mom gives him.  So the mom is very submissive towards the brutal husband and pretty much lets him have his way in every way - especially sexually.  She has a strong affection for her son, which kind of leads to a teasing, flirty behavior.  Red abuses the two and has the young boy steal drugs from the homes of doctors and very sick patients.  Eventually a guy in a Green T-bird comes along , Jimmy Vin, and sweeps her off her feet so to speak.  This leads to the fact that Glenda now has two lovers. Shug witnesses this all, but he hates Red enough that he doesn't care except for the jealousy of the attention that his mother is getting.  It all predictably comes down to a violent ending in which we are the witness to the aftermath.  He doesn't actually describe the scene in the book.  Jimmy plans to take Glenda away from it all as he has found a new job, but Shug can't come along because his job is on a cruise ship.  Jimmy is a cook, and there is no room.  So that's the plan, but Jimmy never shows up for reasons discussed below.

Lots of spoilers already not spoiled above to follow.

So as I was reading this and when I figured out who Sweet Mister was, I was very concerned for the boy since he seemed, relatively, a nice gentle should caught in the wrong place.  By the title, I thought he would die, but he doesn't.  It's his innocence that dies.  I think the message is that this type of life style is circular. Even though Shug is a good kid, it seems reasonable that he will turn out the same as Red- criminal, abusive, misogynist and addicted to drugs, though there is a bit of hope for him maybe because of his sensitivity, he might, more or less, escape all that.  The ending would seem to prove that that probably WON'T be the case.

After all the sensual teasing from his mother and all the out and out sexual behavior he witnessed from the adults, the husband Red took minimal efforts to hide those exploits, Shug seemed ti think he deserved some of what his mother had been giving out.  Yes it seems cliche, but were talking about mother and son, hence the end/death of his innocence.  She tells him no when he begins to make a move, but Shug insists, and whines about not getting what everyone else does.  Glenda is able to fend off Shug's advances at first, but when she realizes that Jimmy is not coming  to pick her she resignedly gives in to her boy's wishes - She has given up hope.

So that's the death of his innocence, but there are more examples of how his innocence has been murdered.  When Shug learns that he wont be going with his mother he is the one that puts everything in play.  It's that Glenda and Jimmy have to leave because they  murdered Red.  Shug knows it, but keeps their secret to protect his mother.  But when he finds out he's not going, he goes and tells Red's best friend who makes it happen that Jimmy is NOT capable of running off with Glenda. So Glenda, in her "not very motherly shorts", allows Shugs hands to move higher and higher on the very last page.  Life as they knew for Shug and Glenda was over.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Heart Transplant **

By Andrew Vachss (writer) and Frank Caruso (illustrator)
Copy right 2010 by Andrew Vachss  and Frank Caruso.
Published 2010 by Dark Horse Comics, Inc. Miwaukie, Oregon.
98 pages.

This book was a quick read so I'll attempt to make quick work of it.  This is a story of a boy who is bullied by everyone in his life including his step father and his negligent mother.  He is left an orphan but the father of the boy's stepfather comes by and adopts him.  This old man is hard nosed but tender at the same time.  It is this old man who finally teaches the boy to stick up for himself.

I think one of the weaknesses of the story is that in the beginning of the book, the writer makes a big ado about how the leads character life is NOT like the movies because the nerd doesn't really get the beautiful girl in the end, but then it has the standard generic pap ending where the kid does learn not to be bullied. Sure the  lesson in how he learns to stick up for him self and the ones he loves does have a slight twist, but it still ends with a happy ever after.

The illustrations I really like.  They have that modern expressionistic quality that is found in so many of today's comics.  Especially those of Dark Horse. There are lots of strong high contrast blacks and whites with washes of color to brighten the palette a bit.  Faces are almost blurred and merely suggested in a sinister way.  Beautiful really if not a bit de la mode.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Warm Bodies **1/2

By Isaac Marion.
Copy right 2011 by Isaac Marion.
Published by Atria Books, a Division of Simon & Schuster, New York.

239 pages.

I'm not normally a reader of Science Fiction or Post Apocalyptic literature, and I am certainly not a reader of Zombie books.  Though I am a sucker for these genres in film, if the film makers do a half way decent job and and the movie's not too stupid.  I chose to read this  because it was an interesting title on Barnes & Noble Discovery Book series where I discovered it.

So yes, this is a book about Zombies.  But there is a twist.  it's from the point of view of one of the lesser deteriorated zombies.  I don't think this idea has ever been done before.  And it's funny because the lead zombie character has a particularly weird out look on life, such as you might call it.  It is a really funny book.  Apparently zombies have a fairly sceptical, fatalistic view on life. I would recommend this book on that basis alone. Simply that's it's really funny and a very quick read.

So I've already introduced our romantic lead, and yes it does have a romantic element.  His name is R ( he can't remember the rest of his name - just the initial sound - but that's more than most of his zombie comrades can do).  So he is intellectually superior to the majority of other zombies in his community at the deserted airport. 

One day, on a hunt, he kills and eats the brains of a boyfriend of a girl who later becomes his love interest.  Instead of killing her too, he saves her from another zombie for some reason, perhaps some glimmer of humanity that still exists inside of him.  He takes her back to his zombie bachelor pad (a deserted airplane)and convinces her in a series of one syllable words, gestures and grunts (he can think at a fairly high level but can't communicate very well - he IS a zombie after all!) that he won't hurt her and a strange sort of friendship begins.  He learns about her through his dreams and visions that he has as a result of eating her boyfriends brains and reliving the boyfriend's memories of his girl.  Apparently when a zombie eats the brains, they get visions of their victims memories and life.  His friend Zombie, M, likes to eat the brains of young women and states that it is like porno.  This is a little too disturbing even for our more sensitive, flesh-eating hero. He slowly starts to have actual feelings of empathy and sympathy.  He is starting to have human feelings.  Maybe he can change!  You think!?!?!?

The beginning of the book is probably the best part and most original part of the book.  Of course it's rather silly, which makes it the perfect beach read (did I just say that !?!?!)  And it does get hokey and into some rather unoriginal ideas as the story continues.  But it still good clean fun.  For example there are these "boneys" who seem to run the zombie community.  It's hinted that their evil is of a more ancient and sinister evil than that of the zombies who ignorantly stumble through their pseudo lives.  These boneys must be the reason for the "curse" that caused or is symptomatic of the Apocalypse.  There's a battle at the end against these boneys because the zombie , R, and his girl, Julie, are a symbol of hope to society of hopefully curing this disease or plague which has overcome earth.  It's a symbol of the change that the future could bring.  Of course there is the overdone, paint-by-numbers theme of the sins humanity has causing this mess in the first place.   But in my opinion those lofty philosophies about mankind are all throw away elements that should give way to the funny, original and silly narrative.

Here's a trailer for the book. They do them for books now!



And someone elses opinions and descriptions. Carefull - some language here.

Parrot & Olivier in America ***

By Peter Carey.
copy right 2009 by Peter Carey.
Published 2011 by Vintage International.  In New York.  A first edition.

Originally published 2009 in Australia by Hamish Hamilton, Penguin Group.
381 pages.

I have heard much about the reputation of John Carey.  About 10 years ago I read his Booker Prize Winner The True Story of the Kelly Gang.  It was historical fiction as is this one here and the subject matter (of both books) is something that interests me strongly.  But I struggled with it.  The cause was partly the language of the characters (they were Australian rough necks form the late 19th century) and his elliptical manner of writing in which he spells out very little for the reader and the reader has to work out what exactly it is that is happening.  This difficullty prevented me from tackling his other books until now, though I really did enjoy the Kelly Gang in spite of the difficulties.

This book is similiar.  It's language is thick and dense.  But for some reason I was able to follow it better.  Perhaps after all these years I'm simply a better reader.

Parrot and Olivier in America is historical fiction based loosely on the life of Alexis de Tocqueville. That character is Olivier.  Olivier is a French Aristocrat in the early to mid 19th century - during the time of the French Revolution, which of course is not a good time to be a French aristocrat.

Parrot is a poor Englishman who becomes the servant of a roguish yet aristocratic soldier - the Marquis.  The Marquis saves Parrot as a boy when he is found wandering the roads and they end up sailing to an Australian penal colony where the boy is left until he is an adult. For some reason the Marquis comes back and takes him to France.  It should be also said that Parrot has a talent for mimicking people, hence the name Parrot, and for drawing.

The over protective mother, who is friends with the Marquis, wants to send Olivier, fearing for his life, away from France.  The Marquis offers his servant Parrot as a companion/servant.  Being from completely different stratas of society, the two do not get along, yet Parrot sticks around as he is honor bound, plus he is being paid.   Eventually the two come to an understanding and a sort of weird friendship.  It's an odd couple story.

I really admired the gritty descriptions of the infant U.S.A.  It was not romanticized and touched on all sorts of debauchery and corruption.  It's not a very romantic description but probably closer to the reality of the situation.

It is also a funny book.  Parrot made much fun of Olivier's snobby attitude with some pretty bawdy language.

And finally, I liked some of the ideas presented about just what is America.  Olivier discourses on much of this of in his monologues about the nature of America.   Surprisingly, some of it still rings true today.  He believed that America was crass and concerned only with commercailism.  He didn't believe true art and fine culture could flourish in the country with out a noble class that has the time to appreciate and study art.  If one compares this to our modern society, one can see the similarities. Our culture and art is driven by tastes of the uneducated and undereducated common man.  There are a few lone wolves out there trying to make a difference but its a steep upward road. Though Parrot argues with him over this idea.  After all Parrot and his wife were artists and Parrot believed that it was possible to have great art in America.  Though his argument loses strength when his group of artists have to sell their art though theatric and circus like tricks.  This and the commercialism of America is a major theme of the book.

Carey's books are not easy reading, so I would not choose to read him when I need a quick read between obligatory reads, but if I have time, he's definitely worth returning to.

Here's a pretty succinct interview about the boook with Carey. I'm glad to see that I'm not that far off for once.



And some more thoughts...



And something a little silly...



And one longer interview for good measure...

Monday, July 4, 2011

Elizabeth Costello **

By J.M. Coetzee.
Published 2003 by Viking a Penguin Group,
New York.
230 pages.

Coetzee is one of my favorite authors.  His book Disgrace is one of my favorite books and won the Booker Prize deservedly so I think. While his books always have multiple layers and things to think about, a reader could always count on a riveting narrative.  So I am always recommending his books.  In fact i recommended this book to someone before I had ever read it.  They said they didn't like it.  I was astonished!

So finally this Spring I started to read it.  I immediately started to see the reason my friend did not like the book. Basically its a book of essays.  The book is a novel, but the narrative is basically that of an elderly woman writer who gives 8 speeches.  Each speech is a chapter and supposedly reveals something of the narrative.  And there is a narrative string but it is a really a loose one.  For the most part it is a book of essays with bits of narrative to tie together the essays in a thematic way.  If I had read this as a book of essays my opinion of the book might be different.  The essays/speeches can be very intellectually demanding, yet I was able to comprehend and stay with the strands of thought being presented.  If this book were presented as a book of essays, perhaps the rating would be much higher.

I also see that Coetzee has several books of essays so he might be someone to check out deeper for those who like to read essays.  I guess an interesting idea to pursue here is why he chose to make these essays into a narrative.  He already has published books of essays and some of these "chapters"/ essays had been published in different forms in various magazines.  I'm guessing there was less narrative in those published pieces and those narrative pieces were added when he decided to turn it into a narrative.  Maybe it was an experiment.  Maybe it was a chance for him to try some different ideas for his essays and therefore enable him to distance him self from some of these ideas since the ideas are not really his, but the ideas of his characters.  Maybe it allows him to try on different ideas that normally he wouldn't call his own and that perhaps he disagrees with.  Maybe he's playing devil's advocate here.  Some of the ideas the character has are controversial with in the context of the book and she gets into discussions with people who disagree with her about her speeches.  Maybe its a chance for the author to show both sides of an argument.

The last chapter is interesting and might be the closest to a narrative that there is in this book.  In this chapter, the author is in purgatory and she can't get into heaven because she refuses to commit herself to a "belief".  So she spends her time in Purgatory, a small,  cliched, early 20th century European town, trying to edit her statement about her beliefs.

I enjoyed this book, but i would refrain from recommending it to most people unless I knew that this person really likes to read intellectual and philosophical texts.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Stitches**1/2

By David Small.
Published by 2009
by W.W. Norton & Company, New York.
330 pages,

The illustrations are nice if not a bit dreary.  It's done in gray washes and for the most part simple lines.  Some of the better, more detailed illustrations have some nice variations in gray, but most of the shading is simple in that there are only 2 or 3 varieties of gray.  The dreariness does fit the story though.

This is the memoir of the author/artist.  Being a memoir, it's episodic in nature, though the main narrative revolves around his non communicative parents and the cancer he obtains in his pre and early teens.
It takes place in the fifties when every one was ultra conservative and conformist.

Mom's a housewife, but she's very bitter.  She comes off as the heavy in this book.  She rarely smiles.  She also turns out to be gay.  The conclusion one draws is that she's bitter because she stuck in the marriage.  In those days there were not many alternative to leading the typical " married and 2.5 kids" lifestyle.  At one point she censors his reading selections (including Lolita) and tosses them n the garbage.

Dad's  a typical 50's dad.  Jolly when around, but never home.

So they discover a bump on David's neck and they go to the hospital to have an operation,.  They don't tell their son he has cancer.  He later discovers that fact while sneaking around in his mother's stuff and finds a letter that tells him the truth. He is understandably angry with his non communicative family.  Obviously, he survived to write this book so the rest of the story has to do with his feelings toward his parents.

Also there are many of dream sequences, which I think graphic novelists use too much.  I know it's an opportunity to have fun with their illustrations, but to me they are quite often a distraction and don't lend, or lend very many, important elements of the plot.  He uses approximately three in a book that tends to be dominated by illustrations already.  So there is not too much text to begin with and he uses facial expressions to tell the emotions of the people.  I like the art work but I do have a hard time concentrating on it when the art alone is trying to tell a story.  It's like silent movies (one critic in the back of the book compared it to a silent movie) and I/we are not accustomed pictures telling stories anymore.  My daughters have a hard time sitting through a silent movie.  I think they have an aesthetic of their own, but they are dated and old fashioned.  People today prefer more language (written or spoken) oriented narratives. I suppose I am that way to a degree also.   So maybe it's my fault for not being more patient with the illustrations and giving them more time and attention that they really do deserve.  But his illustrations are so simple, it's easy to fly past them.

As a narrative , it's dark and disturbing and I think the story needs to be told.  David Small is an older author - born 1945 - that makes him in his 70's.  I am not aware of his other work, but I think he's worth checking into some more.  I just would like to see more detailed and lengthier narratives.

Apparently the book was nominated for the National Book Awards. Apparently I don't know what I am talking about - but that's not anything new.



And some excerpts from the book.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Love is a Mix Tape - Life and Loss, One Song at a Time **

By Rob Sheffield.
Published 2007 by Three Rivers Press, Crown Publishing Group a division of Random House.
224 pages.

This is a memoir written by a writer that contributes to Rolling Stone magazine.  Basically, it's about how he fell in love and then lost that love to a pulmonary embolism.  All this while living, loving and dieing to his (and her)  favorite music.  So the premise is that each chapter starts with a play list which introduces the time period which the author wished to present, and then he follows with the narrative.  It's a neat idea, but something doesn't work.

The first chapter bothered me a bit.  It kept trying to make these poetic comparisons to pop songs and life.  It seemed that he had to really stretch to make those throw away pop lyrics connect to his bigger ideas.  It kept trying to be profound even though most of the music wasn't.  Maybe if he had different music it might have worked (more on that later).  Thankfully, he did not keep this method up for long.  For the most part, he just used the mixes as a time marker and didn't really try to show the significance of the song to his life, which I preferred.  After his wife, Renee, dies he does return to this concept a bit because he's dealing with death and sorrow, so I think the book dips in quality here.  Again he has to stretch some pretty silly lyrical content to get to his deeper and more profound thoughts and ideas. 

I'm a mix tape maker, so this should be right up my alley.  I think I was turned off by his taste in music.  Now I am a pretty hard customer to please, but I must say that much of his taste was pedestrian.  And when he tries to make connections to this mostly pedestrian music, it doesn't work for me.  The high moments he had was when he listed Roxy Music and Tindersticks.  But by his own admission, he really liked the pop radio music.  He claimed that the thought other cool music people looked down on this kind of music and so he tried to make himself look better or cooler for liking it.  Now there is the school of thought that some music could be so bad, that it's good, but he has too much ordinary musicians listed to use that as an excuse.  Even the alternative music he likes is really boring stuff.  He's a big fan of Big Star and Pavement.  All the alternative stuff he names is mainstream in the alternative culture.  Stuff that's at best ok, but nothing special. Near the end, I do like how his taste has grown.  He started to listen to old country and rock and roll, so he does seem to be opening up in his tastes. I guess I really had a hard time relating since i disagreed with his taste so often.

Perhaps the biggest issue is that this guy put him self out there, and while I don't dislike him, I don't really like him.  He should be cooler since he's a music writer, but what do you expect?  He writes for Rolling Stone, not exactly the mouthpiece for non mainstream music.

Here's an excerpt.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Strength in What Remains ***

By Tracy Kidder.
Published by Random House, hard cover.
2010 Random House Trade Paper back Edition.
272 pages.

I think that one of the most amazing things about this book is that it reads like a fiction book. I was hooked like when I read a piece of fiction.   After reading about 50 to 60 pages, I started looking at the cover and blurbs about it and then that's when I realized that it was a non-fiction book.  I truly believed I was reading fiction!  Simply put it's very readable.  Much non-fiction can be dry and it is sometimes it's only the specific content that keeps a reader interested.

Perhaps it was the structure of the narrative that made me believe I was reading fiction.  It went back and forth between two times of the subject's life.  At least the first 30 to 40 percent is structured in this way.

This is the story of a Burundian refugee named Deo who escaped from Burundi and ended up in the hard streets of New York City.  It tells the tale of Deo's escape and then alternates that tale with the tale of his arrival and early life in New York City.  In Burundi, he had been a medical student when all hell broke loose and the civil war between the Hutus and the Tutsis broke out.  This portion of the story is a barely coherent vision of fear, mayhem and murder - appropriate because that must have been what it felt like to live with it.  Yet this part of the narrative still had a flow if not a single direction.  It spoke of the numerous dead he had seen, the fright he would feel when he saw people walk around with a machete, the sickness and malnutrition he suffered and some of the kindness he encountered that made it possible.  In fact, I believe this, the kindness of strangers, was one of the major themes that runs through the book.

And this theme occurs again in New York City.  Now one of the hardships for many immigrants to the US is that often times, they have to work at menial jobs, because their lack of English bars them from an occupation that their training in their homeland was targeting.  So Deo come to America with $200 in his pocket and didn't know a soul.  He does speak French, the Lingua Franca of Burundi, and a cab driver helps him find an abandoned building to live in.  There is crime and homelessness in this tenement, but at least he has a roof over his head.  He gets a job at a small grocery and it's there he meets a woman during a delivery who takes interest in him.  She works for a church and speaks some French.  She learns about Deo's experiences and his education and decides to take him under her wing.  She finds him a home with a sympathetic couple.  He goes back to school and again, through the kindness of strangers, he's back on his feet.

There are a couple of strands worth pursuing at this point.  One is that though Deo is on his feet, there are still some deep scars from his experiences during the massacre.  He demonstrates this in his behavior toward some of the people who try to help him.  Of course, he's relatively well off emotionally compared with the potential harm that could have befallen him.

Another thought I had while reading is the fact there was something special about him.  He was educated.  Could people sense this even if they didn't speak his language?  Maybe his mannerisms gave him away as someone worthy of a little extra help.  What would happen to me if I was a refugee in a foreign country I wondered while reading this.  Well, first off I'm white and American so I'd either have my head chopped off or I'd be elevated to king status.  I exaggerate but I feel if I could avoid the danger that my foreignness attracts in a foreign country, I could probably get by, because I'm an intelligent, go getting American.  I know better than to ignore the fact that my being American is an enormous advantage in such extraordinary circumstances, yet my argument stands.  Would I be able to survive by will of my education and force of my personality.  I think so, and I think this is why Deo was able to survive.  Of course there is some major differences between Deo and me.  I would go and seek help.  Deo did not seek it out so much but it was more like help seeked him out.  If I was in a foreign country, I would be asking questions and putting my nose in places where I could get someone to hear my case.  Deo avoided this behavior.  Partly because he was still afraid for his life and partly because of his culture.

The book tells several folk tales that explain why  people don't complain, or tell other people their business or problems in Burundi.  It is a culture of silence and stoic suffering.  In one part of the book, the woman benefactor tries to persuade him to write a memoir of his experiences.  Deo did not want to do this.  He feared his enemies and it was against his very nature to be broadcasting trials and tribulations to the world at large.

The second part of the book drops a bit in quality.  After Deo's tale is told, the author does a bit of navel gazing and discusses how he met, researched and found all the people involved.  Not horrible reading, but clearly not as engrossing as the previous part.

The final part becomes more interesting again.  It is about a trip that the author and Deo take back to Burundi.  DeoDeo was at time silent and brooding and in one instance he was insolent to a person who could potentially do him harm.  Even though the majority of the violence had ended in Burundi, there was still some dangerous situations in Burundi to be concerned about.

This is the kind of book someone should make if they want to get people involved in world events, unlike the book mentioned previously in the blog about Darfur where it was already assumed that the reader knew what was going on. One has to learn about something before one can or is even willing to do something to make a change or a difference.

Here's a nice general video that gives a lot more information than I do  about the story.

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And an interview.
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