Sunday, November 29, 2009

The Age of Innocence


This is the second Edith Wharton novel I've read, in Folio editions. Lovely books, with wonderful illustrations, but Wharton's critiques of Old New York Society are severe, with likable, if flawed, people being directed or even crushed by forces beyond their control. Age of Innocence, beautifully and powerfully written, does end on a more balanced note than House of Mirth, which was truly tragic. Recommended.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Measure for Measure

In my Shakespeare class we recently read the "problem comedy" Measure for Measure. The action of Measure for Measure commences with the Duke’s reflection that due to lax law enforcement in the city of Vienna, “liberty plucks justice by the nose/…and quite athwart/ Goes all decorum” (I. iii. 29-31). Believing himself to blame, the Duke decides that he cannot be the one to discipline the citizens, and thus decides to temporarily leave Vienna and appoint the austere Lord Angelo as deputy in his place, to restore order to the city through strict punishment. In fact, the Duke only pretends to leave the city, but remains behind disguised as a Friar. Angelo’s first act is to sentence a young man, Claudio, to death for fornication. When Claudio’s sister, a young postulant nun named Isabella, comes to Angelo to plead for his release, Angelo becomes passionately enraptured by her. I won’t give away more, but suffice to say, this play is full of surprises, including a “bed trick” and a “head trick.” The play is dark and disturbing but excellent, and I had the pleasure of watching it performed by the Reed theatre. I highly recommend it.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

A Year in Provence

Light, wry, humorous and filled with an appreciation of humanity. A sweet read. Highly recommended

Thursday, October 15, 2009

The Master of Ballantrae


Just finished this great Robert Louis Stevenson book. The blurb: "Set at the time of the Jacobite uprising, The Master of Ballantrae tells of a family divided". Boy, are they ever! "The intensity of the feud between the Durrisdeers, and the portrait of James - an incubus 'touched with the lurid flickerings from the Pit' - draws upon the deepest, darkest corners of Stevenson's imagination". I loved it. Interestingly, James repeatedly changes from charmer to tormentor - rather like the dramatic but convincing changes in the character of Long John Silver. And this comparison made me realize how strong a theme this is in Stevenson - the entire subject of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde - and a particularly fascinating theme for me personally. Gripping tale - great read!

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Demons (formerly translated as The Possessed)

Finished reading Dostoevsky's "Demons" (1872) for my Russian lit class. I am huge fan of Dostoevsky, and although this is not my favorite of his works, it was still highly enjoyable. Set in a provincial Russian town in the late 19th century, "Demons" chronicles the banal intrigues of a band of revolutionary conspirators and the madness they incite in the townspeople. The novel is based in part on the real-life political murder of Ivan Ivanovich Ivanov and seeks to deride the various ideologies prominent at the time. Written about 50 years before the October Revolution, Dostoevsky's characterization of the revolutionaries is shockingly prophetic in some places.

Definitely recommend, particularly if you liked:
--"The Master and Margarita" (1940), by Mikhail Bulgakov, which is heavily influenced by this work
--"Petersburg" (1913, 1922), by Andrei Bely, also heavily influenced by Demons

The Life of Archpriest Avvakum by Himself


Autobiography of Avvakum (1621-1682), "a Russian protopope of Kazan Cathedral on Red Square who led the opposition to Patriarch Nikon's reforms of the Russian Orthodox Church. His autobiography and letters to the tsar, Boyarynya Morozova and other Old Believers are considered masterpieces of 17th-century Russian literature." (excerpted from the Wikipedia article).

(The painting is The Burning of Avvakum (1897), by Grigoriy Myasoyedov.)

This autobiography is short and truly delightful to read. It is unique among old Russian literature for the "vigorous, clear, and laconic style." Avvakum's opposition to the reforms of Nikon is incredibly strong, and at one point he refers to Nikon as the "anti-Christ." This probably doesn't sound that appealing to most people, but I really highly recommend it to all!!

Satan in Goray

Just finished reading Isaac Bashevis Singer's "Satan in Goray" for my Russian lit class, Literature of Destruction. The novel was written in Yiddish in 1955.

This apocalyptic novel takes place in 1648 in Goray, Poland. Goray is a small Jewish town "at the end of the world" (a deliberately ambiguous phrase, it can mean either temporally or spatially or both). Many of the Orthodox residents become convinced that the end of the world is at hand after hearing news of Sabbatai Zevi, a rabbi who has proclaimed himself the Messiah. Zeal for the end of days leads Goray into depravity and madness.

This book is fantastic, I highly recommend it! I particularly recommend it if you liked:

-- "Everything is Illuminated," (2002) by Jonathon Safran Foer, which clearly took a lot from this work.
-- "One Hundred Years of Solitude," (1967) by Gabriel García Márquez. (Jesse, don't be deterred.)

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

Just received, and quickly re-read, Tinker Tailor.. by John Le Carre, from the Folio Society. It has probably been 25 years since I first read it - it's still wonderful. My favorite spy book of all time. Of course, I can only visualize the characters in terms of the BBC series, which starred Alec Guiness as Smiley. Wonder if that's available in DVD somewhere...have to go check....AHA! (see lower left). Wonderful book about betrayal with highly memorable characters!

Sunday, September 20, 2009

The Protest Singer: An Intimate Portrait of Pete Seeger

Alec Wilkerson, a writer for the New Yorker, has truly given us an intimate portrait of Seeger - not in the sense of "revealing all" but of sketching the feel of Seeger as a person, framed by some of the major events of Seeger's life. A very striking incident is a concert-turned-riot that featured Paul Robeson - later, the description of the primitive house on a cliff above the Hudson that Seeger built by hand reveals that the stonework contains two grapefruit-sized rocks that had been thrown forcefully through the windows of Seeger's car while he was driving away from the concert.

Wilkerson describes Seeger's experiences singing with the Weavers, who at one point had a regular, nationally-broadcast television show. Seeger was personally uncomfortable with this level of fame, and believed the attention given to prominent people slighted the more significant achievements of "ordinary" people. The book describes Seeger's testimony to the House Un-American Activities Committee, an amazing display of idealism and integrity. Seeger was blacklisted and took his family on an extended "world tour" to escape the lack of work and hostile political climate in the US.

I particularly enjoyed this book because of the connections with events I had experienced (at a distance) when I was growing up, but also because it depicted Seeger in real life - rather than larger-then-life terms. A very likable, interesting, and unusual man portrayed in a quick (199 small pages) and very enjoyable read.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

The Zookeeper's Wife

I just finished reading The Zookeeper's Wife, by Diane Ackerman, for this season's kickoff meeting of my local Book Club. This was a very affecting read for me. It is an engaging account of the events of World War II in Warsaw from the perspective of a strong, non-Jewish, Polish woman named Antonina Zabinski. It is a true story, developed from her writings and those of her husband, from diaries of the Jews who she "saved", and other historical accounts. Antonina's life as the wife of the keeper of the Warsaw Zoo was extremely colorful; there was much humor in the behavior of the animals, especially those she reared in her house. She seemed to have special gifts in communicating not only with the animals, but with people too. This quality really helped her defuse the dangerous situations that developed because she kept Jews hidden in her villa. I particularly admired her ability to communicate calm in the face of terror and to both take and give any joy that could be found in the day. This book also appealed to me for a couple of other reasons. Clearly, the author is fond of word origins and I enjoyed the explanation of a number of expressions, such as "screaming meemees" and "Molotov cocktails", that arose during wars. Also, the author uses a number of Polish words that I used to hear at home, so seeing them brought connection and comfort. Additionally, the description of attempts to resurrect extinct tarpans, aurochsen, and European bison, by back-breeding, appealed to the scientist in me. Finally, to know the story of World War II is to be sickened by the relentless suffering of so many, but I knew too little of the events in Poland and the story was so engagingly told that I learned a great deal. It's a great read.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Library Book


The No Asshole Rule by Stanford business professor Robert Sutton was recommended to me and it does have some worthwhile points to make - a key one being that although a few certified assholes may appear to be extremely successful, almost all of them cost a company more than they're worth. And that, economics aside, life's too short to work with assholes. Sutton also cites several interesting social research studies. But the book has a lot of padding and repetition - worth a quick peruse, but don't pay for it!

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Cakes and Ale

Just re-read Cakes and Ale by Somerset Maugham. Delightful, wonderfully written book! Easy to describe the plot, but a little tougher to say what the book's "about". The book is told in flashbacks and certainly there's a major change in the narrator's maturity and life views as the book progresses. Also, there are some very interesting insights into the way authors view the world. But mainly, the characters, especially the key character Rosie, are extremely vivid and interesting. Quick read and highly recommended!

Friday, August 21, 2009

The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch

"The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch" (1965) was the last Philip K. Dick novel I read this summer, and I liked it the most.

I will paraphrase excerpts from the wikipedia page's "Plot introduction":

The setting is some time in the 21st century. Global climatic disruption has rendered Earth inhabitable and to cope with this humans have colonized throughout the solar system. No one wants to be a colonist since it's hard and boring so the UN has to draft people to become colonists. Colonists entertain themselves by playing with "Perky Pat" dolls and accessories manufactured by P.P. Layouts. The real attraction of Perky Pat is using the layouts with Can-D, an illegal hallucinogen that allows the user to "translate" into Perky Pat (if the user is female) or her boyfriend Walt (if male), allowing colonists to experience an idealized version of life on Earth in a collective unconscious hallucination. P.P. Layouts employs several "precogs" to determine if new Perky Pat accessories will be popular. Barney Mayerson, a precog, is the protagonist of this novel.

The plot gets a bit bizarre towards the end of the book, and a few parts are unconvincing, but on the whole I really enjoyed this book.

A Scanner Darkly

Another Phillip K. Dick book I read this summer was "A Scanner Darkly" (1977). It took me a little while to get into it because the main character was so vulgar and hard to sympathize with, but I did end up liking it.

The story revolves around a group of friends who are all addicted to "Substance D," or "Death." The book did a very good job in my opinion of realistically depicting the brutality of drug dependence, in real contrast to movies like Trainspotting. I made the mistake of reading the book jacket, which I think gives a lot away, so I won't say a great deal about the plot here, only that it is a real page turner and gives a powerful view of a seamy drug culture in a futuristic Orange County, California.

VALIS

Earlier this summer I read Philip K. Dick for the first time. VALIS was good and thought-provoking, but very strange.

The protagonist is named Horselover Fat, and is possibly or likely an author surrogate (according to the VALIS wikipedia page: "Horselover" echoes the Greek etymology of the name Philip, while in German, Dick's surname means "fat").

Fat is hit with a beam of pink light which blasts a dense stream of information into his head. He becomes obsessed with the "religious" information he has gained, and begins to write a treatise. His band of friends is unusually sarcastic and bitter, and there is a lot of interesting tension as a result.

Many of the more philosophical aspects of the book were of great interest to me. I returned it to the library so I don't remember exactly what was on these pages, but I wrote down page numbers of sections that interested me: 69, 118, 136, and 170. If anyone reads this soon (same edition!) we can discuss.

When You Are Engulfed In Flames

Finished reading David Sedaris' "When You Are Engulfed In Flames." If you are a Sedaris fan, as I am, then this is a good book for you. The last book of his that I read was "Me Talk Pretty One Day," which I recall as being side-splittingly funny. This one didn't have me rolling on the floor, but it was pleasurable and funny with his characteristic sense of offbeat, awkward humor.

Sedaris describes his life in France and in Tokyo and his language misadventures. He humorously chronicles his struggles to come out as gay and to quit smoking. The NYT Book Review on the jacket fairly calls it "A delightful compilation of essays circling the theme of death and dying, with nods to the French countryside, art collecting, and feces."

I would reccommend.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Moscow Diary

Finished reading Benjamin's Moscow Diary. Very interesting and pleasurable to read. It is the chronicle of Benjamin's visit to Moscow and his frustrated desire for Asja Lacis, his internal struggle over whether or not to join the Communist party, and his attempts to get by in a difficult Soviet society despite speaking almost no Russian. It is also filled with colorful and beautiful descriptions of the city, its churches, museums, culture and inhabitants.

In one passage Benjamin records his friend Reich's observation that

"in great writing the proportion between the total number of sentences and those sentences whose formulation was especially striking or pregnant was about one to thirty - whereas it was more like one to two in my [Benjamin's] case."

This density of style is apparent in Benjamin's works, but I had not thought of it as a flaw in his writing...the style just requires more time spent decoding. However, I can see that it could discourage some from reading him. However, Moscow Diary is direct and fresh, as well as insightful and interesting, making it a good choice for someone who is interested in trying Benjamin but wants an easier read. I highly recommend.


Further reading: In my Russian lit class, The Soviet Experience, we read an essay Benjamin had written that was based on his Moscow diary. I don't remember the name of the essay, but we read an analysis of it by my prof Zhenya called "The Withering of Private Life: Walter Benjamin in Moscow." I recommend both.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Mysteries

Just recently have been reading mysteries - two by P.D. James and two more by Arthur Upfield. From James, read Death of an Expert Witness and Lighthouse. The first was entertaining, but the second was really outstanding - a gripping mystery with vivid, compelling characters and some very emotional human interactions. Wonderful.
I also read two more of the Napoleon Bonaparte (aka Bony), mysteries - Winds of Evil and The Bone is Pointed. Both excellent - very enjoyable and entertaining reads - highly recommended!

Thursday, August 6, 2009

My Name is Will

When my mom and little brother came back from the state meet in July, they brought back with them a cute read from the Miami bookstore called My Name is Will, which they thought I would enjoy, as it had a lot to do with Shakespeare.
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The book itself was funny and a good story. Essentially the book is a story about a boy named Willie/Will who is a UCSC college student who, instead of completing his master's thesis in the past two years, has instead gotten stoned and hooked up with all different sorts of girls. In short, a college degenerate.

Things start to take an interesting turn, however, after he finds the biggest "shroom" of his life when "cow-tripping"- essentially looking for mushrooms to get you high that grow off cow-manure. When his drug-dealing friend gets busted, it falls to him to deliver the drugs to the Renaissance Faire a ways up the California coast. The various misadventures he encounters on the way include no less than getting arrested, having a threesome with one girl he's never met and his Teacher's Assistant, and ruining a comedic production of Romeo and Juliet. Mingled in with all this, every other chapter is devoted to the real Will Shakespeare and his own life as a womanizer. The book reaches a climax when their two lives coincide, and both are changed forever.

The recommendation is a little harder here than for most of my reads. I really enjoyed this book because of the tons of Shakespeare quotes and Latin. I know that that isn't necessarily an enhancing factor for most people, so that's to consider. Also, the book has many, many references to drugs, and steamy sex scenes that rival hardcore romance novels. So, definitely not for small children (watch out for Henry), but for any other teenagers and adults, you could read a bit into it and then stop if you don't like it. Barring those things, the book is actually a really great read and has some interesting points to consider at the end, especially for teenage males.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Related reading

While in Rome, I tried to focus my reading on books of direct relevance. So among others, I read Room With a (Disappointing) View, The Leopard (an Italian classic that is more moody and introspective than I cared for), Heat (great fun in Mario Batali’s kitchen and footsteps), and numerous others. I’m just started reading Rubicon, about the final days of the Roman Republic.

Aside from Italian subject matter, I also picked up a book about the UN, Emergency Sex. It is more substantive than it sounds, covering the heady New World Order days, when the UN/US were prepared to send troops to support democracy and human rights in Somalia, Haiti, and elsewhere. Despite the titular, titling elements that helped it become a best seller, the book depressingly chronicles the deflation of this idealism.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Chain of Chance


Just finished reading Lem's mystery "The Chain of Chance," which I enjoyed. The tone was interesting and the main character, a former astronaut turned detective, was well developed. Part of the action takes place in Rome, for those members of the family who are reading Rome-related books. Somehow it wasn't quite what I expected, but I liked it nonetheless and would definitely read more by Lem. I would recommend.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

The Graveyard Book


Just finished The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman - well, I have a known weakness for children's books. I heard a good review of this somewhere and I also know that Neil Gaiman is the author of the Sandman anime series. Surprisingly, the illustrations were not done by Gaiman. It's a very good story, with some nice spookiness, and some touching parts. And it was a Newbery Award winner! Strong recommendation for those who appreciate fantasy or spirits (not for you, Linda!)

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Treasure Island- Will's review

Wow... I must say, this review seems a little outdated for many of those who have had the good sense to read Treasure Island in the golden years of their youth... Or at least, those who read it before I did. But, for those who have not read it yet, fear not! It is a book for those of any age, and (if I may say so myself) this is the reason that it has endured for so long.

The story focuses in on Jim, the son of the innkeepers of the "Admiral Benbow", a pleasant inn not unlike any other. The arrival of one particular sailor, who is rowdy and likes drink too much for his good, is the catalyst to the plot. The man, demanding to be called "Captain", has a past wrapped in secrecy, but deathly fears other seafaring men, and when one such a man comes to deliver a dire message, the captain dies from his weak heart. From there, it's all downhill as Jim finds in the man's trunk a most mysterious chart, which tells of the location of fabulous treasure, on a mysterious island far out to sea. He soon, with the respected Doctor Livesie and the bumbling Mr. Trelawney, sets out upon a voyage for this treasure, where he gets more than he bargained for.

The basic plot may seem trite to anyone familiar with Treasure Hunt stories, but, it should be remembered that this book is the one that spawned all the cheap imitations that have become so much more well known today, and may even claim to be inspiration for the popular series "Pirates of the Caribbean". The original is fantastic, and is a thousand times better than any knockoff you can find. It has my highest praise for its comedic scenes, its sorrowful scenes, and even all the confusing sailing terms in between.

In short, to any who have not read this wonderful book, READ IT! To those who have, I recommend that you re-read it, as it is the kind of book that cannot be fully enjoyed the first time through.


Saturday, July 25, 2009

Treasure Island


Just finished reading Treasure Island aloud to the boys. I've read it a half dozen times, and always with fresh pleasure. Stevenson is probably my favorite author - the best storyteller I have ever read, who seems to take immense delight in people, both good and bad. Long John Silver has my vote for most fascinating character in all literature! And the fact that it's all about the sea and sailing is icing on the cake for me!

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

SCAT


In the days leading out of the Ohio JO Champs, I have read SCAT by Carl Hiaasen. I found this to be a very good book and had the urge to flatly refuse putting it down to do jobs. The narration (Third person) switches around between characters which helps drive the book forward and keeps you reading. SCAT is the third novel in a series of books set in Florida about preserving wildlife. This book deals with a mix of plots and goals including: Returning a baby panther to its mother, successfully and secretly drilling oil on state property, learning to live left handed, finding a missing teacher, and escaping from jail when framed. There is so much going on that this becomes a very interesting and worthwhile read. I highly recommend it.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Ironweed

Dad recommended Ironweed, by William Kennedy, to me a while ago, and I finally got around to reading it.

I really enjoyed reading it, although it was very grim. I especially loved the fact that the main character, a violent bum, is literally haunted by the ghosts of his past... spooky and intriguing. The voice of the novel is engaging, and the variety of narrative styles is unique. An interesting picture of poverty and alcoholism in 1938.

I would recommend it!

I got over it


Family members know that I really like Philip Pullman and loved The Golden Compass.....right up to the very end, when I was infuriated by the actions of Lord Asriel. It has taken me a couple years, but I finally "got over it" and read The Subtle Knife and The Amber Spyglass. Pullman is a wonderful storyteller, with an astounding imagination. There were many vivid and wholly likable or admirable characters - let's vote! Here are my rankings of favorite (well, I included some that would be more accurately characterized as "most vivid") characters:

1. Iorek Bynison
2. Lee Scoresby
3. Serafina Pekkala
4. Will Parry
5. The Golden Monkey (elected "Most Hateful Character in All Literature" six years running!)

Also, apart from the irresistible story, near the end of The Amber Spyglass, I was powerfully affected emotionally by the caring shown by the older, wise advisors, toward the young Lyra and Will.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

You are an ascetic!

The Brackenbury-Parysek Tribe is gearing up to read Dante's Inferno (in English, with some attention to the facing-page Italian original). But what are you waiting for? here's what Jorge Luis Borges says:
The Commedia is a book that everyone ought to read. Not to do so is to deprive oneself of the greatest gift that literature can give us; it is to submit to a strange asceticism. Why should we deny ourselves the joy of reading the Commedia?

Morewell

Finished Why Orwell Matters by Christopher Hitchens - some parts were lively and interesting: For example, Hitchens observes that Orwell was an early and influential commentator on popular culture! Hitchens devotes a large portion of the book to defending Orwell against attacks by prominent leftists, deliciously skewering some, but this part went on too long for me.

Better is reading Orwell himself. Orwell's essay Lear, Tolstoy, and the Fool is very interesting, and Reflections on Gandhi has this very thoughtful observation:
The essence of being human is that one does not seek perfection, that one is sometimes willing to commit sins for the sake of loyalty, that one does not push asceticism to the point where it makes friendly intercourse impossible, and that one is prepared in the end to be defeated and broken up by life, which is the inevitable price of fastening one's love upon other human individuals. No doubt alcohol, tobacco, and so forth are things that a saint must avoid, but sainthood is also a thing that human beings must avoid.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Vanity Fair

There is a great quantity of eating and drinking, making love and jilting, laughing and the contrary, smoking, cheating, fighting, dancing, and fiddling: there are bullies pushing about, bucks ogling the women, knaves picking pockets, policemen on the look-out, quacks, (other quacks, plague take them!) bawling in front of their booths, and yokels looking up at the tinselled dancers and poor old rouged tumblers, while the light-fingered folk are operating upon their pockets behind. Yes, this is VANITY FAIR: not a moral place certainly; nor a merry one, though very noisy.
A lively and delicious read - rather like a practical and entertaining version of Machiavelli!

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Moby Dick

I have decided that I need to make mid-way posts, because I will rarely update if I wait until I finish the book.

So, I am about 1/5 through Moby Dick. Despite what Jesse would have you believe, this book rocks! The only fair complaint that could be lobbied is that it is a bit slow. However, the narrator, Ishmael, is very clever and humorous, and it is very interesting to read about Nantucket and whaling.

Definitely a worthwhile read!

The Master and Margarita

A while ago I read Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita, which is great. A wild caper in which the devil and his friends come to Moscow and wreak havoc. The protagonist, the Master, is thought by most to be largely autobiographical.

Bulgakov worked on the book from 1928 until his death in 1940. In 1930, after a campaign denouncing him as anti-Soviet, Bulgakov burnt the first manuscript. He later returned to the novel, although he did not live to see it published. The uncensored version of the novel was not published in the Soviet Union until 1973.

It is a fantastic work, and many quotes are famous in Russia even today (according to my Russian lit prof, Zhenya Bershtein). I highly recommend it!!

Saturday, May 30, 2009

The Sands of Windee

I am a big fan of the Leaphorn-Chee Navajo Tribal Police mysteries by the late Tony Hillerman. I've also enjoyed a couple of Hillerman's other books, so I was very sad when he died in October of 2008. In recommending his books to a friend, I looked at the Hillerman entry in Wikipedia and found that he had been inspired by and had long given credit to Arthur Upfield, an Australian writer who authored a series of mysteries featuring a brilliant and unorthodox detective, Napoleon Bonaparte. Bony is half English and half aboriginal, with the strengths of both heritages. Although these books were written in the thirties and forties, I found that our library has many of them. I just finished The Sands of Windee - I think I like it more than Hillerman! A clever plot, with vivid characters, many enjoyable incidents, sprinkled with outback lore. A quick and very enjoyable read!

Four Seasons in Rome

After visiting Jesse, Eileen, and Henry in Rome, we got to re-visit them, in a way, through this delightful book, which Jesse let me take home. Four Seasons in Rome by Anthony Doerr, describes a year with his family in Trastevere while he was supported by a Rome Prize Fellowship. The book has a story arc, but largely consists of observations on life and parenting, set against the backdrop of Rome, beautifully captured in quick, vivid sketches. The subtitle gives a flavor of this very pleasant read: "On twins, insomnia, and the biggest funeral in the history of the world."

Netherland

Karen Knudsen gave me Netherland as a present - what a great read! The framework is the story of a Dutch man, married to an English woman, living in New York following 9-11. His wife is shaken by 9-11 and her own demons, goes skittish on their marriage, and returns to England with their young child. He commutes back and forth, trying to restore their marriage and understand himself. But the story focuses chiefly on the man's involvement with cricket, and a cricket enthusiast and promoter. The jacket blurbs say it's strongly reminiscent of The Great Gatsby, and nearly in the same league. Well, I barely remember Gatsby and didn't care for it all that much - shame on me, as I know some members of this family are true believers - maybe I'll try it again. Anyway, Netherland is wonderful - many unusual and arresting observations, an unsettling atmosphere, thoughtful insights into personality. Highly recommended! And Barack Obama read it!

Thursday, February 12, 2009

A Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez.


Colin gave me this for my birthday and I only recently started reading it. Of course, I probably won't finish it before school's out, but maybe I can read it during spring break. Regardless I am making pretty decent headway (~1/2 way through) and I am really liking it! I was very unenthusiastic about reading it because I thought I didn't like magical realism (since Winter's Tale disagreed with me so much) but I actually think this is awesome! Very powerful visual imagery and interesting story line.

Also, this book seems to me to have been a very large influence on Jonathon Safran Foer's novel Everything is Illuminated. If anyone else has read both these books, does that strike you as well?

Update: finished the book! Thought it was very good. For anyone who is considering reading this but thinks they have no time to read: this book lent itself very well to being read 1 paragraph at a time over a period of months.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Harry Potter!


It is time to revive this blog. I've made the last 3 posts, and there's a total of just one post from nuclear family readers Noah, Will, Lauren, & Eileen.

So I'm turning to the most popular reading topic of all: Harry Potter.

I just finished Tales of Beetle the Bard. It is very short, but quite fun. Dumbledore's "commentary" is full of his witty asides. And since profits from the book go to charity, it doesn't feel like JKR is just mining old material. Strong rec to read.

Here's the prompt for blog participation:

How do you rank the Harry Potter books?

My ranking:
Azkaban (3)
Half-Blood Prince (6)
Deathly Hallows (7)
Goblet of Fire (4)
Order of the Phoenix (5)
Sorcerer's Stone (1)
Chamber of Secrets (2)

Let the debate begin.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Working backwards (II)

More mini-reviews, of books I read March - July 2008:

Middlesex - A rare homerun from the college book club. The immigrant experience of the American century. I prefer Philip Roth - perhaps because this is Greek instead of Jewish - but I'm splitting hairs. Read it.

A Black Englishman - More typical of the college book club: mediocre. The scent and feel of India lingers appealingly, though.

Day of Battle - Volume 2 of a as-yet-unfinished 3-volume history of America's involvement in WWII in Europe. This covers the invasion of Sicily and Italy, an intriguing contrast. Sicily is Patton, Monty, and a rip-roaring success. Italy, rarely the focus of pop historys of WWII, is a winter slog.

Winter's Tale - Grand and grandiose. A time-leaping paean to NYC.

Expectant Father - A useful alternative perspective, though less needed than its author thinks.

The Nine - A pop biography of the justices of the US Supreme Court. A very fast, fun, insightful read. But, damn, it makes you realize that the Conservatives have already won this battle.

Razor's Edge - The college book club goes for a classic, but still I'm not won over. First half of the book feels like Fitzgerald (yay!) but the second half feels like a very tentative inquiry into bohemianism (boo!).

Baby Whisperer - Another perspective on raising babies. Seems good - the compromise position between kids-first and Ferber - but the compromise is ambiguous and hard to execute on. Not recommended.