Wednesday, August 31, 2005
Done well is so much fucking better
Still it is the first mystery in a series. These series are a conundrum. The early ones are generally not so good, but the books improve with time. The trouble is, it is very hard to tell where to start. Since these books comprise a very long narrative arc, jumping in too late can spoil earlier books. Authors like James Lee Burke have a bad habit of describing the ends of previous books in follow-on ones. My general take is to start early and slog through the mediocre to get to the good. This doesn't scale very well with people like Ian Rankin who have a million books. So I need a new strategy.
Now that I have really sold the Winter Queen, I'm sure everyone wants it. If anyone does, let me know.
Tuesday, August 30, 2005
We carry in our hearts the true country
I saw enough to make me cry
See your mother put to death, see your mother die
Marcus reports that younger and younger school children are being taught to use PowerPoint. Little by little the mother tongue is being worn away. It wasn't that long ago that school kids were expected to compose poems, and now they can sound like corporate drones. Yes, I am bitter.
Monday, August 29, 2005
Redder shade of neck on a whiter shade of trash
I should mention the White Trash Special from Redbones, the best BBQ joint in Boston (admitedly not a fierce competition.) It is a sundae with copious amounts of Marshmallow Fluff, chocolate and ice cream. Rarely can one get piles of marshmallow goodness with ones ice cream. Word of warning, do not mock the White Trash Special in front of semi-strangers, if they ate Fluff as a child, they make take it badly.
For some Marshmallow humor, click here. It's way funny, for real.
Sunday, August 28, 2005
Thanks a lot friends
The writing is satirical and should be enjoyable for those who think their office mates are in league with dark forces. There aren't that many authors who can create convincing characters while also being laugh out loud funny but this guy succeeds. The copy on the back of the book didn't really do the book justice and I wouldn't have read it if Steve hadn't sent it to me. The cover art isn't terribly engaging either. Thank god for recommendations or I would just be reading what the marketers tell me to read.
Saturday, August 27, 2005
I push my fingers into my eyes
I had seven faces, which I knew which one to wear
One of my many readers has shouted J'accuse! Apparently I am slighting literary fiction in favor of more genre work. Snobbery is unfortunate in all its forms. Nevertheless, I will mention William Boyd, whose book, Any Human Heart, I am about to begin. I recently read his Armadillo, which was quite good, if a bit heavy-handed in its imagery. It concerns an Englishman who hopes to obliterate his identity and replace it with another. His fetish for hiding his identity is reflected in his hobby, the collecting of masks. Good fodder for the constructivists in a book group.
On the genre side of things, I have cautious hope for Hitler's Peace. The Amazon reviews are fairly negative, but I like to give authors second (and third...) chances. Philip Kerr wrote three really good mysteries set in 30s and 40s Germany. The third, A German Requiem, is a must read for fans of the Third Man, as it is more or less an homage to that movie. Kerr ran off into Chrichton territory for a number of passable novels, but now has returned to his (potential) strength.
Friday, August 26, 2005
He knows damn well he has been cheated
Instead he concentrates on the things that readers of literary fiction enjoy. He evokes feelings of warmth and claustrophobia quite well. Among the most exciting parts of his books focus on the emotions of those facing long or impossible odds, like a Resistance radio operator in occupied Paris. Because his characters are usually non-professionals forced into dangerous situations, they are often far more interesting than those found in more heroic thriller fiction.
As it happens, I like Dark Voyage, but I would not recommend starting Furst here. It is his only sea story and has more more violent action than his other books. Instead you should read World at Night and its sequel Red Gold, which focus on a French film director reluctantly entangled with British and Russian intelligence operatives.
Thursday, August 25, 2005
Happy happy joy joy
My love of this book had me thinking of violence and humor. This book is really violent but also quite funny in a black sort of way. Flashman is another book I read (and tossed aside by page 20) that attempts to combine violence and humor. I'm not sure why I didn't like it though. It could be the nature of the violence in Flashman. Instead of whacking bad guys and hiding from the law, Flashman is a cad who at one point beats a sex partner who won't get back in bed with him. It could also be that I just didn't find the nature of the book that interesting. Flashman lampoons the heroic figures of adventure fiction, which may have been wild stuff in 1969 but seems a bit played now. Don't read it. Read Dexter.
I hung my head
The first is that my hometown's favorite hamburger is the Hardee's Thickburger. It is actually worse than that. Five slots on the top ten are taken by different Hardee's locations! I realize fast food burgers have their place, but it shouldn't be the top. Fortunately, help is on the way. DC's best burger joint, Five Guys, is coming to Virginia Beach. Mayhap they will place next year.
The second shameful thing is that I initially thought of referencing Cheeseburger in Paradise in the title line. Despite nearly clearing the remnants of a long dead Jimmy Buffet fascination from my head, little snippets remain lodged in my brain. I did go to two or three shows way back in the way back and I'd like to say it was just for the drinking, but sadly no.
Wednesday, August 24, 2005
It's so easy to hate, it's takes guts to be gentle and kind
Another point mentioned is that Oprah should be roundly applauded for her now defunct book club in addition to her current more high brow one. Has any public figure in our day done more to promote reading? Isn't this a good thing for both the community and ourselves? There is a wierd elitism that reminds me of certain friends who stopped listening to Metallica after they got a little too popular.
Tuesday, August 23, 2005
I've got the dungeon master's guide, I've got a 12-sided die
All nerds ( and many closeted nerds) know that Feast for Crows is coming out this Fall. What I did not know is that the Brits are getting it nearly a month earlier! So if you don't mind spending a few extra bucks, your nerd lust might be sated all the sooner.
There is some online quest game being promoted in which you find hidden people on the Web and send in the links. Sounded somewhat interesting until I saw that the grand prize consists of things prized only by full-kickin' nerds. For example "A commemorative coin inspired by the fictional works of George R. R. Martin from Shire Post Mint." Come on, who wants that?
I swear I don't, really.
Gordon is really actually pissed about the splitting of the book into two sections. I'm just happy to have it, any one else care?
There's some kind of love, well there's some kind of hate
I admit this has nothing to do with books, but I am writing a book review on intelligence reform and I know for a fact that no person reading this is interested in intelligence reform.
*Crazy-- Ben & Jerry's site will identify which groceries recently sold a given flavor of ice cream. So if you are desperate just for Fossil Fuel, you can find it.
I think it's time we got stinking drunk
Are you kidding me? You must be kidding me.
Monday, August 22, 2005
A Short Review of The Historian, by Elizabeth Kostova
Anyway, Bart becomes increasingly frustrated both with the slow pace of epic poetry and with 19th century conventions of horror. This classic and highly topical exchange follows the passage in which Poe's increasingly frightened narrator opens his chamber door to find ... nothing there:
Bart: "Hey, Lisa, you know what's scarier than nothing?"
Lisa: "No, what?"
Bart (yells in frustration): "Anything!"
Amen, brother, amen.
He's got a bad reputation and it is just talk talk talk
Anyway, I am about to start the Palliser sequence of books which like the Barchester books are both thick and numerous. I can usually manage one a year, so I should be done with these in 2011 or so.
Freedom from choice is what you want
Sunday, August 21, 2005
This is your ass, and I'm in it
This stuff will certainly have the kids in stitches. Instead of giving parents their fifth copy of The Very Hungry Caterpillar, spice up bed time with That’s Disgusting.
Saturday, August 20, 2005
I want candy
While not as rare or as good as the Valomilk, I wish we could see more Cow Tales and fruit tootsie rolls. The Cow Tale is a cylindrical version of the Goetz caramel cream, which many people find vile. If the idea of eating a nine inch cream filled caramel tube sounds great, then you need one. They are best found in sad little boxes in sketchy gas stations.
The fruit flavored tootsie roll is almost impossible to find except as 1/30th the volume of a giant bag of candy. These are like Starbursts, except they are not hard, waxy or chemical tasting. They are so much better than normal Tootsie Rolls that I am surprised they are so hard to find.
Friday, August 19, 2005
Viddy well, viddy well
It's time that the tale were told
If you live in a wealthy city with lots of smart people but somehow lacking good used bookstores, head down to the Goodwill.
Having really good books does not mean you will read them. I have all of those spread over the house and I read (or at least started) Demons. I make fun of people who buy books to show but never read, but it is not as if I am doing much better this week.
Cheap books increase the spread between book purchases and book reading. The delta is probably 2 or 3 books per week right now. This is unsustainable from a space perspective. Thank goodness back in PDX I will have to make do with Powells.
I tell myself I will not read them, even as I buy one
My latest attempt was John Shirley’s Demons. It got blurbed by the likes of William Gibson and Tim Powers, which I know means nothing, but still I was taken. What you get is a tale of how man’s inhumanity and cruelty becomes manifest in the forms of demons who kill special ed kids and do other nasty things. The problem is that it is not scary and the writing is weak. At the John Shirley school of fiction, a few key rules are taught
Never ever have characters speak like humans. Instead, have them narrate long paragraphs or talk idiosyncratically. That makes them really cool.
Make sure to replace all simple words with complicated ones and be sure to use them inexactly. Burn is nice, but what about coruscate, that’s better isn’t it?
Instead of being scary or disturbing, go for the gross-out. Terror is hard to evoke, so let’s strangle the President with a demon’s johnson!
Some cultural theorist I read once noted that “scary” is a social construct and what is scary changes based on society’s changing fears. So maybe we (non-millenarians) are no longer afraid of the Apocalypse. There is some truth here, but the Exorcist still scares the hell out of me. So I think really it is just hard to evoke feelings of dread, unease and fear, so people take the easy route.