Friday, July 28, 2006
Islam
Thursday, July 27, 2006
On a submarine mission for you baby
It makes a hard man humble
On the kid front, I also learned that Laurelhurst park is filling its wading pool in the afternoons. It makes a nice combo with the playground.
Wednesday, July 26, 2006
Hunka hunka sandwich love
Every day is silent and gray
Next up is the End of Iraq, by Peter Galbraith. It's a brief book, but a rather angry one. Galbraith has been supportive of Kurdish rights since a visit in the 1980s and he is none too pleased with American policy in the region. His thesis is that the place is so messed up, we may as well assist it in breaking up into three parts. The screaming caveat is that Galbraith has long advocated Kurdish independence and you have to be careful of his evidence. So far, it is an enjoyable read, if a possibly questionable thesis.
Finally, and most depressing is the Weather Makers, and Australian climate scientists look at global warming and how much it is influenced by human behavior. So far, all bad news. The Amazon reviews have the predictable "he's a liar" reviews. Global warming is like missile defense with the debate approaching the theological, in both intensity and doctrinal correctness. It is hard to know what to believe. I for one will not be convinced that global warming is not a problem by, say, commercials claiming carbon is our friend. To be fair, to really understand these issues requires a lot of reading and discussion, with fair-minded people. I can't tell you how much time I spent looking into boost phase missile defense before I really understood it. So I expect this book will worry me, without making me truly comprehend the problem. Ah, more books I guess.
He can write for miles and miles
This is the sort of space opera that you will either love or make you want to set fire to the book. Thanks to his popularity, his editors let him get away with aside after aside that helps detail his world. We learn about innumerable planets, the corporations and nations that either started them or continue to rule them, the aliens of the universe, the rumors of aliens, the state of marriage (contractual and short term,) lifespan (the middle classes and up can afford rejuvenation in new bodies, making people nearly immortal) lots of social commentary, and plenty more, including descriptions of hang gliding on low gravity worlds. You can tell Hamilton is having fun with this and if you think you will too, then by all means pick this up. This is good space opera.
Oh there is a plot too, of course, the titular Pandora's Star which suddenly winks out of sight thanks to some form of energy field. The somewhat stagnant humanity of the 24th century decides to sally forth and investigate. Can't say how that is since they haven't left yet. Still adding characters....
He can write for miles and miles
This is the sort of space opera that you will either love or make you want to set fire to the book. Thanks to his popularity, his editors let him get away with aside after aside that helps detail his world. We learn about innumerable planets, the corporations and nations that either started them or continue to rule them, the aliens of the universe, the rumors of aliens, the state of marriage (contractual and short term,) lifespan (the middle classes and up can afford rejuvenation in new bodies, making people nearly immortal) lots of social commentary, and plenty more, including descriptions of hang gliding on low gravity worlds. You can tell Hamilton is having fun with this and if you think you will too, then by all means pick this up. This is good space opera.
Oh there is a plot too, of course, the titular Pandora's Star which suddenly winks out of sight thanks to some form of energy field. The somewhat stagnant humanity of the 24th century decides to sally forth and investigate. Can't say how that is since they haven't left yet. Still adding characters....
Tuesday, July 25, 2006
Nobody knows you and nobody gives a damn
The author follows a number of people who moved to Southern California to follow specific dreams, all of which didn't work out. The characters are all infatuated with a young beauty, who tempts and taunts them. She no doubt is the dream that failed. In the final chapter, the author expands beyond his characters to talk about the masses of people who moved to California for the good life, only to find it was as unsatisfying as the old life in Iowa. I think West has hit on a peculairly American problem, the elusive quest for satisfaction. Americans are rarely satisfied with anything. This has its definate upsides like continual improvement, innovation and a motive to fight a variety of status quos. On the downside, even very successful Americans often think of what they didn't get, instead of what they have.
On the super duper plus side, this book is short, only about 160 small pages. So you have nothing to lose!
Monday, July 24, 2006
Oh the guilt
Weekend reading
But I just don't know...what you meant
Sunday, July 23, 2006
Pitching tents
The plus side of the unplanned trip is that we went to Cape Meares. It's a gorgeous spot with very high cliffs, bird watching and this creepy tree that would give Lovecraft or Stephen King some inspiration. We also hit this beach, but this being the West Coast, we were unable to swim thanks to the Arctic temperatures.
All over the world
Throwing out the good with the bad
Thursday, July 20, 2006
I'm going off the rails on a crazy train
Random Random Random
Anyway I bought it anyway since it was trade in credit. I also picked up Helen Knode's Ticket Out because a Hollywood Noir sounds just great. Reading her blurbs, I see that she is James Ellroy's wife. My first thought wasn't that she got the book deal thanks to that (she appears to be a knowledgeable film critic) but rather my surprise that James Ellroy is married. That guy is nuts.
And I also picked up White Apples, a Jonathan Carroll book that some people HATE and some love. I thought his Land of Laughs was great, so I have high hopes.
Storm is comin
The book is full of detail, which may be too much for some people. Brinkley never loses an opportunity to tell you more. When he mentions the Hurricane cocktail, he stops to give us Emeril's recipe. When we meet a person involved in the crisis, we get a multi-page minibio. For those less familiar with the region, this is helpful. I don't know much about the predominantly black part of the city (most of it) so reading the backstories of politicians, ministers and cops provides context for the story. Still it can become a bit much and you might find yourself skimming the frequent asides. At over 700 pages this one is really for those interested in Katrina, New Orleans or the management of disasters.
If you want a shorter hurricane book I recommend Issac's Storm (written by the same guy who wrote the Devil in White City.) It concerns the destruction of Galveston in 1900, but is told in far fewer pages than Deluge. Larson, by the way, is trying to his repeat of progress-while-dark-acts-transpire in his next book, which concerns Dr. Crippen and the inventor of the telegraph.
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
Song of the South
They tell an alternate story to the legend of Sheriff Buford Pusser (Walking Tall). You can catch it in the opening song of this bootleg. This is outlaw southern rock, and it feels a somewhat like hillbilly gansta rap. Check this band photo, if you didn't think these folks were for real, check the female bassist sipping a handle of bourbon. That's southron, yo. It reminds me what a bunch of candy asses West Coast drinkers are.
Sing, sing a song
What are reviews for?
The writer seeking fresh language with which to express her enthusiasm soon discovers that this particular vocabulary has been colonized by p.r. flacks whipping up empty, fluffy blurbs. The result is that all praise now feels like exaggerated praise.
She goes on to discuss the etiquette of current reviews and how they let everyone down. I wish popular reviews were more like academic reviews which, normally, make it easy for you to decide whether a given book is right for you. Yes, they are formulaic, but if you need to scan a few dozen books a week, do you want to puzzle out the meaning of each review? The reviewers in the popular world have become enamored of their own words, rather than the task at hand, which to put it bluntly, is to assist in a purchase decision. Perhaps this is too mercenary, and the writers seek to make their review of art, art. Pitchfork is of course the most guilty, but most of the popular press leans this way.
Tuesday, July 18, 2006
You crammed my book in your map
Fight, fight, fight, fight
But enough, it's WWIV (not III), didn't you know? Momentous times are afoot, and you're either seized of this and on message, or a defeatist, an appeaser, a coward, a rank traitor to the cause. Yes, it's just that simple, although a few paleos in their midst dare dissent and play party-pooper amidst the ginned up hoopla and sense of deep occasion and civilizational peril (this does not mean we aren't confronting real and varied national security threats at the present hour, but a sense of proportion and sobriety is urgently needed lest we march off towards another folly-infused blunder).
The finest cookies in all the land
Monday, July 17, 2006
We take what we want, we do anything that we wish
And there is this. So Vader, so funny.
Oh, and while I am being all nostalgic, it pains me to see that Black Christmas is being remade. No way they are going to get anything as scary as the "It's me, Billy" voice in this one.
Take off, to the great white north.
Davies wrote three trilogies across the 50s, 70s and 80s. I would look for the omnibus editions as you will save a couple bucks. Powells has used copies for less than the price of the crappy bestsellers you see at the airport. I would pick any of them, they are all good.
Sunday, July 16, 2006
Who watches the watchmen?
I am more sympathetic to the Powell's take which says, sure the book isn't the best thriller ever, but the insider look at the CIA and world politics is the fun of the book. For example, at one point the main character, a long standing CIA operations officer like Baer himself, says the CIA will use one of its tame journalists, who spread disinformation for the Agency. Now you know he is thinking of someone when he wrote that. On the other hand, maybe his entire book is disinformation meant to lead us away from the truth...
Anyway, if you like a noirish sort of take on spy fiction, then you are likely to dig this one. It is worth noting that the book explores an alternate theory of blame for 9/11. That could either turn you on or off I suppose.
Leaving on a jet plane
The war
Saturday, July 15, 2006
Bring them back
So drunk in the August sun
Friday, July 14, 2006
It is Newsong who compels you
In order to redeem myself, I give you Everything Hits At Once, a kind of indie Boys of Summer. And it comes with bonus cartoon action about the bummer of breaking up.
Bad to worse
If you prefer your gritty reality in fictional form, you may want to get your hands on Dan Fesperman's new book called the Prisoner of Guantanamo. I read Fesperman's Lie in the Dark, which was set in artillery bracketed Sarajevo. He did a great job at creating a claustrophobic atmosphere and a cast of shady and corrupt figures. So Guantanamo is a good choice for him.
Come on down, sweet virginia
We were also state park crazy with visits to Jockey's Ridge in NC, First Landing, Belle Isle and Westmoreland in the Old Dominion. I'm sad to say that we missed the creation of the world's largest smore at First Landing. We did find a shark tooth fossil at Westmoreland, which is really gorgeous and worth a visit, as are the other two of course. If you are heading to Virginia Beach and need a respite from the beach crowds, First Landing is a great choice.
Thursday, July 13, 2006
So unfair, I want to cry
*OK compare that to this. Now I am even more creeped out by Rand.
No fun, no sin, no you, no wonder it's dark
Sadly unfulfilled
I also just tried Ben and Jerry's Black and Tan. It's cream stout ice cream with a chocolate swirl. As Caesar said in History of the World, "Nice, not thrilling...but nice." There is no alcohol taste, but you do get that taste of cream almost like a Boddington's really. Still, don't drop your fave flavor for this one, it just isn't that exciting. I stopped after three bites which should give you a clue.
Tuesday, July 11, 2006
Notes from the Outer Banks
I do think the Outer Banks needs to export the Brew Thru concept. I would commit foul acts for the ability to drive through and grab milk while kids slept in the back of the car, rather than hauling them out again at the grocery since I forget to get that one last thing. So wonderful would it be.
Did Emerson Pee in the Shower?
We live in succession, in division, in parts, in particles. Meantime within man is the soul of the whole; the wise silence; the universal beauty, to which every part and particle is equally related, the eternal ONE. And this deep power in which we exist and whose beatitude is all accessible to us, is not only self-sufficing and perfect in every hour, but the act of seeing and the thing seen, the seer and the spectacle, the subject and the object, are one. We see the world piece by piece, as the sun, the moon, the animal, the tree; but the whole, of which these are shining parts, is the soul.
Not so this guy.
Monday, July 10, 2006
I'm guilty
The problem is, how do you find out about it? There are some ways like asking friends about favorites, going to Powells or other well staffed booksellers and getting recommendations, but I need something more scalable like the review press which bombards me with NEW titles over and over again. A great source was A Common Reader, but it is no more. If you can scare up a copy of their catalog you will likely find some gems of which you were unaware. I suppose something like Book Lust would come in handy, although I have only flipped through it. The author mentions the wonderful Lee Child thrillers, which I would never have read if a friend hadn't given me one. So maybe she has more gems up her sleeve.
In the spirit of recommending something old, rather than the latest buzz item, I recommend Helene Hanff's 84 Charing Cross Road. It is a story told in correspondence between the author (a New Yorker) and a British bookseller. The story begins as Hanff looks for a few books and advice on authors. It becomes a decades long dialogue about books and reading. It will give you the warm fuzzies.
I just might burst out crying
I just listened to the original. It so blows the doors off that crap. Leaving aside the little kid playing drums, its a good video too, esp the glance behind during the "can't look back lyric."
Mr. Schmallow
Sunday, July 09, 2006
I feel safest of all
Here was something odd. The movie featured a cover of "Life is a Highway." What, would Tom Cochrane only allow his version to be used if they also put "Lunatic Fringe" in the movie? So you know who covered it...Rascal Flatts. They've put out a few country albums, but if you are going to get a cover, why not go for something more off the wall or get someone like the Dixie Chicks to do it? Life is a Highway is of course a "summer song" and you should see the Stereogum discussion of what the summer song of 2006 is. Since the defining feature of summer songs seems to be catchy pile of shite (the last good one on that list is from 81), I don't really care that much.
Thursday, July 06, 2006
I'm scared
The details are stunning as well, such as the development of an effective delivery system for chemical weapons, the handoff of a suspected Al Qaeda skull at Dulles Airport, the Cabinet battles and personal conflicts. It is really great reading, but reading that will make you highly concerned about where we stand.
Read Kevin Drum for more on the book.
This and that
Ted Conover has a piece in the NYT magazine about the rise of a car culture in China. Like John McPhee, Conover can write about just about anything and make it interesting. If you like the article be sure to read Newjack, about which I will say little as it is one of Steve's faves.
Naughty bits
On a more serious note, he also delves into interesting issues in American history such as why did the Salem witch trials happen. Sure, paranoid sexist society and all that, but that was true for a century before and a century (or more?) later. So why in 1692? McDougall argues it is because the collapse of Stuart power in England left a vacuum in America that the Whigs had yet to fill. This made New England in particular insecure in the face of French and Indian depredations. They were all the more ready to accept out of control witch trials. It's little bits like this that make the book so fun to read.
Wednesday, July 05, 2006
There's nerdy and then there's nerdy
Ok, so I started Gardens of the Moon, one of the more highly touted fantasy debuts in the last few years. It is part of a ten, count em ten, volume series. And this has to be some of the densest fantasy I have yet read. It is is highly militarized like the Black Company books of Glen Cook, but is set in a much larger and more developed universe. The politics is equally obtuse with many different nations and polities hazily described. This makes the books seem like a giant computer role playing game with characters hacking and slashing their way across endless campaigns, the point of which is mostly lost to them. The main characters are midlevel military leaders, so you get some sense of the big picture but only enough to be confusing for most of the time. There are also vaguely modern military designations for military units, which is a little unhelpful. Just how big are these units and how many of these units are they? So that unit was destroyed, does that mean that 1% of the Empire's armies are gone, or 20%? There is a real context problem. I am going to stick with it, as the battles are interesting, but this one, so far at least, would be for the hard core fantasy reader only.
Tuesday, July 04, 2006
Looking for better days
For one, the author paints an interesting portrait of old Florida trying to hang on in the face of New Florida. He doesn't just pine for the old ways, but also talks about compromises that might keep things working. His characters are also interesting. The main character lives on a marina so you get some bizarre types, like is sidekick. Most mystery series side kick are the main character's dark sides, who for some reason, are able to commit gross acts of violence. White takes the opposite tack, with the sidekick being a pacifist New Age hippie trying to keep everyone happy. This sets a really different tone. This one is fun.
Happy fourth of July
The first is A Nation Among Nations. The thesis is that American history is best understood in terms of global history. So colonization has to be studied in terms of the opening of the oceans. The Civil War in terms of the many movements for freedom in the period, such as the revolutions of 1848, and so on. Unlike most histories, this one is reasonably short as well. If I have a complaint, it is that academic speak occasionally creeps into the text, but the book is aimed at the general reader, so the author keeps it to a minimum.
The second is Freedom Just Around the Corner by Walter McDougall. I was attracted to this one because I love the author and because he notes he was hoping to avoid the extreme negative history of Howard Zinn and the extreme positive of Paul Johnson. McDougall's thesis is that the US culture is one of hustling, in both the positive and negative sense. People are always trying to figure out the angles, whether to make or swindle a buck. Anyway, I just started it, so I can't say much more.
Monday, July 03, 2006
Yes, I am at work today. No, I am not working.
Sunday, July 02, 2006
Contest
A pair of books
The New York Times reviews the new Peter Robinson and in so doing explains his particular appeal. Much to Robinson's credit, Banks is not particularly gifted. He's cagey and observant, but he's not the brainiest sleuth in crime literature ...... And unlike the more heroic type of fictional cop, he doesn't embody a teenage boy's wishful notion of what a gumshoe could be. Banks is something else altogether, an Everyman with a badge. His virtues are his decency and doggedness, combined with a distrust of the easy answer. That's what helps him bag the villains at the end of "Piece of My Heart" and the 15 previous Inspector Banks novels.
Robinson is probably my favorite series mystery writer, which explains my four unread copies of his books on my bookshelf. When you buy even more knowing you will want to read them later, that's a good sign.
The NYT also has a review of Robert Sullivan's book on driving across country. As this is one of my favorite activities, I am sure to dig this one. If that isn't enough to grab you, this may:
"Cross Country" is delightful as history, but it's the tender portrait of a family driving home together, enjoying their time just the four of them, that resonates on closing the book. America may or may not "be" the road, but for the Sullivans and so many other families, their time there comes to define them.