Friday, February 1, 2013
New York's Mayors In the Spotlight
He was a three-term mayor of New York City from 1934-45. Just five feet tall and energetically motivated to do right by the common person. They wrote a Broadway musical - Fiorello! - about him in 1959, which I saw last night, presented by Encores. He was Fiorello H. LaGuardia.
He was another three-terrm mayor of New York City from 1978-89. Irrepresively fiesty, he pulled the city out of near bankruptcy. There's no musical...yet, but a documentary film about him premiered just a few days ago. He was Ed Koch and he died this morning at 88.
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Film - The Horse's Mouth (1958)
Alec Guinness did his own adaptation of Joyce Cary's novel The Horse's Mouth directed by Ronald Neame in 1958. Painter Gully Jimson (played by Guinness) is a single-minded bastard who lives only to transfer what is in his head to paint - and to drink occasionally. The story is hilarious and excruciating. It let's one imagine what the world would look like if everyone were pure, unregulated id.
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Theatre - Opus No. 7
Saw this last weekend - wonderful improvisatory and lively piece of theatre.
Opus No. 7
Dmitry Krymov Lab - Moscow School of Dramatic Art
St. Ann's Warehouse
Film - Almost Peaceful (2002)
Because of my dissertation writing schedule, I'm feeling a little restricted in the additional writing I can do. One book post per week seems to be the limit right now, but that shouldn't keep me, I'm now thinking to myself, from posting a picture or a few words on the other cultural or scientific encounters of my NY existence. So I'll start with the film I saw last night. No review, just an image or two from Almost Peaceful, a French film released in 2002 about a group of Jews who work for a tailor in Paris after World War II and how they try to get back on their feet. The film really focused on the meaning of people being with people. You know how you can sometime know you are going to like a film because of the way people are arranged in the frame? Well, I feel I can, at any rate.
Saturday, January 19, 2013
Birds eye view (Books - Fly Away Peter by David Malouf)
David Malouf, an Australian writer, was new to me. His novella Fly Away Peter (Vintage International, 1982) has an elegant, even polished voice and an pensive, elegiac tone. It concerns two young men, Ashley Crowther, an English-educated Australian man of means who returns to live on his father estate. He hires Jim, a man well-versed in the birds of his native land, to document all the species which live on his property so that they might start a sanctuary. Through this work, they become much more friendly than men of their distinct classes might ordinarily become. When World War I breaks out, both men join up and serve. That's it. If you're looking for action-packed writing you should look somewhere else. This is a contemplative reading experience about interaction between men and nature, men and themselves, men and each other. Usually World War I is put forward as the start of mechanized warfare and the birth of a new brand of cruelty, but Fly Away Peter, while not selling the horror of the war short, also sees it as a leveler. Along with the death of chivalry, came the death not of class exactly, but death of the notion that the higher born were somehow more favored by the gods. If a bomb went off in the trench, it could kill a poor woodsman or an Oxford-educated estate owner equally efficiently. Fly Away Peter is about the rewards of gaining the perspective of other men or other creatures and, in that it offers some solace amidst all the inhumanity of war.
Sunday, January 13, 2013
A socio-political, musical, map that is the zeitgeist of NW London (Books - NW by Zadie Smith)
Zadie Smith is an artist of our time. She brings an acute ear for the rhythm and melody of contemporary speech to compositions that feel like the music of our multi-cultural urban life. At the same time, she brings an educated awareness of the narrative form that never lets the reader forget what she knows. In her first novel White Teeth, it was that musical ear that was emphasized in its sprawling story and rococo diction. In On Beauty, a leaner story of racial politics in academia, it was her formalistic prowess that shone in a brilliant appropriation of E.M. Forster's plot of Howard's End. In her new novel NW (The Penguin Press, 2012), Zadie Smith synthesizes her two sides to fashion a work that feels equal parts her gifts and her technique.
Saturday, January 5, 2013
In the harsh light of day... (Books - Swimming Home by Deborah Levy)
Deborah Levy's Swimming Home (Bloomsbury USA, 2012) made a lot of critics favorites lists for 2012 as well as being shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize but, although Levy is effective at setting a pervasively creepy atmosphere, I was not as completely taken as everyone else. A few paragraphs from the retrospective opening offer a good example of Levy's modern, brightly-illuminated diction.
He leaned his head out of the window and felt the cold mountain air sting his lips. Early humans had once lived in this forest that was now a road. They knew the past lived in rocks and trees and they knew desire made them awkward, mad, mysterious, messed up.Her prose shines the garish light of a hangover over all she surveys - things are too brightly colorful, too clear, they make your eyes hurt, and her characters get now how perfectly obvious the whole mess was before. The thing is, I've not been drinking, and I felt like I got it from the start.
To have been so intimate with Kitty Finch had been a pleasure, a pain, a shock, an experiment, but most of all it had been a mistake. He asked her again to please, please, please drive him safely home to his wife and daughter.
'Yes,' she said. 'Life is only worth living because we hope it will get better and we'll all get home safely.'
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
2012 - the year that was
A New Year's Day meme. I did this last year and it turned out to be a pretty good year, maybe it will work again. Feel free to steal and modify it.
1. What did you do in 2012 that you’d never done before?
Published an article in a non-science journal. Created a book club. Ate zucchini, hazlenut chocolate cake while looking at the Julian Alps.
2. Did you keep your new years’ resolutions, and will you make more for next year?
I don't know what I said I would do last year and, doubtless, I didn't do it. This year I will write my dissertation and defend it. That is the one and only plan I am making.
I don't know what I said I would do last year and, doubtless, I didn't do it. This year I will write my dissertation and defend it. That is the one and only plan I am making.
3. Did anyone close to you give birth?
Yes, a friend in the midwest.
4. Did anyone close to you die?
Parents of childhood friends and a remarkable Prof in my PhD program.
5. What countries did you visit?
England, Austria, Slovenia, and Italy.
England, Austria, Slovenia, and Italy.
6. What would you like to have in 2013 that you lacked in 2012?
A PhD. A salary. Hair on the top of my head, but let's be reasonable.
7. What dates from 2012 will remain etched upon your memory, and why?
My 50th birthday. Well, because it was my 50th and the Ragazzo got really sick, and 20 children lost their lives in CT. It couldn't quite be called joyous.
8. What was your biggest achievement of the year?
Reaching 50, I guess, although all I did was look before I cross, buckle in, and take my vitamins.
Reaching 50, I guess, although all I did was look before I cross, buckle in, and take my vitamins.
9. What was your biggest failure?
I said this last year but I'm not sure that I improved: I talked more than I listened. I answered more than I asked.
10. Did you suffer illness or injury?
Aside from a rotten sinus infection, and an annoying stomach thing, I was pretty fortunate.
11. What was the best thing you bought?
I got a great tie and scarf in Vienna and saw a lot of terrific theatre performances.
I got a great tie and scarf in Vienna and saw a lot of terrific theatre performances.
12. Whose behaviour merited celebration?
President Obama stood up for gay marriage in an election year. How the world has changed.
13. Whose behaviour made you appalled and depressed?
13. Whose behaviour made you appalled and depressed?
Is it too much of a cliche to say most of the United States legislature?
14. Where did most of your money go?
15. What did you get really, really, really excited about?
Obama's standing up for gay marriage. Our train trip to Slovenia. Cute puppies. Seeing the play Scenes From an Execution after imagining it for 25 years. The Halloween party we did at work for the kids two days after Hurricane Sandy. A meeting that I had regarding future work. Seeing a number of my old students perform.
16. What song will always remind you of 2011?
None comes to mind.
17. Compared to this time last year, are you:
a) happier or sadder?
b) thinner or fatter?
c) richer or poorer? - you don't say in what, so if we're not counting dollars and cents, definitely richer.
18. What do you wish you’d done more of?
Had meaningful exchanges with friends, family, and new acquaintances. Written. Followed through.
None comes to mind.
17. Compared to this time last year, are you:
a) happier or sadder?
b) thinner or fatter?
c) richer or poorer? - you don't say in what, so if we're not counting dollars and cents, definitely richer.
18. What do you wish you’d done more of?
Had meaningful exchanges with friends, family, and new acquaintances. Written. Followed through.
19. What do you wish you’d done less of?
Acted without awareness. Made commitments I couldn't keep.
20. How did you spend Christmas?
At the in-laws making schnitzel, cucumber salad, opening presents with the kids, and singing carols.
21. Did you fall in love in 2011?
Once or twice.
22. How many one-night stands?
None, thanks for asking.
23. What was your favourite TV program?
24. Do you hate anyone now that you didn’t hate this time last year?
Yes, and I'm much better at it.
26. What was your greatest musical discovery?
I'm loving Lorraine Hunt Lieberson's recording of Les Nuits d'Ete
and Radu Lupu's recording of Schumann's Piano Concerto in A minor
27. What did you want and get?
A more unified experience of myself.
28. What did you want and not get?
Although gay people can now marry in nine of the United States and D.C., the federal government does not confer more than 1,000 benefits upon us that it gives straight people who have paid the same fee and sworn to the same terms of that contract.
28. What did you want and not get?
Although gay people can now marry in nine of the United States and D.C., the federal government does not confer more than 1,000 benefits upon us that it gives straight people who have paid the same fee and sworn to the same terms of that contract.
29. What were your favourite performances this year?
Films:
Margaret (2011)
Another Year (2010) - appropriately enough
Blue Valentine (2010)
This is Not a Film (2011)
Copie Conforme (2010)
Red Riding Trilogy (2009)
Theatre:
Uncle Vanya by the Sydney Theatre Co. w/ Cate Blanchette
Orpheus and Euridice chor. Pina Bausch by Paris Opera Ballet
Scenes From an Execution - Nat'l Theatre, London
Timon of Athens - Nat'l Theatre, London (HD simulcast)
Donka: A Letter to Chekhov - BAM
The Other Place - Broadway w/ Laurie Metcalf
30. What did you do on your birthday, and how old were you?
I worked, went to a very elegant restaurant and turned 50.
I worked, went to a very elegant restaurant and turned 50.
31.What one thing would have made your year immeasurably more satisfying?
Equal treatment under the law, as detailed in #28.
32. How would you describe your personal fashion concept in 2011?
I manage to get dressed every day, occasionally that included a tie. Fashion concept? Let's not go crazy.
33. What kept you sane?
Did something keep me sane? If so, it was probably the Ragazzo.
34. What political issue stirred you the most?
Where do I begin? I am appalled at the resistance to offering healthcare as a basic right of citizenship in this rich and technically advanced country. I am amazed that when so many people are murdered in cold blood all some can think about is their personal right to own a gun. I am terrified that Antonin Scalia actually imagines that he or anyone else interprets the Constitution exactly as it was written. We would still have slavery and women would not be able to vote if that were the case. I continue to be amazed that relatively smart people imagine that the only thing between them and better lives is government. They are in denial about how reliant we all are upon each other for basic services. If they want electricity coming to their homes, trash collected, safe meat and dairy to eat, coordinated help after hurricanes, relatively safe household products, we need to have regulation and we need to pay taxes. Making everything answerable only to profit has been disastrous for so many industries - look at the airlines, health insurance, for-profit prisons are a true desecration of justice.
35. Whom did you miss?
My dad. My grandparents.
36. Who was the best new person you met?
I met a really cool woman at a wedding two days ago who works on biodiversity in cities.
37. Tell us a valuable life lesson you learned in 2011:
I worked on being more mindful of things as they are.
I worked on being more mindful of things as they are.
38. Quote a song lyric that sums up your year:
This doesn't sum up my year, but I think Noel Coward is as good a way as any to ring in the New Year.
Quite for no reason
I'm here for the Season
And high as a kite,
Living in error
With Maud at Cap Ferrat
Which couldn't be right.
Everyone's here and frightfully gay,
Nobody cares what people say,
Though the Riviera
Seems really much queerer
Than Rome at it's height,
Yesterday night-
I went to a marvelous party
With Nounou and Nada and Nell,
It was in the fresh air
And we went as we were
And we stayed as we were
Which was Hell.
Poor Grace started singing at midnight
And didn't stop singing till four;
We knew the excitement was bound to begin
When Laura got blind on Dubonnet and gin
And scratched her veneer with a Cartier pin,
I couldn't have liked it more.
I went to a marvelous party,
I must say the fun was intense,
We all had to do
What the people we knew
Would be doing a hundred years hence.
Dear Cecil arrived wearing armour,
Some shells and a black feather boa,
Poor Millicent wore a surrealist comb
Made of bits of mosaic from St. Peter's in Rome,
But the weight was so great that she had to go home,
I couldn't have liked it more.
People's behaviour
Away from Belgravia
Would make you aghast,
So much variety
Watching society
Scampering past,
If you have any mind at all
Gibbon's divine Decline and Fall
Seems pretty flimsy,
No more than a whimsy,
By way of contrast
On Saturday last-
I went to a marvelous party,
We didn't start dinner till ten
And young Bobbie Carr
Did a stunt at the bar
With a lot of extraordinary men;
Dear Baba arrived with a turtle
Which shattered us all to the core,
The Grand Duke was dancing a foxtrot with me
When suddenly Cyril screamed "Fiddledidee"
And ripped off his trousers and jumped in the sea,
I couldn't have liked it more.
I went to a marvelous party,
Elise made an entrance with May
You'd never have guessed
From her fisherman's vest
That her bust had been whittled away.
Poor Lulu got fried on Chianti
And talked about esprit de corps.
Maurice made a couple of passes at Gus
And Freddie, who hates any kind of a fuss,
Did half the Big Apple and twisted his truss,
I couldn't have liked it more.
I went to a marvellous party.
We played the most wonderful game,
Maureen disappeared
And came back in a beard
And we all had to guess at her name!
We talked about growing old gracefully
And Elsie who's seventy-four
Said, "A, it's a question of being sincere,
And B, if you're supple you've nothing to fear."
Then she swung upside down from a glass chandelier,
I couldn't have liked it more.
Monday, December 31, 2012
Rediscovering art in suffering, rediscovering language in silence (Books - The Life of an Unknown Man by Andrei Makine)
Barely a few pages into Andrei Makine's The Life of an Unknown Man (Trans. Geoffrey Strachan, Graywolf Press, 2012), I had a feeling it was going to become a favorite novel of 2012. It is a literate paean to the life of a simple man, made memorable by his fierce and determined love. It begins in Paris as Shutov, an emigre Russian writer, mourns a break-up with a much younger woman. He mouths appreciation for Chekhov that is learned, indeed he speaks on television as a member of literary panel of experts, yet in his appraisal he is distant, formulaic, and, as one ambitious for a different kind of success, he is soured by fear of his own mediocrity. He is a man caught in between - in between old age and youth, in between success and ordinariness, in between the refined, educated life of a Frenchman-of-letters and a victim of the Soviet repression of anything humanistic or beautiful.
I'm not Russian, Lea. I'm Soviet. So you see I'm filthy, stupid, and vicious. Very different from all those Michel Strogoffs and Prince Myshkins the French are crazy about.
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Bookeywookey's best fiction reads of 2012
And now, my favorite fiction reads of the year (excluding re-reads which are obviously already favorites).
Toby's Room by Pat Barker
The Patrick Melrose Novels by Edward St Aubyn
Any Human Heart by William Boyd
What is the What by Dave Eggers
The Stranger's Child by Alan Hollinghurst
Be Near Me by Andrew O'Hagan
Nineteen-Seventy-Four by David Peace
The Life of an Unknown Man by Andrei Makine
I enjoyed looking over all the fiction I read this year. The worlds I inhabited thanks to the authors were so varied, full of strong characters, sharp observations, and the narrative technique, particularly in this short list, was sure. I'm not sure whether I am going to end up wanting to add Andrei Makine's The Life of an Unknown Man to the list of contenders (addendum: see above) , as I'm in the middle of it now, but here are the four, upon looking back, that I think the best of the best. Click the titles for links to my posts about them.
Toby's Room by Pat Barker
The Patrick Melrose Novels by Edward St Aubyn
Any Human Heart by William Boyd
What is the What by Dave Eggers
The Stranger's Child by Alan Hollinghurst
Be Near Me by Andrew O'Hagan
Nineteen-Seventy-Four by David Peace
The Life of an Unknown Man by Andrei Makine
I enjoyed looking over all the fiction I read this year. The worlds I inhabited thanks to the authors were so varied, full of strong characters, sharp observations, and the narrative technique, particularly in this short list, was sure. I'm not sure whether I am going to end up wanting to add Andrei Makine's The Life of an Unknown Man to the list of contenders (addendum: see above) , as I'm in the middle of it now, but here are the four, upon looking back, that I think the best of the best. Click the titles for links to my posts about them.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Bookeywookey's best biography and memoir reading of 2012
I noticed that I returned to a reading pleasure of old this year. I used to read many more biographies and autobiographies than I have in the past few years (especially when I was acting), but in 2012 I read many more. Here were the highlights.
Catherine the Great by Robert Massie
Blue Nights by Joan Didion
A Positively Final Appearance by Alec Guinness
My Name Escapes Me by Alec Guinness
Winter Journal by Paul Auster
It is difficult to pick a 'best' from this list since the straight, long-form biography of the empress of Russia is so different from the memoir form, which is different again from Joan Didion's deep elegiac reflection on the loss of her daughter. Good thing I don't have to choose. These were all great, but I'll single out:
Monday, December 24, 2012
Bookeywookey's best non-fiction (non-biographical) read of 2012
Time for the annual best-of ritual. I'm dividing my non-fiction category into life story forms (biography, memoir) and anything else. Here were the non-biographical non-fiction highlights of my 2012 reading:
The Emperor of all Maladies by Siddhartha Mukherjee
Remarkable Creatures by Sean B. Carroll
The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander
Behind the Beautiful Forevers by Katherine Boo
In Europe by Geert Mak
There isn't a single title in this list that I wouldn't strongly recommend. Since The Emperor of all Maladies and Behind the Beautiful Forevers got a lot of air time from others, I think I'll call it a tie between In Europe and Remarkable Creatures. I found In Europe impressive for combining tremendous scope - covering all of Europe and the 20th Century - with a sense of the impact of history on individual human beings. Remarkable Creatures makes an adventure story out of a narrative that shows how science done by individual mavericks contributes to the fund of general knowledge.
The Emperor of all Maladies by Siddhartha Mukherjee
Remarkable Creatures by Sean B. Carroll
The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander
Behind the Beautiful Forevers by Katherine Boo
In Europe by Geert Mak
There isn't a single title in this list that I wouldn't strongly recommend. Since The Emperor of all Maladies and Behind the Beautiful Forevers got a lot of air time from others, I think I'll call it a tie between In Europe and Remarkable Creatures. I found In Europe impressive for combining tremendous scope - covering all of Europe and the 20th Century - with a sense of the impact of history on individual human beings. Remarkable Creatures makes an adventure story out of a narrative that shows how science done by individual mavericks contributes to the fund of general knowledge.
Sunday, December 23, 2012
2012 reading roundup - let's do the numbers
I feel a little behind in my accounting. I always enjoy my annual review of where my reading tastes took me over the year. So, let's see what kind of reading year I had in 2012.
I have completed 60 books to date, writing about 58 of them. I have a few more in-progress and am likely to finish 1 or 2. Genre categories are not mutually exclusive. If a book falls into more than 1 category, I list it in both.
Books read: 60
written by men: 44
written by women: 16
in translation: 5
re-read: 2
published in the past year or so: 19
fiction: 31
non-fiction: 28
on the fence: 1
poetry: 1
biography/autobiography/memoir: 9
history/political affairs/social science: 9
science: 9
I'm a little surprised I got through so much, but I'm conscious as I'm beginning to write my dissertation, that next year's numbers are likely to be a lot more modest. Not that I won't be reading, it will be many more science articles next year and many fewer books. Or at least, that's what I expect.
Next up: my best-of lists for 2012.
Happy holidays everyone.
I have completed 60 books to date, writing about 58 of them. I have a few more in-progress and am likely to finish 1 or 2. Genre categories are not mutually exclusive. If a book falls into more than 1 category, I list it in both.
Books read: 60
written by men: 44
written by women: 16
in translation: 5
re-read: 2
published in the past year or so: 19
fiction: 31
non-fiction: 28
on the fence: 1
poetry: 1
biography/autobiography/memoir: 9
history/political affairs/social science: 9
science: 9
I'm a little surprised I got through so much, but I'm conscious as I'm beginning to write my dissertation, that next year's numbers are likely to be a lot more modest. Not that I won't be reading, it will be many more science articles next year and many fewer books. Or at least, that's what I expect.
Next up: my best-of lists for 2012.
Happy holidays everyone.
English innocence in Weimar Germany (Books - The Temple by Stephen Spender)
Oxford poets, Weimar Germany, you'd think that I would have enjoyed Stephen Spender's The Temple a little more. Spender wrote it in 1929-1930 at the age of 21, so it has all of the enthusiasm of that tender age. It was never published, I suppose, because it would have outed a few too many of his acquaintances and he feared action for libel. Spender rewrote it in 1986, updating it with clunky self-conscious awareness of the impending war that deprives the narrator of what I suspect was too embarrassing a show of political naivete. To my reading, this stripped what is already a work of patent juvenilia of most of its charm. What remains pscyhologically astute and historically interesting is the certainty of the young characters that Germany was in a revolutionary time of enlightened openness, that there would never be another war, and among the most educated of the characters, many of whom were Jewish or homosexual, a conspicuous blindness to the threat of the rising Nazi party. That observation and a good deal of decent descriptive writing kept me going.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
An unforgiving island and a story woven to pass the time (Books - San Miguel by T.C. Boyle)
San Miguel was the first novel I have read of the 13 of T. C. Boyle and I found him a vivid writer who really knows how to tell a good story. This tale of three generations from the 1880s to the 1940s who inhabit an unforgiving island off the coast of Southern California was free of Boyle's reputed whimsy. I was going to say that this is a sober tale about the borderline between grit and stubbornness, and it is sober, but unlike many modern novels that put forth a unifying theme, this is a novel that is about what it is about. The damp, ramshackle ranch where the Waters and then the Lester families live is not a symbol, it's a dwelling.
Her first impression was of nakedness, naked walls struck with penurious little windows, a yard of windblown sand giving onto an infinite vista of sheep-ravaged scrub that radiated out from it in every direction and not a tree or shrub or scap of ivy in sight. There was nothing even remotely quaint or cozy about it. It might as well have been lifted up in a tornado and set down in the middle of the Arabian Desert. And where were the camels? The women in burnooses? She was so disappointed - stunned, shocked - that she was scarcely aware of the boy as he pushed open the rude gate for her. "You want I should put the things in the parlor?" he asked.The characters did not, as the book's jacket suggest, read like examples of strength, they are simply people, very flawed people who could be petty, who could give up, who could be jealous, overly ambitious, loving, and, yes, determined. The advantage of this was that they were unpredictable. I felt like I was spying on these people in their lives, that if they turned around and saw me they would feel interrupted and self-conscious. Without a theme to give the reading a unifying purpose, the job of Boyle's narrative was to keep me interested in the place and the characters and it is his talent that he does. This felt like old fashioned storytelling - not a narrative to sell an idea but a story woven to pass the time, to entertain, to hold the reader's interest.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Voluptuary and statesman (Books - Catherine the Great by Robert K. Massie)
Literature, theatre, and neuroscience are the fascinations I profess in the tagline to this blog, but while my enthusiasm for fiction and science are evident in my reading choices, and my interest in how narratives build selves shows up again and again in my writing, I think of my interest in Central and Eastern European history as a kind of secret pleasure - one I share with my dear friend Sheila (although I haven't read nearly the amount she has on the subject). We met for an evening of red wine and talk this past week and she saw Robert Massie's Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman (625 pages. Random House, 2011 ) poking its massive head out of my briefcase and laughed knowingly. Many a time is it that we have met over the last twenty years when the second to arrive finds the first at the bar, red wine already in-progress, nose buried in a 900 page tome about the purges of Stalin, or the velvet revolution. In any event, the truth now out on the table, I can confess to not merely enjoying Massie's biography of Catherine II, and learning a ton about 18th century European history - not just of Russia but also Poland and Austria-Hungary, and he does a great one-chapter mini-review of the French Revolution - but also to having done some much-needed work on my biceps, triceps, and lats, lugging the 4 lbs of its heft back and forth to work every day.
Sunday, December 2, 2012
World War I and the changing roles of women and men (Books - Toby's Room by Pat Barker)
World War I was one of the most influential events of the last century. Some credit it with ushering in the modern war, the machine age, the birth of the airplane for regular human use, modern music, the spread of modern clinical psychology, and the death of chivalry. Certainly it heralded the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman, German, and Russian monarchies. Killed 8-9 million soldiers, disabled 7 million, and
seriously injured 15 million. Germany lost 15% of its adult males, Austria–Hungary 17%, and France 10%. Another several million civilians starved to death in its wake. It is little wonder that artists have spent so much time contemplating its devastating reach. English novelist Pat Barker has made the subject of World War I her literary bread and butter. Her Regeneration Trilogy fictionalized Siegfried Sassoon's treatment for shell-shock after serving in World War I. It dramatizes socio-political as well as clinical-scientific complexities of the war experience in a way that makes you feel as thought you were present then. It's a strong and memorable read. Her Life Class looked at making art in the context of war and the changes experienced by one young English woman as a consequence. Pat Barker's latest, Toby's Room, like Life Class, deals with a young painting student named Elinor and her contemporaries, Neville and Paul. I found it a richer exploration than her last novel of the changes wrought on the younger generation in the wake of the war.
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Justice does not banish loss (Books - Berlin Cantata by Jeffrey Lewis)
Berlin, a mecca of culture and progressive thought in the 1920s, cleared of much of its talent by the Nazis,then destroyed like most German cities by the war, then divided as a spoil of war, half-Communist half-Western, then - 1989 - the wall falls. In this city: a house owned by a Jewish family, then Nazis, then Communists. To that city on the verge of change comes an American woman, the next generation of the Jewish owners of the house. Germany's efforts to make reparations to those they harmed in the war mean that she might be able to lay claim to the house. In Berlin Cantata (Haus, 2012), Jeffrey Lewis tells the story of modern Berlin - a city where the layers of history are exposed, where the past walks on two feet, seemingly as alive as the present. A city of ghosts. Lewis tells this story of memory, guilt, politics, and family as a melange of solo voices. The house's former owners, its current residents, the young woman's lawyer, a contemporary journalist speak their monologues as the story accumulates and the mysteries of the past unfold.
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Are the reports of the death of publishing greatly exaggerated?
Books are dying, the print medium is dead, goes the hysterical rumor, and it's Amazon that is killing them. Well, they are alive and well here. On the Media did an excellent show on this subject in April and re-broadcast this weekend.
How did J.K. Rowling stand up to Amazon?
Russian e-pirating of books - it creates free loaders, but it also widens an author's readership and may ultimately boost legal sales.
Listen to the podcast here:
Publishing: Adapt or Die - On The Media
It's their usual deep level of reporting - critical, with a somewhat bemused tone.
How did J.K. Rowling stand up to Amazon?
Russian e-pirating of books - it creates free loaders, but it also widens an author's readership and may ultimately boost legal sales.
Listen to the podcast here:
Publishing: Adapt or Die - On The Media
It's their usual deep level of reporting - critical, with a somewhat bemused tone.
Friday, November 23, 2012
Humane political thought as it arises from facing the conflict in ourselves (Books - Isaiah Berlin: A Life by Michael Ignatieff)
I had felt enough of the influence of Isaiah Berlin on contemporary political thinkers and writers who I like to read, that I wanted to know who he was. For this, I turned to Michael Ignatieff's affectionate biography Isaiah Berlin: A Life (Vintage 2000). Born in Latvia in the early 1900s, living briefly in Russia, and an eventually taking refuge in England, he became more English than the English, rising through the ranks of academia to the level of Oxford don. He was an intellectual with a powerful gift for talking about ideas. His mature thought brought together history, philosophy, and psychology to consider contemporary politics with complexity and compassion. He served as a valued advisor to Churchill and John F. Kennedy.
Saturday, November 10, 2012
The limits of genius (Books - Measuring the World by Daniel Kehlmann)
Daniel Kehlmann is a popular German-born writer living in Austria. With Measuring the World (Quercus, 2007) he has taken the biographies of mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss and scientist Alexander von Humbolt as the jumping off point for a novel which vividly and amusingly imagines their inner lives. Contemporaneous to the late 18th to early 19th centuries, Gauss and Humboldt were endowed with brilliant minds which saw novel ways to answer questions (and defeat strongly held but untested assumptions) about the world in which we live. Both took on the entire world as their subject - the height of its peaks, the composition and temperature of its core, the shape of planetary orbits, the path of the ocean's currents, the very shape of space - but their methods of measurement couldn't have been more different. While Humboldt shocked his own spine in testing the nervous system's ability to conduct electricity and travelled to the far reaches of the world at considerable risk to himself - he couldn't pass an Andean peak without climbing it or a mine shaft without dropping himself in - Gauss preferred to make his measurements without leaving his armchair.
Sunday, November 4, 2012
The riches and burdens of family legacy (Books - The Scientists by Marco Roth)
Our part of New York City was relatively spared from serious Hurricane effects. Our electricity stayed on, we had some downed trees, the stores were emptied of bread, and transportation to work was difficult, but being at the highest elevation in Manhattan, we didn't have much flooding. Thank you to all the friends who checked up on us. I thought the two days off from work would give me time to read and catch up on a considerable backlog of book posts, but that fantasy was never realized. I was back at work on Wednesday, where a much depleted staff carried on with the Halloween party we had offered to host for the families served by the Children's Evaluation and Rehabilitation Center where I work. To our surprise, we had over 100 kids show up in costume. Boy were they and their parents glad to get out of the house!
Another New York story was the subject of The Scientists by Marco Roth (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012) which I was convinced was a novel, but turns out to have been a memoir. It tells of a thirty-something New Yorker whose father, a medical researcher, contracted the HIV virus in the 1980s.
Another New York story was the subject of The Scientists by Marco Roth (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012) which I was convinced was a novel, but turns out to have been a memoir. It tells of a thirty-something New Yorker whose father, a medical researcher, contracted the HIV virus in the 1980s.
Monday, October 29, 2012
Growing up minus the childhood (Books - Down the Rabbit Hole by Juan Pablo Villalobos)
Tochtli is a precocious seven-year-old, although he protests otherwise, who lives in a palace with its own zoo and is obsessed with hats, difficult words, and Liberian pygmy hippopotami.
Some people say I'm precocious. They say it mainly because they think I know difficult words for a little boy. Some of the difficult words I know are: sordid, disastrous, immaculate, pathetic, and devastating. There aren't really that many people who say I'm precocious. The problem is I don't know that many people. I know maybe thirteen or fourteen people, and four of them say I'm precocious. They say I look older. Or the other way around: that I'm too little to know words like that. Or back-to-front and the other way around, sometimes people think I'm a dwarf. But I don't think I'm precocious. What happens is I have a trick, like magicians who pull rabbits out of hats, except I pull words out of the dictionary. Every night before I go to sleep I read the dictionary. My memory, which is really good, practically devastating, does the rest...
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Being rich ain't all its cracked up to be (Books - The Patrick Melrose Novels by Edward St. Aubyn)

Monday, October 15, 2012
The public voice of our frailty (Books - Blue Nights by Joan Didion)
If you read Joan Didion's A Year of Magical Thinking, in which Didion, through writing, relentlessly observes herself in the act of grieving her husband during the year following his sudden death from a heart attack, I imagine you have read, or are thinking about reading, Blue Nights. Blue Nights, although it is an act of mourning her daughter Quintana, who died scarcely a year after her father, is not just more of the same. A Year of Magical Thinking was written through the raging storm. The book is brutal. Didion is dogged in examining her replacement of ordered thought with irrational and yet sensible struggles to undo the death of her husband - John Gregory Dunne - via special deals she makes with the universe. In it, she calls less on their life prior to his death, instead replaying the evening of his death over and over. In Blue Nights, Didion has allowed more time to pass since her daughter's death before writing. Here there is less the feeling of a disaster film shot from the cockpit of a crashing plane, and more the feeling of an invocation. They are both books of mourning, but in Blue Nights Didion calls on memory to wonder at the life and death of her daughter, to actively feel the pain of two losses - one of Quintana, the other of herself - and to assuage them. She uses repetition of form not exactly to reign in the emotion, but to structure it, so that the book is a conscious act of creation rather than simply an outpouring of raw grief. I thought its form evocative of a sestina which, Mary Kinzie's A Poet's Guide to Poetry tells us, is a formal verse structure with 39 lines containing 6 stanzas of six lines whose end words repeat verbatim in the following stanzas in a highly prescribed fashion. The seventh stanza uses all six end-words, also in a specific way. The repetition creates recurrent sounds, allowing a particular theme to echo as a refrain (as grief does with repeated memories). The highly stereotyped order, when used well and pitted against complex emotions, creates esthetic tension and that is precisely how it functioned in Blue Nights.
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Piteable men building their positions of strength on the backs of formidable women (Books - Three Strong Women by Marie NDiaye)
Three Strong Women by Marie NDiaye (Alfred A. Knopf, 2012), has received some strong press and the prestigious Prix Goncourt. The author's literary prowess won her a publisher for her first novel at age 18. Fernanda Eberstadt's fine review of this book in The New York Times Book Review informs us:
The expectation — whether menacing or well meaning — that NDiaye should “represent” multiracial France, or be considered a voice of the French African diaspora, has often dogged her. In fact, as NDiaye is at pains to make clear, she scarcely knew her Senegalese father, who came to France as a student in the 1960s and returned to Africa when she was a baby. Raised by her French mother — a secondary school science teacher — in a housing project in suburban Paris, with vacations in the countryside where her maternal grandparents were farmers, NDiaye describes herself as a purely French product, with no claim to biculturalism but her surname and the color of her skin. Nonetheless, the absent father — charismatic, casually cruel, voraciously selfish — haunts NDiaye’s fiction and drama, as does the shadow of a dreamlike Africa in which demons and evil portents abound, where the unscrupulous can make overnight fortunes and, with another turn of the wheel, find themselves rotting in a jail cell.
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Re-imagining Shakespeare's fairy kings and foolish mortals (Books - The Great Night by Chris Adrian)
It was Sam Ruddock's review that led me to Chris Adrian's The Great Night, an unrestrained hooplah of a novel that re-imagines Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, placing it in Buena Vista Park in contemporary San Francisco. It's quite a ride. Adrian is not only a well-regarded writer, he is also a fellow in pediatric hematology-oncology, which leads me to assume he has probably seen his share of painful loss and human suffering. Interesting then that his characters Henry, Will, and Molly - the equivalent of the quartet of mortal young lovers in Shakespeare's play - have not only deeply suffered, but their lives are irrevocably driven by their suffering. One could say they are completely lost in it as they are lost in the park. The royal fairy couple, Tatiana and Oberon, are not broken up over a changeling in this take, they are grieving their child's death from leukemia. The rude mechanicals of Shakespeare are translated to a group of homeless people rehearsing not the myth of Pyramus and Thisbe but a politically-driven musical based on the film Soylent Green, no really. Puck is still a big trouble-maker. It is the unleashing of his power in the service of Tatiana and Oberon's unmitigated grief that drives the tangled, hallucinatory drama of healing that comprises the action of this novel.
Sunday, October 7, 2012
The story of the 20th century as the search for a 'self' (Books - Any Human Heart by William Boyd)
It seems that my vacation reading brought an unintentional spate of novels built on the autobiographical form. In most ways, What is the What could not be more different than William Boyd's Any Human Heart but they both involve relating the events of a life from a subjective point of view. Any Human Heart (a recommendation of Danielle's - another good one - thanks!) is the picture of a century. The 20th century, to be exact, but it is told through the journals of one Logan Gonzago Mountstuart, a British subject born in Uruguay and sometime resident of England, America, Nigeria, and France.
Saturday, October 6, 2012
Lost it all but rich in "selves" (Books - What is the What by Dave Eggers)
What is the What is the first of Dave Eggers's books I have read. It is distinct and unusual. It tells the harrowing story of Valentino Achak Deng, one of the 'Lost Boys' of Sudan, relating the events of his life that finally brought him to Atlanta in the U.S., but it bills itself as both an autobiography and a novel. An autobiography because Achak Deng related his life story to Eggers himself. A novel, I guess, because Eggers took liberties with his story to make it into a readable book. As I started writing the first sentence of this post I was going going to describe the story as 'unreal,' so mind bogglingly awful are many of the events. Perhaps this is why Eggers wanted to create from its events rather than simply try to record them. Sometimes the truth is unbelievable, or perhaps he (wisely) mistrusted his ability to relate only the facts since no one - not Deng in the telling nor Eggers in the retelling - truly leaves a story unchanged. In any event, the result is outrage-provoking yet beautifully fashioned, compellingly told, and, finally, warming.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Negotiating science in politics (Books - The Art and Politics of Science by Harold Varmus)
Before taking off for points east, I read The Art and Politics of Science a sciency memoir by Harold Varmus, whose Nobel Prize-winning work helped reveal the connection between viral oncogenes and cancer. Dr. Varmus ran the National Institutes of Health (NIH) during the Clinton presidency and now heads Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, one of the leading research and treatment facilities for cancer in the world. It is his success in the combined realm of science and policy-making that made me most interested in reading this swift-moving, easy-going account of a singularly impressive career. Owing to my backlog of posts I will attempt to keep this brief.
Returned from places distant, diverting, and delicious
We're back. The Ragazzo took way better pictures than I did. But here are a few of mine from a walk on the Sussex downs, a view of Ljubljana - the capital city of Slovenia - from the castle which overlooks it, and Lake Bled, a beautiful area of Slovenia where we took a hike - you can see the Alps in the background. Misha Matthew correctly identified all of the locations on my Vacate quiz and will be receiving a book on distant lands! Congratulations, Misha.
I didn't actually take any pictures in Venice or London and my pictures from Vienna are pretty boring but the trip wasn't. We managed to get opera tickets in Vienna and see a performance of Elektra and even before we left, we booked tickets for Scenes From an Execution a Howard Barker play from the 1970s about the freedom of the artist. The primary character is loosely based on Renaissance painter Artemisia Gentileschi and the play is being given a new production at the National Theatre in London starring Fiona Shaw and with a favorite English actress of mine - Phoebe Nichols. The British public seems less than happy with the production if the Guardian article I linked above is any indication, but I thought it intelligent and elegantly produced. We ate well in Venice and stayed in some beautiful and unique places. The train ride from Vienna to Ljubljana offers spectacular scenery and an honest to goodness dining car with linen tablecloths and decent, if not elegant, food.
In addition I read 5 novels, so I really have some catching up to do here. In the coming days I will post on David Egger's What is the What, William Boyd's Any Human Heart, Chris Adrian's The Great Night, Marie Ndiaye's Three Strong Women, and Never Mind by Edward St. Aubyn. In fact, I'm in the middle of his Patrick Melrose novels right now and they are brilliantly written, riveting, and hilarious even as the action is mind-bogglingly ghastly. More to follow.
I didn't actually take any pictures in Venice or London and my pictures from Vienna are pretty boring but the trip wasn't. We managed to get opera tickets in Vienna and see a performance of Elektra and even before we left, we booked tickets for Scenes From an Execution a Howard Barker play from the 1970s about the freedom of the artist. The primary character is loosely based on Renaissance painter Artemisia Gentileschi and the play is being given a new production at the National Theatre in London starring Fiona Shaw and with a favorite English actress of mine - Phoebe Nichols. The British public seems less than happy with the production if the Guardian article I linked above is any indication, but I thought it intelligent and elegantly produced. We ate well in Venice and stayed in some beautiful and unique places. The train ride from Vienna to Ljubljana offers spectacular scenery and an honest to goodness dining car with linen tablecloths and decent, if not elegant, food.
In addition I read 5 novels, so I really have some catching up to do here. In the coming days I will post on David Egger's What is the What, William Boyd's Any Human Heart, Chris Adrian's The Great Night, Marie Ndiaye's Three Strong Women, and Never Mind by Edward St. Aubyn. In fact, I'm in the middle of his Patrick Melrose novels right now and they are brilliantly written, riveting, and hilarious even as the action is mind-bogglingly ghastly. More to follow.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Vacate!
Friends and new acquaintances, we're off to points east for a little bit - a late vacation. Below are the pix of our destinations. The closest guesses (as in most geographically specific) will be entered in a drawing. One winner will be selected when we return (you can live anywhere) . The winner can choose 1 book related to travel or places other than the place you live - fiction or non-fiction, travel, history, world politics, or recipes of distant places - exact details of the offer to follow on our return. Friends, relatives, and others who know our travel plans are not eligible. Answers by email please, not by comment: bookeywookey@gmail.com. Please put 'VACATE drawing' in the subject line. I will, of course, require the name and mailing address of the lucky winner.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Encore, encore (Books - A Positively Final Appearance by Alec Guinness)
Following my enjoyment of Alec Guinness's 1995-6 journal My Name Escapes Me I couldn't help launching directly into his journals covering 1996-8 A Positively Final Appearance. Although roughly chronological the second volume is more organized by theme. Being a little older, Guinness seems more focused on his declining physical powers and the death of friends. He reflects more negatively on the state of the world and makes fewer excursions. The consequence was fortunate for his reader as the book is peppered with sometimes hilarious, sometimes touching anecdotes of Marlene Dietrich, Michel St Denis,
Humphrey Bogart, Edith Evans, Beatrice Lillie, and the like, that I could lap up with a spoon. He also tucks away perceptive readings of verse, and observations on plays and acting offered, not instructively, but because it is his habit and his pleasure to think about them. I'll offer you a few...
Monday, September 3, 2012
Aesthetics transforms vision and the mind, which transforms aesthetics... (Books - The Age of Insight By Eric Kandel)
There has been a bevy of books examining wider aspects of culture as they intersect with brain science written by scientists in the past year: Consciousness: Confessions of a Romantic Reductionist by Christof Koch, The Age of Insight by Eric R. Kandel, Who's In Charge?: Free Will and the Science of the Brain by Michael S. Gazzaniga, and Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman. They are written by senior neuroscientists and written for the general public I wrote about the Gazzaniga here, I will write on Koch in the coming weeks, and I have yet to finish the Kahneman, but I just completed Eric Kandel's The Age of Insight (Random House, 2012).
The eminent Nobel-Prize winning neuroscientist satisfyingly brings together modernist art, the Viennese Secession to be precise, the study of the unconscious mind emerging during the same period, and what the development of neurobiology and cognitive psychology can contribute to our understanding of human-ness. His self proclaimed aim is to bring together science and art, his mechanism is to address what we know about how the brain accomplishes visual perception, creativity, and feeling. The result is a fluidly written account, fueled by a lifetime in neuroscience and a passion for painting, particularly portraiture.
The eminent Nobel-Prize winning neuroscientist satisfyingly brings together modernist art, the Viennese Secession to be precise, the study of the unconscious mind emerging during the same period, and what the development of neurobiology and cognitive psychology can contribute to our understanding of human-ness. His self proclaimed aim is to bring together science and art, his mechanism is to address what we know about how the brain accomplishes visual perception, creativity, and feeling. The result is a fluidly written account, fueled by a lifetime in neuroscience and a passion for painting, particularly portraiture.
A talent for wonder (Books - My Name Escapes Me by Alec Guinness)
In preparation for watching the recent film version of John Le Carre's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, I got the 1979, 6-episode, made-for-BBC version to watch first. I know that I had seen some part of it before, but never the whole thing, and never with the amount of attention required to follow the amount of story telling conveyed through behavioral detail. It is wonderfully slow paced, unlike anything one can see on television now - without the cutting back and forth every five seconds, between seventeen different cameras - lest we linger, lest we see the lie before us, get bored, and change the channel. The music for it was very good too. Ian Richardson's performance is wonderfully animated, but the real pleasure of it was Alec Guinness's close-to-the-chest portrayal of George Smiley. He is one of those actors whose performances always make me think, well he's not really acting, that's just who he is.
Friday, August 31, 2012
Knowledge + taste = meaningful judgment
The excellent Daniel Mendelsohn, sings his creed at Page-Turner on the job of a critic. (The title for this post is his formula, not mine.)
I remember, too, something that Vendler wrote, years later, in a piece about a volume of Merrill’s work that was published after the poet’s death, at the relatively early age of sixty-eight—about how, now that Merrill was gone, he wouldn’t be around to show her how to grow old. I read this with astonishment. So this was what poetry was for: to show you how to live. As for Kael, the sheer extremity of her enthusiasms, the ornery stylistic over-seasoning, the grandiose swooping pronouncements, made it clear that there was something enormous at stake when you went to the local movie theatre.A thoughtful, instructive, and balanced essay.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
A Winter's Tale for the End of Summer (Books - Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin)
In the waning days of summer, I have been energetically immersed in reading, but not so inclined to write. I can probably blame it on all the writing I'm doing at the lab. That's as good an excuse as any. You should be able to read some sort of mention of The Rational Optimist, Consciousness, and Winter's Tale one of these weeks, if that's what you're pining for. And I should be done with Eric Kandel's The Age of Insight soon. The last one is a book after my own heart on the subject of neuroscience and Viennese art, no really. I intend to finish it soon, even if only to have read it prior to visiting Vienna in a few weeks. Now that I have started my fingers going, maybe I'll share less of a coherent review than some disjointed thoughts about my re-read of Mark Helprin's Winter's Tale now, prior to my book club showing up here to eat fruit and cheese and discuss it.
What a passionately lyrical saga Mark Helprin has fashioned in Winter's Tale (Harcourt Brace & Co., 1983) . It is a moralistic tale, a love story, a fantasy, and an absolute love song to a fictionalized late 19th century New York City. I was aware as I read of how highly literate the narrative voice is, even while being thoroughly submerged in the lightening-fast 700 pages which are romantic, imaginative, and often thrilling.
What a passionately lyrical saga Mark Helprin has fashioned in Winter's Tale (Harcourt Brace & Co., 1983) . It is a moralistic tale, a love story, a fantasy, and an absolute love song to a fictionalized late 19th century New York City. I was aware as I read of how highly literate the narrative voice is, even while being thoroughly submerged in the lightening-fast 700 pages which are romantic, imaginative, and often thrilling.
Saturday, August 4, 2012
An antidote to summer - the useless poems of Gennady Aygi
Some snowy poems as an antidote to the dog days of summer. Jamie Olson writes informatively on the dissident form and ordinary content in his review of a new translation of Russian poems Into the Snow: Selected Poems of Gennady Aygi. Sounds enticing.
The difference between Aygi’s ars poetica and Mandelstam’s lies in the way the two poets represent poetry itself. Both of them believe that other aspects of experience lack something essential, but while Mandelstam implies that the aesthetic power of poetry can fill that gap, Aygi dismisses even his own art as powerless. If a dissident is one who rejects the dominant ideology, then for Aygi that rejection applies in some sense to poetry as well.On Berfrois.
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Tracing the moral decay of politics (Books - Echo House by Ward Just)
Ward Just is justifiably ranked among the top writers on American politics in fictional form. Some consider Echo House (Houghton Mifflin, 1997) his masterpiece. It follows a family of Washington insiders, as they are now affectionately called, from the 1940s to the 1980s. It is not my favorite of Just's books, that place would have to be reserved for Forgetfulness, but it is a solid novel partaking of a solid tradition chronicling succeeding generations of a family. The Washington Post characterizes Echo House as the story of the "decline" of the Behls and certainly they don't maintain their grip on power through holding office, but I would frame it as their evolution, as they adapt to a morally decaying political context.
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