Aussie Slap-Down.

I don’t hate Peter Carey the way this guy does, but I did find this review of Carey’s latest to be very hilarious. I find Carey more…weird…and unsettling…rather than “bad”. The Unusual Life of Tristan Smith for example, really creeped me out. But I didn’t think it was badly written. (Oscar and Lucinda was a very weird movie. Not necessarily bad, but definitely weird. Why? Because it was based on a Carey book!)

That said, I think his commenters are dead wrong on Tim Winton. As you may remember, I LOVED LOVED LOVED Cloud Street and highly recommend it.

Shop Till You Drop. *

A bookstore right by the office is currently having a 50% off sale on all books in the store. FIFTY PERCENT OFF. People. ALL BOOKS.

So an official decision was made by myself to give myself carte blanche over lunch today and here’s what I’m carrying home tonight:

  • The Hungers, by Claire Messud
  • The Lone Pilgrim, by Laurie Colwin (recommended by Betsy)
  • That Eye, The Sky, by Tim Winton
  • The Lost Art of Keeping Secrets, by Eva Rice
  • Housekeeping, by Marilynne Robinson (I’ve already read this, but I read a library copy)
  • Forgetfulness, by Ward Just
  • Bright Angel Time, by Martha McPhee
  • Freddy and Fredericka, by Mark Helprin (I’ve been tempted by this many times, but there are already two equally thick Helprins in the pile mentioned below….Someday!)

These will just be added to the bottom of the already huge “to be read” pile, but who could pass up FIFTY PERCENT OFF, even on hardcovers? Helloooooooooooooooooooooooooo.

It’s Brent Books, on the corner of Washington and Franklin, for my fellow Chicagoites, and the sale is going on indefinitely “until they’ve sold every book that will sell.”

*For my use of Till rather than ‘Til or Until – see this excellent post by my friend GirlDetective, a true word lover.

Napping at the Wheel Again.

So, some time ago, I read Claire Messud’s first two books, and I remember liking them. But somehow I missed her third? And now her fourth is long-listed for the Booker? (Here’s a nice piece on her, link via Bookslut.)

Cripes, what have I been doing with my time? Have I not been visiting bookstores, and ordering from Amazon (among others), and dropping by Myopic before both my monthly haircut and my mid-monthly “bang trim”? Have I not been building up a stack taller than myself of books to be read? How did I miss this?

KCRW’s Bookworm: Joyce Carol Oates (8/3).

I am not an Oates fan. In fact, it’s not too strong to say that some of her stuff, I absolutely detest. I did quite like her book “On Boxing” however, so there you go. Anyway, despite my dislike of her style, topics, language, choices, etc., her place in the pantheon of American authors remains quite secure. And I felt I should probably limit myself to podcasts about authors who I know, because what happens when I listen to the ones of authors I don’t know? It just adds to the fucking “go buy this” list doesn’t it. I need a “hey stupid go home and read one of the books in the to-be-read pile” podcast!

Anyway, despite all of the above, this was an enjoyable podcast to listen to although her voice combined with Silverblatt’s was a dangerous recipe for a bus ride, I’m pretty sure I dozed off a few times. Mid-doze, however, I did hear something weird — they seemed to be talking about one of her stories that’s about a boy who’s being brought up as an organ donor. Can that be right? Or did I sleep through the beginning of the sentence where they said “Speaking of ‘Never Let Me Go’ by Kazuo Ishiguro…” Is it possible that both of those have the same plot setup?

One story that sounded interesting is about HItchcock, what a truly despicable person he was, written as if by a similar person to say Tippi Hedrin (but not her). Grew out of Oates being asked to write a short bio of Hancock, sitting around watching all his films and reading interviews and realizing that he was such a jerk that she just couldn’t do it. And out of her hundreds of pages of notes came this story. Fascinating. Although I probably wouldn’t like the story were I to read it…

Also a very funny bit when she was talking about how much she likes epistolary novels (as do I). And they talked about Gogol’s story “Diary of a Madman” which at one point features two dogs writing letters to each other (but of course turns out to be the madman’s imagination). Sounds hilarious!

KCRW’s Bookworm: David Mitchell (7/20)

Technically my iPod has now played this podcast five or six times, as I was using it to fall asleep to over the weekend. Ah, the dulcent sounds of Michael Silverblatt’s voice…

Anyway, as you should know if you read my most important web postings, “Black Swan Green” is one of the best (if not THE best) books I’ve read thus far this year. David Mitchell was very enjoyable to listen to. He seems very meek and British, yet willing to laugh.

Some of his favorite authors: Charles Dickens, Dostoevsky, Ursula LeGuin (oh, I used to read TONS of her…). Also mentions specifically Fournier’s “The Wanderer”.

Some neat moments when Mitchell and Silverblatt discuss the magic of life, of love, and of death.

“Reminder” of the Day.

Revolution gives ordinary people the false belief that they can remake not just themselves, their country, and the whole wide world but human nature itself. That such grand designs always fail, that human nature is immutable, that everyone’s idea of perfection is different — these truths are all for a time forgotten.
–Mark Bowden “Guests of the Ayatollah”

An Afternoon (and then some) with Leonard Lopate.

6/12 episode: Mark Bowden “Guests of the Ayatollah”

I loved, loved (LOVED) Bowden’s earlier book “Black Hawk Down.” So I knew it could be dangerous listening to this podcast. Indeed it was as I felt the need to swing by the bookstore on the way home and buy the new book despite its hefty size and cost (hardback). Don’t know when I’ll read it because it’s certainly too heavy to carry on the El! Anyway, it’s a flash back to the Iran hostage situation of the….70s? Lots of neat information about Carter and the realities of the situation that obviously people couldn’t see at the time.

Funny quote from the stand-in interviewer: at one point he was saying how it’s always been a Republican criticism of Carter (and the Democrats in general) that they didn’t know how to lead these wars and were just going out into the desert and bungling things. And he followed that with “Increasingly going out to the desert and bungling things is looking more like a bipartisan effort…” INDEED.

6/13 episode: Andy Revkin “The North Pole Was Here”

This guy must be a Republican. A few of the things he had to say made sense. A few were outright wrong. And he made a big point of positioning himself as an alternative to Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth” film. The thing Revkin doesn’t seem to understand is even IF the effects of climate change are further off than ALL scientists think (again he pretends there are more scientists in disagreement than is reality), NOW is NOT too early to start fixing them. Yes, this is the world we are leaving our children and grandchildren, as he points out, so WHY would we want to WAIT and force them to fix it starting from a worse place than we already are? How is that a feasible answer? Obviously I disagree.

6/15 episode: A Public Defender in the South Bronx:
David Feige “Indefensible”

This was a very interesting interview. But Feige was sometimes too glib for me. Any REASONABLE (non Republican) person can understand the fact that even if someone is a rapist, murderer, etc., does not necessarily stop them from being an interesting, intelligent person that if you were, say, their public defender, you wouldn’t need to HATE and DETEST them despite their crimes. But he constantly answered the question very glibly with “I know this will sound weird to listeners, but…” and never taking a second to actually explain it. His book sounds good, but I couldn’t read it if it was full of that same tone. He has been involved in some interesting alternative approaches to defense/crime intervention and those all sound like quite laudable efforts.

6/21 episode: Anthony Bourdain “The Nasty Bits”

I haven’t tried any of Bourdain’s fiction, it just doesn’t attract me, but I loved both “Kitchen Confidental” and “A Cook’s Tour”. This book sounds just as good. Bourdain is unremittingly unapologetic and is obviously having a great time touring the world and eating all kinds of crazy stuff I would never be able to digest!

6/23 episode: The Future of Human Cloning:
Ian Wilmut “After Dolly”

I don’t have much interest in the topic but Wilmut was pretty intriguing to listen to and not just because of his soft Scottish accent. And isn’t it always humorous to listen to people speak from a scientific view about things which other people can only talk about from a very moralistic and completely nonscientific place?

6/26 episode: Japanese American Soldiers in WWII:
Robert Asahina “Just Americans”

This was an amazing interview, and I’m certainly interested in reading Asahina’s book. I was interested not only because of my inherited obsession with military history (thanks, Dad) and the disenfranchised, but also because Mariko’s dad was put in an interment camp himself! They talk not just about the Japanese Americans in the camp but those who were forcibly (and voluntarily) drafted and their efforts as a unit (they and the African-American unit did some amazing things, particularly on rescue missions, and were two of the most (if not the two most, I forget) decorated units after the war and NOT because of their race, I can guarantee you that).

6/27 episode: From Blockbusters to Bombs: Peter Bart “Boffo!”

You’d think I’d have enjoyed this a bit more, given the movie obsession. It was OK. I did enjoy some of the stuff about things that were supposed to be bombs becoming cult hits and stuff about the money aspect. Studios and their creative accounting will never cease to amaze me. Did you know Tom Cruise will likely make $60 million-$80 million for MI3 and the studio will likely make…NOTHING. He’s got them all fooled clearly as that was not a $60 million performance. Why would they even agree to make his movies, given his back-end deals plus the upfront cost of making them? Idiots. (Not that I didn’t enjoy it, which I did, but great ($60 million-worth) art it was not.)

Leonard Lopate Interviews Jean Said Makdisi (6/5)

Makdisi’s written two memoirs: Beirut Fragments: A War Memoir (self explanatory, no?) and Teta, Mother and Me, the story of three generations of her family.

This interview was somewhat fractious – they seemed to be talking at cross purposes. Lopate wanted to focus on the repression of women in Arab countries and Makdisi wanted to emphasize that “modernism” doesn’t have to mean “Westernism.” She was a little unwilling to ever give ground, and refused to accept any generalizations. Which in a conversation about an enormous topic isn’t always possible. He, on the other hand, didn’t seem to know how to pick his battles in this one.

Big Screen: The DaVinci Code.

This may be the movie with the worst reviews since Ishtar. Sure, it’s clunky. But I’m pretty sure most of its faults are the faults of the book it’s from (from what I hear, it’s a pretty faithful reproduction, other than they simplified the mystery somewhat). I really didn’t think this was as bad as I was led to expect — I was entertained. I was shocked enough to yelp at one point. I wasn’t bored. I found some of Ron Howard’s “here’s where I REALLY make it REALLY obvious what he’s thinking right now” techniques were way more blatant than they needed to be – felt somewhat INSULTED by them. Apparently he was expecting a less intelligent audience. But he was, wasn’t he, because he was expecting the audience that loved the book…. Mua ha ha ha, really walked into that one, didn’t you, DaVinci fans?!? 🙂

Wasn’t a great movie. But was not the most horrific movie ever made, as perhaps the reviews have convinced you. I’ve seen worse.