What I'm Reading

Books I am reading, have read and/or have reviewed.

year in review, part II

Additions, remarks, and odd things I learned this year:

Harvey Milk was essentially an old-style ethnic politician, just with sexual orientation as his organizing principle. Loved the film, but what Milk skimps on is how much hardball Harvey could and did play--there were a lot of gay dollars around SF in the 70s, and he knew what to do with them to win political representation, union jobs, and a seat or two at the table. He also was a Goldwater Republican who in some ways never really changed his political colors. (Randy Shilts, The Mayor of Castro Street)

Max Allan Collins gets to write too many novels for Hard Case Crime. I like pulp as much as the next person, I really believe that, but he writes the same damn thing every time. Almost exactly. I think this is taking the whole verisimilitude bit too far.

Gloria Steinem took CIA money as a student activist in the 50s, as did Richard Wright and Nina Simone. A bunch of former Communists put on the payroll, though, were pretty unsatisfactory employees, as they took the agency's money and continued on a campaign of factionalism and plunder of anyone who did not share their exact strain of beliefs. (Hugh Wilford, The Mighty Wurlitzer)

being a 19th-century criminal was really not fun: talk about nasty, brutish, and short. And once you talked to the cops, you were pretty much dead meat on the street. And the prisons were even worse. (Gilfoyle, A Pickpocket's Tale) Also, running a gang is hard, particularly as regards the question of punishment and deterrence--how hard do you discipline people? when do you need to lay down the law, and when can you outsource? when do you just let things go? (Venkatesh, Gang Leader for a Day)

Jacob Riis pretty much invented the multimedia presentation, touring with his photos of NYC slums in the 1890s, and made a pretty good career of it as well (Yochelson and Czitrom, Rediscovering Jacob Riis)

Thomas Jefferson was attacked as a dangerous atheist, and John Adams as a religious fundamentalist who would turn the US into a theocracy in the election of 1800 (Larson, A Magnificent Catastrophe)

you can tell how hard farm people in the 30s worked by their recipes, which all seem to call for massive amounts of soaking and cooking in cream. Either that, or they were all really fat and this has been excised from photos (Kalish, Little Heathens)

intellectual stunt-journalism books are harder to pull off than it looks: Jacobs' The Know-It-All, where he reads the entire Encyclopedia Britannica, is funny most of the way through, but can someone with a Brown BA really be as ignorant as Jacobs sometimes shows himself to be?or is that part of the shtick? Shea's Reading the OED, where he, well, reads the entire OED, is basically a bunch of odd words with a few pages of OK rumination dressing them up. He sounds like a nice guy, but it's a thin book. Honestly, Ken Jennings' autobiography/apologia/trivia-nerd defense, Brainiac, which is far better than it has any right to be, remains the cream of the crop for me.

you can draw some interesting homologies between dominant modes of social experience and sports--football, with all of its regimentation and military lingo, was of particular cultural centrality in the 60s and 70s, when those experiences had formed a central part of the lives of many Americans (Mandelbaum, The Meaning of Sports)

people were making waterboarding jokes, in a satirical context, 100 years ago, given that the tactic was being used in the Philippines--and thus it must have resided at least somewhere in the collective consciousness. What happened in the interim? (Crosby, Captain Jinks, Hero: from the NYT review, Aug. 30, 1902: "A good American sitting among his broken idols and ruefully rubbing the welts and bruises his patriotism receives from the bastinado which Mr. Ernest Crosby wields in Captain Jinks, Hero, may, nevertheless, find balm in the thought that he wrote it in six weeks -- as his publisher announces.")

the Inquisition pretty much invented every tactic of spy agencies and tribunals, including agents provocateurs, going after financial assets, forcing accused people to denounce others to survive, and using secret evidence (Kirsch, The Grand Inquisitor's Manual)

someone could make a great movie about Venice Beach around 1980-81, when steroids were making their way into bodybuilding culture with what can only be called great bursts of energy. The whole revolution of everyone and everything around Arnold, and the shady dudes prescribing everywhere the informed eye knew to look, would be one of the cooler and mostly unexplored subcultures to put on the screen (Assael, Steroid Nation; see also the excellent documentary Bigger, Stronger, Faster*)

Abraham Lincoln came into office with no knowledge of military affairs, so, in order to prevent his generals from steamrolling him, he gave himself a crash course in military history. George McClellan, who had graduated from West Point at 20 ranked #2 in the class (the famous class of '46 that also included Stonewall Jackson, Pickett, and 20 other Civil War generals), had had so many experiences of early success that all he would do was sit around and whine about how Lincoln never gave him enough troops. Reason #50 why Lincoln rocks. (McPherson, Tried by War) When McClellan ran as a Peace Democrat in 1864, he was actually more pro-war than some in his party, who were openly rooting for a Confederate victory; there were significant disturbances and attacks on military recruiters in places like Ohio (home of exiled congressman Clement Vallandingham), which does at least make me both defend and worry about the kinds of civil-liberties measures Lincoln chose to win the war (Weber, Copperheads)

it's far too easy to buy your way into college. When I read about, say, the Olsen twins or whoever going to NYU, I thought, well, maybe they're actually smart. Or maybe not, since there are all sorts of loopholes to let dumb children of the rich and powerful, or famous people with no particular academic distinction, into prestigious schools, no matter how horrid their academic records. This has been going on overtly for most of the century, and semi-covertly for the past 15 years. Duke has more or less leaped two levels in reputation over the past 30 years on the backs of such development admits (Golden, The Price of Admission; Karabel, The Chosen)

it is not so dangerous to attend soccer matches in England now, partly because you can't buy tickets to matches unless you have a previous history of ticket-buying. Also, there are lots of police stationed everywhere, and a lot of the louts have been priced out. (Culpepper, Bloody Confused!)

January 07, 2009 in Africa, Books, history, Jewish stuff, Journalism, lit, Music, mysteries, Shakespeare geek, stats, the fitba, US, What I'm Reading Now, WWII | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Year in review 2008

Faithful reader E.G., whom I ran into on the street pretty much in front of the house, asks if in fact I have read anything since October. Well, yes. So, to get back on the horse, here we go:

books read last year: 210
minutes of exercise: 21,260 (took the last week-and-a-half of the year mostly off, so I missed my compulsive goal of an hour a day by 640 minutes, or a mere 1 min. 45 seconds per day).
Evidence that I am not alone in this comes from my gym, which has installed these crazy bikes that have courses you can race on and even a lame game where you ride through dragons. You can create a login and then track all of your progress (average mph, calories, distance ridden) and graph it against everyone who's registered, break down the data by age and sex, club, bike type, and region. So there--I am clearly not the only one. If they had something like GTA on there, except you had to pedal your car, I would be Lance Armstrong.

Actually, not--they give you the mph rating at which you're pedaling, and I've been up to about 27, but not for long (did 1 mile in 2:26, which works out to 24.65 mph). I think the guys on the Tour de France regularly pedal at like 30+, for hours. According to this, in 2005 Lance Armstrong averaged 25.82 mph over 86 hours, with a top speed of 35.54 mph (that's an average, too, which means he did this for more than an hour) for a 41.85-mile time trial. Dang. Still, it would kick butt if you could ride around and shoot things.  Since you have to, you know, stay on the course, that has cut down on my reading a bit. But it's more fun than I would have expected.

Anyway. Best however many of the year, in fiction:
Gruber, Tropic of Night--African shamans and folklore, taken seriously and exported to Miami, where they enrich the tropical stew. Reminds me of those paranormal George C. Chesbro mysteries I ate up as a teenager. Pretty dang literate, and suspenseful. His last book made it into trade pb, which is a nice step up.
Faust, Money Shot--the best hard-boiled mystery I've ever read set in the world of porn. Also the only hard-boiled mystery I've ever read set in the world of porn.
Bolaño, Nazi Literature in the Americas--funny and compassionate, in an odd way: even his Nazis are compulsive writers who submit their work to endless contests, found minor journals no one reads, create weird personal mythologies that only other obsessives follow, and carry on with little compunction about their horrendous beliefs. Bought 2666 the day it came out and am stuck on p. 60 or so, but will get back in there slugging soon.
Gaiman, American Gods--mythology, confidence games, gods fighting, a prison novel, end-times prophecy: pretty much every genre there is mashed together, and it all works astonishingly well as a story; you don't just sit there and admire how well he mixes it all. A heck of a trick.
Park, Personal Days--or Ferris, And Then We Came to the End, both of which concern politics, office politics, and relationships, and how weird work is in general. Hard to separate what exactly happens in each, though Ferris's collective narrator captures something scarily essential about office culture
Hamilton, The Slaves of Solitude--WWII fought out within the confines of an English rooming-house. Dry, hilarious, mean. Particularly recommended to Eoin.
O'Neill, Netherland--Gatsby as a post-9/11 West Indian named Chuck Ramakissoon, and cricket as a grand metaphor for about 15 things. Which reminded me that I know two people who are actually really interested in cricket, and who showed me cricket videos on YouTube.
Hemon, The Lazarus Project--history and the usual hilarious black-comic Balkan self-loathing, mixed in with photos and a reimagined story about an immigrant killed by Chicago's police chief for what may have been anarchism or just simple confusion. What Everything Is Illuminated should have been. (Reminds me of the people I got stuck next to on the flight back from NY--out-of-the-catalogue twentysomethings: he had the hobbit beard, sagged pants, chain wallet, hoodie, and she was reading, yes, Everything Is Illuminated. Couldn't tell if they were friends with benefits, just friends, a couple, or what. Ah, these young people.)
Gran, Dope--mean, twisty, bleak little female-centered noir set in 50s NYC. Lives up to the Jim Thompson comparisons by reviewers.
Bloom, Away--who knew she had it in her? After writing some great New Yorker fiction (not exactly an insult, but definitely a genre), Bloom here presents a brutal, unsentimentally funny, vivid take on Jewish NY in the 1920s, along with a semi-tall tale about a real-life woman who tried to walk to Siberia to get her child back. A powerhouse of a story, told with color and a drive I had no clue she could muster.

In nonfiction:

Kaplan, When the Astors Owned New York--and boy, did they. I think I'm supposed to call this "delicious," which may presume a higher interest in antique society gossip than you or I possess. (Also makes me ponder the continued career of Louis Auchincloss, who seems to turn out a small, elegant, [and totally uninteresting to me] novel every year or so about latter-day NYC WASPs. I guess someone reads them--maybe the adult version of whoever reads Gossip Girl novels? I begged one from a student--"I won't be your enabler," she protested, before giving in to my whining--and my soul felt maimed afterward. I tried Twilight, too, but the first page was so horrid that I couldn't do it. Susan kinda liked all four, though, so your mileage may vary.)
Dalrymple, The Last Mughal--vivid, thoughtful, wonderful look at the 1857 mutiny through the eyes of actual Indians as well as Brits, with a full ration of savagery and imperial brutalism. Later, it turns out that someone we knew is a descendant of the Mughals and had read the book, which was awesome. She also loves (and even slightly prefers) his White Mughals, which I got about a quarter of the way through but will pick up again in deference to Priya.
Faust, This Republic of Suffering--about how the Civil War instituted an entire new regime dedicated to managing suffering, which relates not just to the world of emotions but to refrigeration, cemeteries, and pensions. A powerful and resonant book. Also, Dray, Capitol Men, about the impossibly courageous African-American politicians who made Barack Obama possible.
Mendelsohn, The Lost--another of those people I would be if I were way smarter. Mendelsohn traces the members of his family lost in the Holocaust while also considering the story of Genesis as a way of understanding why the world is and people exist in the first place. Paul R. suggested that he was probably sleeping with all of his translators, too. If so, more power to him.
Halberstam, The Making of a Quagmire--calls the entire course of the Vietnam War, in about 1963. Also some amazing stuff about how hard the Kennedy and Johnson White Houses strove to get him silenced or pulled from the country.
Gourevitch, Standard Operating Procedure--or Mayer, The Dark Side; or Lichtblau, Bush's Law; or Filkins, The Forever War--at some point, I got tired of all the malfeasance (couldn't read the Cheney biog, though Lisa R-S recommended it), but before that, got as much chapter-and-verse as I needed. Filkins' take on the war rewrites Herr's Dispatches in ways that are chilling, immediate, and horrific; he really shoves your face in what it's like to be older and under fire and protected only by massively-armed 20-year-olds. It's not a good feeling.
Perlstein, Before the Storm--the definitive Barry Goldwater book, I'm sure, and one not weighed down by the overly large historical claims made in Nixonland, which I think is a little too much a politics-junkie's book: every story gets told (admittedly, some of them great, as when Jack Germond jokes that George Romney, Mitt's dad, is such a maladroit communicator that "the Governor later clarified" is a key on his typewriter), whether or not it ultimately mattered, and I think the result mistakes overheated rhetoric for real political commitments. What's now particularly interesting to me about the Goldwater book is what it will show in 10 years. If the republic actually elects President Palin (the Repubs, Perlstein points out at length in both books, were essentially written off by political scientists as a permanent minority party after LBJ crushed Goldwater in 1964), then it's going to be really, really scarily relevant. I'm rooting for historical curiosity instead.
Fatsis, A Few Seconds of Panic--it really sucks to play pro football in a lot of ways, and the players grasp most of them. In a surprising way, a great book about a modern American workplace. Also mentions born-again kicker Jason Elam's Christian thriller Monday Night Jihad, which I saw at JFK airport and briefly considered reading. But I read Left Behind, and that was crap (though I am still rather a large fan of LB II the film; III sucked, even with Lou Gossett), and I'd rather someone with those politics not get my money. (Sounds more decent than you'd expect, though. From the PW review: "Rich details about life as an NFL player invigorate the story; the details become problematic when the story gets wordy (as in one long and unnecessary chapter toward the end of the book). Although the final [...] plot twist is too easy, unexpected humor helps leaven the serious themes, and the sparks of romance that fly between Riley and an American Muslim woman will pique readers' interest.")
Page, The City's End--several hundred years of fantasies of the end of NYC. Amazing a) how many people have wanted it destroyed b) how hopeful these visions can be for a new future. Introduced me to a fascinating WEB DuBois story about the racial possibilities of the city's end that I'd never known of. (Here's an interesting review in an SF mag.)
Hajdu, The Ten-Cent Plague--poor old EC comics, beaten down by the forces of, well, the usual. A great bit of comics history, enlivened in particular by interviews with those who did the burning as well as those who got burned. Plus that great bit from Gaines' congressional testimony:
            Mr. BEASER. There would be no limit actually to what you put in the magazines?

            Mr. GAINES. Only within the bounds of good taste.

            Mr. BEASER. Your own good taste and salability?

            Mr. GAINES. Yes.

            Senator KEFAUVER. Here is your May 22 issue. This seems to be a man with a bloody ax holding a woman's head up which has been severed from her body. Do you think that is in good taste?

1954-crimesuspenstories22

            Mr. GAINES. Yes, sir; I do, for the cover of a horror comic. A cover in bad taste, for example, might be defined as holding the head a little higher so that the neck could be seen dripping blood from it and moving the body over a little further so that the neck of the body could be seen to be bloody.

            Senator KEFAUVER. You have blood coming out of her mouth.  

            Mr. GAINES. A little.

January 06, 2009 in Books, history, Jewish stuff, Journalism, lit, mysteries, stats, the fitba, US, WWII | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Burroughs, Public Enemies

I love, love, love all those 30s gangsters. Did a research paper for History 467, US Since 1933 with the redoubtable Sidney Fine, sophomore year of college on them and probably something similar in my excellent seminar on radical lit of the 30s with Brian Lloyd, and then found a used copy of this when it came out, then let it sit on the shelf for 2+ years. Buzzed through--big-book week: Perlstein's is a 748-pager and this one's 550.

Mostly a narrative history of 1933-34, in which we learn:
1. Burroughs' disillusionment with Bonnie and Clyde (I get the sense that he originally might have thought they were interesting, then did more research and found they were pointless thugs deserving of no cultural resonance whatsoever)
2. the venality but nothing more of Ma Barker (apparently a nice, scattered old lady who did a lot of jigsaw puzzles but whom J. Edgar Hoover made into a mastermind)
3. the ineptitude of the early FBI, which boasted a bunch of college boys with law degrees who couldn't shoot and apparently couldn't follow or capture anyone either.
4. what I presume is the regrettable inaccuracy of the Thompson machine gun (there are numerous scenes of gangsters and G-men firing wildly at each other, then everybody gets away, unless someone hit a car's radiator by blind luck); from Philip B. Sharpe, "The Thompson Sub-Machine Gun," American Inst. of Crim. Law 23 (1932-33): 1098:

            The accuracy of the sub-machine gun is decidedly interesting. File records of the Auto-Ordnance firm indicate that in a Mann rest test fired at Hartford, Conn., May 2, 1921, the mean radius using a Remington Standard 230 grain bullet at 100 yards ran 1.89 inches. At 200 yards mean radius was 4.92 inches; at 300 yards 7.63 inches at 400 yards it increased to 18.31; while at 500 yards it jumped to 20.45 inches. Accordingly, one can assume that the accuracy of the more or less spent bullets is quite uncontrolled at the longer ranges. This writer suggests that the effective range of the weapon is under 300 yards....While the Thompson gun is a simple one to handle, it should not be used indiscriminately by any member of a police department. Machine gunning is a job requiring experience.

5. more excellent 30s slang, like "yeggs," "git" (the detailed getaway map for a bank robber), and more; shades of Miller's Crossing, with the timeless line, "We only take yeggs what's been to college"
6. Machine Gun Kelly was sort of a loser as a criminal, and Pretty Boy Floyd actually WAS good to the regular folks he encountered
7. and what should be a more shocking revelation that Burroughs underplays drastically, that the FBI beat criminals (sometimes with telephone books) and occasionally even held them out windows to induce confessions, Suge Knight style

In the single best sentence in the book, Burroughs mentions that the FBI got some Lithuanian-speakers to eavesdrop on the parents of Alvin Karpis, whom he lionizes as the smartest criminal of the period, in the hope that they might lead somewhere. (Excellent find: parts of his Alcatraz disciplinary record.) Instead, all they did was sit around arguing about who was more to blame for their son's life of crime. That's a great short story right there.

June 24, 2008 in Books, history, Journalism, mysteries, US | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Venkatesh, Gang Leader for a Day

I am getting a little sick of these "rogue" economists--I mean, poor little Steven Levitt, with his job at U. Chicago and his NY Times column and his medals. (I would hate to think what a "mainstream" economist with a "real" sense of professional respect would enjoy.) The authentically rogue economist now is probably some colorless person who can't write well putting together tables 13b through 47f for a thesis on role definition among white-collar workers or something.

Anyway, this is the guy whose work Levitt jacked to support the attention-grabbing factoid in Freakonomics that lower-level drug dealers make less than minimum wage. Venkatesh can really write, and here he follows his trail into this research, including a really scary night with a bunch of gunmen on the stairs when he just blunders in there with his clipboard and is lucky not to get shot, and the later money shot, where he gets to celebrate bring-your-sociologist-to-work day and pretend-run the gang for about 12 hours. It's really hard, actually--lots of judgment calls about how and where to calibrate authority, inter-gang issues to arbitrate (violence? talk?), disputes on which to rule where both parties are hard to trust. There's also some great reflexive stuff about how his work on the underground economy gets used by ghetto power brokers to squeeze the people under them even before, since now all the little secrets people had get nurtured thrown into the open and can thus be taxed.

June 24, 2008 in Journalism, mysteries, US | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Moskos, Cop in the Hood

OK, I have to say, what the hell happened to Princeton UP? This is worst proofreading job I've seen on a book maybe ever, and worse than a good many research papers from high-school students I've graded. Geez.

Anyway, after The Wire, a lot of this just feels like confirmation: you say "PO-lice" in Bawlmer, and "jack up" means one thing to NYC cops and another to Bawlmer PO-lice. There are some really good things in the sociology--the structure of staffing and paperwork means that there are actual incentives to NOT arrest people (even assuming that arrests are a useful measurement of how good a job cops are doing); drug wars just mean rounding up lots of people on the street, to no purpose whatsoever, and running them briefly through the system (the only time he noticed a real decline, for a day or two, was when police and FBI sweeps followed hard upon each other, resulting in crackheads stealing a lot of sugar from the corner laundromat's coffee spot); there are all sorts of ways of manifesting your authority, from driving slow to eyeballing to stopping to actually getting out of the car. Moskos says he never fired his gun in 20 months on the job and that he would have died for his fellow cops, whereas not so much for his colleagues at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Cool blog for the book, too. Some stuff that was neat to learn, but not revelatory.

June 24, 2008 in Books, Journalism, mysteries, US | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Nerd days re-re-revisited

Every so often, I am consumed with the desire to revisit those nerd days, or nerd-reading days, not kidding ourselves about our dialectical relation to nerdiness today, and devour some...well, what I used to be nerdishly clear about reading was science fantasy, which was sort of a specialized subset of both genres: barbarians vs. ray guns, that sort of thing. (From what I can tell now, the present-day analogue is these 9-book, 900-page-novel series people keep writing, which surely has some Internet-age atavism to it.) I recall liking L. Sprague de Camp a lot, though I think I could name maybe one of his books now. Am not sure that any other genre is any less boundary-policing (cozy mysteries, historicals, hard-boiled, procedurals; or the various declensions of the romance novel, all distinguished by explicitness), so maybe it's the nerdish fervor you see here about what goes, and doesn't go, in which category that's distinctive.

Anyway, so I saw this latest Neil Gaiman collection, Fragile Things, I think first when we were stuck at JFK for like 4 hours, and thought, hey, that looks like fun. S. noted that he has one of the all-time worst names to have in middle school, though maybe marginally less so in England. (Whereas if he'd been Neil Poof...) Made me wonder about the whole chicken-and-egg aspect, since the kind of writer you're going to get laughed at for carrying around in middle school has precisely the sort of name that's going to get laughed at in middle school. Maybe there's some sort of genetic determinism at work. Nobody named Buffo McBully writes SF or whatever 12-year-old nerds read; nope, they're named Gaiman or Moorcock. Or Lovecraft. Seriously, it's like you're just not allowed to publish unless your name can be somehow rendered snickeringly sexual.

Soo...found a copy used, read it, and loved it. Gaiman's genius is to take one-liners as story ideas (dotty old bat finds Holy Grail, Sherlock Holmes vs. Lovecraft monsters, Grendel in the Scottish highlands, Snow White as a vampire [she does, after all, look pretty damn pale]) and really think them out past the gimmick; it's as if the idea of the backstory that could result, and the world it implies, entices him as much as the conceptual bridge built by x-plus-y. Not as easy as it looks, either: the first story in the collection, "A Study in Emerald," was for a Holmes-meets-Lovecraft anthology, which I duly got from the library, having spent considerable time in both vineyards. (Speaking of which: Cthulhu cakes! If only one could bake a non-Euclidean pastry.) And his story stands out considerably there, too, since it's really the only one that goes anywhere beyond the narrative proposition, "Mr. Holmes, they were the footprints of a giant cross-dimensional gibbering mind-sucking non-Euclidean entity!" Makes you realize how thin are the metaphorical resources HPL offers you, though Gaiman turns his baddies into the eternal Euro ruling class, which is a nice little inbred-royalty joke as well.

So then there had to be more Gaiman. And it came to pass. Also liked his first collection, and really loved Stardust, the movie, which has the whole Princess Bride snarky-fantasy thing going on. (Recommended it to several conveniently-located teenagers, at least one of whom pronounced it "pretty rad," in only a semi-ironic way.) Then, really getting into the spirit, read China Mieville's Un-Lun-Dun, which had gotten several positive reviews, and had quite a good time. The heroine's not who everyone thinks she's supposed to be, the invention is ceaseless and owes more to Lewis Carroll than JKR, and there's a neat environmentalist theme as well. (Plus some well-plotted visions of tolerance for the different, the creative, and the socially-constructed.) Which is of course what novels nerds like say, right?

April 17, 2008 in Books, history, lit, mysteries | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Leonard, The Hot Kid

After reading gamely through two painful Civil-War books (not bad, just lots of dying and pain, and lots and lots and lots of soldiers' newspapers), time for a break. So read some Elmore Leonard. Like butter. Like silk. Like breathing. It's hard to recall which ones I've actually read and which I haven't, since they're kind of all the same--though I suppose I should read Killshot, which the bracketology book says is his best novel. This one does the Southwest in the early Depression, and well, to my mind. Not to the mind of BR Myers, whose pretty persuasive review points out a whole host of moral and stylistic problems with his work in general and this one in particular. But I love the whole setting (there's some sort of Kansas/Oklahoma-crime-novel genre, half Western and half crime story--the Southwestern?--wringing dirt and pain from isolated farms, savage gunplay, and cars speeding through open spaces to and from desolate, mulchy native-descended names like Okmulgee and Muskogee--think Capote's In Cold Blood, Stephen Hunter's Dirty White Boys, the entire career of Pretty Boy Floyd, like that), the time, and the yeasty dialogue. The efficiency, too--man can tell a story or set a scene in a line or two. So it was a nice little break.

April 11, 2008 in Books, history, lit, mysteries | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Bolano, Nazi Literature in the Americas

If he writes it, I'll read it. Still, the ways he gets published here are a little confusing. As one other review points out, the publication order in this country is a little off, so this one comes out AFTER a lot of his later stuff, including a later novel, Distant Star, that expands this book's last chapter into a short novel.

It's no stretch to say that he turns all of his fascists, Nazis, and traditionalists into Bolano characters--they're uncomprising avant-garde poets, stubborn pulp fictioneers, scrubs from the provinces trying to eke out a win in yet another of those minor literary contests Bolnao so loves...indistinguishable from his heroes in The Savage Detectives or similar figures in the stories in Last Evenings on Earth, which raises the question of what we do (and what he's doing) with such misdirected artistic urges. (Because he's really not mocking them, any more than he mocks any of his other marginal artistic types: maybe a little chiding, but mostly love and shared values.) Surely, as such an engagé writer, Bolano doesn't believe that politics are immaterial; precisely the opposite. So then the imagination of an entire cosmos of such writers has about it something of the odor of...charity, in that he grants the sincerity, though monstrous wrongness, of their beliefs? ...of belated struggles with history, in an attempt to understand what happened in Latin America in the 60s and 70s, how such appalling ideas got smuggled South and then reanimated?...a political sense that BECAUSE extreme right-wing ideas partake so much of fantasy both personal and collective, we need to understand and counteract, or counterprogram, those same urges?

I'm not sure he's worked this out yet. His main character in Distant Star, a sort of concrete poet of torture, more powerfully poses the whole question of art in a dictatorship. These seem more like gestures, attempts in the direction of understanding the whole corpus of ideas rather than the kind of finished, if ambivalent, artistic manifesto we see presented in, say, The Savage Detectives.

Still, it's not a bad introduction to his aesthetic, which strikes me as absolutely unique--can't think of a single writer with his stupefying imagination and capacity for narrative play (almost every one of his novels seems to be arguing, why can't every book contain as many styles and models as you want? note that, for instance, Distant Star throws in TWO utterly superfluous locked-room mysteries in its final pages, for no other reason than that he felt like it), flair for, and love of, so many genres in enormous detail (one of his pulpsters sounds like H.P. Lovecraft, another writes these bizarre post-apocalyptic macho gunplay fantasies that recall the grocery-store Mack Bolan thrillers, particularly well analyzed in James W. Gibson's Warrior Dreams), all combined with a relentlessly avant-garde sense of literature and an earthy grounding in bodies and sweat. Definitely worth a read, if not reaching the greatness of his best stuff so far.

2666, when are you coming out? I need you.

February 17, 2008 in Books, history, Jewish stuff, Journalism, lit, mysteries, US, WWII | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

greatness of Gene Hunt

The faboo BBC detective series Life on Mars just concluded (over here, at least) and explained all. Fairly satisfactorily, too. American version, with all the same character names and Colm Meaney as DCI Gene Hunt, coming soonish.

Along the way, it contained (season 2, episode 7), the greatest insult of all time. See?

Don't believe me? Check here or here or here. Or here.


Want more Gene? Turns out he's got a whole set of vids on YouTube. Of course he does. Introducing Gene. Being a 1973 man. He's more right than you.  He deals with the threat of being shot by accident. He reveals excellent investigative technique. Animated Gene--a parody of this series, which you can watch.

February 12, 2008 in mysteries | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Faust, Money Shot

Now that's what I'm talking about. A sleazy, nasty little noir set in the porn industry...which is probably redundant. Now, if it was "a romantic, multigenerational magic-realist saga covering one family's experiences across a century in the porn industry," or "a breezy piece of chick-lit featuring a lovable single mom, her adorable but difficult kids, and her best gal pals, set in the porn industry," that would be unexpected. (Come to think of it, it would be kind of cool to read something about, say, the 1950s porn industry, outside of James Ellroy's novels, which are nasty big noirs, etc., or that Bettie Page film, which felt sort of airbrushed, so to speak. I mean, could the porn industry ever be that innocent?) But for now, this will do: our heroine gets punched, raped, shot, and left for dead in the first 40 pages. She survives and later gets to shoot one guy, duct-tape another to death, and rescue some enslaved Romanian sex-trafficked women ("Natashas," they're called). Heartwarming, really.

January 31, 2008 in Books, mysteries | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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