Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Review of the novel Mary Reilly by Valerie Martin

  I treasure books that offer a fresh twist on classic tales, elevating those characters that were given little voice in the original telling. Often these individuals are the overlooked of society, those so easily forgotten by history. It does not matter if the characters are made of fiction or if they truly lived. These new stories give them, mostly women of ages past, the agency each of our lives deserves.
   This novel offers up the seminal Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde story from a unique and intriguing angle - that of the Doctor's housemaid. Mary Reilly is quick-witted and dutiful to a fault, bearing heavy scars from her past. Privy to a quickly deepening pool of secrets, the young woman's bond with her employer only grows more intimate and powerful. Author Valerie Martin seamlessly weaves her tale with that of the original's haunting details and characters. And as the mysterious events and encounters seen from her distinct viewpoint begin to multiply faster, Mary must decide how far she is willing to go for this man. Notably as she increasingly suspects that the Doctor may be a near-deafening echo of the monster from her childhood.

Sunday, April 27, 2014

Review of the novel The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien

“They carried all they could bear, and then some, including a silent awe for the terrible power of the things they carried.”*

   This novel strikes me with the contradictory yet complimentary natures of simplicity and complexity. Trudging, slogging, tearing though the countryside and battlefields of the Vietnam War, it all comes down to those things that they carried. The hundreds of ammunition rounds, the machine guns, assault rifles and grenades, the mortars and shells, the radios and maps, these are all humped through the stretching hot days along with the rations and water, the extra pairs of socks, the illustrated bibles and love letters, the trinkets from home, and, so often, each other - through an environment alive with menace, both manmade and natural. They carried the awareness of the limitless danger inherent in a war that no one understood, most of all, themselves. They carried the very human ability to die for a flimsy and misguided cause simply because they were afraid not to.
   And those who survived, those who walked away, continue to carry it all within the intricate folds and glimmering visions of memories. A map, a photograph, the rising cadence of a voice, may bring certain scenes back - events that truly happened or those flashing moments existing on the border of near-truth and myth. These men remain haunted.
   Written in the guise of interconnected short stories, Mr. O'Brien blends quiet intimacy with the rumbling thunder of the universal. No one goes untouched within War's reach, and those who hiked the steaming jungles and fields of that far-off country carry their scars of knowledge - of those terrible things that one man can do to another.

*excerpt from novel

Review of the novel In The Skin Of A Lion by Michael Ondaatje

   
   I can't begin to explain how beautiful and transcendent this novel is to me. The writing is lyrically evocative while the narrative weaves strands of intimate individual stories together with stunningly reimagined factual events. Walking among the quickly-growing immigrant communities of 1920s Toronto, Patrick Lewis searches for a missing millionaire and, perhaps, his future. While searching, the young man also stumbles upon the thin line between myth and altering history. Those we so often miss in the common recollections of modernity flicker to life all throughout Patrick's journey to decisive action. Those girder and strut builders, the workmen and women of civilization, whose stories are never touched upon, shimmer into focus within the pages of this novel. And the quiet yet clear sensation of a true epic masterpiece unfolding among the scenes and chapters of In The Skin Of A Lion is sincerely swoon-worthy. I have read and re-read nearly all of Michael Ondaatje's works, but this is the one that rises highest among them for me. Certain turns of phrase and specific revelations have the ability to make my hair stand on end in pleasure. Echoes upon echoes of this book will forever live in the folds of my mind.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Deserted Island List Mania: 5 Favorite Films (if the island had a DVD player)

   I am (quite obviously) in love with movies. I enjoy watching, talking about and writing about them. Realizing that, by definition, deserted islands do not have electricity to power non-existent DVD players nor does Netflix reach everywhere, specifically tiny islands without internet access, and that my copies would be useless would not stop me. I'd bring them anyway, just because I cannot see myself without their presence.
   These are the five films that I could stand to watch over and over again. They continuously surprise me. And every time I watch I find myself bowled over by images of echoing and transcendent beauty, humor, and/or profundity. Each one has the ability to alter my mood, living inside my head for days to come. These are movies that I will never forget, be it for the story, the characters, the worlds that are created or the experiences they afford me.

In no particular order:

1. Walkabout directed by Nicholas Roeg

   "Australia has a dirty history, much like every country on this earth, but it is just as true and filthy as those. The clean and beautiful lines of the buildings and roadways that snake around the perimeter of that island continent were not always present; their history is new and built on the soil of an older culture. Move inland from these glittering cities on the cusp of the sea and one will find traces of that older culture—one of the oldest on the planet. One sees the outback, an immense stretch of landscape that has shaped that culture and will continue to shape it beyond the time that those gleaming structures of the cities possess. Director Nicholas Roeg places us in this landscape, along with its sordid history, as simply as opening a beautiful picture book." - Excerpt from my 01/27/11 review of the film.



2. The Big Lebowski directed by the Coen Brothers

   It's difficult to choose one movie from the Coen Brothers' impressive filmography, but, then again, this particular selection seems like a no-brainer. Tied to some really memorable moments in my life, this genius comedy slash mystery is just as memorable. I can't begin to explain the ins and outs of the plot and characters in a concise manner, so just watch it and enjoy.







3.  Winter's Bone directed by Debra Granik

    "A rural sheriff arrives. He explains the situation slowly and does not elaborate. A 17 year old girl listens; she already knows what she has to do. Behind her is the backwoods cabin she lives in with her two younger siblings and catatonic mother. She takes care of them, makes sure they are provided for and healthy, and the weight of that responsibility leans on her shoulders as she faces the sheriff. “I’ll find him,” she says in a quiet but certain manner." - Excerpt from my 01/28/11 review of the film. 



4. Pan's Labyrinth directed by Guillermo del Toro

   A gorgeous and inventive fable of a film. Set during the Spanish Civil War, the fairy-tale story balances del Toro's intricately-detailed magical realism with the everyday nature of the thin line running between the political and the personal. The images within are evocative and dream-like, yet always grounded in realism. This movie makes me swoon a little bit every time.







5. Spirited Away directed by Hayao Miyazaki 

   "It is the wonder of Miyazaki's films that so many of his young protagonists find the best of themselves when thrust into unexpected and testing circumstances. It may be that Miyazaki is simmering the notion that there is often more to each of us than our current easy situations are pushing us to confront and realize." - Excerpt from my 05/11/14 review of the film.







Cheater Bonus Film: Children of Men directed by Alfonso Cuaron  

   This is definitely one of the only times I will admit that a film adaptation surpasses the power of the book on which it is based. The impact of the scenes that Cuaron hits the viewer with are astounding in their intricate weaving of issues of class and race, character development and change, and pure, visceral emotion. It's a color-soaked portrait of humans clinging to the end of civilization. A film that posits the notion that the end of days may bring about the worst in most but can also inspire the good in a few.




Super Cheater Bonus - TV Series: The Simpsons. Duh.

   I don't believe I need to go into any explanation for this particular pick.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Review of the documentary The Rape of Europa

   World War II history fascinates me to no end. The turmoil and devastation directly influenced the paternal side of my family profoundly, sending my then teenage grandmother, her brothers and her parents as well as thousands of their fellow Lithuanians on a meandering, 8 years long path to the Midwest region of the US. I have heard the stories surrounding this journey countless times throughout my life. However, only in the last 5 years or so, have I taken a sincere interest in the immeasurable extent of the War on the world, specifically the whole of the European continent and its effected neighbors.
   I came upon the 2007 documentary The Rape of Europa while scanning through Netflix the other day. Chronicling the Nazi plundering of major works of art and the efforts to save them, the film gives viewers a in-depth look at WWII history from an art-lover's perspective. The atrocities committed against humanity are never downplayed in importance. Rather, this documentary brings light to the plight and dedication of those striving to bring masterpieces of the world out of the darkness of war and give them back to humanity. The narrative weaves together photographs, video recordings, witness testimonials, and art and war historians' discussions to create a relatively comprehensive picture of this particular history. Perhaps due to the limited running time of the film, its scope may not be as far-ranging as I would like, and the lack of racial and ethnic diversity among the story-tellers and experts is questionable. What of the destruction, theft, and restoration efforts in the Middle East? Egypt and northern Africa? It is true that these many of these countries are not part of Europe-proper, but these are still quite stark omissions. 
   Despite its limitations, I would recommend The Rape of Europa if one wishes to gain more perspective on the far-reaching effects of the war not always discussed. The importance of art for humanity should never be denied. Listening to the witness testimonials, viewers certainly can see how sincerely affecting art has the potential to be to individuals and the whole of the human race. 

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Deserted Island List Mania: A Rundown of the 5 Books I'd Never Ever Give Up

   I was recently discussing with a friend the topic of personal libraries. We agreed that there are certain books that we simply could never get rid of, no matter how much shelf space it'd free up. We both felt that these collections were signifiers of our personalities. If we didn't have these specific individual libraries, then a causal onlooker would not be able to discern who we had been, who we are now, and who we want to be in the future.
   A few weeks ago I did some spring cleaning, including a thinning of my book library. There were about 20 that I easily singled out for donation, while about 10 that were somewhat difficult to give up. After the assessment, approximately 50 books - mostly novels, poetry collections, social science texts, and a handful of biographies - remained and will do so into the foreseeable future.
  Running with this train of thought, I have created a deserted island list. These are the 5 books that I could never ever be without. They are those texts that I could read over and over again and never be bored. They surprise me every time with something emotionally striking and/or new. I wouldn't be satisfied to have these volumes on Kindle, Ipad, or any other digital reader. I need to own the actual book and be able to hold it in my hands, turning real pages and cracking real spines. These books say something profound, at least to me, about who I am.

In no particular order:

1.  The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood

   "Ten days after the war ended, my sister Laura drove a car off a bridge." If you can come up with a more gripping first sentence, tell me, because I can't find one. I am quite biased, true, since I know the rest of the tale. I don't care; it's a stellar beginning to a book I could just sit with all day and flip through, marveling in the dazzling strands of story/web that Atwood spins so skillfully. 







2. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

   The allegorical town of Macondo is rendered unforgettable as told through the history of the Buendía family, both imaginings of Marquez's passionate prose. This novel swings between passages of lulling calm and those of thundering violence, gorgeous and sprawling landscapes and claustrophobic moments of terror. Beautiful and epic in scope, a veritable myth of a book.







3. Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut

   The decision between this Vonnegut masterpiece and that of Cat's Cradle was one I wrestled with, and perhaps still will do so into the future. But something in my mind/heart(?) tells me that Slaughterhouse-Five would be the one of the two I would grab from my shelf if a fire were cutting through my home and I had only seconds to escape. Billy Pilgrim is a name I will never forget, and his journey as he becomes unstuck in time is that of a hilarious romp combined with an exploding, shrapnel-filled morality tale.





4. The Country Between Us by Carolyn Forche

   "Gathering this world together without seam, The Country Between Us reflects back to us that which is most difficult to view - the mire and complexity of our society - and alters it into that which cannot be turned away from. The sensual language on display in these poems never oversteps the dramatic narratives unfolding from real experiences and remembrances. The resulting realization that everything within happened - the causal and cruel violent acts, the striking injustices, the moments of pure and transcendent glory - does not soon abate." - Excerpt from my 04/21/14 review of the collection.




5. In The Skin Of A Lion by Michael Ondaatje

   "...the quiet yet clear sensation of a true epic masterpiece unfolding among the scenes and chapters of In The Skin Of A Lion is sincerely swoon-worthy. I have read and re-read nearly all of Michael Ondaatje's works, but this is the one that rises highest among them for me. Certain turns of phrase and specific revelations have the ability to make my hair stand on end in pleasure." - Excerpt from my 04/27/14 review of the novel.






Cheater Bonus Book - Memoir: The Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston

   The book might confuse some looking for a linear narrative of a life story. But this particular memoir edges between fiction and fact, elemental and original. Hong Kingston uses her fierce clarity of words to blend her own tale with that of becoming the "female avenger" of her dreams. At times dizzying in scope but always rooted in the profoundly personal.







Super Cheater Bonus Book - Non Fiction: If I could take a huge, heavy volume, it'd have to be the illustrated and annotated edition of Sigmund Freud's Interpretation of Dreams compiled by Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson. That's a BIG book!

   Even if you vehemently disagree with things that Freud proclaimed true, you have to admit he started the conversation, as well as the fact that he was a talented and evocative writer. And this annotated edition of his greatest work brings the other voices of the discussions and arguments that it sparked into the fold. The book that makes my head spin with free-wheeling imaginings and swirling notions of thought.

Monday, April 21, 2014

Review of the poetry collection The Country Between Us by Carolyn Forche

"There is a cyclone fence between ourselves and the slaughter and behind it 
we hover in a calm protected world like netted fish, exactly like netted fish. 
It is either the beginning or the end 
of the world, and the choice is ourselves 
or nothing."*   

   This slim volume sends one gliding from the civil unrest of 1970s El Salvador to the steely Eastern Europe of the Cold War and into the forever-troubled pulse of all modernity. Author Carolyn Forche blends the personal and political into something deeper - more fecund - with its ability to sear into one's mind a lyrical mixture of the beautiful and horrible. Gathering this world together without seam, The Country Between Us reflects back to us that which is most difficult to view - the mire and complexity of our society - and alters it into that which cannot be turned away from. The sensual language on display in these poems never oversteps the dramatic narratives unfolding from real experiences and remembrances. The resulting realization that everything within happened - the causal and cruel violent acts, the striking injustices, the moments of pure and transcendent glory - does not soon abate. This is a collection to be read again and again to relive its undeniable power to bear witness and change.

*excerpt from the collection

Monday, April 7, 2014

Review of the novel The Outlander by Gil Adamson

She runs west, into the wilderness, into the mountains, into her own darkness...

At 19 years old, Mary Boutlan is newly widowed by her own hand and is pursued by two towering, vengeful twins. These trees of men are her murdered husband's brothers and they are close on her careening path into the ragged, unforgiving Canadian Rockies. Alone, except an old mare given by a empathetic benefactoress, she climbs into the heights. There she is chased by scent hounds and the twins, and she is plagued by visions and specters, real and not, phantasmagoric scenes of what may or may not have been her life before this flight. There are those she meets on her journey, the bird lady, the Ridgerunner, Bonny, the dwarf, and the cat-skinner, whose lives also lack steady rhythm and meaning. And each sees something of that in Mary as she flashes in and out of their existences, heading towards what is only known to inevitability and fate. A landslide is fast approaching, perhaps metaphorically, maybe literally, and its harbinger sounds could miss her ears, so overtaken with the echoes of pounding blood. Breathlessly suspenseful and excruciatingly gorgeous against the senses, The Outlander is a novel that floods the reader with the amazing experiences of a young woman fleeing into the wilds of her own making.

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Review of the novel Coming Through Slaughter by Michael Ondaatje

Undeniably lyrical and experimental, Coming Through Slaughter gives life to the imagined narrative of one of jazz music's founding fathers. Buddy Bolden, his name whispered and renowned by all the greats who came after, breathed the essence of himself through his trumpet and out into the sprawling, colorful city of New Orleans. There his presence was legendary. But his performances were never recorded and his true story, one of genius, spirit, and unknowable madness, was never fully told. Here Ondaatje weaves and bobs through the tales and rumors, the scenes and snippets, the leaps and halts of a phantom's history with sincere verve and craft. Buddy may have been experienced by so many in that city at that time in the lifespan of music, but his true rhythm was undiscoverable to all, including himself.

Review of the novel The White by Deborah Larsen

The White is one of those singularly-affecting books that is also the only one its author has ever completed. Published in 2002, this evocative novel tells in lyrical and beautifully wandering detail the story of the real Mary Jemison, a Pennsylvanian frontier girl. She was captured by a Shawnee raiding party at 16 years old in 1758 and spirited away to be raised by two kind and quiet native women. Eventually she marries into the tribe and decides to remain the rest of her days among them. Real quotes from Jemison are intwined with the imagined narrative of her life so gorgeously and with what seems like effortless writerly grace. Despite what can be viewed as a white romanticization of an indigenous people and culture, Larsen sidesteps this understandable criticism of her story with a sensitive account of a life uniquely and truly well-lived. 

Review of the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

I cannot describe sincerely enough how thrilling and visceral Mary Shelley's classic is when given the time and effort so deserved. The inextricably intertwined existences of the ingenious and enterprising doctor and his cruelly cast-off creation, Frankenstein sets the stage for the entire genre of gothic horror that came afterward. An absolute master course in sophisticated yet completely accessible and riveting craft writing, the novel's true authorship has always been hotly debated. Some louder critics argue that Shelley's more accomplished and learned husband actually penned the novel, due, of course, to the book's almost "masculine" assuredness and intelligent design. But there are many who care not for those kinds of sexist, confining labels and, instead, simply reveal in the true genius of Frankenstein.

Review of the novel I Was Amelia Earhart by Jane Mendelsohn

Banking into a cover of clouds off the New Guinea coastline on July 2nd, 1937, Amelia Earhart vanished forever. That day she disappeared from an intensely public and infamous life within the silver body of her beloved Lockheed Electra aircraft. In writer Jane Mendelsohn's novel, the imagined life that came after that red letter day vibrates and sounds itself into an existence just as enticing as that which has been so renowned and retold. The words of this story flash forward and backward through Amelia's true and fictional history, from the greatest altitudes of flight to the depths of what an individual can endure and yet still remain herself. A novel of one famed and long lost heroine finally found. 

Review of the novel Disgrace by J. M. Coetzee

J. M. Coetzee's Booker prize-winning novel is a devastating tale of a man who discovers himself disgraced many times over. Living the latter years of his middle age in post-apartheid South Africa, Professor Lurie does little outside his comfort and means. But a brief affair with a university student throws the bored and dulled man's plain existence off it's course. Coetzee sets a brilliantly drawn character within a modern world, illuminating a dazzlingly clear view of his country's, and the world's, searing political and personal struggles. 

Review of the novel Moon Tiger by Penelope Lively

Moon Tiger is a gorgeous, sprawling novel about one woman who never hesitated to write her own way through history. Claudia's life has taken her from the English seaside, the Egyptian deserts of World War II, the Central American jungles to the cusp of death.  This final place is the setting for her journey through that past and that of the entire known world. A love story and a forceful fictional memoir, Moon Tiger will always remain on my shelf of favorites.

Review of the novel The Children of Men by P. D. James

An elegant and subtly-rendered portrait of humans clinging to the end of civilization. The Children of Men puts its readers in a greatly realized time and place soaked with violence, disillusion and dread. A novel that posits the notion that the end of days may bring about the worst in most but can also inspire the good in a few. This story was also the inspiration for the, in my opinion, superior film version Children of Men by director Alfonso Cuaron. The review of that movie is pending posting on this blog.