Archive for the ‘Books’ Category

I r a filuhsuhfee grajuit

Friday, May 9th, 2008

When I was in high school, I remember seeing this copy of The Stranger and being immediately blown away by the absolute weirdness of this stage troupe.

Aside: Does anyone know what group this is, who took the photo, what it’s about? I think it’s the Bantam edition.

I then proceeded to check the book out and I honestly can say I didn’t understand Mersault ( does anyone? ) and having read the book at least twice more and once in its native language, I’m still completely baffled by Mersault, his motivations, his identity. Mersault’s wedding plan, Mersault’s bliss over tablets of chocolate and cigarettes, his deadly flat attitude towards marriage, and ultimately his dispassionate choices standing on the sand.

As far as existential icons I prefer the doctor from The Plauge or Raskolnikov from Crime and Punishment but there’s something about Mersault that haunts me - and it may be something to do with this cover.

Reading a little fiction

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

After I got back from SXSW I needed some hard-core abandoning involvement in the world time. I had taken a peek at Diane Setterfield’s The Thirteenth Tale, which I had ordered some time back but had not yet read, and he first chapter managed to get me involved.

It’s a gothic story that had a hook that immediately engaged me. A shy archivist engages a famous, aged, literary master to write her biography. This task is slightly more daunting than usual because the author has achieved fame and renown for giving incorrect details to those who have asked to know her biography. She explains how their eyes change from demanding and seeking the truth, to wanting “the warm comfort of a fat lie”. The writer, Vida Winter, suggests that within the recent past she has been approached by a guileless man who plaintively had asked that she “simply tell the truth” and that the need to speak the truth, perhaps in conjunction with the disease that is eating her within, prompted her to make an honest go of it.

…but she needs the rigor of an archivist to hold her to telling the true tale, and not weaving the scraps of stories that she still has in her satchel into another façade to enchant, entrance, and mislead the hearer.

Good set up, no?

True to a Gothic tale there are secret gardens and a decrepit manse in Yorkshire, men slowly maddening in locked rooms, ladies carried away to the asylum, a fire, children of questionable birth and the mystery of what would happen if your sense of identity were bound in two, not one beings ( more common than one might think ).

In all, it was a very fine read where the Modernist experiment in unreliable narrators telling tales ( Mrs. Dalloway or Memento? ) was wrapped in another layer, having the character put the unreliable tale in a crucible and ask the reader to work with her to distill away the confusion.

I recommend it.

Letterpress: 1a. The process of printing from a raised inked surface.

source

I’ve watched it now three times and I find a great peace in the slow narration and accentation. Makes me want to visit the northeast again.

It reminded me of Jessie Ferguson’s installation hosted by Make magazine.

It shouldn’t be this hard…

Tuesday, July 31st, 2007

Reading this list I was put in mind of wanting to buy some of these texts. I have a great number of them already in paper-back, but was wondering where would I go if I were to want, say, a copy of the Republic in hardback? Or perhaps The Collected Aristotle?

I could see something like estate-sale staple, “The harvard classics”, but I always thought they were a bit too small and pretentious.

Is there some other ( insert: book ) solution?

Update:

The League pointed out the Everyman’s Library collection (which I had completely forgotten about). I remember when this came out because on BoingBoing there was a lot of fan-ism around the idea that for 2 grand you could basically have a collection of some of the finest works of the world.

Spam reminds me sometimes…

Thursday, July 12th, 2007

The other day I got a spam mail from “Fentress Telling” who, in addition to having a name like a Jedi, sent me a mail entitled: “The Martians were there—in the canal—reflected in the water.”

Do you know the source of this quote? It’s the last line of one of my favorite books.

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Oprah + Cormac = BFF

Friday, March 30th, 2007

I’ll not do a “he’s a little bit country, she’s a little bit rock-n-roll” comparison, but Oprah has chosen for her book club the sparse, scary, and beautiful as a razor blade novel “The Road” for her book club selection for the month as reported by the Chicago Tribune.

I’m still in awe of this book.

Much hay is being made of the “Will the Wally Lamb fan set” who adhere to the Prophetess of the Miracle Mile be willing to ditch the South Beach and Hoodia chick-lit to which they’ve been accustomed for a world so isolated, devoid, and scary?

Ultimately, The Road, for its post-apocalyptic setting and disturbing themes is a story of paternal love and adults’ search for meaning as thrown into stark relief against the innocent optimism of a child. The loneliness of the road is merely metaphor for that dark road we all have occasion to walk when the stars are hidden, our loved ones are sleeping, and we wonder if we are truly understood.

And the want of understanding is certainly something universal.

I headed back from San Jose yesterday and used the time to finish up Volume 3 of The Baroque Cycle: System of the World. I could do with a little less mass in my bookbag, so I’m glad to be finished with the work.

But it was an enjoyable undertaking: ideas, gold, and the tying up of several plot threads that ran for the previous 1700-odd pages. One of my biggest complaints about Stephenson’s work is that he can’t relieve the exciting frission of tension he builds up in the preceding pages.

He acquits himself, decently this outing. There are no ridiculous deus ex machina devices ( I’m looking at you Cryptonomicon ), but I can’t say that the climactic resolutions that you feel you’re owed all happen ( some do, some don’t quite, and some flat-out don’t ). Nevertheless, to see how it all ends up between The King of The Vagabonds, a wily duchess, and an alpha-geek, after you’ve made the commitment to the previous tomes makes reading the 3rd book a bit of a requirement. You owe it to yourself at that point.

I actually can’t say too much more, because to do so would ruin the experience of the other books, so I’ll remain mute and wait for The Social Bobcat to finish it off.

I also had a chance to pay attention to my recently purchased Morrissey live at Earl’s Court record. One of the highlights was his cover of Patti Smith’s incongruously boppy reggae song about a disappearance / suicide “Redondo Beach”. Past that, Morrissey’s voice has aged wonderfully, turning from a fair champagne lilt to a richer, wiser, VSOP cognac. I recommend it highly for Morrissey fans, Patti Smith fans, and the Venn intersection therebetween ( Looking at you Mice-man ).

That said, I’m off to Houston this week for training in Java. While I’m more into strange an edgy languages at the moment ( Erlang, Haskell, and Ruby ), it can’t hurt to know how to play in 4/4 time either.

Yesterday, while I had proof of residency and a lot of documentation on me, I headed down to the Austin Public Library and got a library card.

I checked out Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf and The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner by Alan Sillitoe. Wozniak mentioned the book being very inspirational to him. I figured it might be inspiring to me as well.

iRead iWoz

Sunday, November 26th, 2006

Over the Thanksgiving holiday I took the opportunity to read the autobiography of Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, iWoz.

  • Steve believes in “extreme ethics”: always tell the truth completely
  • Steve was incredibly precocious in terms of becoming an engineer
  • Steve seems to be one of the ‘new atheism’ camp: Science, proof, reason, plus nothing else.

So I never got any exposure to religion. Church, mass, communion. What is that? Seriously I couldn’t tell you.

As for religion, if I asked, my dad would say, no, no, he was scientific. Science was the religion. We had discussions about science and truth and honesty, the first discussions of many that formed my values.

  • Steve takes engineering very seriously.

…I still believe engineers are among the key people in the world. And I believe that I will be one forever, and i have dedicated my whole life to engineering.

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Finished “The Road” by Cormac McCarthy

Sunday, November 19th, 2006

First things first, there is nothing manlier than the name Cormac McCarthy.

I think if it were that name stitched into a leather belt…

versus

…a Ford F150 with a poker table in the bed around which cowboys were drinking a case of Black Label while arguing over football while getting straightrazor shaved by strippers while puffing on Cuban stogies

…I think the name on the belt may have an edge.

If you have a last name that can bear that manly weight, then I beg you, give us more Cormac-en.

About The Road, it’s an unsentimental and very realistic portrayal about life after a global firestorm. Was it nuclear, asteroid, alien? No one knows, but the earth is now covered with a fine layer of ash which stirs ideograms of desolation into forgotten western landscapes.

A father, who has only bitter memories of a wife that seems to belong to another time, is taking his son down an interstate highway, pushing a shopping cart that carries the only tools that will help them survive.

Unlike Mad Max ( which actually presupposes an astonishingly developed model of civilization ) where Good and Evil face in pitched battle for the right to control the what-comes-next, “The Road” gives no such meaning to the apocalyptic landscape. There is the father, his son, their cart, their plastic tarp and the unending narration of their few miles gained each day.

They’re headed South from North where it’s just gotten too cold. I believe their path to be somewhere in Nevada through Northern California on into the Big Sur region. Along the way there are the inevitable highwaymen ( “road rats” ), rapists, shuffling dead, and agonizing hunger and thirst.

Yet the boy, who never knew anything of the world before, merely trudges on: curious, scared, sick, and gaunt.

The book features no chapter headings and no real sense of time. On this road there is no history of meaning, no future of value, and the present day is a routine in survival and walking.

I was stunned by the bare prose, verging on blank verse poetry.

The layout was also great and thoroughly assisted in the portrayal of the post-apocalyptic, vast, nothingness. With wide margins and ample line spacing the spartan presentation adds to the void and empty prose.

Picture is worth a thousand words:

Sample of text from McCarthy’s “The Road”

Invariably I found myself asking what I would do in such a situation. I’ve always been a bit more into eschatology than people should be. When I was still a regular attendant of church services and the preachers were spouting nonsense I usually found myself reading those grim bits of insanity in the last chapter of the Bible. I suppose my Gnostic interests found their root there - in the symbology and transformational hidden content.

Where would one start? It seems that nothing grows? How would one catalyze an agricultural existence? It appears that all the wildlife perished in the great firestorm?

How would you begin? In light of that weight, how would you continue? Would you fight for botulized tins of old food, eat bark and hope not to get murdered in your sleep by roving brigands? What sort of world is that to live, is that truly a life? And what, pray tell, would help you go on?

It’s all very fine, heavy existential work that, as all questions of this sort do, touch on those fine works by Kierkergaard. In all, it was a fine book.