Friday, May 24, 2019

The People of Sand and Slag   Paolo Bacigalupi
Short work by an author I love about a future of people who live on sand and slag who find a biological dog. Bacigalupi’s usual good prose and acid view of our future. Short, but a good distraction.

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Cleaning the Gold   Lee Child and Karin Slaughter
Novel with Child’s Jack Reacher and Slaughter’s Will Trent teaming up to investigate espionage occurring at Fort Knox. Brief, but interesting enough to be a distraction. Always like Reacher and Child’s prose. Read it on my phone.

Sunday, May 19, 2019

The Christmas Scorpion   Lee Child
A Jack Reacher story I read on my phone. Very short, almost nothing to it. What’s here is fine, brief hunt for an assassin, written in Child’s crisp prose, but there isn’t much. Almost not worth the $1.99 it cost. Disappointing because more would have been nice.

Sunday, May 12, 2019

Neon Prey   John Sandford
Most recent book in the Lucas Davenport Prey series, nearly all of which I have read. As always, the star is Camp’s prose which is a pleasure to read, followed closely by the interplay of the characters, especially the cops. A good plot with murder, cannibalism, betrayal, and a snake bite. Well executed and interesting. An excellent distraction, wish it had gone on a little longer.

Thursday, April 25, 2019

Metropolis   Phillip Kerr
Latest and last of the very enjoyable Bernie Gunther series, it takes place in 1928 Berlin. Kerr uses a framework of German cinema for this murder mystery, specifically Metropolis and other Fritz Lang films, but Bernie’s struggle to stay honest and free of political pressures as he solves the case is once again a fundamental component of the plot. Like the other books in the series, it is historically accurate, Bernie is flawed, but good, and no one gets out unscathed. Wish there were going to be more. Thank you Mr. Kerr.

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Exit Strategy   Martha Wells
Fourth, and I think final, book in the murderbot diaries series. Like the previous three, in this book murderbot must protect and save stupid humans from themselves and other threats. But now it finds itself  doing similar stupid things as it develops emotional connections, which it hates, and becomes more of a person. Very well imagined and executed, and very enjoyable. Wish there were more.

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Rogue Protocol   Martha Wells
The third book in the murderbot diaries. Another adventure where murderbot must protect and save stupid humans from themselves and other threats. A little more complex plot and emotions as murderbot continues her quest to get evidence against GreyCris and as she develops personally. Very enjoyable.

Friday, March 29, 2019

Artificial Condition   Martha Wells
The second volume in the murderbot diaries series. While it takes a little while to get going, it is just as well-imagined and entertaining as All Systems Red. Murderbot is once again involved with a group of endearing and frustrating humans that it likes as it continues to develop as a persona. Really enjoyed it.

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

All Systems Red   Martha Wells
Short, surprising, and very entertaining novel about a Security Unit robot (actually a cyborg) that turns off its governor, and acts and thinks for itself. Good action, very interesting interactions with humans, and augmented humans, and its developing personality is delightful and hilarious. Really enjoyed it.

Tuesday, March 19, 2019

Breaking and Entering: The Extraordinary Story of a Hacker Called “Alien”   Jeremy N. Smith
Non-fiction account of Elizabeth Tessman’s education and work as a “hacker.” Unfortunately, the book seems written for teenage girls, there is far more detail on her clothes, hairdos, and boyfriends than the work she does, which is fine if you are a teenage girl, which I’m not. Also, Smith repeatedly describes technical problems that Alien locates, but then provides no information on solving the problems. Disappointing, even frustrating read. Too bad.

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

A Moveable Feast: The Restored Edition   Ernest Hemingway
I have read the original version of this book many times. The prose was exquisite, and I loved reading Hemingway’s first-hand accounts of this artistically crucial period of his life that were posthumously assembled by his last wife Mary. This new edition includes a number of unfinished, never-before-published sketches revealing experiences that Hemingway had with his son, Jack, and his first wife Hadley. I found it less readable, and less powerful, but no regrets reading it.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

A Farewell To Arms   Ernest Hemingway
Re-read this novel after about 40 years, and loved it even more than the first time. Especially liked the recounting of Henry’s war experiences, the camaraderie with the other soldiers, the long , dangerous retreat, and Henry’s escape and decision to desert. Contains two of the greatest paragraph’s in all of American literature. This is the ending of the second one:
“If people bring so much courage to this world the world has to kill them to break them, so of course it kills them. The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places. But those that will not break it kills. It kills the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially. If you are none of these you can be sure it will kill you too but there will be no special hurry.”

Thursday, February 14, 2019

Underground Airlines   Ben H. Winters
Well-imagined, very readable novel about a present-day, alternative history United States where slavery was never abolished. Though the prose is good, this book was hard to read because of the subject, and there are scenes on a modern corporate plantation that are like a horror novel. Complex human dramas throughout, and unbearable tragedies. Glad I read it, and glad I’m done. Winters is a very interesting writer.

Saturday, January 26, 2019

In The Galway Silence   Ken Bruen
Latest in Bruen’s always entertaining and emotionally brutal Jack Taylor series. This time his nemesis is Michael Allen, and as always, everything that matters to Jack is taken from him. I’ve read all Bruen’s books, and I am still astonished by what Taylor causes, and even more by the losses he endures. As always, the best part is Bruen’s sharp, quick prose wound as tight as Taylor himself. Really enjoyed it, if that’s the right word. Couldn’t put it down.

Friday, January 4, 2019

The Foreigner   Francie Lin
Novel about a Chinese-American man who goes to Taiwan to inter his mother’s ashes and gets involved with local human traffickers. I found the character of Emerson, the protagonist, very dislikable. Not sure if that is intentional, or just a mistake by the author. There is nothing masculine about him, and the one sexual encounter is embarrassingly unconvincing. Also, what progress he makes toward freedom from his past and awakening turns back on itself at the end. Lin’s prose is beautiful, but the preponderance of emotional nuance is completely out of place against the narrative action. Didn’t like it, too bad.

Monday, December 31, 2018

The Histories   Herodotus
Herodotus’ (484-414 BCE) histories of Persia, Egypt, and Ionia covering religion, social traditions, politics, geography, and wars, especially the Persian empire that dominated the period. Really the first work in what we in the western world consider history. Divided into nine sections named for the muses. MacAulay’s translation, though from the 19th Century, is clear and readable. An important and impressive work, and not just because it may originally have been presented orally. Trying to fill in another gap in my education.

Friday, December 28, 2018

Thin Air   Richard K. Morgan
Complex mystery novel that takes place on a far-future, colonized Mars. Murder everywhere, intricate political intrigue, staggering violence and brutality, and a very well developed future described in great and convincing detail. The technology is impressively thought out and believable. Became completely immersed in it, a very enjoyable distraction. Didn’t want it to end.

Sunday, December 9, 2018

Schopenhauer in 90 Minutes   Paul Strathern
Very short introduction to Schopenhauer, though not much about his actual philosophy. Primarily covers his life, his bitter relationship with his mother, and his many affairs. Too bad, his ideas influenced Nietzsche, Wagner, Freud, and Wittgenstein, among others. While I enjoyed it well enough, and I learned about Schopenhauer’s life, I don’t understand the elements of his thought any better. One good thing about the book is that it really did take only 90 minutes to read.

Saturday, December 8, 2018

Ship Breaker   Paolo Bacigalupi
Young Adult novel about a dystopian America caused by the effects of global warming. Nailer is a ship breaker who gets involved with a swank girl and the corporate intrigue of her family. The same world of Bacigalupi’s adult novels, which I loved, and like them very well written, enjoyed it well enough. Disappointed that the two following novels focus on a different character. Not a bad read at all.

Saturday, December 1, 2018

The Maples Stories   John Updike
A one-volume collection of all eighteen stories about Richard and Joan Maples Updike wrote throughout his career. As always with Updike, he explores the rich emotional complexity and nuances of a relationship in highly intelligent, luminous, exquisite prose. Humorous, and at times, deeply moving. I really miss Updike’s writing, wish he were still alive. Loved every word.

Thursday, November 29, 2018

Tales From Ovid   Ovid (trans. Ted Hughes)
Twenty-four of Ovid’s Metamorphoses beautifully translated by Ted Hughes. Much better examples of the quality of Ovid’s poetry, though he is still no Virgil. Many of the tales/myths that have entered western civilization down to the present, such as Echo and Narcissus, Tiresias, Venus and Adonis, Midas, etc. Though I have always been more interested in the Greeks, glad to have filled this gap in my education.

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Ovid in Love   Ovid
Love poems by the Roman poet. Published in 1968, the book itself has beautiful, sensual drawings as well. Didn’t like the poetry that much, but very glad to fill this gap in my education. None of the bawdy, graphic poems he is famous for, at times the verse seems almost adolescent, though maybe that is the translation. Surprisingly, a couple of poems about abortion. Very glad I read these poems.

Thursday, November 22, 2018

Brief Answers to the Big Questions   Stephen Hawking
A deeply disappointing collection of essays covering topics such as “Is there a God”, “Is Time Travel Possible”, etc. Written for people who know nothing at all about science. Should more accurately have been titled “Shallow Answers”. Hawking was a brilliant  thinker about physics, but he wasn’t able to build any kind of a persuasive argument in any of these essays, and he makes a bad logical mistake in the essay about God. Too bad, would have liked some intellectual stimulation. Wish I had saved my money.
The Ghosts of Galway   Ken Bruen
Most recent in Bruen’s Jack Taylor series, all of which I have read, as well as all his other books.  This time he gets further involved with Emerald, a sinister group of super patriots, and all his own ghosts. This one is even more emotionally bleak and violent than the others with many of the main characters killing themselves or being murdered, some by Taylor himself. But it’s all told with Bruen’s quick, sharp, powerful prose. Enjoyed this one very much.

Saturday, November 10, 2018

Past Tense   Lee Child
Latest novel in the Reacher series, all of which I have read. Once again, Reacher is on the road, this time trying to get from Maine to San Diego for the winter, but he stops in New Hampshire to see his father’s home town. Of course, there are really bad people doing really bad things that Reacher has to stop. Two separate plot arcs gradually converge, both plausible and interesting, into a slightly weak ending, it just seems to fall apart a little too easily. Enjoyable and engrossing read, and once again, the real star is Child’s prose. Not his best, but liked it a lot.

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Red Cat   Peter Spiegelman
A very well written and executed mystery. John March’s brother demands that he find a woman who is threatening him and his family. Of course, she then turns up murdered. March painstakingly follows what clues he has. Spiegelman does an excellent job of creating the atmosphere and environment in which March works. A lot of detail about the characters. All the relationships are fraught and unraveling. The murdered woman is an especially fascinating character. Really enjoyed this very good novel.

Thursday, October 18, 2018

Holy Ghost   John Sandford
Latest in the Virgil Flowers series. This time  there are shenanigans and murder in Wheatfield, Minnesota surrounding visitations from the Virgin Mary who looks suspiciously like one of the town’s women. Like the other books in the series, the banter among the cops and the idiosyncratic townspeople are the most enjoyable elements. Even the sub plots weren’t so bad. But Sandford took so long with the police procedural that it got a little tedious. All-in-all an enjoyable, very well written distraction.

Disturbing and infuriating history of the concerted Christian efforts to destroy “pagan” culture and thought as Christianity became the dominate ideology between the first and fifth centuries of the Christian era. Nixey’s attempts to make it a popular, almost entertaining, history weaken it, and the organization was a little chaotic, but the information that does come through is very important, and works to undermine the Christian propaganda about that period. Very informative and useful history.

Saturday, October 13, 2018

Wrecked   Joe Ide
Third novel in the very enjoyable IQ series. The main narrative arc leads Isaiah to Grace, she is his Irene Adler, which leads to love and serious danger, and unfortunately, too many chases. But like the other IQ novels, the real entertainment is the characterizations. The hood is filled with unique and interesting people. As usual, Ide’s prose moves things right along effortlessly. Had a very good time reading it, wish there were more of them.

Thursday, October 4, 2018

They Shoot Horses Don’t They   Horace McCoy
Emotionally bleak, 1935 novel about two people involved in a marathon dance. Captures the desperation of life in Depression-era America, as well as any history could. Authentic prose, vivid characters, and engrossing plot. A very quick, rewarding read.

Sunday, September 16, 2018

Pale Horse Riding   Chris Petit
Sequel to Butchers of Berlin that finds Schlegel, Morgen, and Sybil in the Auschwitz garrison investigating corruption and murder. Even though Petit seems to get a little lost inside his own plot toward the end, it all works. Once again, Petit’s austere prose is just right for the situation. I was hanging by a thread at the end, but it was ok. Really enjoyed reading it. Wish there were another in the series I could read now.

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

A World of Thieves   James Carlos Blake
Well-written novel about a family of bandits in 1920s New Orleans and west Texas. Good characterizations, effective first person narrative, and historical accuracy. The John Bones bogeyman sub plot kind of gets in the way, and even minor characters have involved stories to tell, which got a little tedious, but in all, really well done. Moved right along, cared about the characters, felt authentic. Really enjoyed it.

Saturday, August 18, 2018

The Butchers of Berlin   Chris Petit
Excellent novel about policemen in 1943 Berlin trying to solve a series of gruesome murders. Good characterizations, a complex plot that continues to reveal surprises, written in a readable prose. Took a little while to get going, but it was well-done right from the start. Felt like I was there. Very accurate portrayal of the nihilistic, amoral, sinister, brutal, and corrupt Third Reich. By the end couldn’t put it down. Really liked it, so much, I ordered the sequel.

Saturday, August 4, 2018

Aspen Pulp   Patrick Hasburgh
Nicely written, engaging novel about a former ski instructor and television writer who returns to Aspen, Colorado. Everything goes sideways when he inadvertently gets mixed up with drug dealers and far-right militiamen. Some strange and unjustified plot twists, too many coincidences, and unlikely escapes made it difficult to take seriously. The ending was much too sweet. But it moved right along and kept me distracted for a couple of days. Enjoyed it well enough.

Friday, July 27, 2018

Blown   Mark Haskell Smith
Novel about a Wall Street investment banker who embezzles $17 million and takes off for the Caribbean, and the people the bank sends to get the money back. Written in Smith’s usual engaging style, but without the usual affectionate humor for the characters of his previous books. And, after an entire narrative of fatalism, a surprising and unconvincing ending. Still a quick, entertaining read.

Friday, July 20, 2018

William James: In the Maelstrom of American Modernism   Robert D. Richardson
Very well written, highly-informative intellectual biography of a pre-eminent figure in American intellectual history, and someone I have been interested in for a very long time.  James is the American philosopher, if that is not an oxymoron, who articulated pragmatism. Covers all James’s work in detail while clearly showing us James the man. Provides a good glimpse of American intellectual and social history of the time (1842-1910), as well. Excellent use of letters to and from him. A very, very good biography, really enjoyed it and profited from reading it.
Raw   Mark Haskell Smith
Novel about the romance between a reality TV star who doesn’t really know the difference and an intellectual wannabe author needing a dose of reality. I really enjoyed and cared about the characters in the two Smith novels I’ve read previously, even most of the bad guys, but I didn’t like any of these characters. None of them were written with the affection with which he wrote the others, I guess. Even so, the novel is well done, a quick, enjoyable read. Glad I found Smith, just the lighthearted distraction I need. On to the next one.

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Delicious   Mark Haskell Smith
Another very entertaining novel from Smith, this one set in Hawaii with competition between indigenous and invading mainland production catering companies. Inventive, interesting, and well-constructed plot and characterizations, both good and bad, all presented in very good, readable prose that moves right along. And, as usual, several love stories and relationships that are what it’s all about. Really enjoyed it, couldn’t put it down.

Monday, July 16, 2018

The Air Raid Killer   Frank Goldhammer
German novel that takes place in Dresden at the end of World War II. Max Heller, detective inspector, is chasing a serial murderer who commits ritual murders during air raids. Characterizations are a bit thin, and the plot took a while to get going, but it picked up, and there are some good twists toward the end. Excellent, moving description of trying to survive the senseless fire bombing in February 1945. All-in-all, an enjoyable and interesting read.

Monday, July 9, 2018

Salty   Mark Haskell Smith
Turk Henry, ex-heavy metal bass player, and his ex-super model wife go on vacation in Phuket, Thailand, and that’s when all the trouble starts. Kidnappers, pirates, a corrupt ICE agent, beautiful Thai hookers, and the heat lead to self-discovery and humor for everyone. Nicely written, lots of fun, very entertaining comic novel. Right from the beginning, wanted to see what happened to these people. Really enjoyed it, wish it hadn’t ended.

Thursday, July 5, 2018

The Shadow District   Arnaldur Indridason
Icelandic mystery novel that takes place during World War II and the present day. Written in very simple prose, the narrative develops in both times simultaneously. Unfortunately, that causes problems when the present day investigator is trying to figure out things that have already been explained. The ending was completely unconvincing when one of the murderers decides to just give up and explain everything. Disappointing.

Sunday, July 1, 2018

Noir   Christopher Moore
Another delightful, humorous, heartwarming, and deeply entertaining novel by Moor. It’s 1947 in San Francisco and bartenders, waitresses, aliens, crooks, Chinatown, and a narrating black mamba all come together for adventure and enjoyment. Very well written, highly imaginative, and fun. Wish it hadn’t ended.

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Super Sad True Love Story   Gary Shteyngart
Well-written, interesting novel about dystopian America in the very near future. The narrative framework is diary entries by Lenny and text messages of his lover Eunice that chronicle their relationship and the devolution of an already-teetering United States. This format works very well, especially the language of the text messages. The love story is sad, and the creeping dystopia seems true. Even though the weak ending undermines the power of the story, I enjoyed this book, very well executed overall. Glad I read it.

Saturday, May 19, 2018

You Were Never Really Here   Jonathan Ames
Novel about a former Marine and FBI agent who is now a private contractor who finds kidnapped young women. Written in spare, simple, very readable prose, the narrative unfolds quickly. Unfortunately, it ends abruptly with no resolution, only part way through the protagonists search. Deeply frustrating, even dishonest. Too bad. 

Extremely well written and accomplished novel about a post-zombie-apocalypse world, that isn’t. As the protagonist recounts his many escapes and losses, the book gets progressively sadder and the ending, though unanticipated, feels inevitable. Quite a bit above what you would think of as a zombie novel, it’s much more about the characters and what it is like for them to be at the end of the world. Very good.

Monday, April 30, 2018

Twisted Prey   John Sandford
Latest in Camp’s Lucas Davenport series. This time he’s in Washington, D.C. investigating an apparent assassination attempt on a Minnesota senator. As usual, Camp’s prose is excellent and pulls the narrative right along. The procedural elements are very well laid out, and there was a good deal of tension. Even though the ending is weakened by a measure of improbability, it was good. I’ve read many of the books in this series, and I liked this one as much as any of them. Good distraction while it lasted.

Monday, April 23, 2018

Distant Star   Roberto Bolaño
Brief, brilliant novel tracking poet, air force pilot, and serial killer Carlos Wieder through the crimes of the Pinochet years in Concepción, Chile and “the shifting anthology of Chilean poetry”, to Barcelona many years later. Written in clear, straightforward prose, at least in this translation, the story unfolds in an almost off-handed narrative. Chilling, sad, and filled with remorse. Felt I should read at least one of Bolaño’s novels. Very good.
Greeks Bearing Gifts   Philip Kerr
Latest, and penultimate, Bernie Gunther novel. I've now read every one in the series. Written well enough, the narrative moves right along, but the plot is static, at best, what little action there is is told through never-ending dialogue, the character portrayals are shallow, once again Bernie’s romantic interest is completely unconvincing, and the cynicism is over the top. Kerr seems more interested in appearing erudite than writing well. Got tired of Bernie’s never-ending sarcasm. Whole thing got tedious. Too bad.

Sunday, April 1, 2018

The Square and the Tower: Networks and Power, from the Freemasons to Facebook   Niall Ferguson
Well written look at history, primarily European, from the point-of-view of the struggle between networks and hierarchies. I had problems with Ferguson before I read this book, primarily his love of empires and oppression, especially the British Empire which he adores, and his extreme conservative politics, both of which are prominent throughout his analysis. I’m fascinated by networks, especially network theory, so the topic sounded tremendously interesting. Unfortunately, didn’t encounter any new ideas really, I have questions about his sources, and I found his conclusions unpersuasive.

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

A Legacy of Spies   John Lecarré
Beautifully written filling out and re-examination of the spy story told previously in his The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, this time from the point-of-view of Peter Guillam. The prose pulls us effortlessly through the narrative. Perfectly executed, and, if possible, even sadder than the original. Cornwell explores all his old themes again, especially the toll taken on those who worked in espionage during the cold war. Loved it. Very, very good.

Monday, March 19, 2018

The Three Way Tavern: Selected Poems   Ko Un
A collection of poems by “the pre-eminent Korean poet of the twentieth century.” Unfortunately, these poems seem to be a good example of Robert Frost’s claim that “poetry is what’s lost in translation”. That seems especially true of Un’s Sŏn poems. Still, very glad I read this collection.

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Joyland   Stephen King
Have felt for a long time that I should read a Stephen King novel because of his influence in American fiction. This mystery novel, part of the Hard Case Crime series, is about a series of carny murders back in 1973. It’s a coming-of-age story of sorts, as well. I was disappointed by the writing and the adolescent characterizations. Also, there was no real edge to it, the series notwithstanding. But it was an engaging distraction for a couple of days. Not very good, but no regrets.

Friday, March 2, 2018

The Blinds   Adam Sternbergh
Entertaining, well-written novel that follows the narrative structure of a western, small town in west Texas, sheriff, standing up to outside invaders, with a little science fiction sprinkled in. Imaginative, readable, though a little short on characterization, and the ending seems too optimistic for the plot. But an enjoyable diversion.

Monday, February 26, 2018

Ezra Pound and His World   Peter Ackroyd
Brief but very good biography of probably the most influential poet of the twentieth century. Filled with excellent photographs, as well. Answered the questions I had about him, his politics, poetry, and sanity. Very readable. Just what I was looking for.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

The Night Market   Jonathan Moore
Entertaining, well-written, inventive novel about a near future San Francisco policeman investigating a very strange death. It just gets more complicated from there. A blend of science fiction and mystery that is plausible and well-executed. Found the ending unjustifiably optimistic, but not too bad. Really enjoyed it. Couldn’t put it down.

Sunday, February 11, 2018

Normal   Warren Ellis
Short, well-written, imaginative, and highly intelligent novel about academic futurists confined in a remote rest farm because peering into the future has driven them mad. In turns hilarious, sad, and deeply troubling, but also very entertaining. Though known more for his graphic novels, this is the third excellent novel I’ve read by Ellis. He’s a very good writer. Really glad I read it.

Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Ultraluminous   Katherine Faw
Very well written, emotionally bleak novel about a high-end prostitute working in Manhattan. A first-person narrative in clear, precise prose perfectly suited to the main character’s emotional disintegration. Even though you see it coming, devastating conclusion. A quick, powerful read. 
 

Bhagavad Gita
A beautiful and profoundly spiritual text.  This, more than any other “sacred” text I have read seems purely spiritual and conveys an understanding of life. I do not like the explanations for why it is acceptable for Arjuna to kill people, Krishna is a harsh god. I also am uncomfortable with the Lord/God references even though they can be understood to portray a reverence for the foundation of existence throughout the universe, which I liked. Loved the clarity and simple beauty of Mitchell’s translation.

Saturday, January 20, 2018

Four Quartets   T.S. Eliot
Four of the most beautiful and philosophical of Eliot’s poetry. I used to read these poems every year, but it has been a while. Very rewarding to read them again, and I see things in them for the first time, my life having changed so much in the last couple of years. Even so, Burnt Norton and The Dry Salvages are still my favorites. “There is no end of it, the voiceless wailing.”                  “ but this thing is sure,

                          That time is no healer”

Thursday, January 11, 2018

The Bear   William Faulkner
Read this novel forty years ago, and it seems just as great now. The beautiful, intense, well-crafted prose moves us through the lives of McCaslins and the death of the Mississippi wilderness symbolized in the hunt for and killing of Old Ben, a monumental bear that has eluded the encroaching civilization for generations. While I remembered parts clearly, it was fresh and powerful once again, got me through some tough stuff, as well.

Saturday, January 6, 2018

The Wanted   Robert Crais
Latest in the Elvis Cole series. This time Cole and Pike help a woman track down her son and solve a series of eighteen burglaries of very high-end homes. Plot moves along well, and Crais’ prose is clear and readable, but there isn’t as much humor and emotional power compared to previous books. Wish Pike had been more involved, and the final confrontation was kind of weak. Nonetheless, a very enjoyable, quick, and entertaining read.

Saturday, December 30, 2017

Righteous   Joe Ide
Second novel in the I.Q. series about the Sherlock Holmes figure based in the hood. This time he’s rescuing a friend’s sister from Triads while figuring out who killed his brother eight years ago. Language and dialogue aren’t quite as inventive and authentic this time, but the plot and characterization are good, the narrative comes together nicely, and, unfortunately, the excellent ending made me wish the next book in the series was already available. Enjoyable, entertaining read, like the protagonist and series quite a bit.
The Fifties   David Halberstam
Well-written, overview history of the decade when the United States became the country it is now. While not exhaustive, this is a thorough account focused on the people who embodied the staggering postwar affluence that generated suburbs, rock and roll, malls, big cars, fast food, McCarthyism, the pill, the beginnings of the women’s movement, huge Hollywood stars like Brando, Dean, and Monroe, the Cold War, the Korean War, Ike, desegregation, the generative stages of the Civil Rights Movement, the great migration, and the “changes that were taking place every day in more subtle ways because of the ferocious commercial drive of television and its effect upon both consumers and industry.” A very, very good book, informative and readable, really glad I got to it.

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Duino Elegies   Rainer Maria Rilke
Very nice dual-language edition. Nearly every phrase is exquisite, even in Stephen Mitchell’s translation. Again, a little astonished that a person can write with such beauty. This time, except for some well-loved passages, it was like I hadn’t read them before. Still love these poems, always will.

                        “Ah, but what can we take along
into that other realm? Not the art of looking,
which is learned so slowly, and nothing that happened here. Nothing.
The sufferings, then. And, above all, the heaviness,
and the long experience of love...”
                                            "The Ninth Elegy"

Saturday, November 25, 2017

My Absolute Darling   Gabriel Tallent
Beautifully written, deeply disturbing novel about the incestuous relationship between Julia “Turtle” Alveston and her monster of a father who abuses her sexually and emotionally. Extraordinary details about the physical world and her inner life. Outstanding portrayal of her personality that completely justifies the narrative development, and very-well written characters, good and bad, most often in authentic dialogue. Very good, but hard to read emotionally.

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Sourdough   Robin Sloan
Read this book because I loved
Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore so much, and this novel has the same inventiveness and wonder in the same light, readable prose. Story of a young woman, sourdough starter, the future of food, and, as always, love. An interesting blend of hard technology and mysticism, very bay area. Entertaining, enjoyable, and worth every quick page. Really liked it.

Sunday, November 12, 2017

The Midnight Line   Lee Child
Latest Reacher novel. This time, he’s in Wyoming and South Dakota trying to return a woman soldier’s West Point class ring. Get’s involved with a very sophisticated opioid drug ring. Written in Child’s usual crisp, intelligent, highly-readable prose. But most of the interactions between Reacher and the other searchers weren’t as interesting as in past novels, almost got a little tedious in the  middle. But, a quick, entertaining, and enjoyable read. Sad, too. Wish I had another one.

Friday, November 10, 2017

I.Q. Joe Ide
Very inventive, entertaining novel about a contemporary Sherlock Holmes character in urban Los Angeles. The Holmes figure is a young black man, Isaiah Quintabe, thus the title, whose sidekick is Dodson. Pretty good characterizations, and good writing, but the real power of it is the dialogue, which is very good. Plot is a little thin, but not bad. Very enjoyable read, couldn’t put it down, even the way I am now. Really looking forward to the next one.
Deep Freeze   John Sandford
Latest, very entertaining Virgil Flowers police procedural, based again in the fictitious Trippton, MN. He has to solve two murders, both with some difficult wrinkles. Not as much humorous repartee, this time, and I miss Virgil’s sexual adventures now that he’s with Frankie, but still good. All of it told in Camp’s clear, very readable prose that moves things right along. A very nice, enjoyable distraction.

Friday, September 29, 2017

Later Short Stories, 1888-1903   Anton Chekhov
Re-read these stories because I read a statement in a review that Lady With a Dog is the greatest love story ever written. It, like all the others, is really good, but hard for me to agree it is the greatest. Really enjoyed re-reading The Bet again, one of my all-time favorites. Liked Shelby Foote’s introduction as well. Reminded me what real literature is about, even in translation. Really good stories.
Tampa   Alissa Nutting
In this novel, the main character “unrepentantly recounts her elaborate and sociopathically determined seduction of a 14-year-old student.” She particularly wants the most emotionally vulnerable boy she can find, so he can be easily used and manipulated. All this while she’s married. I could only survive a few chapters. The prose is good, and some of the characters are well and humorously described. But, I found the whole thing deeply disturbing, and I kept thinking what critics, especially feminist critics, would say about a man targeting for an affair the most vulnerable 14-year-old girl he could find in his class. Would it even get published? Why is this ok?

Monday, September 25, 2017

The Girl Who Takes an Eye for an Eye   David Lagercrantz
Deeply disappointing next volume in the Lisbeth Salander books. Lagercrantz has completely missed her character and sidelined her in the narrative. The plot is stiff and predictable, filled with unbelievable characters and sidebars. It all gets adolescent treatment, and the resolution is completely unconvincing. He has undermined and trivialized one of the great literary characters of the 21st century. A complete shame. A waste of money, as well. A really bad book.

Monday, September 4, 2017

Home   Toni Morrison
Latest, brief novel by the Nobel Prize winner, the third book of hers I’ve read. Employs a narrative technique where the protagonist writes a critique in the first person of the narrator’s third person account, though not sure what that adds for anyone other than the author herself. Got almost propagandistic toward the end, and I found Frank’s recovery unjustified. I though A Mercy was excellent, and Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination was deeply mistaken. Unfortunately, this book is closer to the second, but glad I read it.

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Wolf on a String   Benjamin Black
Novel about the court of Rudolf II in 1599 Prague, where a young visiting scholar improbably gets tasked with solving the murder of Rudolf’s mistress. Much court intrigue, and far too many prose flourishes, Banville seems completely infatuated with his own style, found myself skipping over-long descriptions of unnecessary things. Fairly interesting, follows the same structure and method of his Quirk, mysteries. Not a waste of time, but not great.

Thursday, July 20, 2017

You Belong to Me   Colin Harrison
Beautifully written “thriller” about the American wife of an Iranian-American financier and the multi-layered connections to them both. Harrison is great at portraying the richness of the webs that bind people, families, and communities underneath their seemingly-normal lives. Really liked the protagonist, Paul. As usual with Harrison, the worst possibilities triumph, though there are, this time, some survivors. Another very good read.

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

No Middle Name: The Complete Collected Jack Reacher Stories   Lee Child
As the title indicates, a collection of all the Reacher stories Child has written, plus a new novella. Entertaining, like the novels, though it is easy to tell the older stories because the prose hasn’t yet gotten to the precise, clear style of the more resent work. Enjoyed reading them all very much, wish they hadn’t gone by so quickly.

Friday, July 7, 2017

Prussian Blue   Philip Kerr
Most recent Bernie Gunther novel. More interesting than the previous few because he’s back in Nazi Germany, working for them against his will. He’s up at Berchtesgaden, Kerr’s pretentious homage to Der Zauberberg with Gunther as a jaded Castorp? Longer, with more detail, some unnecessary. Kerr eschewed any romantic involvement this time, probably a good thing, in the last few novels it was forced. Not as good as the first three, but enjoyable. Thanks to Charlie for giving it to me, glad I read it.

Sunday, June 4, 2017

Habermas: A Very Short Introduction   James Gordon Finlayson
Excruciatingly tiny print in a small book, but a very intelligent, informative, thorough, and well organized introduction to and overview of Habermas’s work and thought. Habermas’s contributions to philosophy, sociology, and political thought are so extensive, getting them all together, even briefly, is a major accomplishment. Finlayson writes clearly and precisely. Excellent summary appendix at the end, though the book is so well done, it’s almost unnecessary. A very good book.

Sunday, April 30, 2017

Golden Prey   John Sandford
Latest Lucas Davenport police procedural. I’m not really a fan of Davenport, but Camp’s prose is very readable, and the plot’s are always entertaining. This novel is the same, though this time there wasn’t as much funny cop chatter, and the two sinister criminals were much more sympathetic and interesting than the cops. Another quick read and pretty good distraction.

Saturday, April 29, 2017

What Work Is: Poems   Philip Levine
Beautiful, personal, almost polemical poems about labor and life in the United States. Levine, and this book in particular, have had a profound influence on my poetry. re-read it for
National Poetry Month. Loved it again, though this time I read it with some heartache because it is my last, and I’m no longer writing poetry.

Monday, April 24, 2017

The Book Thieves: The Nazi Looting of Europe's Libraries and the Race to Return a Literary Inheritance   Anders Rydell Disappointing book about the efforts to identify, and in some cases, return books stolen by the Nazis. Well enough written, as you would expect from a journalist. Based on the title, and my interest, I thought there would be much more history. Instead Rydell deals primarily with the present day attempts at identification. Also, he inserts himself into the narrative way too much for me. Besides, I am unconvinced that it really means something to return a book to the descendants of someone who was gassed and then incinerated by fascist racists. Too bad.

Sunday, April 2, 2017

American Philosophy: A Love Story   John Kaag
Engaging tour through the history of American philosophy as a result of Kaag’s time working in Ernest Hocking’s library. I generally love books like this, intellectual history and analysis couched in a personal narrative. Kaag’s vituperative discussions of his first marriage, even though most of the blame is directed at himself, seemed much too personal, I felt like I was forced to look at something I didn’t want to see. But the book is pretty well written, and it did help rekindle my interest in James and Royce, so I’m glad I read it.

Monday, March 6, 2017

The Ranger   Ace Atkins
Interesting thriller about an army Ranger who goes home on leave to find his uncle dead and the town he grew up in submerged in corruption. Of course, he fixes it. Very readable prose, more actual characterization than often is the case in this genre, and general believability. Found it to be a pleasant, fairly satisfying diversion. First in a series, may try the next one. Enjoyable enough. Glad I read it.
Guilty Thing: A Life of Thomas De Quincey   Frances Wilson
Relies heavily on De Quincey’s autobiographical writings, at times it seems just to be regurgitating them. But provides a good sweep of his life. Prose is pleasant and effective, though De Quincey himself remains a little elusive until the end, this book provides a good overview. Surprised and very interested that Poe was so strongly influenced by him, and that De Quincey was read and so esteemed in America. Enjoyed it very much even though my opinion of De Quincey is now more realistic, his life got very sad at the end as he got more prolific and brilliant. Good writing and research. Excellent, brief summary at the end of De Quincey’s profound influence. Glad I read it, kind of sad it has ended.

Friday, February 24, 2017

Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of World War II   John W. Dower
Excellent, Pulitzer Prize-winning history of postwar Japan. Really liked the emphases on social and intellectual history, use of popular culture, such as, comedians, TV shows, magazines, songs, etc., and personal letters and diaries. Provides good insight into what life was like for individual Japanese. Very interesting details about the decision to keep the emperor in place, reflecting SCAP’s very conservative approach. Though I read this book about 10 years ago, it fit well with my current reading about Japan in the Pacific war. Very good book.

Thursday, February 9, 2017


Confessions of an English Opium Eater   Thomas De Quincey
De Quincey’s idiosyncratic autobiographical sketches of his early life, as well as specific thoughts and reminiscences of the pleasures and pains of opium use, in his case laudanum. I was assigned to read this book in high school, but I didn’t, so, since I have always been interested in it, I finally got to it. I never would have been able to get through his prose back then, it was work enough now. The section on the pains of opium use was the most tedious, all his weird dreams, etc., but I enjoyed the book somewhat, and I’m really glad I finally got it done.