If you’re pressed for time, check out the ultra-condensed summary of Beowulf and other books.
Category: books
Beowulf (review: 2/5)
I haven’t yet summoned the courage to tackle Beowulf in one of those authoritative translations yet, but I figured a graphic novel could do the trick. I tried Gareth Hinds’ graphic adaptation of Beowulf. The text is in a fresh translation, so it’s an easy read, but still has a noble, epic quality. I really wanted to like this one, but things didn’t work out. Some weird inconsistencies threw off the whole package for me.
It seemed like the art direction and illustrations took on a couple different styles over the course of the book. Some parts look hand-drawn and colored on computer, other parts look wholly of ink and watercolor. I think the paneling was a bit ad-lib, jagged, frantic–too excited for its own good. Especially in the early portions of the book, the poem is broken up into large chunks that are interspersed throughout the narrative. So, you end up with a couple of wordy pages and then a bunch of pages of pure illustration. I was a bit bothered that the action scenes were completely silent—I’m not looking for “POW” and “AARRRGGH” and “KER-THWAM”… I’m just not sure if the silence is because the original text glosses over the battles, or if it was the artist’s discretion. I have to admit that one very nice touch is the latter portion of the book, dealing with Beowulf’s final years. That final section is in a washed-out palette of grays, and the story has a sense of inevitability and confidence that I didn’t find in the rest of the book.
Plastic Man: Rubber Bandits (review: 5/5)
Kyle Baker’s Plastic Man: Rubber Bandits is absolutely hilarious. Pure entertainment, like watching a good Saturday morning cartoon (as in the Fox Kids era of Eek the Cat, the Tick, X-Men, Tiny Toons, Terrible Thunder Lizards, Batman: The Animated Series, etc.). This book, along with Baker’s other one, Plastic Man: On the Lam, has some of the best comedic writing I’ve seen. Plenty of sight gags—it seems like every panel has a little something extra. I love the snappy dialogue and self-aware parody: “Blast you, Trapper! My complex personal ethics force me to allow you to endanger the very fabric of reality to save a single human life!” Interestingly, although the silliness of the characters lend themselves to over-the-top illustration, most of the paneling maintains fairly traditional layouts with hard frames. It’s admirable restraint, allowing the colorful, sharp drawings and great characters to keep things exciting. This one and On the Lam are definitely worth a purchase. I just love it.
The Paris Review Interviews, Volume I (review: 4.5/5)
The Paris Review has been popular for years for its interviews with writers, focusing more on the authors’ methods and craft, rather than their products. The Paris Review Interviews, Volume I collects 16 of those interviews over the last half-century, a selection of novelists, poets, screenwriters, and even an editor. One of the unique aspects of the Review’s approach is that the interviewers review and refine and reconstruct the text in concert with the writers. There’s plenty of back-and-forth communication along the way from inception to print. I’ve never read a book full of interviews before, so one of the best parts was to be an observer of that proceess. I learned bit more about the difference between good interviewing (e.g. Borges & Christ) and bad interviewing (Hemingway vs. Plimpton). Of course, the more obvious privilege is learning from the writers themselves—reading about the ideas of really smart people who do really, really difficult work.
You’ll find a lot of great moments in this book. To pick just a few…
Robert Stone on the state of American fiction: “You have famous writers, but there’s no center. There are the best-seller writers, who are anonymous, almost industrial figures…” I love that! Nora Roberts is like GM, James Patterson is PepsiCo, Danielle Steele like Kraft; I can imagine them and their counterparts hulking along churning out self-similar merchandise.
Saul Bellow was interesting for his occupational humility:
There is such a thing as overcapitalizing the A in artist. Certain writers and musicians understand this. Stravinsky says the composer should practice his trade exactly as a shoemaker does. Mozart and Haydn accepted commissions–wrote to order. In the nineteenth century, the artist loftily waited for inspiration. Once you elevate yourself to the rank of a cultural institution, you’re in for a lot of trouble.
Kurt Vonnegut mirrors this attitude: “Trade. Carpenters build houses. Storytellers use a reader’s leisure time in such a way that the reader will not feel that his time has been wasted. Mechanics fix automobiles.”
Jorge Luis Borges is brilliant and his interviewer, Ronald Christ, seemed to be right up there with him. I expect conducting an interview is a lot easier with such a responsive subject, but I love how he was able to ask, prompt, suggest, hint… and just let Borges carry on. The result is the longest and probably the most engaging transcript in the entire book.
On the other hand, George Plimpton’s interview with Ernest Hemingway was simply awful, but in an interesting way. Hemingway comes off as a real jerk. Intelligent, serious, dedicated, but a jerk. For the most part, Plimpton rolls belly-up, yielding ground and changing the subject. It seems like he never really pressed or pursued or challenged. Then again, I wonder how literally accurate the transcription is, after the back-and-forth editing between writer and interview. There has to be some background story there.
I find a certain perfectionist kinship with editor Robert Gottlieb. His perspective:
What is it that impels this act of editing? I know that in my case it’s not merely about words. Whatever I look at, whatever I encounter, I want it to be good—whether it’s what you’re wearing, or how the restaurant has laid the table, or what’s going on on stage, or what the president said last night, or how two people are talking to each other at a bus stop. I don’t want to interfere with it or control it, exactly—I want it to work, I want it to be happy, I want it to come out right.
There’s some other good folks in there: T.S. Eliot, Truman Capote, Joan Didion, Billy Wilder, among others. This book probably has the highest educational-value to difficulty-of-reading ratio that I’ve come across in the past couple years. I would have blown through it in a couple of hours if I didn’t have to stop so often to bookmark a worthy exchange or ponder a claim. I hope the rest of the series holds up as well as this volume.
New York Magazine has a good profile of economist Tyler Cowen and his new book, Discover Your Inner Economist: Use Incentives to Fall in Love, Survive Your Next Meeting, and Motivate Your Dentist.
Lately there have been a couple good interviews with William Gibson in anticipation of his book, Spook Country. From his talk with the College Crier:
One of the assumptions that I had was that science fiction is necessarily always about the day in which it was written. And that was my conviction from having read a lot of old science fiction. 19th century science fiction obviously expresses all of the concerns and the neuroses of the 19th century and science fiction from the 1940’s is the 1940’s. George Orwell’s 1984 is really 1948, the year in which he wrote it. It can’t be about the future. It’s about where the person who wrote it thought their present was, because you can’t envision a future without having some sort of conviction, whether you express it or not in the text, about where your present is.
And recently on Amazon:
The thing that limits you with Google is what you can think of to google, really. There’s some kind of personal best limitation on it, unless you get lucky and something you google throws up something you’ve never seen before. You’re still really inside some annotated version of your own head.
I was browsing through the Library of Congress website and came upon some cool posters from the Works Progress Administration. From that, I put together a little collection of library propaganda, lovely pro-literacy silkscreens and lithographs from our government.
Mark Hurst just published a book to get you back on track: Bit Literacy: Productivity in the Age of Information and E-mail Overload. Could be a good one.
Plates from George Catlin’s 1844 North American Indian Portfolio. And I’m a sucker for celestial atlases, like Johann Rost’s 1723 Atlas Portatilis Coelestis—note the fold-out pages for color illustrations. The Linda Hall Library has a number of other cool digital collections.
A simple infographic about Snape’s cultural/emotional heritage. [via rebecca blood]
Sean calls it Pötterdämmerung. Just for that, Sean, I promise I’ll get around to finishing book #3.
A Jane Austen enthusiast ripped a few chapters from her books, changed the names, and submitted them to publishers. [via Mises]
Whither our literary arbiters? On NPR, a story about how newspapers are dedicating less space for book reviews than in the past. Goes along with the general decline in newsprint circulation & advertising dollars.
Animal Farm (review: 0/5)
This was the second book I read on the Appalachian Trail this summer. Unfortunately it was the only book I had available at the time, but I pushed through it. I was surprised how bad this book was. I just loved 1984, and I for the most part I’ve enjoyed Orwell’s essays and stories… but wow, what a disappointment. I guess the storyline was a too much of a bludgeon for my tastes.
Mickey Smith’s photographs of bound journals. I like the installations, too.
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde (review: 4/5)
Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde was the first book I brought to read during my hike this summer, and also the first time I’d ever brought a book on a hiking trip. Loved it. I especially appreciate the roundabout style narration. You rarely get information first-hand, it’s almost all reported within the dialogue or letters from the characters. I think what I’ll most remember from this book is just the simple pleasure of reading it. When I was out hiking, sunset came around 8:30pm and darkness soon after. This was my last waking pleasure each night, just a few pages after dinner, reading until I got sleepy or just couldn’t see anymore.
Fun facts about the OCLC Top 1000 books owned by library systems worldwide. “How far down the list do you have to go to get to a live author? Jim Davis’ Garfield is number 15 on the list. (Four of the 5 top works by living authors are cartoons!)”
I just found Moon River a few days ago. A blog with lots of old books, maps, design stuff. Right up my alley.
I’m glad that someone has called out Oprah Winfrey for featuring The Secret on her show. I was pretty stunned that she’d pick a crap book like that.
Batman: Year 100 (review: 2/5)
So in Batman: Year 100 we have the typical gritty Gotham set in a climate of heavy-hand police state dystopia, etc etc. The year is 2039. Not too distant, but plenty of time for the world to go to crap. Enough time for the old Batman to die off and a new one to take his place. Or maybe it’s the same man…? The mystery of the new Dark Knight is unfortunately one that never gets resolved. He just sort of is, and does the usual foiling of nefarious plots. On the upside, there’s interesting artwork from Paul Pope and Jose Villarrubia, and I liked seeing Batman as a bit more of a ramshackle outsider, coming across as unexperienced and a bit clumsy and improvisational.
One of the better surprises was the little mini-comic stashed in the back of the book: Berlin Batman. This one revolves around the (true) story of Ludwig von Mises, a brilliant and outspoken economist who fled the Nazis at the cost of having his home ransacked and all his papers confiscated. Batman tries to stop it. It’s a cool little yarn, with a hilariously bourgeois/bohemian Bruce Wayne. It was great to see two of my personal thrills (Batman and Austrian economics) collide so unexpectedly.