Wednesday, October 24, 2012

The Art of Fielding

This is a novel with the weight and IQ of a doorstop. A blurb from the execrable Jonathan Franzen should have been the tipoff. Nothing here is believable; no character emerges into three dimensions. To give the author credit, some of the dialogue begins to veer toward the credible along about page 250. But the Spider-Man comics of my youth in the mid-1970s were more complex and better written by far.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Roadside Picnic

It is unlikely I would have picked up this Russian novel by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky had it not been the basis for the 1979 film Stalker. In the event, I am glad I did. As the useful foreword explains, this is not the science fiction of generals and geniuses, but of real people, principally the "stalker" Red Schuhart. That an alien civilization would visit Earth and then leave, possibly bored, is the type of contact story not often told. The humans are left to blunder through the items left behind, like animals encountering the remains of a roadside picnic. They reach blindly for understanding, with no tools but a puny intelligence and a living soul.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Candy

Banned smut with artistic pretensions will always attract a crowd, and the "scandalous" Candy, co-authored by Terry Southern, attracted a crowd of some 3 million readers after a Paris edition was reissued in the United States. Many of them, I suspect, eagerly fingered the pages looking for the dirty parts, which include anatomical terminology and some clumsy sex scenes. Southern's novel Blue Movie and his work in film make you wonder how he could have produced this satirical dreck.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Man Made

Joel Stein's book, subtitled A Stupid Quest for Masculinity, is deadpan, self-deprecating, and very funny. It also provides unexpected moments of insight as he endures military training, goes on calls with firefighters, and, perhaps most hilariously, hunts turkeys, among other pursuits. Stein's humor thankfully lacks snark, and his reporting puts the reader in mind of The Pump House Gang and other earlier classics.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

The Happy Hypocrite

Max Beerbohm's 63-page story, first published in 1896, is described on the dust jacket as "a golden butterfly, done by Whistler." It is a skillfully constructed miniature about a vile, boozing English lord who woos a pure maiden by putting on a saintly mask. The ending has the rare quality of being both surprising and seeming in hindsight to have been inevitable. The fine prose puts one in mind, on the American side, of James Branch Cabell.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

The Master of Go

There are passages in this novel by Yasunari Kawabata of poignant insight as a game of Go between the "invincible Master" and his young challenger unfolds amid the ebbing of an old, aristocratic Japan. The reportage upon which the novel is based, however, can take over the narrative. The hotel arrangements, match delays, health issues, and other practical matters are given in great detail. For a game as symbol, I prefer the approach of Nabokov in The Defense.

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