Sunday, January 28, 2018

Fire and Fury

Other than the urge to take a long, hot bath after finishing this book, what stands out is the almost total absence of interest by Michael Wolff, the author, or anyone in the White House for that matter, in addressing issues of policy. You know, the business of government. It is all backstabbing, lying, and plotting at about the level of an MTV reality series. The problem is, the institutional damage will endure long after the clown show leaves town.

Saturday, January 27, 2018

Ethan Frome

The New York Times review of Ethan Frome in 1911 talks of the novel's cold, harsh physical climate as a kind of chorus accompanying the narrative, and that is what is likely to leave its mark on the reader.

Friday, January 26, 2018

Count Bruga

Is it possible for a satire published in 1926, about a poet now largely forgotten, to provide a reader nearly a century later with enjoyment? With Ben Hecht writing, the answer is a qualified yes. Hecht's send-up of his friend, Maxwell Bodenheim, has no doubt lost some of its punch as the mists of time have obscured the public character of the Greenwich Village poet. And the fictionalized version, Count Hippolyt Bruga, is mostly tedious. But there is a long section in the novel's core, about a magician, that is as sensitively done as Mann's Mario and the Magician and just about as creepy.

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

In Another World

Subtitled "Van Morrison & Belfast," this brief volume by Gerald Dawe collects previously published work and weaves it into a mini-history of postwar Belfast and its music. The book is particularly good in evoking the city before the sectarian strife created no-go zones, when youths of all religions could come together in clubs to hear visiting and local bands play R&B and jazz. It was out of this milieu that Morrison developed his skills as a musician and songwriter, never losing sight of his hometown but eventually transcending it.

The Peron Novel

Tomas Eloy Martinez's fictionalized account of Juan Domingo Peron's return to Argentina in 1973 from exile in Spain is richly detailed, drawing from sources both real and imaginary to paint the general, his three wives, his hangers-on, and the opposition forces awaiting his return. The story is by turns poignant, tragic, and ludicrous. Martinez shows here, as the best novelists can, how fiction illuminates fact.

Class Trip

This short, creepy novel by French writer Emmanuel Carrere follows an awkward adolescent to a school ski trip at which his imagination and, eventually, events run wild. It is a cold, perceptive study of youthful alienation.

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