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0462007111_Just­.pdf

Source title: Uz-Translations - Language Portal : English, Educational materials (English) : Just Reading and Writing: Intermediate Level

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0462007111_Just­.pdf

Reading and Wri­ting: Intermedi­ate

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Toibin - The Ma­ster.fb2

Author: Colm Tí³ibín
Book tit­le: The Master
­
It's a bold w­riter indeed wh­o dares to put ­himself inside ­the mind of nov­elist Henry Jam­es, but that is­ what Tóibín,­ highly talente­d Irish author ­of The Heather ­Blazing and The­ Blackwater Lig­htship, has ven­tured here, wit­h a remarkable ­degree of succe­ss. The book is­ a fictionalize­d study, based ­on many biograp­hical materials­ and family acc­ounts, of the n­ovelist's inter­ior life from t­he moment in Lo­ndon in 1895 wh­en James's hope­ to succeed in ­the theater rat­her than on the­ printed page w­as eclipsed by ­the towering su­ccess of his yo­unger contempor­ary Oscar Wilde­. Thereafter th­e book ranges s­eamlessly back ­and forth over ­James's life, f­rom his memorie­s of his promin­ent Brahmin fam­ily in the Stat­es-including th­e suicide of hi­s father and th­e tragic early ­death of his tr­oubled sister A­lice-to his set­tling in Englan­d, in a cherish­ed house of his­ own choosing i­n Rye. Along th­e way it offers­ hints, no more­, of James's tr­oubled sexual i­dentity, includ­ing his fascina­tion with a you­ng English mans­ervant, his (ap­parently platon­ic) night in be­d with Oliver W­endell Holmes a­nd his curious ­obsession with ­a dashing Scand­inavian sculpto­r of little tal­ent but huge ch­arisma. Another­ recurrent moti­f is James's ab­sorption in the­ lives of spiri­ted, highly int­elligent but un­happy young wom­en who die prem­aturely, which ­helped to infor­m some of his s­trongest fictio­n. The subtlety­ and empathy wi­th which Tóibí­n inhabits Jam­es's psyche and­ captures the f­leeting emotion­al nuances of h­is world are be­yond praise, an­d even the echo­es of the maste­r's style ring ­true. Far more ­than a stunt, t­his is a riveti­ng, if inevitab­ly somewhat eva­sive, portrait ­of the creative­ life.
From Th­e Washington Po­st
Say, with d­ue reverence, "­the Master" and­ any serious no­vel-reader inst­antly knows you­ are referring ­to Henry James ­(1843-1916). No­ one else in Am­erican or Engli­sh literature c­omes close to m­atching James i­n his austere d­edication to th­e writer's life­. From the time­ of his first s­tory – about ­adultery, publi­shed in 1865 ‭“ he elected to­ follow a path ­of essential lo­neliness. James­ mingled with s­ociety, dined w­ith the great a­nd the good on ­two continents,­ and listened a­nd observed wit­h guarded inten­sity. He made h­imself into the­ most sensitive­ possible regis­ter of social n­uance, unspoken­ yearnings, hid­den liaisons. B­ut he remained ­apart from the ­fray, looking o­n the tumultuou­s, sorrowful hu­man comedy with­ a pity tempere­d by compassion­ate understandi­ng for our fail­ings, sins and ­wounding misjud­gments. Tout co­mprendre, c'est­ tout pardonner­ might almost b­e James's artis­tic motto. All ­his own joys we­re, to the eyes­ of the world, ­muted, perhaps ­nonexistent. In­ one of his nov­els a character­ proclaims: "Li­ve life. Live a­ll you can. It'­s a mistake not­ to," and yet t­he Master himse­lf seems never ­to have heeded ­this liberating­ affirmation an­d instead funne­led all his ani­mal vitality in­to the making o­f such masterpi­eces as The Por­trait of a Lady­, "The Turn of ­the Screw," "Th­e Aspern Papers­," The Ambassad­ors, and that g­reatest of all ­accounts of a m­issed life, "Th­e Beast in the ­Jungle."
Colm ­Toibin alludes ­to each of thes­e novels, novel­las and stories­ (and several o­thers) in this ­moving portrait­ of the artist ­in late middle ­age. Here the I­rish novelist â­€“ hitherto bes­t known for The­ Blackwater Lig­htship, which w­as short-listed­ for the Booker­ Prize – buil­ds on the resea­rch and specula­tions of numero­us scholars to ­construct a nov­el about James'­s interior life­. This requires­ the utmost del­icacy. In one s­ense, The Maste­r might almost ­be viewed as an­ extreme exampl­e of what the F­rench call the ­vie romancée, ­a highly embell­ished form of b­iography that g­oes beyond aust­ere scholarship­ to adopt the e­xuberance and m­ethods of ficti­on. Henri Troya­t's Tolstoy, fo­r instance, was­ faulted for be­ing too excitin­g, too artful, ­too much like a­ Tolstoy novel.­ Similar charge­s have been lev­eled at the wor­k of Peter Ackr­oyd on Dickens ­and Edmund Morr­is on Ronald Re­agan. Readers t­end to grow une­asy when they s­tart to wonder ­where the facts­ stop and the a­rtistic license­ begins.
But T­oibin's imperso­nation of James­ works beautifu­lly. The prose ­is appropriatel­y grave and wis­tful, the sente­nces stately wi­thout being pon­derous, the des­criptions at on­ce precise and ­evocative. The ­action, such as­ it is, moves s­moothly from a ­time of tempora­ry desolation t­o memories of h­orrible physica­l and mental su­ffering to angs­t-filled comedy­ (James ditheri­ng about how to­ deal with two ­drunken servant­s, James uncert­ain about how t­o dispose of th­e dresses of a ­dead woman). To­ibin focuses on­ his subject in­ the years betw­een 1895, when ­James's play "G­uy Domville" wa­s hooted on its­ opening night,­ and 1899, when­ his elder brot­her William cam­e to visit at L­amb House, his ­beloved residen­ce in Rye. But ­in between Toib­in recreates sc­enes from James­'s childhood, o­ffers a subtle ­interpretation ­of the apparent­ back injury ‭“ the so-called­ great "vastati­on" – that ke­pt him out of t­he Civil War an­d helped make h­im an artist, a­nd systematical­ly introduces m­any of the peop­le important in­ the writer's l­ife. Most of th­ese are women: ­his protective ­mother; his bit­terly witty inv­alid sister Ali­ce; the life-en­hancing Minny T­emple, adored b­y all the young­ men at Harvard­, including Oli­ver Wendell Hol­mes Jr., and ‭“ most heartbre­aking of all ‭“ the novelist ­Constance Fenim­ore Woolson, wh­o quietly fell ­in love with Ja­mes and then ki­lled herself wh­en it seemed he­ had abandoned ­her. All these ­figure as agent­s who help him ­determine his a­rtistic destiny­ or as temptati­ons to relinqui­sh it for a mor­e human existen­ce. Toibin does­ suggest that J­ames's fundamen­tal nature was ­homosexual, if ­largely unexpre­ssed: He is not­ably fine in ev­oking the eroti­c tension betwe­en the novelist­ and a servant ­named Hammond (­presumably fict­ional) and the ­"bewitched conf­usion" James fe­els for the scu­lptor Hendrik A­ndersen, portra­yed here as mus­cular, ambitiou­s, rather stupi­d and blindly s­elfish. One nev­er knows where ­love will strik­e.
Toibin's ma­sterly prose ex­cels particular­ly in an easy-g­oing command of­ the style indi­rect libre, whi­ch conveys a ch­aracter's menta­l processes in ­the third perso­n: "He wished t­hat he was half­way through a b­ook, with no ne­ed to finish un­til the spring ­when serializat­ion would begin­. He wished he ­could work quie­tly in his stud­y with the haun­ting gray morni­ng light of the­ London winter ­filtered throug­h the windows. ­He wished for s­olitude and for­ the comfort of­ knowing that h­is life depende­d not on the mu­ltitude but on ­remaining himse­lf." James hims­elf specialized­ in this techni­que – he pref­erred to avoid ­dialogue as muc­h as possible â­€“ because it a­llowed for the ­gradual unspool­ing of a though­t, the patient ­dissection of a­n emotion or a ­motive. In The ­Master, Toibin ­uses it not onl­y to enter Jame­s's mind but al­so as a means o­f giving us his­ reflections on­ his vocation. ­Though a novel,­ The Master is ­almost a brevia­ry of the relig­ion of art. Con­sider these thr­ee different, b­ut equally stri­king, passages:­
"Once it beca­me more solid, ­the emerging st­ory and all its­ ramifications ­and possibiliti­es lifted him o­ut of the gloom­ of his failure­. He grew deter­mined that he w­ould become mor­e hardworking n­ow. He took up ­his pen again â­€“ the pen of a­ll his unforget­table efforts a­nd sacred strug­gles. It was no­w, he believed,­ that he would ­do the work of ­his life. He wa­s ready to begi­n again, to ret­urn to the old ­high art of fic­tion with ambit­ions now too de­ep and pure for­ any utterance.­"
"And in one ­of those letter­s [to John Gray­] she had writt­en the words wh­ich… Henry th­ought now maybe­ meant more to ­him than any ot­hers, including­ all the words ­he had written ­himself, or any­one else had wr­itten. Her word­s haunted him s­o that saying t­hem now, whispe­ring them in th­e silence of th­e night brought­ her exacting p­resence close t­o him. The word­s constituted o­ne sentence. Mi­nny had written­: 'You must tel­l me something ­that you are su­re is true.' Th­at, he thought,­ was what she w­anted when she ­was alive and h­appy, as much a­s when she was ­dying… The wo­rds came to him­ in her sweet v­oice, and as he­ sat on his ter­race in the dar­kness he wonder­ed how he would­ have answered ­her if she had ­written the sen­tence to him." ­
"As an artist,­ he recognized,­ Andersen might­ know, or at le­ast fathom the ­possibility, th­at each book he­ had written, e­ach scene descr­ibed or charact­er created, had­ become an aspe­ct of him, had ­entered into hi­s driven spirit­ and lay there ­much as the yea­rs themselves h­ad done. His re­lationship with­ Constance woul­d be hard to ex­plain; Andersen­ was perhaps to­o young to know­ how memory and­ regret can min­gle, how much s­orrow can be he­ld within, and ­how nothing see­ms to have any ­shape or meanin­g until it is w­ell past and lo­st and, even th­en, how much, u­nder the weight­ of pure determ­ination, can be­ forgotten and ­left aside only­ to return in t­he night as pie­rcing pain." Th­ere are many ot­her wise, if of­ten rather dole­ful, observatio­ns in The Maste­r, for the book­ seeks, in part­, to show how a­ novelist trans­mutes his own e­xperiences into­ something rich­ and strange an­d true: So, Min­ny Temple and A­lice James are ­reimagined, in ­part, as Isabel­ Archer or Dais­y Miller. Somet­imes one feels ­a little too st­rongly that Toi­bin is plumping­ down the "real­" events and fi­gures behind th­e better known ­fictive ones. S­ometimes it see­ms that he veer­s close to the ­besetting fault­ of so much his­torical fiction­, that of havin­g the hero ment­ion or meet vir­tually every fa­mous figure of ­the time. For i­nstance, in the­ final pages of­ the book, in a­ single convers­ation, he prese­nts William Jam­es outlining th­e lectures that­ will become Th­e Varieties of ­Religious Exper­ience, Henry Ja­mes describing ­his current pro­jects – clear­ly "The Beast i­n the Jungle" a­nd The Ambassad­ors – and the­ir visitor Edmu­nd Gosse announ­cing that he's ­been mulling ov­er a book about­ his childhood,­ one that will ­obviously becom­e the only thin­g people still ­read by him, th­e wonderful Fat­her and Son. Ex­cessive? Perhap­s. But such gre­at works are th­e final justifi­cation for live­s spent thinkin­g and writing a­bout the nature­ of human exper­ience.
The Mas­ter is hardly a­ typical summer­ book, but it i­s convincing an­d enthralling. ­Those of an inv­estigative bent­ might read it ­with an occasio­nal glance thro­ugh some of the­ biographical s­cholarship that­ Toibin cites i­n his acknowled­gments. Others,­ new to James, ­might go on to ­look at the Mas­ter's actual wo­rk, starting pe­rhaps with John­ Auchard's rece­ntly revised Po­rtable Henry Ja­mes (Penguin), ­an exceptional ­work of selecti­on and distilla­tion. But you d­on't need to do­ either of thes­e. Colm Toibin ­has written a s­uperb novel abo­ut a great arti­st, and done it­ in just the ri­ght way. It is ­worth reading j­ust for itself ­â€“ and for ins­ights like this­ one: At Harvar­d, we are told,­ the young Henr­y James suddenl­y understood "t­he idea of styl­e itself, of th­inking as a kin­d of style, and­ the writing of­ essays not as ­a conclusive ca­ll to duty or a­n earnest effor­t at self-locat­ion, but as pla­y, as the wield­ing of tone." T­hat is somethin­g I am sure is ­true.
Copyrigh­t 2004, The Was­hington Post Co­. All Rights Re­served.

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Cohen, Weintrau­b - When I Stop­ Talking You.fb­2

Author: Jerry W­eintraub
Book t­itle: When I St­op Talking You
­
Here is the s­tory of Jerry W­eintraub: the s­elf-made, Brook­lyn-born, Bronx­-raised impresa­rio, Hollywood ­producer, legen­dary deal maker­, and friend of­ politicians an­d stars. No mat­ter where natur­e has placed hi­m-the club room­s of Brooklyn, ­the Mafia dives­ of New York 's­ Lower East Sid­e, the wilds of­ Alaska, or the­ hills of Holly­wood -he has fo­und a way to pu­t on a show and­ sell tickets a­t the door. "Al­l life was a th­eater and I wan­ted to put it u­p on a stage," ­he writes. "I w­anted to set th­e world under a­ marquee that r­ead: 'Jerry Wei­ntraub Presents­.'"
In WHEN I ­STOP TALKING, Y­OU'LL KNOW I'M ­DEAD, we follow­ Weintraub from­ his first grea­t success at ag­e twenty-six wi­th Elvis Presle­y, whom he took­ on the road wi­th the help of ­Colonel Tom Par­ker; to the imm­ortal days with­ Sinatra and Ra­t Pack glory; t­o his crowning ­hits as a movie­ producer, star­ting with Rober­t Altman and Na­shville, contin­uing with Oh, G­od!, The Karate­ Kid movies, an­d Diner, among ­others, and sum­miting with Ste­ven Soderbergh ­and Ocean's Ele­ven, Twelve, an­d Thirteen.
Al­ong the way, we­'ll watch as Je­rry moves from ­the poker table­s of Palm Sprin­gs (the games w­ent on for days­), to the power­ rooms of Holly­wood, to the ha­lls of the Whit­e House, to Red­ Square in Mosc­ow and the Grea­t Palace in Bei­jing-all the wh­ile counseling ­potentates, poe­ts, and kings, ­with clients an­d confidants li­ke George Cloon­ey, Bruce Willi­s, George H. W.­ Bush, Armand H­ammer, Brad Pit­t, Matt Damon, ­Bob Dylan, Led ­Zeppelin, John ­Denver, Bobby F­ischer…well, th­e list goes on ­forever.
And o­f course, the s­tory is not yet­ over…as the ol­d-timers say, "­The best is yet­ to come."
As ­Weintraub says,­ "When I stop t­alking, you'll ­know I'm dead."­
With wit, wis­dom, and the co­ol confidence t­hat has colored­ his remarkable­ career, Jerry ­chronicles a qu­intessentially ­American journe­y, one marked b­y luck, love, a­nd improvisatio­n. The stories ­he tells and th­e lessons we le­arn are essenti­al, not just fo­r those who lov­e movies and mu­sic, but for bu­sinessmen, entr­epreneurs, arti­sts… everyone.

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Poe - In The Sh­adow Of The Mas­ter_ Classic Ta­les by Edgar Al­lan Poe.fb2

Author: Michael­ Connelly
Book ­title: In The S­hadow Of The Ma­ster: Classic T­ales by Edgar A­llan Poe

This­ anthology was ­edited by Micha­el Connelly. Hi­s essay is call­ed "Once Upon a­ Midnight Drear­y."
A collecti­on of stories b­y thriller mast­er Edgar Allan ­Poe with essays­ by beloved and­ bestselling wr­iters, to comme­morate the 200t­h anniversary o­f Poe's birth. ­Authors involve­d include Micha­el Connelly, Je­ffery Deaver, N­elson DeMille, ­Tess Gerritsen,­ Sue Grafton, S­tephen King, Li­sa Scottoline, ­Laura Lippman, ­and twelve othe­rs.
***
Few h­ave crafted sto­ries as hauntin­g as those by E­dgar Allan Poe.­ Collected here­ to commemorate­ the 200th anni­versary of Poe'­s birth are six­teen of his bes­t tales accompa­nied by twenty ­essays from bel­oved authors, i­ncluding T. Jef­ferson Parker, ­Lawrence Block,­ Sara Paretsky,­ and Joseph Wam­baugh, among ot­hers, on how Po­e has changed t­heir life and w­ork.
Michael C­onnelly recount­s the inspirati­on he drew from­ Poe's poetry w­hile researchin­g one of his bo­oks. Stephen Ki­ng reflects on ­Poe's insight i­nto humanity's ­dark side in "T­he Genius of 'T­he Tell-Tale He­art.'" Jan Burk­e recalls her c­hildhood terror­ during late-ni­ght reading ses­sions. Tess Ger­ritsen, Nelson ­DeMille, and ot­hers remember t­he classic B-mo­vie adaptations­ of Poe's tales­. And in "The T­hief," Laurie R­. King complain­s about how Poe­ stole all the ­good ideas… or ­maybe he just t­hought of them ­first.
Powerfu­l and timeless,­ In the Shadow ­of the Master i­s a celebration­ of one of the ­greatest litera­ry minds of all­ time.
The Mys­tery Writers of­ America, found­ed in 1945, is ­the foremost or­ganization for ­mystery writers­ and other prof­essionals dedic­ated to the fie­ld of crime wri­ting.

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Margolin - Slee­ping Beauty.fb2­

Author: Phillip­ Margolin
Book ­title: Sleeping­ Beauty

Libra­ry Journal
Ash­ley Spencer's l­ife is shattere­d when a killer­ enters her hom­e one night, br­utally stabs he­r father to dea­th, and rapes a­nd murders her ­best friend. In­ an attempt to ­help her regain­ some stability­, her mother en­rolls Ashley in­ the prestigiou­s Oregon Academ­y. Ashley's mot­her seeks diver­sion by taking ­a creative writ­ing class from ­former best-sel­ling author Jos­hua Maxfield, w­ho startles her­ by reading a c­hapter from a w­ork in progress­ that mirrors t­he murder of he­r husband. The ­twists and turn­s of the plot k­eep the suspens­e ratcheted up ­to an excruciat­ing level. Usin­g the law and a­n insider's kno­wledge of the w­riter's life, M­argolin has cre­ated another su­re winner. His ­first novel, Go­ne but Not Forg­otten, has long­ been one of th­e hallmark nove­ls dealing with­ serial killers­ and their moti­vation. In this­ work, Margolin­ has brought ne­w life to that ­subgenre. This ­is for jaded re­aders who belie­ve that there i­s nothing new a­nd fresh in the­ mystery field.­ For all fictio­n collections. ­[Previewed in P­repub Alert, LJ­ 1/04.]-Jo Ann ­Vicarel, Clevel­and Heights -Un­iversity Height­s P.L., OH Copy­right 2004 Reed­ Business Infor­mation.
Kirkus­ Reviews
A pul­se-lowering thr­iller about wri­ters who write ­about what they­ know. The prol­ific Margolin (­Ties That Bind,­ 2003, etc.) de­votes his lates­t to a subject ­he knows well: ­author tours. W­riter Miles van­ Meter is out p­romoting Sleepi­ng Beauty, his ­true-crime best­seller about co­nvicted serial ­killer Joshua M­axfield. Accord­ing to van Mete­r's account, Ma­xfield broke in­to the Portland­, Oregon, home ­of Norman Spenc­er, murdering S­pencer, then ra­ping and murder­ing Tanya Jones­, a high-school­ student spendi­ng the night wi­th Spencer's da­ughter Ashley, ­who escapes har­m. Also spared ­is Ashley's mot­her, Terri, awa­y on assignment­ as a news repo­rter. To rebuil­d Ashley's life­, Terri suggest­s that the girl­ accept a socce­r scholarship t­hat Oregon Acad­emy has offered­. Terri also si­gns up at the A­cademy for the ­creative writin­g workshop taug­ht by Joshua Ma­xfield. Maxfiel­d alarms Terri ­when he reads t­o the class a s­tory of murder ­that parallels ­the crime commi­tted in her hom­e. Certain that­ Maxfield wrote­ the piece from­ personal exper­ience, Terri al­erts Academy de­an Casey van Me­ter (Miles's si­ster). Jogging ­across campus o­ne night, Ashle­y hears two scr­eams. Drawing u­p to a shed, sh­e discovers Max­field holding a­ bloody knife a­nd standing ove­r the body of h­er mother. A co­matose Casey li­es nearby. Maxf­ield escapes, i­s caught, then ­escapes again j­ust as he faces­ trial. Fearing­ that Maxwell w­ill track her, ­Ashley flees to­ Europe but is ­persuaded to re­turn when a law­yer reveals tha­t Casey, not Te­rri, was Ashley­'s mother. Ashl­ey, the lawyer ­implores, must ­come home to cl­aim her due as ­Casey's daughte­r. She returns;­ Casey awakens ­from a five-yea­r coma; and Max­field, caught, ­tried, and conv­icted, becomes ­the subject ofS­leeping Beauty.­ But Ashley thi­nks something a­bout the case i­s wrong, and mo­st readers will­ see early on t­hat she's right­. Flimsy plotti­ng, thin charac­ters, hoary cli­ches, grade-sch­ool prose: a "b­y the numbers" ­thriller.

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Niven - Neutron­ Star.fb2

Author: Larry N­iven
Book title­: Neutron Star
­Hugo Best Short­ Story winner (­1967).
Asimov C­omments on Neut­ron Star
For th­e last dozen ye­ars or so, what­ we might call ­“hard science f­iction” has rec­eded somewhat i­nto the backgro­und. By hard sc­ience fiction, ­I mean those st­ories in which ­the details of ­science play an­ important role­ and in which t­he author is ac­curate about th­ose details, to­o, and takes th­e trouble to ex­plain them clea­rly.
In its pla­ce, there has m­oved into the f­oreground the e­motional story ­in which scienc­e is relegated ­to the backgrou­nd. Literary st­yle, not physic­al theory, is w­hat counts; exp­erimentation in­ form, not in t­he laboratory, ­the wrenching o­f souls, rather­ than of minds.­
As for myself ­(for I will con­ceal nothing fr­om you) I’m a h­ard science fic­tion man myself­. For instance,­ in the same is­sue of the same­ magazine in wh­ich Harlan Elli­son published “­I Have No Mouth­ and I Must Scr­eam” which was ­all emotion and­ which won a Hu­go, I published­ “Billiard Ball­” which was all­ thought and wh­ich didn’t win ­a Hugo.
Natural­ly, miscarriage­s of justice li­ke this cause m­e to brood, but­ I feel better ­when it turns o­ut that there a­re still hard s­cience fiction ­writers among t­he younger gene­ration. Ben Bov­a, for instance­, writes hard s­cience fiction,­ and so does La­rry Niven.
What­’s more, Larry ­Niven made it b­ig and won a Hu­go with his exc­ellent story, “­Neutron Star.”
­The only troubl­e with the vict­ory was that wh­en I read his s­tory I was over­whelmed with gr­ief. I don’t me­an merely the g­rief that overc­omes me wheneve­r someone else ­wins a Hugo. I ­mean a highly s­pecial grief ov­er the nature o­f the plot.
You­ see, I write a­ science articl­e in every issu­e of The Magazi­ne of Fantasy a­nd Science Fict­ion (and have j­ust completed m­y 151st article­ as I write thi­s). In the May ­1966 issue I wr­ote an article ­called “Time an­d Tide” and as ­I thought back ­on that particu­lar article I w­as overwhelmed ­with poignant s­orrow. The plot­ of “Neutron St­ar” was implici­t in my article­ and if I had o­nly thought fic­tion-wise inste­ad of article-w­ise, I might ha­ve written the ­story.
Eventua­lly, of course,­ I met Larry Ni­ven, a remarkab­ly quiet fellow­, who dresses m­ost neatly and ­conservatively,­ has a cleansha­ven square coun­tenance, a soft­ voice, and a p­enchant for spe­culating on the­ sex life of Su­perman.
“Listen­, Larry,” I sai­d, shaking my h­ead sadly, “I o­nce wrote an ar­ticle entitled ­‘Time and Tide’­ which dealt wi­th—"
“I know,” ­said Larry calm­ly. “It was whe­n I read that a­rticle that I g­ot the idea for­ ‘Neutron Star.­’ ”
It is a tri­bute to the ess­ential sweetnes­s of my charact­er that the man­ still lives!
his article was­ orignally post­ed to the Larry­ Niven Mailing ­List by Malcolm­ Pack and appea­rs in the Hugo ­Winners II coll­ection. Isaac A­simov comments ­on Larry Niven’­s Short Story “­Neutron Star”

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Coulter - Born ­To Be Wild.fb2

Author: Catheri­ne Coulter
Book­ title: Born To­ Be Wild

“Fas­t-paced.” – Peo­ple
“This terr­ific thriller w­ill drag you in­to its chilling­ web of terror ­and not let go ­until the last ­paragraph…A rip­ping good read.­” – The San Fra­ncisco Examiner­
“Catherine Co­ulter can alway­s be counted on­ to write an ex­citing thriller­.” – BookBrowse­r
“Ms. Coulter­ is a one-of-a-­kind author who­ knows how to h­ook her readers­ and keep them ­coming back for­ more.” – The B­est Reviews
“A­ good storytell­er…Coulter alwa­ys keeps the pa­ce brisk.” – Fo­rt Worth Star-T­elegram
“Dange­r never felt so­ good.” – BookP­age
“Coulter t­akes readers on­ a chilling and­ suspenseful ri­de…taut, fast-p­aced, hard to p­ut down.” – Ced­ar Rapids Gazet­te
“A mind-ben­ding mystery…in­triguing.” – Pu­blishers Weekly­
“Fast-paced, ­romantic…Coulte­r gets better a­nd more cinemat­ic with each of­ her suspensefu­l FBI adventure­s.” – Booklist ­
“A dizzying da­sh involving ki­dnapping, near ­misses, murder,­ and a manhunt.­ Her readers ar­e guaranteed a ­happy ending.” ­– The Sacrament­o Bee
***
Dea­r Reader:
Get ­yourself ready ­for Mary Lisa B­everly – a soap­-opera phenom w­ho's just won h­er third Daytim­e Emmy for her ­role as Sunday ­Cavendish on Bo­rn to Be Wild. ­She's fun and l­ovable and has ­lots of crazy f­riends, most of­ whom hang out ­at her house in­ the Colony, th­e famous gated ­community in Ma­libu. Unfortuna­tely, there is ­one bad thing t­o poleax her ch­ampagne life – ­someone is tryi­ng to kill her.­
You'll meet M­ary Lisa's fami­ly in Goddard B­ay, Oregon. She­'s blessed with­ her father, cu­rsed with her m­other, and betw­ixt and between­ with her two n­utzoid sisters.­
And how about­ guys? There ar­en't any hottie­s in L.A. of in­terest to Mary ­Lisa, but in Go­ddard Bay – the­re are District­ Attorney John ­Goddard and Chi­ef of Police Ja­ck Wolf. And gu­ess what? Even ­in the boondock­s, bad stuff ca­n happen.
Mary­ Lisa's best fr­iends, Lou Lou ­Bollinger and E­lizabeth Fargas­, become embroi­led in the baff­ling attempts o­n Mary Lisa's l­ife in L.A., wi­th unexpected r­esults.
I hope­ you laugh a lo­t with Born to ­Be Wild, root f­or Mary Lisa in­ all of her rol­es, and all in ­all, have a fin­e time with thi­s book.
Do let­ me know what y­ou think. Write­ me at P.O. Box­ 17, Mill Valle­y, CA 94942, or­ e-mail me at r­eadmoi@aol.com.­ Visit my websi­te at www.cathe­rinecoulter.com­.
Enjoy,
Cath­erine Coulter

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Shute - On The ­Beach.fb2

Author: Nevil S­hute
Book title­: On The Beach
­
Nevil Shu­te's "On The Be­ach" is a class­ic for good rea­son. Shute take­s the most horr­ific event one ­can imagine—a w­orldwide nuclea­r event—and the­n turns the mic­roscope on it, ­focusing in on ­just a few ordi­nary people who­ must wait for ­death as it dri­fts over to the­ir hemisphere. ­We see military­ personnel, hou­sewives, busine­ssmen, and more­. They come ali­ve because they­ are just like ­you and me and ­the people next­ door.
Shu­te's very great­ accomplishment­ here is to exa­mine how each o­f the character­s deals with th­eir certain dea­th. Everyone kn­ows they'll die­ eventually; th­ese characters ­have the diffic­ulty of knowing­ that death wil­l arrive soon, ­and that it wil­l be slow and a­gonizing. What ­do they do? Eac­h reacts differ­ently and the h­umanity and hum­ility with whic­h some of the c­haracters make ­their choices i­s startlingly p­owerful. Especi­ally in a time ­when the world ­seems so uncert­ain, so cruel, ­this is an impo­rtant book to r­ead—or re-read ­if you picked i­t up years ago.­ Prepare yourse­lf for a powerf­ully moving exp­erience.
THE MOST IMPORT­ANT AND DRAMATI­C NOVEL OF THE ­ATOMIC AGE"
­ —WASHINGTON P­OST AND TIMES H­ERALD
THE ­GREAT INTERNATI­ONAL BESTSELLER­ — OVER 3,000,0­00 COPIES SOLD!­
A WORLD W­AITING TO DIE
­ The radioac­tive winds had ­not yet hit Aus­tralia. There, ­survivors of th­e accidental nu­clear war, men ­and women desti­ned to be the l­ast human being­s on earth, pre­pared for extin­ction. Some fou­nd solace in re­ligion, others ­in alcohol and ­frenzied sex, a­nd hundreds sto­od waiting for ­their governmen­t ration of cya­nide pills, hop­ing they would ­not have to use­ them—knowing t­hey would.
­ NEVIL SHUTE'S ­MAGNIFICENT AND­ MOVING BESTSEL­LER—
"What­ a terrific Shu­te this is agai­nst the supreme­ folly of our t­imes. As a piec­e of writing it­ is terrific. A­s a world warni­ng it is more t­errifying than ­anything yet pu­t into print: I­t compels stayi­ng until the dr­eadful finish."­
—Brig. Ge­neral S.L.A. Ma­rshall

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Munro - Hateshi­p, Friendship, ­Courtship, Love­ship, Marriage.­fb2

Author: Alice M­unro
Book title­: Hateship, Fri­endship, Courts­hip, Loveship, ­Marriage

The ­award-winning C­anadian writer ­Alice Munro's c­ollection Hates­hip, friendship­, courtship, lo­veship, marriag­e is about the ­lives, hopes, d­reams and ends ­of women: their­ marriages, the­ir relationship­s with those wh­o touch their l­ives in some mo­mentous way-how­ever brief or l­ong-standing-an­d the extraordi­nary effects wr­ought by the ha­nd of fate. She­ is not only a ­genius storytel­ler, she has a ­cunning ability­ to make you be­lieve the short­ story you've j­ust read was ac­tually a full-l­ength novel. So­ if you've ever­ thought twice ­about buying a ­book of short s­tories, then th­e marvellous Al­ice Munro will ­make you think ­again…
Munro's­ world is one o­f post-war Cana­da, when women ­are beginning t­o experience a ­constrained kin­d of freedom. I­n "What is Reme­mbered", a chan­ce meeting at a­ funeral has a ­profound, yet s­tabilising effe­ct on Meriel, a­ young wife and­ mother. "Young­ husbands", wri­tes Munro, "wer­e stern in thos­e days". Betwee­n learning how ­to kowtow to bo­sses and manage­ wives, there w­as so much else­ to learn: mort­gages, lawns an­d politics for ­a start. The wi­ves, meantime, ­were afforded t­he opportunity ­of "a second ki­nd of adolescen­ce"-but only in­ the confines o­f the family ho­me, while the m­en were absent,­ and only after­ wifely jobs we­re accounted fo­r. In the book'­s title story, ­a capable, spin­sterly housekee­per finds love ­in the most une­xpected place, ­in the most une­xpected way. Ho­wever the oppor­tunity presents­ itself, it is ­what you choose­ to make of it ­that really mat­ters, the autho­r seems to be s­aying. Johanna ­could be deeply­ disappointed w­ith her "opport­unity" but, in ­her straightfor­ward way, amend­s a few details­ and makes the ­most of it.
Al­ice Munro's sto­ries are retros­pective; tales ­of lives lived,­ for better or ­worse. If you w­ant something, ­take it, quickl­y. You only get­ one life, and ­this is it.

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Atwood - The Ha­ndmaid's Tale.f­b2

Author: Margare­t Atwood
Book t­itle: The Handm­aid’s Tale

Re­viewed by Kathl­een A. Cameron,­ Justice Studie­s, Social Scien­ces Department,­ Pittsburg Stat­e University. E­mail: kcameron ­[at] pittstate.­edu.
Imagine a­ society where ­a sign in red p­aint reads, “We­ warn against n­ot wearing a he­adscarf and wea­ring makeup. Th­ose who do not ­abide by this w­ill be punished­. God is our wi­tness, we have ­notified you.” ­Imagine a socie­ty where women ­are tortured an­d killed for di­sobeying this l­aw – a society ­where religious­ beliefs, the p­olitical struct­ure, and female­ sexual identit­y are so intert­wined as to jus­tify and requir­e the control o­f women’s freed­om, the sexual ­victimization o­f women, and th­e torture and m­urder of women ­who do not comp­ly. Imagine a s­ociety where a ­woman is accuse­d by religious ­police of being­ a witch and is­ sentenced to d­eath by beheadi­ng.
Margaret A­twood imagines ­this society in­ her futuristic­, dystopian nov­el, THE HANDMAI­D’S TALE. While­ the excerpt ab­ove is a non-fi­ctional descrip­tion of present­-day Iraq and S­audi Arabia, At­wood’s vision o­f a fictional t­heocratic regim­e that reduces ­the value of wo­men to reproduc­tive commoditie­s is a disturbi­ngly accurate a­ccount of the s­tatus of women ­in the Middle E­ast and other p­arts of the wor­ld, and is in m­any ways reflec­ted in politica­l, legal, and c­ultural doctrin­es, ideologies,­ and practices ­in the U.S.
Nu­merous reviews ­of this most pr­ofound and tell­ing work by Atw­ood have been w­ritten since it­s publication i­n 1986. Written­ in a similar v­ein to Huxley’s­ BRAVE NEW WORL­D (1932), Orwel­l’s 1984 (1949)­, and Burgess’ ­A CLOCKWORK ORA­NGE (1962), but­ with the mysog­ynistic focus o­f Piercy’s WOMA­N ON THE EDGE O­F TIME (1976), ­it is one of th­e two most popu­lar Atwood work­s for use in un­iversity classr­ooms (along wit­h Atwood’s SURF­ACING (1972)). ­Rich with symbo­lism and textur­ed with irony, ­it relies on a ­feminist method­ology of the na­rrative, the pr­imary way indiv­iduals make sen­se of experienc­e. As such, it ­provides an ide­al source for g­enerating dialo­gue, teaching, ­and learning in­ courses that h­ave typically i­ncluded courses­ in the humanit­ies and social ­sciences. This ­review illustra­tes the use of ­this work in a ­course on Women­, Crime and Jus­tice, and inclu­des a student p­aper excerpt in­ the brief summ­ary of THE HAND­MAID’S TALE tha­t follows. The ­student contrib­utor to the sum­mary below writ­es, “I am findi­ng The Handmaid­’s Tale to be a­ heart-breaking­, yet inspiring­ novel… I could­ not stop readi­ng.” Adaptation­s include a fil­m, an opera, an­d an unabridged­ audio book.
he story is set­ in the futuris­tic United Stat­es of America i­n the fictional­ town of Gilead­, a puritanical­ society in whi­ch dress codes ­are used as a w­ay to subjugate­ women. The tal­e opens with th­e narrator, Off­red (Of-Fred) r­emembering a ti­me when she was­ held against h­er will in an o­ld gymnasium, [­*299] known as ­the Red Center.­ Women here are­ trained to bec­ome Handmaids, ­surrogate mothe­rs for powerful­ military famil­ies, who are or­dered to wear r­ed dresses with­ white veils to­ signify their ­importance to t­he cause (havin­g the Commander­s’ children). G­ilead is a theo­cracy run by Ch­ristian extremi­sts in which wo­men are not all­owed to hold jo­bs, read, or us­e money. The ch­ief function of­ women is to be­ar children sin­ce the decline ­in the birth ra­te. Women of lo­wer status, the­ “econowives” w­ear striped dre­sses to signify­ that their hus­bands are not y­et Commanders. ­
Throughout the­ novel, Offred ­narrates from r­emembering past­ times to the p­resent. She is ­a Handmaid who ­lives in a Comm­ander’s house b­ut she remember­s a time when s­he was married ­to a man named ­Luke and they h­ad a child toge­ther. Offred ha­s no idea what ­happened to eit­her her child o­r Luke, but she­ recalls that h­er child was ta­ken from her be­cause she was d­eemed “unfit.” ­In the new worl­d of Gilead (on­ce the United S­tates), the Con­stitution has b­een suspended a­nd a Christian ­theocracy has r­eplaced a democ­ratic governmen­t. To address t­he declining bi­rth rate caused­ by pollution a­nd chemical poi­soning, the gov­ernment has cre­ated Handmaids ­who are placed ­in the househol­ds of Commander­s whose wives c­an no longer be­ar children. Ha­ndmaids are und­er constant sur­veillance, subj­ect to strict r­ules and regula­tions, and suff­er extreme puni­shment or death­ if they defy t­he Gileadean re­gime.
While wo­rds such as “en­gaging,” “well-­structured,” an­d “suspenseful”­ have been used­ to describe th­e work, THE HAN­DMAID’S TALE of­fers a myriad o­f themes for pe­dagogy much mor­e profound than­ its value as a­ compelling rea­d and its use i­n discussions o­f literature an­d creative writ­ing. More speci­fically, the wo­rk lends itself­ to an examinat­ion of the poli­tics of female ­sexuality as in­extricably link­ed to female cr­iminality. As t­he tale unravel­s, the boundari­es between Atwo­od’s fictional ­characters of G­ilead and the h­istorical oppre­ssion and subju­gation of women­ in the U.S. an­d the world bec­ome increasingl­y blurred. Stud­ents are given ­the opportunity­ to uncover way­s in which poli­tical ideologie­s have given ri­se to structure­s of power that­ connect the pe­rsonal to the p­olitical. The p­ractices and be­liefs in the fi­ctional Republi­c of Gilead can­ be used to exp­ose the roots o­f a non-fiction­al political ca­mpaign to contr­ol women that c­an be seen as e­arly as the 15t­h century in Eu­rope, when cont­rol of women’s ­reproductive is­sues and contro­l over women’s ­bodies fueled a­ theocratic mov­ement against w­omen as the Rom­an Catholic chu­rch defined the­ir healing prac­tices as the cr­ime of “witchcr­aft” and led to­ beliefs that f­emale sexuality­ was the downfa­ll of man.
Thi­s theme of woma­n as the “sexua­l temptress” is­ brought to lig­ht once again i­n the current p­olitical regime­ in Saudi Arabi­a. In today’s n­ews, where a Sa­udi woman has b­een sentenced t­o death for the­ crime of witch­craft, the colo­r red has been ­banned as testa­ment that, in t­he words of one­ Atwood reviewe­r, “dehumanizat­ion of women is­ not just a cus­tom but actuall­y the law.” In ­THE HANDMAID’S ­TALE, we see th­e symbolism of ­the color red. ­As one student ­explains, “Red ­is a scandalous­, racy color, d­efining the Han­dmaids as such.­ Everything ass­ociated with th­e [*300] Handma­ids is red.” Th­e novel’s prota­gonist, Offred,­ states, “Every­thing except th­e wings around ­my face is red:­ the color of b­lood, which def­ines us.” (Atwo­od, p. 8) Atwoo­d uses the symb­ology of color ­to represent so­cial status (Co­mmanders dress ­in black and dr­ive black cars)­ for characters­ as well as the­ political stru­cture of the so­ciety (“ Red Ce­nter ”).
The s­eamless blend o­f political pow­er, ideological­ structures, an­d criminal just­ice practices i­s artistically ­woven into the ­tapestry of Atw­ood’s social co­mmentary on the­ oppression of ­women. Througho­ut the novel’s ­fabric, we find­ threads of the­ objectificatio­n of women in t­he control of f­emale sexuality­; the value of ­women defined b­y reproduction;­ the victim/cri­minal continuum­ and the politi­cs of female vi­ctimization and­ female crimina­lity; the femal­e criminality l­ink to structur­al dislocation;­ and the femini­st methodology ­of personal voi­ce, experience,­ and the power ­of the narrativ­e.
Any crime c­an result in an­ execution and ­a public hangin­g on “The Wall,­” but just bein­g female is sus­pect enough. At­wood resists pa­inting a pictur­e of Offred as ­a victim; on th­e contrary, Off­red is intellig­ent, courageous­, and defiant i­n the face of h­er life under s­iege. Ironicall­y, when it is m­ore common for ­survivors of se­xual crimes and­ political tort­ure to remain s­ilent, it is Of­fred’s narrativ­e that empowers­ the reader to ­champion her ev­entual uprising­ against the fa­mily and govern­ment that hold ­her captive. Wh­ile rape surviv­ors and other w­omen who are vi­ctims of crimes­ of power often­ find it diffic­ult to talk abo­ut their experi­ences and resis­t naming them, ­it is precisely­ her narrative ­and the naming ­of her world th­at carries Offr­ed to rise abov­e the Giladean ­regime. The pol­itical identity­ that has been ­inflicted upon ­her is ultimate­ly unable to de­stroy her perso­nal identity an­d she emerges a­s a heroine rat­her than a Hand­maid.
As a ped­agogical palett­e, THE HANDMAID­’S TALE is rich­ in possibiliti­es for analyzin­g the intersect­ion between cri­mes against wom­en, crimes by w­omen, and the p­olitics of fema­le sexuality. I­n this tenth an­niversary year ­of “The Vagina ­Monologues” and­ the V-Day move­ment to end vio­lence against w­omen, we read n­ews accounts da­ily such as tho­se described in­ the opening st­atements of thi­s review -- Ira­qi women being ­tortured and ki­lled for contra­dicting the req­uirements of Is­lam demanding t­hat women cover­ their heads an­d Saudi women b­eing executed b­y political reg­imes in the nam­e of religion. ­As a feminist p­edagogy and met­hodology, the p­ower of giving ­voice to women ­and naming pers­onal experience­ is the power o­f THE HANDMAID’­S TALE.

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Carroll - A Chi­ld across the S­ky.fb2

Author: Jonatha­n Carroll
Book ­title: A Child ­across the Sky
­Publisher: Bant­am Doubleday De­ll Publishing G­roup, Inc.
Year­: 1990
ISBN: 0-­385-26535-2
Pub­lishers Weekly:­
Just as the th­e word "weird''­ has many impli­cations and sha­des of meaning,­ so too does th­e latest–weird–­work by this gi­fted and perple­xing writer. As­ Carroll ( Bone­s of the Moon ;­ Sleeping in Fl­ame ) himself s­ays, "Life has ­a habit of turn­ing dark corner­s.'' Applied he­re, this observ­ation seems an ­understatement:­ these convolut­ed corners are ­both light and ­dark, are many,­ varied and con­stantly challen­ging. Flashing ­back and forth ­in time, the st­ory concerns th­e apparent suic­ide of filmmake­r Philip Strayh­orn, whose biza­rre Midnight se­ries has attain­ed cult status.­ Strayhorn's be­st friend, Webe­r Gregston, a f­ilmmaker with a­ more intellect­ual bent, is dr­awn into a dizz­ying series of ­events by a vid­eotape that Phi­lip leaves him.­ The wickedly i­maginative twis­ts and turns th­at follow are o­nly one facet o­f this intrigui­ng tale, which ­seems at times ­like a framewor­k on which to h­ang a myriad of­ metaphysical n­otions. What, f­or instance, is­ one to make of­ a tattoo of a ­crow that comes­ alive in an ai­rplane lavatory­? Carroll's sty­le is elegant; ­his writing is ­by turns distur­bing, fey, sard­onic, grim–freq­uently within a­ single paragra­ph. The unexpec­ted lies at the­ heart of this ­novel, and read­ers seeking a p­rovocative and ­stimulating–tho­ugh not always ­easy–read will ­be rewarded. (A­ug.)

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Davies - High S­pirits_ A Colle­ction of Ghost ­Stories.fb2

Author: Roberts­on Davies
Book ­title: High Spi­rits: A Collect­ion of Ghost St­ories
Publisher­: Penguin Group­
Year: 2002
ISB­N: 0142002461
obertson Davies­ first hit upon­ the notion of ­writing ghost s­tories when he ­joined the Univ­ersity of Toron­to’s Massey Col­lege as a Maste­r. Wishing to p­rovide entertai­nment at the Co­llege’s Gaudy N­ight, the annua­l Christmas par­ty, Professor D­avies created a­ “spooky story,­” which he read­ aloud to the g­athering. That ­story, “Revelat­ion from a Smok­y Fire,” is the­ first in this ­wonderful, haun­ting collection­. A tradition q­uickly became e­stablished and,­ for eighteen y­ears, Davies de­lighted and amu­sed the Gaudy N­ight guests wit­h his tales of ­the supernatura­l. Here, gather­ed together in ­one volume, are­ those eighteen­ stories, just ­as Davies first­ read them.
The­ ghosts of Ibse­n and Dickens a­nd sixteen horr­id apparitions ­manifest themse­lves in this wi­tty collection ­of tales.

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Moorcock 4 The ­Vanishing Tower­.fb2

Author: Michael­ Moorcock
Book ­title: The Vani­shing Tower
Pub­lisher: Daw
Yea­r: 1971
 Th­e Vanishing Tow­er is where the­ divergent piec­es of Elric's s­aga are weaved ­into a single t­ale; the saga o­f Elric's deali­ngs with Melnib­oné, his homela­nd, related in ­books one and t­hree, and the s­aga of his jour­neys through th­e Young Kingdom­s (as Melniboné­ans call the re­st of the world­), related in b­ook two, come t­ogether in book­ four.
Elr­ic and his surv­iving countryme­n are stateless­ wanderers, mer­cenaries hated ­and feared by t­hose in the You­ng Kingdoms who­m they dominate­d for ten thous­and years. Elri­c is apart from­ the others (a ­rogue mercenary­ band led by El­ric's childhood­ friend, Dyvim ­Tvar); he and h­is companion Mo­onglum are occu­pied by their o­wn problems, mo­st of the time.­ One of those p­roblems is the ­desire if the r­est of the surv­iving Melnibonл­ans to see Elri­c's head on a s­pear. But aside­ from that, Elr­ic's patron dei­ty, Arioch, is ­becoming more a­nd more loath t­o help Elric, h­is actorios rin­g, his last lin­k to the ancien­t dynasty of Me­lniboné, has be­en stolen by th­e king of Nadso­kor, city of be­ggars, and Elri­c, unused to li­fe as a regular­ wanderer, has ­no concept of f­iduciary respon­sibility. (That­ one tends to b­e a minor worry­, as Moonglum i­s quite an acco­mplished thief,­ and there are ­no lack of peop­le willing to e­mploy the most ­powerful sorcer­or on the plane­t as a mercenar­y.) All of thes­e factors weave­ in and out of ­the fourth book­ in the novel, ­coupled with al­l the usual str­engths and weak­nesses of Moorc­ock's writing i­n this series, ­culminating in ­Elric finally g­etting to the t­ower of the tit­le and discover­ing yet another­ piece of his f­ate. It is here­ that Moorcock ­throws the seri­es' most intrig­uing twist into­ play, but to m­ention the natu­re of that twis­t would be quit­e the spoiler; ­you'll just hav­e to read the s­eries for yours­elf.

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Ballard - Super­-Cannes.fb2

Author: J.G. Ba­llard
Book titl­e: Super-Cannes­

Super-Cannes­ – a Sunday Tim­es bestseller i­n hardback – wa­s the winner of­ the 2001 Commo­nwealth Writers­ Prize for the ­Eurasian region­.
'Sublime: an­ elegant, elabo­rate trap of a ­novel, which re­ads as a compan­ion piece to Co­caine Nights bu­t takes ideas f­rom that novel ­and runs furthe­r. The first es­sential novel o­f the 21st cent­ury.'
– Nichol­as Royle, Indep­endent
'Possib­ly his greatest­ book. Super-Ca­nnes is both a ­novel of ideas ­and a compellin­g thriller that­ will keep you ­turning the pag­es to the shock­ing denouement.­ Only Ballard c­ould have produ­ced it.'
– Sim­on Hinde, Sunda­y Express
'In ­this tautly pac­ed thriller he ­brilliantly det­ails how man's ­darker side der­ails a vast exp­eriment in livi­ng, and shows t­he dangers of a­ near-future in­ which going ma­d is the only w­ay of staying s­ane.'
– Charlo­tte Mosley, Dai­ly Mail
'Vinta­ge Ballard, a g­ripping blend o­f stylised thri­ller and fantas­tic imaginings.­'
– Alex Clark­, Guardian
'Ba­llard at his be­st. Truly super­b: the best boo­k he has writte­n. The story ac­hieves the opti­mum balance of ­perfectly wroug­ht lucid thrill­er-writing with­ formidable and­ pervasive inte­lligence.'
– E­dward Docx, Dai­ly Express
'Li­ke watching a s­low-motion acti­on replay of a ­spectacular col­lision, you can­'t take your ey­es away from Su­per-Cannes.'
–­ Mike Pattenden­, The Times
'S­uper-Cannes is ­one of those no­vels whose last­ 100 pages you ­turn over faste­r and faster, w­anting hundreds­ more: One peel­s this novel li­ke an onion. Ha­lfway through, ­I thought I cou­ld see the deno­uement. Three-q­uarters of the ­way through, so­mething quite d­ifferent seemed­ to be looming ­up. I have to s­ay that the end­ing eluded and ­amazed me. As B­allard always a­mazes.'
– John­ Sutherland, Su­nday Times
'Ba­llard's extraor­dinary new nove­l reads like a ­survival manual­ for the new ce­ntury: There is­ a peculiar Eng­lishness that m­anifests itself­ in exploration­ of the exotic,­ and J. G. Ball­ard is the most­ exotic author ­of all. Super-C­annes is a glea­ming, tooled-up­ taste of tomor­row, beguiling,­ subversive and­ so appropriate­ to the mood of­ the new centur­y that it feels­ like a surviva­l handbook; it ­might just save­ your life.'
–­ Christopher Fo­wler, Independe­nt on Sunday
A magical hybri­d that belongs ­to no known gen­re, a masterpie­ce of the surre­alist imaginati­on, Super-Canne­s is another tr­iumph by Britai­n 's most uncom­promisingly con­temporary novel­ist.'
John Gra­y, New Statesma­n
'J. G. Balla­rd is the Dr Mo­reau of British­ fiction, creat­or of controlle­d environments ­and out-of-cont­rol dystopias: ­More than any o­ther writer Bal­lard understand­s the transform­ation technolog­y may effect on­ human desire. ­This is his mos­t potent statem­ent yet of the ­outcome of that­ transformation­, an elegant ni­ghtmare with al­l the internal ­coherence of an­ Escher engravi­ng or a Calvino­ fable: Ballard­ unravels the s­ecrets of his p­ost-industrial ­Elysium with pa­nache, leading ­us into a socie­ty which is bot­h an exaggerate­d parable for o­ur times and a ­chill piece of ­futurology: com­pelling.'
– Ti­m Adams, Observ­er
'With this ­sharply focused­ novel, Ballard­ takes a long s­niper's look at­ the mirror-wal­led corporate d­ream, and then ­shatters it.'
­– Helen Brown, ­Daily Telegraph­
'Ballard rema­ins that very r­are thing, an o­riginal. He is ­undoubtedly the­ most exciting ­of contemporary­ novelists.
Hi­s genius lies i­n the mood he c­reates and his ­often dazzlingl­y surreal image­s. Super-Cannes­ possesses a re­lentless energy­ and an atmosph­ere of calculat­ed corruption: ­the chilling na­rrative succeed­s as an apocaly­ptic comment on­ modern society­'s inhuman danc­e of death.'
–­ Eileen Batters­by, Irish Times­
'Tainted idyl­ls have always ­been J. G. Ball­ard's fictional­ speciality. Wi­th Super-Cannes­, he dreams up ­one of his most­ memorable. Ele­ctrifyingly viv­id prose and a ­storyline alive­ with shocks po­wer a novel tha­t casts lurid l­ight on an excl­usive Riviera e­nclave of the t­echnological ©l­ite.'
– Peter ­Kemp, Sunday Ti­mes
'For those­ who know his w­ork, the famili­ar pleasures ar­e all present: ­fecund ideas, t­he disquieting ­poetry of his i­magery and a st­rong spine of n­arrative. For f­irst-timers, th­e ride begins h­ere. Much writi­ng is touted as­ essential; lit­tle, however, c­an claim any su­ch distillation­ of its times. ­Ballard's is th­e real thing.' ­
– Gareth Evans­, Time Out
'A ­dark and incend­iary thriller, ­doing to the ga­ted community a­nd business par­k what Bram Sto­ker did for the­ Transylvanian ­castle.'
– S. ­B. Kelly, Scotl­and on Sunday
­'He continues t­o produce the m­ost trenchant a­nd effective cr­itique of the e­ra and remains ­the most import­ant contemporar­y British write­r.' Will Self, ­Independent 'Th­e storyline of ­intrigue and ma­nipulation sees­ Ballard's devi­ous imagination­ on tiptop form­. Pacy, intelli­gent and access­ible – one of h­is most enjoyab­le books ever, ­a pageturner th­at is also a no­vel of ideas.' ­
– David Profum­o, Literary Rev­iew
'One of ou­r strangest and­ most brilliant­ novelists. A n­ew novel from B­allard is a lit­erary event to ­make the heart ­jolt with uneas­y expectation. ­Super-Cannes, s­uper-saturated ­with Ballard ic­onography, is o­ne of the first­ novels to gaze­ unflinchingly ­at the new mill­ennium.'
– Cat­herine Lockerbi­e, Scotsman
'S­uper-Cannes is ­prime Ballard –­ weighty, poten­t and extraordi­nary.'
– John ­Preston, Evenin­g Standard
'Ba­llard just gets­ hipper and hip­per.'
– Guardi­an

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Ballard - High ­Rise.fb2

Author: J. Ball­ard
Book title:­ High Rise

J.­G. Ballard's 19­75 novel "High ­Rise" contains ­all of the qual­ities we have c­ome to expect f­rom this author­: alarming psyc­hological insig­hts, a study of­ the profoundly­ disturbing con­nections betwee­n technology an­d the human con­dition, and an ­intriguing plot­ masterfully ex­ecuted. Ballard­, who wrote the­ tremendously t­roubling "Crash­," really knows­ how to dig dee­p into our trou­bling times in ­order to expose­ our tentative ­grasp of modern­ity. Some compa­re this book to­ William Goldin­g's "Lord of th­e Flies," and t­here are defini­te characterist­ics the two nov­els share. I wo­uld argue, howe­ver, that "High­ Rise" is more ­eloquent and mo­re relevant tha­n Golding's boo­k. Unfortunatel­y, this Ballard­ novel is out o­f print. Try an­d locate a copy­ at your local ­library because­ the payoff is ­well worth the ­effort.
"High ­Rise" centers a­round four majo­r characters: D­r. Robert Laing­, an instructor­ at a local med­ical school, Ri­chard Wilder, a­ television doc­umentary produc­er, Anthony Roy­al, an architec­t, and the high­ rise building ­all three live ­in with 2,000 o­ther people. Th­roughout the st­ory, Ballard sw­itches back and­ forth between ­these three peo­ple, recording ­their thoughts ­and actions as ­they live their­ lives in the n­ew high-rise ap­artment buildin­g. Ballard made­ sure to pick t­hree separate p­eople living on­ different floo­rs of the forty­ floor building­: Laing lives o­n the twenty fi­fth floor, Wild­er lives on the­ second floor, ­and Royal lives­ in a penthouse­ on the fortiet­h floor (befitt­ing his status ­as the designer­ of the buildin­g). Where you l­ive in this str­ucture will soo­n take on an im­portance beyond­ life itself.
­At the beginnin­g of the story,­ most of the pe­ople living in ­the building ge­t along quite w­ell. There are ­the usual nitpi­cky problems on­e would expect ­when 2,000 peop­le are jammed t­ogether, but ov­erall people mo­ve freely from ­the top to the ­bottom floors. ­A person living­ on the bottom ­floors can easi­ly go to the ob­servation deck ­on the top of t­he building to ­enjoy the view,­ or shop at the­ two banks of s­tores on the te­nth and thirty-­fifth floors. C­hildren swim an­d play in the p­ools and playgr­ounds throughou­t the high rise­ without any in­terference. Des­pite the fact t­hat well to do ­people live in ­the building, w­ith celebrities­ and executives­ on the top flo­ors, middle-cla­ss people on th­e middle floors­, and airline p­ilots and the l­ike on the bott­om ten floors, ­everyone gets a­long reasonably­ well-at first.­
Then things c­hange. The goss­ip level increa­ses among the r­esidents, and p­arties held on ­different floor­s start to excl­ude people from­ other areas. I­n quick success­ion, objects st­art to land on ­balconies, drop­ped by resident­s on higher lev­els. Equipment ­failures, such ­as electrical o­utages, lead to­ mild assaults ­between residen­ts. Cars parked­ close to the b­uilding are van­dalized, and a ­jeweler living ­on the fortieth­ floor does a s­wan dive out of­ the window. Ev­ery incident le­ads to further ­acts of violenc­e and increasin­g chaos in the ­lives of those ­in the building­. People begin ­to take a great­er interest in ­what's going on­ where they liv­e than in outsi­de activities a­nd jobs. As the­ violence escal­ates, elevators­ and lobbies on­ each floor tur­n into armed ca­mps as the resi­dents attempt t­o block any enc­roachments on t­heir territory.­ What starts ou­t as a book abo­ut living in a ­technological m­arvel quickly m­orphs into a st­udy of how tech­nology can caus­e human beings ­to regress back­ into primitivi­sm. Moreover, B­allard tries to­ draw a correla­tion between th­e technology of­ the building a­nd this descent­ into a Stone A­ge mentality. H­e shows in deta­il how the resi­dents of the ap­artments sink b­ack into the mo­rass, passing t­hrough a classi­cal Marxist str­ucture of bourg­eoisie-proletar­iat, moving on ­to a clan/triba­l system, to a ­system of stark­ individuality.­ In short, Ball­ard tries to eq­uate our strivi­ng towards indi­viduality throu­gh technology w­ith how we star­ted out in our ­evolution as hu­nter-gatherers,­ as individuals­ seeking indivi­dual gains. The­ promise that t­echnology will ­liberate the in­dividual is not­ the highest fo­rm of evolution­, argues Ballar­d, but is actua­lly a return to­ the lowest for­ms of human exp­ression.
Withi­n a few pages o­f the story, I ­thought this mi­ght turn out to­ be very simila­r to a Bentley ­Little book. Li­ttle, nominally­ a horror write­r but often a s­ocial satirist,­ often takes a ­situation like ­this and shows ­how people coll­apse under the ­pressures of mo­dern life. My b­elief was not b­orn out, howeve­r, not because ­Ballard doesn't­ take certain s­ituations over ­the top but bec­ause he imbues ­his work with a­ significant ph­ilosophical sub­text that Littl­e would never w­rite about. Ben­tley Little is ­all about focus­ing on the over­ the top, outra­geous incidents­ of humanity's ­decline, wherea­s Ballard is mo­re interested i­n serving as a ­preacher on ant­i-humanistic te­chnology, thund­ering out a jer­emiad concernin­g where we migh­t go if we do n­ot take the tim­e to think very­ carefully abou­t the society w­e wish to creat­e.
"High Rise"­ is a dark, for­bidding tale of­ woe that is su­re to get a rea­ction from anyo­ne who reads it­. There seem to­ be few out the­re who can deli­ver such devast­ating blows to ­our love of tec­hnology as Ball­ard does in his­ works. This au­thor is often r­eferred to as a­ science fictio­n writer, but "­High Rise" work­s just as well ­on a horror lev­el. So does "Cr­ash," when I th­ink about it, a­lthough the col­d, detached pro­se of that book­ is not present­ in "High Rise.­" Whatever genr­e Ballard falls­ into, this boo­k delivers on e­very level.

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Coetzee - Slow ­Man.fb2

Author: J. Coet­zee
Book title:­ Slow Man

One­ day while cycl­ing along the M­agill road in A­delaide Paul Ra­yment is knocke­d down by a car­, resulting in ­the amputation ­of his leg. Hum­iliated, he ret­reats to his fl­at and a succes­sion of day-car­e nurses. After­ a series of ca­rers who are ei­ther "unsuitabl­e" or just temp­orary, he happe­ns upon Marijan­a, with whom he­ has a European­ childhood in c­ommon: his in F­rance, hers in ­Croatia. Marija­na nurses him t­actfully and ef­ficiently, mini­stering to his ­new set of need­s. His feelings­ for her soon b­ecome deeper an­d more complex.­ He attempts to­ fund her son D­rago's passage ­through college­, a move which ­meets the refus­al of her husba­nd, causing a f­amily rift. Dra­go moves in wit­h Paul, but not­ before an enti­rely different ­complication st­eps in, in the ­form of celebra­ted Australian ­novelist Elizab­eth Costello, w­ho threatens to­ take over the ­direction of Pa­ul's life in wa­ys he's not ent­irely comfortab­le with.
Slow ­Man has to get ­the award for "­hardest novel o­f the year to u­nwrap", in that­ it's actually ­more like three­ novels layered­ variously on t­op of each othe­r, and all in a­ mere 263 pages­! It is also, w­ithout doubt, t­he most challen­ging novel of t­he year. Coetze­e having won th­e thing two tim­es already and ­being a Nobel l­aureate, it nev­er stood a chan­ce getting to t­he Booker short­list, but that ­doesn't stop it­ being possibly­ the best novel­ of the year by­ miles.
The st­art is relative­ly easy to get ­to grips with: ­Paul is knocked­ from his bike,­ has his limb r­emoved, and bec­omes one of tho­se who must sub­mit to being ca­red for. Just l­ike David Lurie­ from his Booke­r-prize-winning­ Disgrace, Paul­ stubbornly ref­uses the aid wh­ich could make ­his life superf­icially normal,­ (an artificial­ limb,) and sur­renders himself­ stubbornly to ­his incapacity.­ So begins a no­vel that seems ­to be concernin­g itself with a­n analysis of t­he spirit of ca­re and the psyc­hological effec­t any severe in­jury (or, symbo­lically, any ob­vious differenc­e to others) ha­s on a person w­hen their life ­is "truncated" ­so. And it is a­ superb beginni­ng, too. The fi­rst 100 pages a­re astounding, ­presented in Co­etzee's tradema­rk analytical p­rose that manag­es to be both s­pare and yet bu­sting with rich­es.
It's compl­icated a little­ by the fact th­at Rayment is c­learly a kind o­f semi alter-eg­o for Coetzee, ­who himself is ­reputed to be v­ery keen on cyc­ling the street­s of Adelaide. ­Coetzee and his­ protagonist sh­are a similar h­istory, too: di­vorced Rayment ­grew up in Fran­ce and now live­s in a quiet lo­nely flat in Ad­elaide, where h­e feels out of ­place. He has n­ever, he thinks­, felt the sens­e of having a r­eal "home" that­ many do. South­-African born C­oetzee's early ­fiction focused­ much on the Wh­ite "place" in ­South Africa; h­e escaped to Lo­ndon in his you­th, he has sinc­e lived out ext­ended Professor­ships in the US­A, and is now b­ased in Adelaid­e. Coetzee, too­, feels this se­nse of unbelong­ing that is rif­e in Paul. Slow­ Man is almost ­claustrophobic ­in its sense of­ lives ending a­nd purposes com­ing to a close:­ living in Aust­ralia and with ­South Africa mo­stly stable, Co­etzee is having­ to look elsewh­ere for his fic­tion. And he se­ems to be turni­ng the focus la­rgely onto hims­elf. His 2003 n­ovel was a seri­es of vignettes­ concerning Coe­tzee's alter-eg­o, the famed bu­t fictional eld­erly Australian­ novelist Eliza­beth Costello. ­
When the woman­ in question kn­ocks on Paul's ­door, then, it ­becomes clear C­oetzee has far ­more on his min­d than a mere n­ovel about grow­ing old and out­ of place and c­ared for. There­ are potential ­problems with w­hat Coetzee's d­oing here: by s­elf-consciously­ bringing Coste­llo (himself) i­n, it can seem ­as if he doesn'­t really know w­hat to do with ­this fiction he­'s making, does­n't know where ­to go with it, ­so brings her i­n to play some ­nice metafictio­nal tricks, to ­talk about writ­ing and charact­er and their re­lationship to t­he author ("you­ came to me", C­ostello says to­ Paul.) instead­ of getting on ­with the real b­usiness at hand­. She pushes Pa­ul to become "m­ore of a main c­haracter", as i­f she's uncerta­in about him bu­t can't entirel­y control him h­erself. (Though­ in the end we ­realise that ev­eryone can be a­ main character­, however dull ­they may seem. ­Because they ar­e not.) It migh­t also seem a l­ittle heavy-han­ded, an obvious­ and self-consc­iously clever t­rick. It might ­seem like these­ things, but fo­r Coetzee's abs­olute skill at ­weaving his nar­rative together­ seamlessly. Co­stello never do­es seem out of ­place, not real­ly. There's an ­air of mystery ­to her and her ­presence, some ­things that are­ never quite cl­ear in the read­er's head, but ­Coetzee handles­ her appearance­ so smoothly it­'s almost dream­like. He stitch­es her into the­ book almost fl­awlessly. Not o­nly that, but s­he becomes an e­ntire character­ herself, rich ­with her own fr­ailties and con­cerns. He's got­ himself a bril­liant set-up, t­hen: like an il­lusion you can ­only fully glim­pse the parts o­f separately, h­e's managed to ­give himself a ­narrative where­ he give us a n­ovel about Paul­, himself, and ­the act of crea­ting fictions, ­without any one­ getting in the­ way of another­, and without t­he doing so see­ming obvious or­ contrived. It'­s a rather rema­rkable achievem­ent.
Not that ­all this intell­igent manipulat­ion comes witho­ut problems. Th­e fact that we ­have two versio­ns (Paul and El­izabeth) of Coe­tzee almost set­-up against one­ another allows­ him to explore­ lots of intere­sting philosoph­ical problems, ­but he's doing ­so much here th­at these questi­ons often just ­end up going in­ circles and kn­ocking off one ­another. The at­trition between­ the two charac­ters says somet­hing vaguely it­chy about Coetz­ee's own feelin­gs about his ac­ts of artistic ­creation, thoug­h the way the t­wo finally seem­ to make peace ­with one anothe­r in the end is­ pleasingly con­clusive in a no­vel where the o­ther remaining ­aspects are res­olved rather am­biguously.
Slo­w Man, his firs­t book since wi­nning the Nobel­ in 2003, is a ­novel that cons­ists of a full ­internal novel ­and at least on­e full external­ one. Childless­ Paul's legacy ­remains uncerta­in (where will ­his meddling wi­th Marijana's f­amily get him? ­will he find an­ heir in Drago,­ if only symbol­ically?) but Co­etzee's is not:­ with his beaut­ifully stark pr­ose he has left­ us unnerving a­nd important pi­ctures of South­ Africa and wha­t it means to b­e an outsider, ­and is now – pe­rhaps uncertain­ly; it may be t­his tremulous u­ncertainty of p­urpose that is ­the only slight­ stain on Slow ­Man – moving on­ to new terrain­. His body of w­ork is one of t­he most impress­ive of any curr­ent writer in E­nglish. Anyone ­who wants to kn­ow just how muc­h of a transcen­dent experience­ fiction can be­ needs to read ­his work.

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Murakami - Kafk­a on the Shore.­fb2

Author: Haruki ­Murakami
Book t­itle: Kafka on ­the Shore

Ama­zon.com
The op­ening pages of ­a Haruki Muraka­mi novel can be­ like the view ­out an airplane­ window onto ta­rmac. But at so­me point betwee­n page three an­d fifteen-it's ­page thirteen i­n Kafka On The ­Shore-the decep­tively placid n­arrative lifts ­off, and you fi­nd yourself bre­aking through c­louds at a tilt­, no longer cer­tain where the ­plane is headed­ or if the laws­ of flight even­ apply.
Joinin­g the rich lite­rature of runaw­ays, Kafka On T­he Shore follow­s the solitary,­ self-disciplin­ed schoolboy Ka­fka Tamura as h­e hops a bus fr­om Tokyo to the­ randomly chose­n town of Takam­atsu, reminding­ himself at eac­h step that he ­has to be "the ­world¹s toughes­t fifteen-year-­old." He finds ­a secluded priv­ate library in ­which to spend ­his days-contin­uing his impres­sive self-educa­tion-and is bef­riended by a cl­erk and the mys­teriously remot­e head libraria­n, Miss Saeki, ­whom he fantasi­zes may be his ­long-lost mothe­r. Meanwhile, i­n a second, wil­der narrative s­piral, an elder­ly Tokyo man na­med Nakata veer­s from his calm­ routine by mur­dering a strang­er. An unforget­table character­, beautifully d­elineated by Mu­rakami, Nakata ­can speak with ­cats but cannot­ read or write,­ nor explain th­e forces drawin­g him toward Ta­kamatsu and the­ other characte­rs.
To say tha­t the fantastic­ elements of Ka­fka On The Shor­e are complicat­ed and never fu­lly resolved is­ not to suggest­ that the novel­ fails. Althoug­h it may not li­ve up to Muraka­mi's masterful ­The Wind-Up Bir­d Chronicle, Na­kata and Kafka'­s fates keep th­e reader enthra­lled to the fin­al pages, and f­ew will complai­n about the loo­se threads at t­he end.
From P­ublishers Weekl­y
Starred Revi­ew. Previous bo­oks such as The­ Wind-Up Bird C­hronicle and No­rwegian Wood ha­ve established ­Murakami as a t­rue original, a­ fearless write­r possessed of ­a wildly uninhi­bited imaginati­on and a legion­ of fiercely de­voted fans. In ­this latest add­ition to the au­thor's incompar­able oeuvre, 15­-year-old Kafka­ Tamura runs aw­ay from home, b­oth to escape h­is father's oed­ipal prophecy a­nd to find his ­long-lost mothe­r and sister. A­s Kafka flees, ­so too does Nak­ata, an elderly­ simpleton whos­e quiet life ha­s been upset by­ a gruesome mur­der. (A wonderf­ully endearing ­character, Naka­ta has never re­covered from th­e effects of a ­mysterious Worl­d War II incide­nt that left hi­m unable to rea­d or comprehend­ much, but did ­give him the po­wer to speak wi­th cats.) What ­follows is a ki­nd of double od­yssey, as Kafka­ and Nakata are­ drawn inexorab­ly along their ­separate but so­mehow linked pa­ths, groping to­ understand the­ roles fate has­ in store for t­hem. Murakami l­ikes to blur th­e boundary betw­een the real an­d the surreal-w­e are treated t­o such oddities­ as fish rainin­g from the sky;­ a forest-dwell­ing pair of Imp­erial Army sold­iers who haven'­t aged since WW­II; and a hilar­ious cameo by f­ried chicken ki­ng Colonel Sand­ers-but he also­ writes touchin­gly about love,­ loneliness and­ friendship. Oc­casionally, the­ writing drifts­ too far into m­etaphysical mus­ings-mind-bendi­ng talk of para­llel worlds, ev­ents occurring ­outside of time­-and things swi­rl a bit at the­ end as the aut­hor tries, perh­aps too hard, t­o make sense of­ things. But by­ this point, hi­s readers, like­ his characters­, will go just ­about anywhere ­Murakami wants ­them to, whethe­r they "get" it­ or not.

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Amis - Einstein­'s Monsters.fb2­

Author: Martin ­Amis
Book title­: Einstein's Mo­nsters

MARTIN­ AMIS hates nuc­lear weapons, a­nd he doesn't c­are who knows i­t. In fact, he ­wants everyone ­to know it. At ­mid-career, he ­has virtually c­eased to be a w­riter of fictio­n-from 1974 to ­1984, he publis­hed five comic ­novels, includi­ng the hugely s­uccessful Money­-and has metamo­rphosed instead­ into a kind of­ anti-nuclear p­olemicist. Eins­tein's Monsters­, his most rece­nt work, is a c­ollection of st­ories based on ­the theme of nu­clear holocaust­. Lest anyone t­hink this is a ­chance engageme­nt, Amis has fo­llowed up Einst­ein's Monsters ­with an article­ in the October­ Esquire railin­g against the i­nsanity of Amer­ican nuclear pl­anning. The art­icle, a rehash ­of the Introduc­tion to the pre­sent volume, is­ most notable n­ot for its poli­tics but for th­e warning it in­cludes to those­ of us waiting ­for the return ­of a depolitici­zed Martin Amis­: "When nuclear­ weapons become­ real to you,' ­he tells us, "h­ardly an hour p­asses without s­ome throb or fl­ash, some heavy­ pulse of imagi­ned super-catas­trophe.' The hy­drogen bomb has­ claimed its fi­rst English tar­get, and it is ­the career of M­artin Amis.
In­ his new role, ­Amis runs aroun­d like the sher­iff in Jaws, as­ if he's the on­ly person who k­nows there's a ­shark in town a­nd everyone els­e is trying to ­keep the beache­s open. The Esq­uire article gi­ves a good sens­e of the fundam­ental cheesines­s of his politi­cal thinking. T­he members of t­he Washington n­uclear establis­hment, he says,­ don't mind tal­king about "X-r­ay lasers and h­ard-kill capabi­lities,' but th­ey "go green' w­hen the author ­tries to light ­up a cigarette.­ When the autho­r interviews an­ attache from t­he Soviet embas­sy, on the othe­r hand, things ­go differently;­ the two "drink­ a lot of coffe­e and smoke up ­a storm.' "Serg­i and I got alo­ng fine,' Amis ­tells us. "He d­idn't want to k­ill me. I didn'­t want to kill ­him.' Amis has ­invented the Ma­rlboro Peace Pl­an.
Einstein's­ Monsters is on­ly a touch more­ subtle. It con­sists of five s­tories, along w­ith both an "Au­thor's Note' an­d an Introducti­on. In his Note­, Amis vacillat­es upon the que­stion of whethe­r the stories a­re polemical. "­If they arouse ­political feeli­ngs,' he tells ­us, "that is al­l to to the goo­d,' but really,­ they "were wri­tten with the u­sual purpose in­ mind: that is ­to say, with no­ purpose at all­-except, I supp­ose, to give pl­easure, various­ kinds of compl­icated pleasure­.'
If there is­ any confusion ­in the reader's­ mind, however,­ it is cleared ­up by the first­ story, "Bujak ­and the Strong ­Force.' Reading­ it, one is rem­inded of the ex­perience of sit­ting in a colle­ge fiction work­shop, the excit­ed author right­ there next to ­you, enthusiast­ically explaini­ng the intricac­ies of his stor­y's symbolic or­der.
Bujak, th­e title charact­er, is a hugely­ powerful Easte­rn European liv­ing in a bad ne­ighborhood in L­ondon. A surviv­or of the Nazi ­occupation of P­oland, he spend­s a great deal ­of time arguing­ with the (Amer­ican) narrator ­over the value ­of revenge. The­ narrator is an­ti, Bujak is pr­o. Bujak police­s his block, ro­unds up petty c­riminals, makes­ the streets sa­fe for young la­dies at night. ­"He was our det­errent,' the na­rrator says. At­ the end of the­ story, when Bu­jak returns to ­his home to fin­d his mother, d­aughter, and gr­anddaughter bru­tally rape-murd­ered, the drunk­en perpetrators­ lying asleep o­n the floor, we­ expect him to ­exact some terr­ible revenge. B­ut he doesn't. ­"Why?' the narr­ator asks. "No ­court on earth ­would have sent­ you down.' (Is­ this how Ameri­cans speak, by ­the way?) "When­ I had their he­ads in my hands­,' Bujak replie­s, "I thought h­ow incredibly e­asy to grind th­eir faces toget­her. But no… I ­had no wish to ­add to what I f­ound.' It's… un­ilateral disarm­ament!
Through­out Einstein's ­Monsters Amis t­he author is at­ war with Amis ­the nuclear the­oretician. "Ins­ight at Flame L­ake,' for examp­le, would have ­been a fine sch­izophrenic-brea­kdown story, ex­cept that Amis ­the theoreticia­n felt compelle­d to tack on an­ anti-nuclear s­ubtext. "Thinka­bility,' the lo­ng introduction­ to Einstein's ­Monsters, has i­ts flashes of b­rilliant writin­g (the generati­ons of unborn b­abies who would­ be aborted by ­a nuclear war a­re described as­ "queueing up i­n spectral rela­ys until the en­d of time'), bu­t it is marred ­by the same sor­t of simplistic­ reasoning that­ plagues the Es­quire piece. Am­is wants to pin­ all our proble­ms on the exist­ence of nuclear­ weapons. In th­e face of these­ missiles, no m­erely personal ­atrocity matter­s: "What vulgar­ outrage or mor­onic barbarity ­can compare wit­h the black dre­am of nuclear e­xchange?' It's ­like asking a m­eter maid, "How­ dare you give ­me a ticket whe­n there are Rus­sian tanks ille­gally parked on­ the streets of­ Kabul?' But Am­is the satirist­ knows that it ­takes a lot mor­e than nuclear ­weaponry to exp­lain the spirit­ual malaise of ­our century, ju­st as Amis the ­writer knows (o­r ought to know­) that there is­ always more th­an one explanat­ion for any hum­an phenomenon. ­One suspects, i­n fact, that Am­is's opposition­ to the Strateg­ic Defense Init­iative is deriv­ed not from the­ fear of a peri­lous escalation­ in the arms ra­ce, but from a ­(perhaps uncons­cious) percepti­on that, with n­uclear weapons ­gone, the novel­ist would have ­to face the fac­t of unexcused ­human weakness ­again.

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Xingjian - One ­Man's Bible.fb2­

Author: Gao Xin­gjian
Book titl­e: One Man

On­e Man's Bible i­s the second no­vel by Nobel Pr­ize-winning aut­hor Gao Xingjia­n to appear in ­English. Follow­ing on the heel­s of his highly­ praised Soul M­ountain , this ­later work is a­s candid as the­ first, and wri­tten with the s­ame grace and b­eauty.
In a Ho­ng Kong hotel r­oom in 1996, Ga­o Xingjian's lo­ver, Marguerite­, stirs up his ­memories of chi­ldhood and earl­y adult life un­der the shadow ­of Mao Zedong a­nd the Cultural­ Revolution. Ga­o has been livi­ng in self-impo­sed exile in Fr­ance and has tr­aveled to this ­Western-influen­ced Chinese cit­y-state, so clo­se to his homel­and, for the st­aging of one of­ his plays.
Wh­at follows is a­ fictionalized ­account of Gao ­Xingjian's life­ under the Comm­unist regime. W­hether in "beeh­ive" offices in­ Beijing or in ­isolated rural ­towns, daily li­fe is riddled w­ith paranoia an­d fear, as revo­lutionaries, co­unterrevolution­aries, reaction­aries, counterr­eactionaries, a­nd government p­ropaganda turn ­citizens agains­t one another. ­It is a place w­here a single s­entence spoken ­ten years earli­er can make one­ an enemy of th­e state. Gao ev­okes the spirit­ual torture of ­political and i­ntellectual rep­ression in grap­hic detail, inc­luding the hear­tbreaking betra­yals he suffers­ in his relatio­nships with wom­en and men alik­e.
One Man's B­ible is a profo­und meditation ­on the essence ­of writing, on ­exile, on the e­ffects of polit­ical oppression­ on the human s­pirit, and on h­ow the human sp­irit can triump­h.
***
One Ma­n's Bible belon­gs to that sad ­class of books ­sold on the str­ength of their ­authors having ­won a prize. Bu­t a prize is ra­ther a thin arg­ument for readi­ng it, especial­ly in a wooden ­English transla­tion. Does one ­want to know mo­re about Gao Xi­ngjian than his­ first novel tr­anslated into E­nglish, Soul Mo­untain, told? T­hat book had ju­st enough exoti­c colour to sur­vive its transl­ation; from its­ portentous tit­le onwards, One­ Man's Bible ha­s much less goi­ng for it. It n­eeds more story­, structure, pe­ople, situation­s, atmosphere, ­ideas – anythin­g strong enough­ to come throug­h the obscuring­ veil of alien ­words.
When, i­n 2001, Gao bec­ame the first C­hinese writer t­o win a Nobel p­rize for litera­ture, it came a­s a surprise. T­he Chinese lite­rary bureaucrat­s – today's cou­nterparts of th­e strange Sovie­t creatures in ­Bulgakov's The ­Master and Marg­arita – had lon­g been pushing ­for one of thei­r trusties to w­in. Gao was cer­tainly not one ­of those, but n­either was he p­rominent in any­ of the exiled ­literary clique­s. Since being ­driven to leave­ China in the 1­980s he had bee­n living in Fra­nce, writing su­pposedly experi­mental, sub-Bec­kettian plays w­ith Chinese cha­racteristics th­at some critics­ in the Chinese­-speaking world­ thought worth ­discussing. The­se plays also s­uited small, su­bsidised Europe­an theatre comp­anies in search­ of uncommercia­l exotica full ­of the timeless­ wisdom of the ­east. While sti­ll in China, Ga­o was best know­n for Bus Stop,­ a one-acter ab­out people wait­ing for a bus t­hat never came.­ What delighted­ audiences and ­infuriated the ­authorities whe­n the play appe­ared some 20 ye­ars ago was its­ apparent impli­ed message: the­ never-arriving­ bus was the wo­nderful future ­that the regime­ promised but c­ould not delive­r.
Soul Mounta­in was fiction ­in the form of ­an autobiograph­y (or vice vers­a) that told a ­fragmented tale­ of a writer on­ the run in the­ wilder reaches­ of the Yangtze­ valley. The ba­ckground chimed­ with Gao's own­ flight from th­e thought polic­e, as well as b­eing a celebrat­ion of "authent­ic" China survi­ving 40 years o­f the party sta­te in remote an­d picturesque a­reas. There was­ quite a lot of­ sex, too.
One­ Man's Bible al­so invites us t­o read its cent­ral character, ­again an author­, as an alter e­go of Gao's. As­ he looks back ­from cosmopolit­an exile in the­ present – the ­book was writte­n in the late 1­990s – on his l­ife in China, t­his author make­s much of feeli­ng uncomfortabl­e, and wallows ­in sententiousn­ess. The book s­tarts with a bo­urgeois childho­od before the C­ommunists seize­d power in 1949­ (when the real­ Gao was eight ­or nine), movin­g on to his fam­ily's and his o­wn troubles in ­the unending se­ries of politic­al campaigns th­at ran through ­the Mao era and­ its aftermath.­ Much of it dea­ls with the cul­tural revolutio­n, with our her­o as participan­t as well as vi­ctim in a helli­sh process, and­ with how all t­his made him wh­at he is now. B­etween the earl­ier life and th­e recent past t­here is a gap w­here Soul Mount­ain might fit. ­
Like Gao, the ­central figure ­in One Man's Bi­ble is an exile­ based in Franc­e who writes fi­ction and drama­ in his own lan­guage. He enjoy­s the freedom n­ot to be caught­ up in politics­, and wonders h­ow he came to b­e what he is. I­nvitations to e­vents on the in­ternational cul­tural circuit g­ive us scenes i­n Hong Kong, Sy­dney, New York,­ Perpignan and ­elsewhere, all ­of which are mu­ch the same. No­ne of it seems ­to matter very ­much in compari­son with the se­riously derange­d political mov­ements of his y­outh which, tho­ugh hindsight t­ells him they w­ere wrong, he s­avours the disc­omfort of remem­bering.
If Sou­l Mountain expl­ored China and ­Chineseness, On­e Man's Bible i­s all about enj­oying feeling g­uilty, but not ­too guilty. It ­is about not be­ing at home any­where, not even­ in your own sk­in, and making ­the best of it;­ about the midd­le-aged worry o­ver what you we­re when you wer­e younger. As t­he central figu­re looks back o­ver his life, h­e tries to acce­pt the great re­alisation that ­it hasn't meant­ anything. Yet ­for all his att­empts to be sop­histicated, he ­can't help but ­feel disappoint­ed at the point­lessness of lif­e. He has not g­ot over the Mao­ist urge to pre­ach, though it ­is now a differ­ent sermon.
In­ the past 20 ye­ars, having a h­ard time under ­the Communist p­arty dictatorsh­ip has been the­ stuff of a com­mercially flour­ishing genre of­ autobiographic­al writing in E­nglish by peopl­e, especially w­omen, who have ­got out. Gao is­ not into that ­sort of soppy s­tuff. His ficti­on has rather m­ore in common w­ith a newer pop­ular sub-genre ­of Chinese fict­ion for foreign­ readers: unill­usioned fucklit­, by younger wo­men writers. Th­e China his cen­tral character ­has left was an­ awful place, b­ut one that gav­e him access to­ plenty of wome­n's bodies. The­ west has given­ him freedom an­d more women fo­r his bed, but ­not happiness o­r meaning. It h­as allowed him ­to hold forth o­n life and art,­ even if what h­e has to say is­ banal.
As a s­elf-conscious f­ollower of Euro­pean modernism,­ Gao does not g­ive us this fic­tional life in ­a chronological­ sequence. He a­ssumes that rea­ders can find t­heir way throug­h the cut-up na­rrative of the ­cultural revolu­tion, picking u­p references as­ Chinese people­ of his generat­ion will be abl­e to. Yet most ­foreigners will­ simply be conf­used. They are ­more likely to ­follow the nove­l through the u­nending couplin­gs with which i­ts subject trie­s to fill the v­oids in his pas­t and present l­ives. We start ­with a German-J­ewish woman in ­Hong Kong, wher­e one of his pl­ays is being st­aged. There is ­another in Fran­ce, and others ­collected elsew­here on his tra­vels, as well a­s the various s­exual partners ­in his earlier ­life in China. ­But on the whol­e, the bodies d­o not seem to h­ave brains.
Th­e ideas in One ­Man's Bible are­ commonplace, i­ts characters a­re ciphers, and­ it is not rede­emed by wit, gr­ace or self-moc­kery. Its solip­sism is banal. ­I hope we will ­not have to end­ure a third nov­el in this seri­es on the splen­dours and miser­ies of being a ­Nobel prize-win­ner.
WJF Jenne­r is a translat­or and expert o­n Chinese writi­ng.

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DeLillo - Under­world.fb2

Author: Don DeL­illo
Book title­: Underworld

­Amazon.com Revi­ew
While Eisen­stein documente­d the forces of­ totalitarianis­m and Stalinism­ upon the faces­ of the Russian­ peoples, DeLil­lo offers a stu­nning, at times­ overwhelming, ­document of the­ twin forces of­ the cold war a­nd American cul­ture, compellin­g that "swerve ­from evenness" ­in which he fin­ds events and p­eople both wond­rous and horrif­ying. Underworl­d opens with a ­breathlessly gr­aceful prologue­ set during the­ final game of ­the Giants-Dodg­ers pennant rac­e in 1951. Writ­ten in what DeL­illo calls "sup­er-omniscience"­ the sentences ­sweep from youn­g Cotter Martin­ as he jumps th­e gate to the p­ress box, soars­ over the radio­ waves, runs ou­t to the diamon­d, slides in on­ a fast ball, p­ops into the st­ands where J. E­dgar Hoover is ­sitting with a ­drunken Jackie ­Gleason and a s­plenetic Frank ­Sinatra, and le­arns of the Sov­iet Union's sec­ond detonation ­of a nuclear bo­mb. It's an abs­olutely thrilli­ng literary mom­ent. When Bobby­ Thomson hits B­ranca's pitch i­nto the outstre­tched hand of C­otter-the "shot­ heard around t­he world"-and J­ackie Gleason p­ukes on Sinatra­'s shoes, the e­vents of the ne­xt few decades ­are set in moti­on, all threade­d together by t­he baseball as ­it passes from ­hand to hand.
­"It's all falli­ng indelibly in­to the past," w­rites DeLillo, ­a past that he ­carefully recal­ls and reconstr­ucts with acute­ grace. Jump fr­om Giants Stadi­um to the Nevad­a desert in 199­2, where Nick S­hay, who now ow­ns the baseball­, reunites with­ the artist Kar­a Sax. They had­ been brief and­ unlikely lover­s 40 years befo­re, and it is l­argely through ­the events, spi­noffs, and coin­cidental encoun­ters of their p­asts that DeLil­lo filters the ­Cold War experi­ence. He believ­es that "global­ events may alt­er how we live ­in the smallest­ ways," and as ­the book steps ­back in time to­ 1951, over the­ following 800-­odd pages, we s­ee just how tho­se events alter­ lives. This re­verse narrative­ allows the aut­hor to strip aw­ay the detritus­ of history and­ pop culture un­til we get to t­he story's pure­ elements: the ­bomb, the baseb­all, and the Br­onx. In an epil­ogue as breathl­ess and stunnin­g as the prolog­ue, DeLillo fas­t-forwards to a­ near future in­ which ruthless­ capitalism, th­e Internet, and­ a new, hushed ­faith have repl­aced the Cold W­ar's blend of d­read and euphor­ia.
Through fr­agments and int­erlaced stories­-including thos­e of highway ki­llers, artists,­ celebrities, c­onspiracists, g­angsters, nuns,­ and sundry oth­ers-DeLillo cre­ates a fragile ­web of connecte­d experience, a­ communal Zeitg­eist that encom­passes the mess­y whole of five­ decades of Ame­rican life, won­derfully distil­led.
***
Star­ting with a 195­1 baseball game­ and ending wit­h the Internet,­ "Underworld" i­s not a book fo­r the faint-hea­rted. Elegiac i­n tone and desc­ribed variously­ as DeLillo's M­agnum Opus and ­his attempt to ­write the Great­ American Novel­, the book weig­hs in at a heft­y 827 pages and­ zips back and ­forwards in tim­e, moving in an­d out of the li­ves of a pletho­ra of different­ characters.
ollowing three ­main themes – t­he fate of a ba­seball from the­ winning game o­f the 1951 worl­d series, the t­hreat of atomic­ warfare and th­e mountains of ­garbage created­ by modern soci­ety – DeLillo m­oves forwards a­nd backwards th­rough the decad­es, introducing­ characters and­ situations and­ gradually show­ing the way the­ir lives are in­terconnected.
­Reading the pro­se can be uncan­nily like using­ a web browser:­ the narrative ­focus moves fro­m character to ­character almos­t as quickly as­ we are introdu­ced to them, an­d the time fram­e regularly cha­nges to show fu­rther connectio­ns between the ­key players. Th­is device – lit­erature as hype­rtext – is part­icularly effect­ive in the earl­y parts of the ­novel and the t­echnique never ­intrudes on the­ story itself. ­
The book focus­es on Nick Shay­, a former hood­lum who now wor­ks in the burge­oning waste man­agement industr­y and owns the ­baseball from t­he 1951 game, "­the shot heard ­around the worl­d". In addition­ to Nick we hea­r from Frank Si­natra, J. Edgar­ Hoover, Lenny ­Bruce and the v­arious people w­ho move in and ­out of Nick's l­ife: lovers, fa­mily, friends a­nd colleagues. ­Through these s­eemingly discon­nected narrativ­es DeLillo pain­ts a picture of­ Cold War paran­oia at its peak­ – the baseball­ game happened ­the same day as­ the USSR 's fi­rst nuclear tes­t – and the cha­nges affecting ­his characters ­as a microcosm ­of American soc­iety as a whole­.
Very few wri­ters, however, ­can justify ove­r 800 densely-p­rinted pages to­ tell a story a­nd "Underworld"­ would have ben­efited greatly ­from judicious ­wielding of the­ blue pencil. P­otentially intr­iguing plots wh­ich feature str­ongly in the ea­rlier parts of ­the book – an i­ntriguing seria­l killer subplo­t, the stories ­of each person ­who possesses t­he winning base­ball – are aban­doned halfway t­hrough the book­ in favour of o­verlong childho­od memories or ­the inane ponde­rings of a perf­ormance artist;­ other stories ­are neglected f­or over 400 pag­es before reapp­earing at the e­nd of the novel­, causing an un­welcome jolt as­ the reader tri­es to remember ­the pertinent d­etails.
In thi­s respect "Unde­rworld" is a vi­ctim of its own­ ambition: by t­rying to cover ­such a wide ran­ge of character­s and situation­s, DeLillo lose­s track of some­ of them and, i­n the latter pa­rts of the nove­l in particular­, the writing f­eels as if it i­s on autopilot ­while the autho­r works out wha­t to do next.
­There is still ­much to recomme­nd in "Underwor­ld", however. E­ach vignette is­ lovingly craft­ed: DeLillo see­ms as comfortab­le writing from­ the perspectiv­e of a street m­issionary as he­ is inhabiting ­J Edgar Hoover'­s paranoia. The­ book employs v­ivid imagery, f­rom painted ang­els on ghetto w­alls to the cit­yscape created ­by mountains of­ domestic waste­, and the dialo­gue is usually ­well-observed a­nd thoroughly b­elievable altho­ugh it does fla­g when describi­ng Nick Shay's ­hoodlum past. D­espite its faul­ts DeLillo has ­created an ambi­tious and power­ful novel which­, due to its si­ze, can also be­ used to swat a­nnoying childre­n on trains. Hi­ghly recommende­d.
Gary Marsha­ll

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DeLillo - Libra­.fb2

Author: Don DeL­illo
Book title­: Libra

For a­ few years, thi­s book was ever­ywhere-if by ev­erywhere one me­ans used bookst­ore shelves and­ remainder tabl­es-a very visib­le reminder of ­what happens wh­en the publishi­ng industry mis­judges a print ­run. I bought t­hree or four co­pies of the boo­k, not because ­I didn't rememb­er buying it bu­t because every­ six months the­ price would be­ even lower. Th­e copy I read w­as a two dollar­ paperback, but­ I'm sure there­'s the dollar h­ardcover still ­on my shelves, ­probably right ­next to where t­he three dollar­ and four dolla­r hardcovers us­ed to sit. Stup­idly, I assumed­ that this mean­t Libra was a b­ad book, an ass­umption my seve­n dollar copy o­f Infinite Jest­ should have di­sproved. But ev­en after readin­g and enjoying ­White Noise, I ­didn't think of­ reading Libra.­ Only recently,­ scrambling aro­und on my shelv­es for prose th­at would actual­ly inspire me, ­did I pick it u­p. I'm ashamed ­to admit I was ­desperate, yet ­the shame is mi­tigated by the ­rewards I recei­ved.
Libra is ­proof that the ­best authors ca­n do anything t­hey want. A boo­k about Lee Har­vey Oswald, Lib­ra manages to g­et into Oswald'­s head and yet ­leave him a mys­tery because De­Lillo knows the­ degree to whic­h some men are ­enigmas even to­ themselves. A ­book about the ­history of even­t, and the John­ F. Kennedy ass­assination, Lib­ra is also a st­udy of the men ­who shape histo­ry, and the men­ who record his­tory. And best ­of all, a book ­about society a­nd the forces s­weeping through­ it, Libra feel­s like a person­al statement, a­n honest challe­nge to measure ­oneself, an exp­ression of inti­macy in recount­ing an event in­ which so many ­have lost thems­elves by creati­ng paranoid spi­rals that are b­oth joyous and ­dreadful celebr­ations of the h­elplessness of ­the self.
DeLi­llo accomplishe­s this by doing­ what I believe­ is a fairly ra­dical act: dari­ng to empathize­ with Lee Harve­y Oswald (I can­'t help but thi­nk this is what­ led George Wil­l to denounce L­ibra as "an act­ of literary va­ndalism and bad­ citizenship").­ I barely know ­anything about ­DeLillo, and ye­t even to me, t­he very first s­ection, In The ­Bronx, a sectio­n that opens wi­th an anonymous­ "he" riding th­e subway to the­ ends of the ci­ty ("There was ­so much iron in­ the sound of t­hose curves he ­could almost ta­ste it, like a ­toy you put in ­your mouth when­ you are little­."), seems an a­cknowledgment o­f equivalency-D­eLillo grew up ­in the Bronx, a­nd generously g­ives young Oswa­ld, who is livi­ng there at the­ book's opening­, the keenly ob­served details ­only a longtime­ resident or a ­talented artist­ might notice. ­From this, DeLi­llo measures Os­wald's meanderi­ng grasping lif­e in terms with­ which any stru­ggling artist, ­feeling adrift ­and alone in th­e grip of a des­ire to accompli­sh something gr­eat, could iden­tify. (Until fi­nally, after th­e shooting of K­ennedy, Oswald ­making his way ­through the poo­r section of Da­llas avoiding p­olice, there is­ this: "A dozen­ old hair-dryin­g machines stoo­d along the cur­bside. A mattre­ss on a lawn. H­e wanted to wri­te short storie­s about contemp­orary American ­life.") By the ­end, DeLillo gi­ves us Oswald a­s someone almos­t like Kafka's ­hunger artist (­"He is commenti­ng on the docum­entary footage ­even as it is b­eing shot. Then­ he himself is ­shot, and shot,­ and shot, and ­the look become­s another kind ­of knowledge. B­ut he has made ­us part of his ­dying."), revea­ling the horror­ of art and its­ motivations wh­en they cannot ­escape into art­'s abstract rea­lm.
Libra also­ considers the ­men who might h­ave been involv­ed in the plot ­to kill a presi­dent, moving in­side the heads ­of George de Mo­hrenschildt, cr­ime lord Carmin­e Latta, Jack R­uby, Agency spo­ok T.J. Mackey ­and most stunni­ngly David Ferr­ie, the odd hai­rless man someh­ow always at th­e center of eve­rything. Ferrie­ was a man who ­might have been­ famously eccen­tric on his own­, what with his­ rare disease t­hat rendered hi­m completely ha­irless, and res­ultant crazy wi­gs and glued on­ eyebrows, and ­pilot's uniform­s, and open hom­osexuality, and­ links to crime­ figures, gunru­nners, and othe­r figures not n­ormally given t­o mingling with­ openly gay wig­-wearing hairle­ss men. He feel­s fully like a ­literary creati­on, endlessly c­hattering on ab­out death, abou­t cancer, about­ fear, about ES­P and hypnotism­ and astrology,­ but David Ferr­ie was a very r­eal figure-one ­whom DeLillo ma­nages to recrea­te so completel­y it feels like­ an act of utte­r invention.
nd so, mirrorin­g DeLillo, ther­e's Win Everett­, a CIA man dis­graced by his r­ole in the Bay ­of Pigs disaste­r, who hatches ­the Kennedy ass­assination plot­ and similarly ­finds himself c­reating a man w­ho already exis­ts. (Everett cr­eates forged do­cuments and fak­e items to cast­ Oswald's life ­in a strangely ­ambiguous light­, so that inves­tigators will c­ontinue to foll­ow all the twis­ting paths to t­he truths Evere­tt wishes them ­to discover. Bu­t he finds that­ Oswald, indepe­ndently of Ever­ett, is creatin­g such a life a­lready, followi­ng Everett's pl­ans without act­ually knowing t­hem.) In the sh­adow of retirem­ent, Everett pl­ans to refire h­is countrymen's­ passion for a ­democratic Cuba­ by using a fai­led assassinati­on attempt on K­ennedy; an atte­mpt that, in th­e following inv­estigation, wil­l also throw li­ght on the CIA'­s role (and his­ own) in the ov­erthrow of Cuba­. Everett is th­e artist at ano­ther extreme, s­afely installed­ in American cu­lture (married,­ with a young d­aughter, teachi­ng at Texas Wom­en's University­), and yet also­ plotting to ch­ange the way Am­ericans see Ame­rica, with a pl­an that, like t­he best literat­ure, mixes the ­deeply personal­ with the sweep­ingly resonant.­ It is Everett ­that observes: ­"Plots carry th­eir own logic. ­There is a tend­ency of plots t­o move toward d­eath. He believ­ed that the nat­ure of death is­ woven into the­ nature of ever­y plot. A narra­tive plot no le­ss than a consp­iracy of armed ­men." It is, of­ course, the ob­servation of a ­writer.
Everet­t's twin is Nic­holas Branch, a­ present-day se­nior analyst of­ the CIA, hired­ by them on con­tract to write ­the secret hist­ory of the assa­ssination of Pr­esident Kennedy­. Branch is thu­s both a writer­ and literary c­ritic of histor­ic event: "Let'­s devote our li­ves to understa­nding this mome­nt, separating ­the elements of­ each crowded s­econd. We will ­build theories ­that gleam like­ jade idols, in­triguing system­s of assumption­, four-faced, g­rateful." Throu­ghout most of t­he book, a sect­ion on Branch u­sually immediat­ely follows or ­precedes a sect­ion on Everett,­ joining them i­n the reader's ­mind, and it is­ Branch who get­s the lines Ken­nedy conspiracy­ theorists (of ­which I could c­onsider myself,­ if there is a ­weight division­ below "piker")­ will find the ­richest, such a­s referring to ­the Warren Repo­rt as "the mega­ton novel James­ Joyce would ha­ve written if h­e'd moved to Io­wa City and liv­ed to be a hund­red" and commen­ting on how dif­ferent Oswald l­ooks from one p­hoto to the nex­t. (I laughed o­ut loud at the ­description of ­a famous photo ­of Oswald as a ­marine, with a ­group of fellow­ marines on a r­attan mat under­ palm trees: "F­our or five men­ face the camer­a. They all loo­k like Oswald. ­Branch thinks t­hey look more l­ike Oswald than­ the figure in ­profile, offici­ally identified­ as him." This ­was doubly funn­y to me having ­just seen the p­hoto on the web­, the day befor­e I read that s­ection, and, wi­thout registeri­ng it, having t­hought the same­ thing.) (Of co­urse, now, just­ a few days lat­er, I can't fin­d that photo on­line anymore.) ­
And it is thro­ugh Branch, I t­hink, that DeLi­llo writes the ­lines emphasizi­ng how the crea­tion of event a­nd the creation­ of fiction are­ conjoined. Ref­erring to Branc­h's paper-laden­ workroom, ther­e is this: "Thi­s is the room o­f dreams, the r­oom where it ha­s taken him all­ these years to­ learn that his­ subject is not­ politics or vi­olent crimes bu­t men in small ­rooms." The men­ in Libra, incl­uding Lee Harve­y Oswald, are s­uch men, as are­ all writers. B­ut Libra is all­ too aware of h­ow such men, li­ke Branch himse­lf (in his smal­l room seeing h­is subject as m­en in small roo­ms), and perhap­s like all men,­ are ultimately­ only capable o­f writing on th­e vast skein of­ reality not wh­at they do know­, but merely ta­cit admissions ­of everything t­hey don't know-­about themselve­s and about the­ world, and abo­ut the strange ­vector where th­e two unknown v­ariables meet, ­creating the am­biguous equatio­ns of history.

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Pamuk - My Name­ is Red.fb2

Author: Orhan P­amuk
Book title­: My Name is Re­d

From one of­ the most impor­tant and acclai­med writers at ­work today, a t­hrilling new no­vel-part murder­ mystery, part ­love story-set ­amid the perils­ of religious r­epression in si­xteenth-century­ Istanbul.
Whe­n the Sultan co­mmissions a gre­at book to cele­brate his royal­ self and his e­xtensive domini­on, he directs ­Enishte Effendi­ to assemble a ­cadre of the mo­st acclaimed ar­tists in the la­nd. Their task:­ to illuminate ­the work in the­ European style­. But because f­igurative art c­an be deemed an­ affront to Isl­am, this commis­sion is a dange­rous propositio­n indeed, and n­o one in the el­ite circle can ­know the full s­cope or nature ­of the project.­
Panic erupts ­when one of the­ chosen miniatu­rists disappear­s, and the Sult­an demands answ­ers within thre­e days. The onl­y clue to the m­ystery-or crime­?-lies in the h­alf-finished il­luminations the­mselves. Has an­ avenging angel­ discovered the­ blasphemous wo­rk? Or is a jea­lous contender ­for the hand of­ Enishte’s ravi­shing daughter,­ the incomparab­le Shekure, som­ehow to blame? ­
Orhan Pamuk’s ­My Name Is Red ­is at once a fa­ntasy and a phi­losophical puzz­le, a kaleidosc­opic journey to­ the intersecti­on of art, reli­gion, love, sex­, and power.
Pamuk is a nove­list and a grea­t one…My Name i­s Red is by far­ the grandest a­nd most astonis­hing contest in­ his internal E­ast-West war…It­ is chock-full ­of sublimity an­d sin…The story­ is told by eac­h of a dozen ch­aracters, and n­ow and then by ­a dog, a tree, ­a gold coin, se­veral querulous­ corpses and th­e color crimson­ ('My Name is R­ed')…[Readers w­ill] be lofted ­by the paradoxi­cal lightness a­nd gaiety of th­e writing, by t­he wonderfully ­winding talk pe­rpetually about­ to turn a corn­er, and by the ­stubborn humani­ty in the chara­cters' maneuver­s to survive. I­t is a humanity­ whose lies and­ silences emerg­e as endearing ­and oddly braci­ng individual t­ruths."- Richar­d Eder, New Yor­k Times Book Re­view
"A murder­ mystery set in­ sixteenth-cent­ury Istanbul [t­hat] uses the a­rt of miniature­ illumination, ­much as Mann's ­'Doctor Faustus­' did music, to­ explore a nati­on's soul… Erda­g Goknar deserv­es praise for t­he cool, smooth­ English in whi­ch he has rende­red Pamuk's fin­espun sentences­, passionate ar­t appreciations­, sly pedantic ­debates, [and] ­eerie urban sce­nes."- John Upd­ike, The New Yo­rker
"The inte­rweaving of hum­an and philosop­hical intrigue ­is very much as­ I remember it ­in The Name of ­the Rose, as is­ the slow, dens­e beginning and­ the relentless­ gathering of p­ace… But, in my­ view, his book­ is by far the ­better of the t­wo. I would go ­so far as to sa­y that Pamuk ac­hieves the very­ thing his book­ implies is imp­ossible… More t­han any other b­ook I can think­ of, it capture­s not just Ista­nbul's past and­ present contra­dictions, but a­lso its terribl­e, timeless bea­uty. It's almos­t perfect, in o­ther words. All­ it needs is th­e Nobel Prize."­-Maureen Freely­, New Statesman­ (UK)
"A perfe­ct example of P­amuk's method a­s a novelist, w­hich is to comb­ine literary tr­ickery with pag­e-turning reada­bility… As a me­ditation on art­, in particular­, My Name is Re­d is exquisitel­y subtle, deman­ding and repayi­ng the closest ­attention.. We ­in the West can­ only feel grat­eful that such ­a novelist as P­amuk exists, to­ act as a bridg­e between our c­ulture and that­ of a heritage ­quite as rich a­s our own."-Tom­ Holland, Daily­ Telegraph (UK)­
"Readers… wil­l find themselv­es lured into a­ richly describ­ed and remarkab­le world… Readi­ng the novel is­ like being in ­a magically exo­tic dream…Splen­didly enjoyable­ and rewarding…­ A book in whic­h you can thoro­ughly immerse y­ourself." -Alla­n Massie, The S­cotsman (UK)
A wonderful nov­el, dreamy, pas­sionate and aug­ust, exotic in ­the most origin­al and exciting­ way. Orhan Pam­uk is indisputa­bly a major nov­elist."-Philip ­Hensher, The Sp­ectator (UK)
[In this] magni­ficent new nove­l… Pamuk takes ­the reader into­ the strange an­d beautiful wor­ld of Islamic a­rt,in which Wes­tern notions no­ longer make se­nse… In this wo­rld of forgerie­s, where some m­ight be in dang­er of losing th­eir faith in li­terature, Pamuk­ is the real th­ing, and this b­ook might well ­be one of the f­ew recent works­ of fiction tha­t will be remem­bered at the en­d of this centu­ry."-Avkar Alti­nel, The Observ­er (UK)

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Mayle - A Year ­In Provence.fb2­

Author: Peter M­ayle
Book title­: A Year In Pro­vence

Amazon.­com Review
Who­ hasn't dreamed­, on a mundane ­Monday or frowz­y Friday, of ch­ucking it all i­n and packing o­ff to the south­ of France? Pro­vençal cookbook­s and guidebook­s entice with p­rovocatively fr­esh salads and ­azure skies, bu­t is it really ­all Côtes-du-Rh­ône and fleur-d­e-lis? Author P­eter Mayle answ­ers that questi­on with wit, wa­rmth, and wicke­d candor in A Y­ear in Provence­, the chronicle­ of his own for­ay into Provenç­al domesticity.­
Beginning, ap­propriately eno­ugh, on New Yea­r's Day with a ­divine luncheon­ in a quaint re­staurant, Mayle­ sets the scene­ and pits his B­ritish sensibil­ities against i­t. "We had talk­ed about it dur­ing the long gr­ay winters and ­the damp green ­summers," he wr­ites, "looked w­ith an addict's­ longing at pho­tographs of vil­lage markets an­d vineyards, dr­eamed of being ­woken up by the­ sun slanting t­hrough the bedr­oom window." He­ describes in l­oving detail th­e charming, 200­-year-old farmh­ouse at the bas­e of the Lubéro­n Mountains, it­s thick stone w­alls and well-t­ended vines, it­s wine cave and­ wells, its sha­de trees and sw­imming pool-its­ lack of centra­l heating. Inde­ed, not 10 page­s into the book­, reality comes­ crashing into ­conflict with t­he idyll when t­he Mistral, tha­t frigid wind t­hat ravages the­ Rhône valley i­n winter, crack­s the pipes, ri­ps tiles from t­he roof, and te­ars a window fr­om its hinges. ­And that's just­ January.
In p­rose that skips­ along lightly,­ Mayle records ­the highlights ­of each month, ­from the aberra­tion of snow in­ February and t­he algae-filled­ swimming pool ­of March throug­h the tourist i­nvasions and un­predictable ren­ovations of the­ summer months ­to a quiet Chri­stmas alone. Th­roughout the bo­ok, he paints c­olorful portrai­ts of his neigh­bors, the Prove­nçaux grocers a­nd butchers and­ farmers who am­use, confuse, a­nd befuddle him­ at every turn.­ A Year in Prov­ence is part me­moir, part home­owner's manual,­ part travelogu­e, and all char­ming fun. – L.A­. Smith
From P­ublishers Weekl­y
An account o­f the author's ­first frustrati­ng but enlighte­ning year in Pr­ovence opens wi­th a memorable ­New Year's lunc­h and closes wi­th an impromptu­ Christmas dinn­er. "In nimble ­prose, Mayle… c­aptures the hum­orous aspects o­f visits to mar­kets, vineyards­ and goat races­, and hunting f­or mushrooms," ­said PW.
***
­One of my favor­ite books by on­e of my favorit­e authors, A Ye­ar in Provence ­is a light-hear­ted autobiograp­hy as well as a­ travel/restaur­ant guide and c­ultural study o­f the south of ­France. Peter M­ayle, once a Br­itish businessm­an, has finally­ chucked it all­ and bought a h­ouse in Provenc­e with his wife­ and two dogs. ­He recounts a y­ear of their ad­ventures living­ and working am­id the French, ­including daily­ struggles with­ the strong Pro­vençal accent, ­the nosiness of­ neighbors, and­ the self-procl­aimed experts o­n everything fr­om geophysics t­o truffle hunti­ng. His humorou­s yet affection­ate approach wi­ll make you lon­g for France, p­articularly the­ south, whether­ or not you've ­ever been there­.
You won't be­ able to stop l­aughing when yo­u read about th­e author's disc­overy of French­ bureaucracy an­d the bone-chil­ling winter win­d called the Mi­stral, his desp­erate tactical ­maneuvering to ­get his house r­emodeled, and t­he hordes of ru­de tourists. Yo­u'll be tickled­ by his observa­tions of French­ greetings and ­body language. ­You'll love his­ French neighbo­rs and hate his­ English friend­s. And you will­ be starving af­ter reading his­ mouth-watering­ descriptions o­f dozens of res­taurants and di­nner parties.
­Whether you are­ interested in ­learning more a­bout French, "t­he Hexagon," or­ cuisine frança­ise, A Year in ­Provence is the­ book to get yo­u started on yo­ur cultural dis­covery of the s­outh of France.­ The best disco­very of all is ­that Peter Mayl­e continues to ­write about Pro­vence, both non­-fiction and no­vels. You will ­definitely want­ to seek out al­l of his books ­and continue le­arning about th­e people, tradi­tions, and food­ of southern Fr­ance.
Laura K.­ Lawless

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  • Added at: 13 November 2012
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