The story begins in a nursing home, narrated by a ninety-three year old retired veterinarian recalling his first experience working in a Depression era circus. Rich with historical detail and possessed of a lively, complicated plot, the book captivated me enough to be a twenty-four hour read. That’s a book I pick up and only [...]
Honestly, I’ve never been fond of chicken. As a child I refused to eat it after I read that birds were the modern relatives of dinosaurs. If you wouldn’t eat snake or lizard why would you eat a chicken? My mother still refers to it occasionally by my label when I ask what she’s making: [...]
The first experience I had with Japanese literature was when I was thirteen. I was away at summer camp on a college campus, and their bookstore had a clearance shelf that included a defectively bound copy of Yukio Mishima’s The Sound of Waves for a dollar. I was hooked not so much by the writing [...]
I can’t say why exactly, but I do prefer William Gibson’s more recent work. Maybe it’s obvious that a writer gets better with practice, but in his case I would suggest the reason is a ‘less is more’ sort of evolution. Neuromancer, like The Difference Engine, is so packed with ideas and descriptions the effect [...]
Somehow, I had always missed reading the whole thing. I knew the plot, several of the catchphrases, but had never actually read the book. It was worth it. An easy read, bit of a fable, with a sly straightfaced narration, the book describes a politic inevitable in communes and corporations: the ascent of power, the [...]
Here is a book that knows what the modern novel is about: a postmodernist classic. David Mitchell makes skillful use of his writer’s bag of tricks. The storyline is chronologically creative; a series of short stories link through coincidence and theme. The characters are unique, while the theme develops historically and ideologically. By the end [...]
This absurd and compelling animated trailer reminds me of Mike Whiteside’s stories, which all began, ” I was sitting in this bar in Hollywood..” I may actually read the book, since I dug the flow of the prose.
When I say I liked it, that doesn’t necessarily mean it was a good book. It was just a good read, at the right time, and had some redeeming qualities. Like the first book in the trilogy, The Girl Who Played With Fire is an intentional blockbuster. It reads like a screenplay (and immediately became [...]
I just finished reading the second book of Stieg Larsson’s Millennium trilogy, The Girl Who Played With Fire. It wasn’t much better than the first, but it did move along faster. I decided I would read the third book. These are surely blockbusters, and full of cliches, but I am enjoying the quirks of the [...]
David Liss is proof that an author devoted to fine writing will rise above: his work is to be found in the literature section of the LAPL. The second book he wrote starring the hero Benjamin Weaver is sophisticated beyond the first, and hopefully, a harbinger of the the future. Here we get the back [...]