Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Book Review: Old Records Never Die by Eric Spitznagel



Old Records Never Die: One Man's Quest for His Vinyl and His Past

Author: Eric Spitznagel
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Date of Publication: April 12, 2016
Pages: 288


     I have five packing boxes of LPs from the 1960s and 70s in my basement.  These are always on the top of my wife's list of items to dispose of, but I just can't bring myself to do it.  Keep in mind that I haven't had a turntable hooked to my sound system since about 1992.  Why keep them?  This book helps to answer that question.  Old Records Never Die is beyond a nostalgia-fest, over and above a memoir and more than entertaining.  This book is for those of us who grew up flipping through the record racks at our local record shops.  This book is for those of us for whom music played a formative role in our adolescence and young adult lives.  This book is for those of us hooked on the "Classic Vinyl" channel on Sirius radio.  It is fitting that the book cover features "Let It Bleed" by the Rolling Stones.  That record along with The Beatles' "Abbey Road" and The Who's "Tommy" formed the soundtrack of my senior year in high school (1969).

       In Old Records Never Die Eric Spitznagel relates his quest to find his lost record collection.  He doesn't want to just replace the records of his youth, he wants to find his actual records!  He wants his Bon Jovi record which has an old girlfriend's phone number scrawled on the album cover.   He wants his copy of Kiss' "Alive II" which he listened to repeatedly with his younger brother.  He wants his records because he remembers where the skips and pops are on every one.  A pristine new version or, even worse, a digital version just wouldn't be the same.  The author takes the reader on a tour of used record stores, flea markets and discount stores in the Chicago area.  We share his disappointments when he finds albums that might have been his but turn out to have been somebody elses.  The reader also shares the author's excitement when he discovers a former used record store owner who has his old inventory in storage.  

     Eric Spitznagel is an executive writer for Men's Health magazine and has written essays in many other popular magazines.  He has also written six books and is a contributing editor for "The Believer" magazine.  He is a very humorous writer and combines irony with funny anecdotes, both from his past as well as from his current quest to find his records.  Author David Eggers writes on the book jacket: "When he searches for the records he lost and sold, Spitznagel is trying to return to a tangible past, and he details that process with great sensitivity and impact."

     So why go to all of this trouble?  This music is now available through the magic of the internet with just a few clicks on the computer and a credit card.   Charles Fernyhough writes in his book Pieces of Light that certain sensory stimuli can evoke very strong memories (or "involuntary memories").  Spitznagel tells how each of these records he is searching for brings back memories of certain formative experiences for him.

    So, I went down to my basement and opened one of my boxes of  records.  I randomly pulled out a copy of "Crosby, Stills and Nash" and immediately recalled their epic show (with Neil Young) at the old Capital Centre in August of 1974.  This was three days after Richard Nixon resigned (and about two days before I started medical school).  I found a forgotten copy of "Welcome to Fat City" by Bill Danhoff and Taffy Nivert, two Georgetown students who co-wrote "Take Me Home, Country Roads" with John Denver after a show at the old Cellar Door at 34th and M Streets in Georgetown.  They went on to form the Starland Vocal Band (one hit wonders with "Afternoon Delight"), an album which must be in another box.  The "Fat City" album has a picture of the two singers sitting in front of a mirror in a bar called Tamminy Hall on Pennsylvania Avenue in D.C.  I hadn't thought of the Cellar Door or other D.C. nightspots in a very long time.  So , Eric Spitznagel and Charles Fernyhough are right!  These old record albums do evoke some pretty strong memories.  Lucky for me all I need to do is go down to my basement (until they finally go to the dumpster or Goodwill).

Photo from "Welcome to Fat City" Album Cover
 

Monday, October 24, 2016

Book Review: The Power of Parable by John Dominic Crossan





The Power of Parable

Author: John Dominic Crossan
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Date of Publication: February 5, 2013 (REPRINT)
Pages: 259


      John Dominic Crossan is a Professor Emeritus at Depaul University's Department of Religious Studies.  He is a former Roman Catholic priest and was Co-Chair of the Jesus Seminar from 1985-1996.  The Jesus Seminar met twice yearly to debate the historical authenticity of the story of Jesus as presented in the Gospels.  The Power of Parable is one of twenty seven books he has written on the topic of the historical Jesus.

     Crossan begins the prologue with a definition of a parable: a fictional story invented for moral or theological purposes.  He goes on to describe his personal epiphany regarding parables which occurred after his graduate studies.  He was attending the Oberammagau Passion Play when he realized that the parabolic stories BY Jesus seemed remarkably similar to the resurrection stories ABOUT Jesus.  He asks questions: Are some, many, or most of the recorded events of Jesus' last week parable rather than history, or, parabolic history or historical parable?  Where does factual history end and fictional parable begin?

   The first three chapters of The Power of Parable define riddle, example and challenge parables.  Riddle parables are linguistic contests with potentially profound consequences.  This type of parable existed in the ancient world (Example: Sophocles’ Oedipus the King – 429 B.C.).  Examples of riddle parables also exist in the Old Testament (Judges 13-16).  The Parable of the Sower in Mark 4 is seen as a riddle parable.  Example parables are moral models or ethical stories that consciously and deliberately point metaphorically beyond themselves.  The author feels that Luke interpreted (or misinterpreted) Jesus’ parables as example parables.  Example parables in Luke include the Parables of the Lost Sheep and the Lost Coin.  The author contends that challenge parables are the best category of parables within which to understand the intention and purpose of Jesus’ stories.  These parables challenge us to think, to discuss, to argue and to decide about meaning.  The best examples of challenge parables are the Parables of the Prodigal Son and the Good Samaritan.  
     Challenge parables existed in the Biblical tradition before Jesus.  In Chapter Four the author explores the books of Ruth, Jonah, and Job to show that book-length challenge parables existed in the Old Testament before the time of Jesus.  Were challenges intended in all of Jesus’ original parables?  The author uses the Parables of the Tax Collector as well as Lazarus and the Rich Man, as well as the Good Samaritan to show that Jesus was attempting to raise consciousness in an oral situation of audience interaction.  These would be an enticement to debate:  i.e., challenge parables.  The author concludes the first section of the book by asking yet another question:  Why did Jesus choose this third category for his parabolic vision of the Kingdom of God?  The author describes Jesus as “a master paradigm shifter, a supreme tradition troubler, and, for some, a divine outlier.”  The author goes on to say: “Jesus’ challenge parables are not only profoundly appropriate, but even rhetorically necessary as a collaborative invitation for a participatory kingdom of God.”
     All of this prepares us for PART 2 of the book, “where we move finally from challenge parables by to challenge parables about Jesus and, indeed, to Jesus as the Christian God’s great challenge parable to the world.” 
     The remaining four chapters examine the thee synoptic Gospels (Mark, Matthew and Luke/Acts) and the Gospel of John.  The author is quick to point out that there is but one "Gospel" and that each of these versions should be read as "The Gospel According to Mark, Matthew, etc..."  They are four different tellings of the same story, albeit with different intent, audience and emphasis.  Crossan also introduces yet another type of parable: the attack parable.  He notes that "every attack is a challenge, but not every challenge is an attack."  If the story "calls names, doubts honesty, impugns integrity, or even negates and dismisses what it challenges, it has moved beyond nonviolent challenge to violent attack."  The author contends that Mark  "presented Jesus through a challenge megaparable, but in Matthew the presentation morphed into an attack megaparable.  Next, Luke/Acts and John both, but in divergent ways, combined challenge parable with attack parable."
     This book is not for the casual reader.  It seems more of an academic treatise or dissertation than a book intended for the general public.  Some of the concepts, especially in the second half of the book will disturb many.  We used this book in an adult Sunday school class at our church (First Presbyterian, Lynchburg, Virginia) and the discussion it generated was at times intense.  It's hard to look at the Gospels, which have been ingrained as dogma, as stories which are almost certainly historically inaccurate if not, at least in part, fabricated or greatly embellished.  The Power of Parable is a book which I am glad that I have read.  It does give the reader great new insight into the parables of Jesus.  The historical part of this I will leave to the historians and Biblical scholars.    

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Book Review: Vinegar Girl by Anne Tyler



Vinegar Girl

Author: Anne Tyler
Publisher: Crown/Archetype
Date of Publication: June 21, 2016
Pages: 240

     Any new work by Anne Tyler is a cause for celebration.  The appearance of Vinegar Girl is especially sweet since her last novel, A Spool of Blue Thread  was supposed to be her last.  This effort is a part of the Hogarth Shakespeare series which features Shakespeare's works reinterpreted by today's best-selling and acclaimed novelists.  Vinegar Girl is this author's reworking of the classic comedy The Taming of the Shrew.

     The main character is Kate Battista, a millenial who is a square peg constantly finding herself tryng to fit into a round hole.  She lives at home with her widowed father who is a medical research scientist at Johns Hopkins Medical School.  She works as a teaching assistant in a pre-kindergarten class even though she has little patience for children.  Kate's younger sister Bunny is the exact opposite of Kate.  Bunny is a attractive, socially adept and fun-loving and finds herself in chronic conflict with Kate.   Dr. Battista introduces a wild card into this strange milieu.  He brings home his highly regarded graduate assistant who is in America on an expiring visa and suggests that he and Kate marry so that his research can continue.

     Anne Tyler spins this story to a very satisfying and humorous conclusion as only she could.  The characters, like characters in all of her books, seem like old friends or neighbors by the time the story winds up.  This author is also a master at description of settings which adds another dimension to this novel.  Little details set the tone for entire episodes.  The author's familiarity with Baltimore adds to the richness of her descriptions.

     This is a short novel (less than 200 pages) which is the only disappointment here.  I wish it could have gone on for several hundred more!

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Book Review: Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk by Ben Fountain



Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk

Author: Ben Fountain
Publisher: HarperCollins
Date of Publication: May 1, 2012
Pages: 320

     When the canon of literature which arises from the war on terror is finally assembled, I would suspect that Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk would be one of the first included.  It has already been called "the Catch-22 of the Iraq War" by none other than Karl Marlantes.  It was a National Book Critics Circle Award (Fiction) winner in 2012.  The movie version, directed by two-time Oscar winner Ang Lee ("Brokeback Mountain" and "The Life of Pi"), will be released November, 2016.  This is a fantastic novel.

     The story line is fairly basic but intriguing.  Billy Lynn is one of seven surviving members of Bravo Company, whose heroics in Iraq were captured on film by an embedded journalist.  These soldiers are brought back to the United States for a "victory tour" to drum up support in the homeland for the Iraq War.  The tour culminates with the Bravo Company being included (along with Beyonce) in the halftime show  of the Dallas Cowboys Thanksgiving Day game.  The entire novel tells the story of that Thanksgiving Day, with flashbacks exploring Billy's life story and the events which led to the Bravo Company being anointed with "hero" status.

     The over-riding theme of the book is cruel irony.  It is ironic that several of these young men, not even old enough to drink alcohol during the festivities, are in the Army as an alternative to jail.  Circumstances turn them into media heroes.  It is ironic that these soldiers are feted by a gaggle of Texas oil men fat cats, most of whom used influence and money to dodge their generation's war.  It is the cruelest irony that the government is returning the Bravo company to Iraq after their "victory tour" to complete their tour of duty.  The book painfully exposes the absurd contrast of the normalcy of American life contrasted to the desperate battles our soldiers are fighting half a world away.  Even more ridiculous is the public's obsession with sports as well as with celebrity status.

     The books is far from a comedy, but it is infused with black humor.  At one point several of the soldiers sneak off with one of the waitstaff at Cowboys Stadium to smoke a joint.  When one sounds a note of caution another replies "What are they gonna' do?  Send us back to Iraq?"  Billy has an hours long romance with one of the Cowboy cheerleaders. This relationship ends poorly when the young lady, enamored with Billy's celebrity/hero status, backs off of any commitment when she learns he is headed back to combat.
     
     This book succeeds on many levels.  It is the story of a troubled young man who is swept up into a media circus.  It shines a harsh, critical light on an American citizenry which is more intensely concerned about a football game and a glitzy halftime show than the fact that their country is involved in a war and that their young men and women are being killed or changed beyond belief.  It succeeds as statement regarding futility of modern politics and warfare.  It is not anti-war as much as it is anti-hypocrite and anti-politics.

     It is rare to find a work of fiction which is both entertaining and thought provoking.  Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk accomplishes both with flourish and style.

Monday, April 18, 2016

Book Review: The Harder They Come by T.C. Boyle






The Harder They Come

Author: T.C. Boyle
Publisher: HarperCollins
Date of Pubication: March 31, 2015
Pages: 400 (E-book edition) 


     T. C. Boyle is a prolific writer of novels and short stories and a Professor of English at the University of Southern California.  He has written historical novels with quirky central characters including The Road to Wellville (John Harvey Kellogg, physician and inventor of corn flakes),  Riven Rock (Stanley McCormick, heir to the Cyrus McCormick fortune), The Women (Frank Lloyd Wright) and The Inner Circle (Alfred Kinsey).  He has also written novels which focus on major societal issues including illegal immigration (The Tortilla Curtain), identity theft (Talk, Talk) and global warming and environmental destruction (A Friend of the Earth).  The Harder They Come falls into this latter category.  This ambitious book takes a hard look at our country's culture of violence and factors which contribute to it.

     The riveting first section of the book introduces 70 year old Sten Stenson.  Sten is a jaded Viet Nam war veteran and retired high school principal.  He hates retirement: he describes it as "pre-death". Sten reluctantly agrees to take his wife on a Caribbean cruise which the author makes feel like Dante's ninth circle of hell.  Sten makes international headlines by violently thwarting an attempted robbery during a shore excursion.  

     He returns to his California home as a reluctant hero.  Seemingly everyone knows his name and strangers buy him drinks.  Everyone loves Sten except for his son Adam.  Adam is like the preacher's kid who hates church:  he was constantly in trouble in school and a total embarrassment to his father. As a young adult Adam's poor choices and increasing anti-social behavior widen the chasm between father and son.

     The third character is Sara, a thirty-something veterinary assistant and radical right-wing isolationist.  She becomes romantically involved with Adam through a very odd course of events.  She eventually plays the role of enabler as Adam spirals out of control.

     The plot careens forward towards a catastrophic ending as Adam becomes more obviously paranoid and psychotic, Sara steadfastly remains in a state of denial and Sten becomes more and more frustrated at his lack of impact on his son.

     The book is told in the first person by all three characters.  The writing is superb.  The author blames nature and nurture, as well as cultural and societal pressures all as equal culprits in creating the violent anti-social Adam.  The author is short on solutions, but this is a novel and not an editorial.  I found The Harder They Come both entertaining and thought provoking.  It is yet another excellent effort by T. C. Boyle.

Sunday, February 14, 2016

Book Review: The Life We Bury by Allen Eskens






The Life We Bury

Author: Allen Eskens
Publisher: Prometheus Books
Date of Publication: October 14, 2014
Pages: 303 

   This is an outstanding first novel from Allen Eskens.  The  author has been a practicing defense attorney for twenty years and he uses that experience to craft an intricate plot.  The Life We Bury involves a decades old crime and a potentially innocent man in jail. 

     The story starts with Joe Talbert, a college student at the University of Minnesota who needs to write a biography for an English class.  He interviews Carl Iverson, a resident of a local nursing home.  Carl was convicted for a brutal rape and murder and had just been paroled from prison because of his illness.  As Joe (and the reader) gets to know Iverson the certainty that he committed the crime comes into doubt.

    Joe's life is more complicated than the usual college student.  He has an alcoholic mother and an autistic younger brother who both cause multiple problems and distractions for Joe.  Add to the mix of characters Joe's reclusive (but beautiful) coed neighbor and there is a full and entertaining cast of players.

  The character development, plot and pacing are all excellent.  This novel keeps you guessing.  The author uses just enough descriptions to help the reader visualize settings and his dialogue is very direct.  The only flaw that I see is the actual premise of the story.  That is, I don't know how many college students would become so involved in an English project that they would be consumed with the story and risk life and limb to find the truth.  The two "kids" playing detective kind of has a "Hardy Boys" air about it.  Get past that though, and the reader has an engaging and compelling read.  I look forward to reading the author's next effort: The Guise of Another.

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Book Review: The Geography of Genius by Eric Weiner



The Geography of Genius

Author: Eric Weiner
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Date of Publication: January 5, 2016
Pages: 368

"Talent hits a target no one else can hit;  genius hits a target no one else can see."
- German Philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer

      Eric Weiner is a former N.P.R. correspondent who describes himself on his web-site (www.ericweinerbooks.com) as a "philosophical traveler".   He has crafted a unique book, the stated goal of which is to try to define what creates an atmosphere which promotes genius.  Specifically, what made ancient Athens, 12th Century Hangzhou, Florence in the 1500s, 18th Century Edinburgh, Vienna in 1800 and 1900 and Silicon Valley in the 21st Century such centers of creative genius?  Did these areas have common qualities which might explain bursts of brilliance?  The Geography of Genius is composed of equal parts travelogue, history lesson, character study and diary.

     The author travels to each of these locations to examine what he calls "genius clusters". He uses various research techniques including exploring the locations thoroughly, conducting interviews with local experts and reading contemporary writings and texts.  He does indeed identify several key ingredients to the promotion of genius.  The first of these is mentors.  Prime examples of this are the Medicis in Florence and Emperor Joseph II of Austria, a patron of the arts during the time of Mozart and Beethoven.  Weiner also notes that other attributes which promote creative genius are an openness to new ideas and chaos (which the author notes shakes a civilization out of its routines).  This occurs in areas flooded with immigrants such as ancient Athens, Austria and even Florence.   Most of these areas are located near the sea, increasing the likelihood of foreign visitors and free exchange of ideas.

     Weiner notes that a good set of attributes for an area to promote genius are "the three Ds: disorder, diversity, and discernment.  Disorder, as we've seen, is necessary to shake up the status quo, to create a break in the air.  Diversity, of both peoples and viewpoints, is needed to produce not only more dots but also different kinds of dots.  Discernment is perhaps the most important, and overlooked, ingredient.  Linus Pauling, the renowned chemist and two-time Noel Prize winner, was once asked by a student how to come up with good ideas.  It's easy, replied Pauling.  'You have a lot of ideas and throw away the bad ones.'"

    Several concepts struck me as particularly relevant to 21st Century America.  The first is the author's discussion of why these areas of genius eventually collapse:

"As we've seen, a golden age doesn't last long.  A few decades, perhaps a half century or so, then it disappears as suddenly as it arrived.  Places of genius are fragile.  They are far easier to destroy than to build.  Great civilizations rise to greatness for different reasons but collapse for essentially the same reason: arrogance."

     The author also gives a stern warning to our current education system:

"The expectation of a reward or evaluation, even a positive evaluation, squelches creativity.  This phenomenon is called the extrinsic theory of motivation.  Stated simply, people will be most creative when they feel motivated primarily by interest, enjoyment, satisfaction, and the challenge of the work itself - not by external pressures.  Many schools and corporations, by placing such an emphasis on rewards and evaluation, are inadvertently suppressing creativity."

     Finally, in what I think is the most relevant thought for modern times, Weiner quotes Plato: "What is honored in a country will be cultivated there."  Weiner then asks: "What did the Athenians honor?  They honored nature and the power of walking.  They were no gourmands but enjoyed their wine, as long as it was sufficiently diluted.  They took their civic responsibilities, if not their personal hygiene, seriously.  They loved the arts, though they wouldn't have phrased it that way.  They lived simply and simply lived.  Often, beauty was thrown in, and when it was, they paid attention.  They thrived on competition, but not for personal glory.  They didn't shrink from change, or even death.  They deployed words precisely and powerfully.  They saw the light.  They lived in profoundly insecure times, and rather than retreat behind walls, the Athenians bear-hugged that uncertainty, thistles and all, remaining open in every way, even when prudence might dictate otherwise.  This openness made Athens Athens.  Openness to foreign goods, odd people, strange ideas."

    This is a very thought provoking book.  We live in a time when budget restraints have all but removed music and the arts from our schools.  We reward mediocrity and promote conformity.  Our politicians prey on our fears and endorse closed-mindedness and closing borders.   As I listen to the brash rhetoric of another election cycle I am haunted by the author's assertion that all great civilizations collapse for the same reason: arrogance.  What are the chances that this environment in which we live will promote another "genius cluster" or golden age of creativity and innovation?   Plato's assertion that "what a country honors will be cultivated there" is disconcerting as well.

     The Geography of Genius is a totally absorbing read.  It is informative, entertaining and very thought provoking all at once.  It was already named a "Best Book of the Month" for January 2016 by Amazon.com and I expect that many more honors will follow.  

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Book Review: The Crossing by Michael Connelly



The Crossing

Author: Michael Connelly
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Date of Publication: November 13, 2015
Pages: 400

    The Crossing is the twentieth installment in Michael Connelly's always entertaining Harry Bosch series.  Mickey Haller, the "Lincoln Lawyer" of Connelly's other character driven series also is involved.  The story opens with Bosch becoming bored in his state of forced retirement.  Enter half-brother Mickey who entices Harry to "look into" a perplexing case.  Haller is defending a former gang member accused of a brutal rape-murder of a prominent L.A. public servant.  Haller is convinced his client is innocent despite overwhelming evidence and eventually so is Bosch.

     Bosch begins by exploring some inconsistencies in the case and evidence and is slowly drawn into a full blown investigation.  He has difficulty "crossing over" to the defense side and suffers the scorn of his former colleagues for his actions.  He is driven, however, by his compulsive need to know the truth.

     Bosch uncovers a complex sinister plot and cover up involving a plastic surgeon with a gambling problem, fenced stolen goods, prostitution and two rogue cops.  Although the actual main perpetrators are known early on in the story it is intriguing to see how all of the disparate parts of this complex story come together.  

     What sets Michael Connelly's books above the usual police procedurals is the care that he takes to explore the main character's emotions and struggles.  Bosch feels he is betraying his true nature by helping his half-brother on the defense side of things while he also struggles with his age, his change of work status and the impending departure of his only daughter for college.

    The sum of all of these parts adds up to a great story which moves along quickly and entertains.  There are no real major surprises contained in the plot, but the twists and turns will satisfy even the most jaded mystery reader.  I enjoyed it and look forward to installment #21.

Friday, January 22, 2016

Book Review: Mr. Fox by Helen Oyeyemi



Mr. Fox

Author: Helen Oyeyemi
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Date of Publication: November 6, 2012
Pages: 336

A 19th Century illustration of Bluebeard and his wife by Gustave Dore (Wikipedia)

     Bluebeard is a French folk tale, believe to be based on a 15th century Breton nobleman named Gilles de Rais, a confessed serial killer or on the early Breton king Conomor the Accursed and his wife Typhine.   The legend involves multiple disappearing (and presumed murdered) wives, a forbidden basement room containing dismembered corpses and a suspicious new wife.  The Bluebeard legend has even been immortalized at Disney's Haunted Mansion:

Legend of Bluebeard at Disney's Haunted Mansion (Photo from Wikipedia)

   Helen Oyeyemi has reimagined the Bluebeard tale in her compulsively readable Mr. Fox.  The main character is an eccentric writer named Mr. Fox who is poorly matched with his wife Daphne.  Mr. and Mrs. Fox are very different and even seem totally incompatible at times.  Enter Mary Foxe, a character existing totally in Mr. Fox's imagination.  Mr. Fox becomes totally enamored with his imaginary friend as he writes his stories which are filled with gruesome and sometimes creative murders.  Mary Foxe becomes quite the distraction as Mr. Fox creates in her all of the traits he feels missing from his wife.  Daphne, noting changes in behavior in Mr. Fox assumes infidelity.

     Mr. Fox has all of the components of the Bluebeard fable, the suspicions and accusations and even the forbidden room (in this case, Mr. Fox's study).  The story line (such as it is) is not linear and is very confusing at times.  The fact that all of the main characters have more or less the same surname makes following the choppy story difficult.  The real star of Mr. Fox, however, is the writing which is pristine and unique and is what keeps the reader turning the pages.

     This is a book which I would not ordinarily have read.  It came as part of a Book Riot Quarterly Box and fulfilled the Book Riot 2015 Reading Challenge # 15:  Read a re-imagining of a classic tale.  I enjoyed it more than I thought I would and would recommend it for anyone who enjoys crisp writing.