INDEX
How could I have abandoned this blog on such a depressing note as the Norton Book of Women's Lives? Well, I've got a lot on my mind. And I get intimidated by my growing list of neglected titles. This means that it's time for another set of mini reviews. Not very good ones, either, but I've got to keep my hand in.
1. Hotel Bemelmans, by Ludwig Bemelmans (1946). Karl loves this collection of Bemelmans' writing about working in hotels. The writing is swift and funny, but I had the same reaction as I had to A.J. Liebling and Calvin Trilling: I'm just not all that interested in restaurants, and particularly not in the kind of people who enjoy going to restaurants, so many of the stories about hotel patrons were wasted on me. I did enjoy reading about the kitchen work, and the banquet work, and...uh, I guess the key word here is "work"; that's what I like. You, however, may feel differently, so I would recommend that people flip through and look for the kinds of stories that amuse them, because Bemelmans provides a variety of them.
2. Dancing Girls, by Margaret Atwood (1979), is not one of her better collections. A few of the stories, notably the much anthologized "Rape Fantasies" and the title story, are very good, very funny and insightful. But now that a few months have passed, I find that I can't really remember any of the other stories. Bluebeard's Egg is a much stronger collection.
3. The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat As Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of The Marquis de Sade, by Peter Weiss (1963, trans. Geoffrey Skelton 1964). Several years ago I sat through half of the dull (notwithstanding the actors' magnetism) film version, which left me in a bad state for reading the play. But if you're in the right mood, you can finish it in an hour and enjoy it very much indeed. I found myself for the very first time ever interested in Sade. But I don't think I'll read him, because I suspect that the satisfactions of reading the fictionalized Sade in the play will outweigh any pleasure I might get from his books. Something that vexed me greatly was the appearance at the end of different English translations of a song which had nothing in common with each other. How, then, am I supposed to trust that the English translation I read was at all faithful to the German? Maybe it doesn't matter, woo!
4. Fierce Attachments, by Vivian Gornick (1987). I loved the excerpt that appeared in the Norton book so much that I ran out to Bobst to get the full memoir. Disappointment! As seems to happen in so many books about rebelling against one's parents and striking out on her own, Gornick comes off as self-pitying, vacant, and convinced that she invented the orgasm. Her rebellion is boring, because it is commonplace. What makes the Gornick's coming of age particularly bad reading is that it suffers in comparison with the depiction of her mother. Her mother was also a self-pitying, vacant, self-regarding person--but she knew how to elevate the possession of a bad personality to an art form, and Gornick exploits all these characteristics to great effect. Those parts of the book are wonderful, intelligent, scathing, and oddly compassionate stuff, and it's too bad that she couldn't be as insightful and strong (not to mention selective) when describing herself.
5. Bless Me, Ultima, by Rudolfo Anaya (1972). I started reading books by writers whose last names ended in Aa-As, so that I could solve the Margaret Atwood problem on my bookshelves by breaking up my collection of her books across two different shelves. So I picked out this famous coming-of-age story of a Chicano boy in the 1940s, whose family invites an aging curandera (healer) to live with them. But I'm sorry to say that I won't be buying a copy. It is not a terrible book. But it is simplistic and lacks cohesion. It feels like a first novel. And I don't have time for first novels unless they're pretty damn good.
6. Night Train, by Martin Amis (1999). Yet another in the Aa-As reading series. What I don't understand is how someone who wrote a novel as good as Time's Arrow wrote a novel as bad as this one. I thought I'd be riveted: the story of a hard-boiled female detective who investigates the suicide?/murder? of a young woman who had it all, and discovers.... Well, I'm not going to tell you, even though I don't think it's worth your time to read it, because the discovery is interesting, even if the rest of the book lacks a certain something--depth of character? Convincing dialogue? Interest? I do have some standards, even if Amis doesn't.
7. Cast in Doubt, by Lynne Tillman (1993). Hard on the heels of Night Train (and totally disillusioned by my bookshelf project), I read this literary mystery about an expatriate gay writer's investigation of the disappearance of the party girl next door. This was my first Tillman since the hilarious, lovely No Lease on Life, and I was sorry to be disappointed. Again. I had a feeling similar to the Gornick feeling: I simply could not interest myself in the party girl--I don't find that kind of person attractive in real life or in literature, and, despite Tillman's immense literary talent, she failed to show me why I should be interested in this one too. This novel isn't really about the investigation; it's about the discovery of the self, and mimesis, and all that smarty kind of stuff. But.... I couldn't warm to the smarty stuff, all the allusions and literary references, because I was too familiar with them. To my way of thinking, a smarty book whose characters are discussing books I've already read can't be that smart, because *I'm* not that smart. The literati in a novel should be reading things that I haven't read, but ought to read. Is that unfair? Maybe. Probably. But there it is.
8. Oracle Night, by Paul Auster (2003). At that point I hadn't yet given up on the detective genre, but I almost did. This is an entertaining book and, though I didn't mention it in reviews #6 and 7, just as readable as the Amis and Tillman. But that was about it. Yadda yadda yadda detectives and Brooklyn and stuff. The genre had nearly done me in, but then I read a GOOD one, to be reviewed at a later date.
9. The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair (1906). This is a socialist novel, still relevant today, about the dreadful lives suffered by the immigrant working poor. Sinclair was deeply bothered by the fact that when his book started to attract public attention, the only reforms made were about food hygiene for the consumers, while nothing was done to improve working conditions for the laborers. It is an important book, and even a well written book, and I wish that I had read it in high school or college, because its conclusions would have been very educational to me at the time. The book is marred by racism and by some really bad, and wholly unnecessary, utopian prosing at the end. (Besides which, the predictions Sinclair made about how corporate agriculture would benefit American farmers proved totally wrong over the course of the 20th century.) But, you should still read it, if you haven't already.
10. The Road to Wellville, by T. Coraghessan Boyle (1994). Boyle did it again. A supremely entertaining novel about quackery, set at Kellogg's sanitarium in Battle Creek, Michigan, at the turn of the century (incidentally, the Sinclairs appear sporadically as guests at the sanitarium). Boyle always treads a fine line for me in attacking both the things that I like to laugh at (self-improvement, interest in health, people who go to the doctor) and the things that I passionately defend (vegetarianism, activism). I spent most of the novel laughing (Boyle is just about one of the funniest writers I know), but angry, too. Yet, as always happens, *SPOILER* I got my validation at the end, and felt that he and I were on the same side. Is this a jejune way to read? To require validation? Yes. But it's one of the reasons I enjoy Boyle so much. Now, this novel is not so finely crafted as the collection of his stories I liked, so it wasn't quite a keeper, but I am glad I read it.
Next time, I'll review some books I really liked.