Tuesday, November 14, 2023

The Glass Hotel by Emily St. John Mandel

 The Glass Hotel by Emily St. John Mandel

A beautiful woman, chef on a container ship, falls overboard. This novel is a flashback as her life passes before her eyes during her final minutes. Before shipping out, she was the innocent trophy wife of a disgraced financier whose crimes resemble the real-life story of Bernie Madoff. And she met that man while working as a bartender at a hotel owned by that financier. Glass in the hotel's lobby was vandalized by her brother. Everything ties together. Economically- and beautifully-written, Mandel's style of storytelling is a pleasure to read. However, I suggest you start with her earlier book, Station Eleven. If you like that one, continue to this book to explore this talented author's work.

Friday, September 22, 2023

Space Operas Used to Be So Entertaining

When I was younger, I avidly consumed space operas in both written form and television/movies. In my retirement, I've returned to some of those. Either I've become more sophisticated or they have not aged well. Or it could be both. One of my favorite authors was Robert A. Heinlein. Now I cannot understand how it was that I found anything interesting in his work; it just seems so sophomoric. Similarly, a portion of Isaac Asimov's work including the Foundation trilogy is definitely space opera, but Asimov's writing and plotting is so straightforward that it bores me.  I have a similar feeling when viewing various entries in the Star Trek , Star Wars, or Babylon 5 franchises. I enjoyed most of them (An exception is that odd-numbered Star Trek movies were always dreadful and remain dreadful to this day.) when they first came out. For perspective, realize that Star Trek: The Original Series was first broadcast when I was still in elementary school.  But today, I find it hard to believe that I once liked much of that stuff. There are exceptions: a few Start Trek episodes still pack a punch: "The City on the Edge of Forever" and "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" are both still worth watching. Others might be too but I'm not going to endure so many juvenile programs hoping for a couple more that have enduring value.

On the other hand, The Expanse (a fairly recently-published series of space operas available in both written and television miniseries forms) gives me something to talk about with my older grandson, and it is worth reading for that alone. 

Bottom line: I used to enjoy space opera a lot, but it doesn't do all that much for me anymore.

Thursday, September 7, 2023

 Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro


I cannot shake the feeling that I've misread this book. To me, it's a horror story involving human clones fated to spend and ultimately end their lives as organ donors. The way in which they passively await their destiny ("completion") alarmed me.  This was my second book by Ishiguro. Previously, I had read Klara and the Sun. Both books are written in first person with a narrator who seems to have an incomplete understanding of the world. Both books are set in an alternate timeline that varies slightly from our own. Klara seems to be in a near future, and Never Let Me Go is in an alternate past from just after world war 2 to the late 1990s. The narration is set in the 1990s, looks back over the previous couple of decades, and focuses on the relationship among three "donors" (Kathy, Ruth, and Tommy) as they grow up and become adults.

I feel as if I was missing something. Why did Kathy (the narrator) and her friends passively accept their roles? Why didn't they run? Initially, they misunderstood their situation, but even as understanding came they still didn't react. They were created to be organ donors, but there was never any exposition explaining why their choices were constrained. They were not confined. They were free to come and go and travel. What am I missing?

I found such films (and by the way, Never Let Me Go came out as a movie in 2010) as Parts: The Clonus Horror -- wonderfully adapted in the eighth season of Mystery Science Theater 3000 -- or its higher-budget remake The Island easier to understand. In these latter stories, a clone flees upon learning their purpose. I feel as if Ishiguro must have put in something that is escaping me.

Ishiguro is a master of the English language. Even as I was frustrated with the plot, I kept reading because I enjoyed consuming the fruit of his ability as a writer. If you want to sample the output of this Nobel Prize winner, consider reading Klara and the Sun or one of his other books. 


Saturday, August 5, 2023

 Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel


Emily Mandel is an excellent writer. I just finished reading her 2022 book Sea of Tranquility, and I cannot stop thinking about it.  Having read her 2014 novel Station Eleven a couple months ago, I was looking for another book by the same author. I am glad to have found Sea of Tranquility and to have now read the latter book second. The two books are not part of a series, and yet they are tangentially-related. A major character in Sea of Tranquility is an author who wrote a highly successful book that is a lot like Station Eleven

I think both books are considered to be science fiction, yet Station Eleven doesn't contain any sort of fictional technology. On the other hand, Sea of Tranquility features time travel, air ships, lunar colonies, and colonies in the stars. Therefore, it is definitely in the science fiction category.  But definitely not a space opera. The plot moves from 1912 to 2020 to 2203 to 2401 and then swings back. Action takes place on earth, the moon, and A seemingly minor character keeps appearing and becomes more important. Similarly, unimportant events turn out to be important later in the novel and later in time; people's lives loop through time and intersect again; a passage in a novel becomes an event that happens in real life; a musical performance from the future is heard by someone in the past. I find myself reflecting on the interactions between different parts of the novel and between characters from different times.

Ultimately, this is all in service of the metaphysical idea that our universe is actually a simulation in some computer. But if it is, how would we tell and does it matter? 

I enjoyed both of these books so much that I intend to reread them both and also to look for more books by this very talented writer. There are six so far, and I hope she produces more.


Monday, July 10, 2023

 Blogs to Look At


There are certain places on the web I return to again and again. Some are blogs like this one, but others are regularly-posted comics and essays. Besides this web-log, take a look at these:

  • https://www.cringely.com/
            A former columnist from InfoWorld, Robert X. Cringely continues to put out his thoughts on the world of silicon valley, startups, and information technology. He has been at it for nearly 40 years, using his many contacts in those worlds to continue to bring bold predictions and fresh insights. 
  • https://aclownswifeabroad.wordpress.com/
            One of my daughters is now an ex-pat, living with her family in a small city in mountains east of Mexico City. Having moved out of the US during the summer of 2022, he shares her thoughts and observations concerning this new life.
  • https://xkcd.com/
            This is a great online comic. You need to be a science nerd or else willing to do some research to get some of the jokes. He (Randall Munroe) generally puts out about three new comics a week. His books are worth purchasing as well.
  • https://phdcomics.com/
            Another great online comic. So much of what it has to say about doctoral programs rings true to me. New comics come out about as frequently as new posts to this blog. That is to say: hardly ever.
  • https://www.peopleiwanttopunchinthethroat.com/
            Imagine Erma Bombeck updated to our times, with a few F-bombs thrown in, and still very funny. That's Jenn Mann. Also, she writes funny books that make great gifts for people who don't mind occasional raunchy words. She lives in the Kansas City area, and she makes public appearances from time to time. She changed platforms not too long ago -- look for her on substack in the future.

Thursday, June 8, 2023

 Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

Having lived through a recent global pandemic (is it over?), we might want to think about how things might have gone had the virus been more contagious and more virulent. Or maybe not. But we don't have to imagine it, because Emily St. John Mandel did the work for us with Station Eleven published in 2014. I became aware of this award-winning book because HBO put out an adaptation at the end of 2021. Our house is out of space for more books. If I buy a book, I need to find one to discard or give away. So, I've had a hold on the book with my public library for some months.

So....Is this a book about a pandemic? Not really, but the story begins with the start of one, shifts to fourteen years earlier, and then shifts to twenty years after. The pandemic is serious enough that year zero resets to the year it began. If you're exposed to the Georgia Flu, you get sick in a few hours and you're dead in a day or two. The only survivors are people who escape exposure. Civilization collapses. Twenty years later, there is a museum (Museum of Civilization) displaying such curiosities as electric lights, laptop computers, and mobile phones. The pandemic provides a setting and background, The central characters are famous actor Arthur Leander and child actress Kirsten. The action is mostly around the great lakes.

So....Is this a post-apocalyptic science fiction story? The book isn't science fiction; there's no technology in the book that doesn't exist today. The only major fictional device is an extrapolation of a flu pandemic that spreads rapidly around the world thanks to globalization. And there's not enough time for a miracle mRNA vaccine to be developed. So, it is definitely post-apocalypse. 

The story follows several people who have some associations with each other and with a famous actor (Arthur) who died of a heart attack on stage coincidently as the Georgia Flu was arriving in Toronto. One character (Kirsten) is a little girl in the production who saw him die. Another character is a paramedic in training who jumps on stage to try to save him. Other characters include Arthur's three wives and his child. Kirsten joins a nomadic group of performing artists. The action goes into Arthur's past and into the future of some people who knew him.

You might wonder where the title comes from. Station Eleven is an eponymous graphic novel in two volumes within the book created over many years by Arthur's first wife. Some of the scenes she drew were inspired by her own-life events. Arthur gives a copy of the graphic novel to Kirsten. Near the end of the novel, she gives it to the Museum of Civilization for their collection.

I recommend this book. The writing is excellent. And it gives cause to reflect on how things might have gone for us had Covid19 been more deadly.


Tuesday, May 23, 2023

 Academic Novels

I enjoy reading novels which contain something I recognize. An example would be Search: A Novel by Michelle Huneven in which I enjoy reading a plot and characters within the familiar ground of a Unitarian Universalist congregation even though I am a lapsed UU.

And now that I've been retired since 2018, I'm also a lapsed academic. As such, I enjoy reading fiction in which the story unfolds in an academic setting. The best two academic novels I've found so far are Moo by Jane Smiley and Straight Man by Richard Russo. The porting of Straight Man into an eight-episode television mini-series on AMC called Lucky Hank inspired me to reread Straight Man. 

A second reading of Straight Man was even more enjoyable than the first. Now having watched the miniseries had an impact on my reading. For example, both the show and the book are narrated by the title character, named William Henry Devereaux, Jr, played in the show by Bob Odenkirk. During the second reading, my mind kept hearing the narrator's words in Odenkirk's voice.

Another impact of having watched the show just before my second reading of the novel was that I spent a lot of time thinking about what was added and subtracted for the show. Hank's wife has a much bigger role in the show. The show devotes an episode to a highly cringe-worthy faculty supper which did not appear in the book. Grabbing a goose by the neck in the novel changed to shadow boxing the bird. An alcoholic faculty member changed gender. The time scale was different in that the book's events took place over a few days, and the show took place over a number of months.

But the heart of the book and the show remains examination of a man's midlife crisis, that same man's never-resolved issues with his father, the overimportance many academics place upon their scholastic niche and their own work within that niche, and the mediocrity which pervades much of academia. And a quote variously attributed to Kissinger, Parkinson, Sayre and others, "The politics of the university are so intense because the stakes are so low," came to mind repeatedly as I experienced both the book and the show. 

Never in my career did I battle a goose. Nor was I burdened with Daddy issues. Other than that, the book and the show brought back memories of many incidents from my academic career. I think many academics would recognize themselves or their colleagues should they either read the book or watch the show. 




Tuesday, May 9, 2023

Thoughts from a Trip to Mexico

 Last summer, our daughter and family moved to Mexico. Last month, we saw them in their new home for the first time. In this post, I will share some thoughts and observations.

Their new home is in the small city of Orizaba, Veracruz, Mexico. The city gets its name from the Pico de Orizaba, a dormant but not extinct volcano. I had never heard of this mountain before the move was announced. It turns out that it is the highest mountain in Mexico, and the third highest mountain in North America. The volcano is visible from parts of the city, but I didn't see it as much as I expected. In many places, it is obscured by some smaller but nearer peaks. And it is frequently obscured by rain, fog, or clouds. When I was able to see it, it appeared to be snow-covered, but my son-in-law tells me that the light color at the top is actually sand. There is snow and glaciers only on the north side. I'll have to take his word for that.

Speaking of rain, fog, or clouds, we chose our visit based on recommendations from several travel websites. We were there during the dry time of year. Locals thought our choice of visitation was ill-advised as it was also the hot time of year. But I think the temperature reached 81 F on one day and 85 on another. Most days had a low in the 60s and a high in the 70s. Dry was, by the way, a relative term. I think we saw at least a little bit of precipitation on nearly half the days and really heavy rain on three days (out of a three-week visit). My daughter tells me that it rains daily during much of the year. Every afternoon and especially during June-October. The driest months are December-April.

Orizaba is a tourist town, among other things. A nice overview video aimed at an American audience is here. I noticed many, many hotels, but only one American brand (Holiday Inn). A lack of signs in English suggests that the target tourist is a Spanish speaker. Given that there are no nearby airports, it makes sense that attracting an American tourist would be futile. I will note that the ADO bus ride from Mexico City airport was a pleasant four hours. Besides hotels, there are many restaurants and bars with many open quite late even in residential neighborhoods. The downtown neighborhood, Centro, was vibrant and lively all day and into the evening.

You need to have at least some cash in the Mexican currency. Credit cards were accepted at the mall (similar to any mall in America) and high end restaurants & stores. Otherwise, you need cash. My Visa debit card worked at some ATMs, but not others. I wasn't able to figure out why. You'll need 5 peso coins (about 25 cents American) to use public restrooms.  Be sure to have cash for buses and taxis. Small denominations are hard to come by, yet they are necessary.  Public transportation was excellent. Buses were frequent. It was easy to find a taxi on major streets. You can call a dispatcher to get a pickup on a back street. The buses are smaller than American city buses; they seat about 30 people. You might have to stand during part of the route during rush hour. Bus stops tended to be marked downtown, but not in residential areas. People just seemed to know where to wait for a bus. I think it would be unsafe for me to drive. There are subtleties to the rules of the road that I never really figured out. I thought that "Alto" was Spanish for "Stop," but that is obviously not what it means. 

On the topic of tourism: There are many small museums and many well-used, charming parks. There is a long river walk with exhibits from the city zoo scattered along the way. There is Biori, a lovely botanical garden. You can take a gondola ride to the top of a mountain west of the city downtown, and at the top are some historical exhibits and a small museum. You can walk to the top on a lighted trail, but we didn't do that. I've read online that some tourists try to walk up the volcano with a guide, but we didn't do that either.

We did go to the planetarium, the botanical garden, a mall, a vibrant downtown, and various parks and squares. There were several architecturally interesting historic buildings, many of them now operated by the city with multiple tourist-oriented tenants (museums, restaurants, bars, etc.) inside. A fairly new group of attractions included a Dinosaur Park, Casavegas (my daughter accurately described it as being like a Renaissance Fair but open every day and without the turkey legs), a toboggan ride, a small theme park, and museums.

The economy is not entirely about tourism. I was surprised to see many post-secondary educational institutions scattered through the city. I also saw some manufacturing facilities in the southern part of the city and also several large ones to the east of the city. I get the feeling that Orizaba is fairly well-off especially for being a town so far from the northern border and the economic engine of the United States. There's a lot of nice-looking houses -- suggesting to me a healthy economy.

As a retired professor of management, I was continually surprised by what I saw of the economy. I saw many people trying to make a living doing things that would not possibly be economically viable in the United States. That is, running businesses or doing jobs that would not be productive enough in the US to generate even a minimal income.  There are supermarkets, but there are also very small shops scattered in the neighborhoods.  Those shops were never busy when I was around. Most restaurants had fewer than ten tables. I could get my shoes shined for a pittance, and there were over twenty shoe shine booths next to one another in a downtown square. Similarly, I noticed clustering of shops in the downtown. So for example one block would have a number of shops selling various types of home improvement and home cleaning merchandise. Another block had mostly clothing stores. Shops were often small and very specialized. And then you'd see some bizarre groupings of merchandise. We went to a supermarket that sold food and motorcycles.

I'm pretty sure there are no zoning laws. Small shops and restaurants were scattered about residential areas. About two blocks from our daughter's family, there was an event space with occasional parties with music booming into the night. There were houses all around that! Also, you would see very high end houses next to hovels. Houses tended to be built right up to the property line with no space whatsoever between. This, by the way, made the city fairly compact and you could walk to many destinations. 

Crime in Orizaba is lower than in the cities adjacent to the US, but there were indications that crime is a problem. I noticed a heavy police presence. Based on the variety of vehicle liveries, there are several police agencies. Most intimidating were the federal police; they would have two men in the bed of a pickup truck armed with heavy weapons pointed skyward. Also, most houses looked like forts with either blank walls to the street or bars on the windows and many security cameras. Our son-in-law never let us go anywhere on our own, and he accompanies our daughter on her walks to work. I felt like this was more of a caution than a courtesy. 

It was wonderful to see our daughter, son-in-law, and grandsons. They seem to have adjusted to their new surroundings well, and I've given up hope that they will ever move back to the United States. I hope to return soon. I miss them already.






Wednesday, March 22, 2023

 Review: Klara and the Sun

Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro features an interesting use of the device of the unreliable narrator. In this case, the unreliability comes from the many misunderstandings and misinterpretations of the titular Klara. She (it?) is an AF – Artificial Friend – a child’s companion. She accurately reports everything that happens, but frequently misinterprets. As the novel progresses, her understanding of human nature progresses and the reader’s understanding of the near-future dystopian society she inhabits also progresses. Unlike many things I read, this book sticks with me. I keep reflecting upon Klara & her journey from the store to being Josie’s companion to the junkyard. There are many themes to the book, but one that settles with me is how often the well-off receive assistance from those with less yet the more fortunate never realize the sacrifice that was made. From a literary standpoint, this was the finest bit of fiction I’ve read in quite some time.

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

 Recommendations from Netflix Streaming


One challenge in dealing with Netflix is finding what's worth watching from its vast library of available titles. Some small number get a lot of buzz, but those are not usually what I like the best. Here's a list of titles which are available for streaming right now (22 February 2023), don't appear to be heavily promoted, and I think highly of.

After Life. This Ricky Gervais vehicle about a man mourning his deceased wife has a lot of sweetness. At times, it made me laugh, and at other times, I cried.

Black Mirror. Imagine if Twilight Zone were still in production and updated to deal with the current age. It is composed of excellent, thoughtful stories often featuring a twist.

Borgen. According to Wikipedia, "Borgen" is a slang term for Christiansborg Palace, a building in Copenhagen which houses all three of Denmark's branches of government. You might like this if you liked West Wing. Think of this series as West Wing with a Nordic slant. 

Cunk on Earth. Diane Morgan is excellent as the clueless Philomena Cunk in this mockumentary. I'm amazed and amused as the real-life experts she interviews are patient and polite enough to endure her stupid questions. This actress also played a minor character in After Life

Inside Man. Here we have mystery with a famous detective. That might sound like pretty well-explored territory, but here's a twist: the detective is a convicted murderer who must solve the mysteries working from prison. It's very funny in an edgy way, and it explores humankind's capacity to do the wrong thing. Performances by David Tennant and Stanley Tucci are especially memorable and entertaining.

The IT Crowd. Even though each character is a stereotype from the world of corporate IT, this is funny. We have clueless bosses, a genius man-child, a misogynist, and a goth. Of course their department is housed in the basement.

Love, Death, and Robots. An animated science fiction anthology with episodes ranging in length from about five to twenty minutes. There's a variety of animation styles and story themes. If you like Black Mirror, you will probably like this. Currently, there are 35 episodes. I hope they create and release another season.

Margin Call. A fictional drama showing how the economic contagion that became the Great Recession of 2007 to 2009 might have begun.

Molly's Game. This based on a true story drama shows how a former Olympic-level skier runs a high stakes poker game. Aaron Sorkin's clever dialog makes the characters spark. I especially liked the performances of Jessica Chastain, Idris Elba, Kevin Costner, and Chris O'Dowd (who played the misogynist in The IT Crowd).

2 westerns that break the mold. From the twisted minds of the Coen Brothers comes several vignettes of the American west in The Ballad of Buster Scruggs. And Godless shows a distaff western in which a small Colorado town populated by women faces a cold-blooded outlaw and his gang.