Tom

The Heart Goes Last

I just finished reading ‘The Heart Goes Last’, a novel by Margaret Atwood. Atwood is justly famous for her dystopian novels and that are rich in character but sometimes flow slowly. This one is different.

The Heart Goes Last can only be described as a rather kinky dystopian novel with some lead characters that have the internal monologue of a tape on an endless loop. It’s quite funny in parts and well-written and it’s clear she had some fun with this one.

Stan and Charmaine are victims of a vast economic collapse, living in their car and scrambling for gas and food money. When a prosperous planned community offers an escape from post-apocalyptic misery, they don’t question the details. That’s just as well, since the details of Consilience don’t follow any rational logic. The thriving city is built around Positron Prison, and residents like Stan and Charmaine are expected to alternate months as support staff and prisoners, with each group providing work and a rationale for the other. Consilience promises a meaningful life of luxury, in complete isolation from the outside world. The catch, of course, is that once you enter, you can’t leave; it’s the roach hotel of the postmodern world.

Charmaine and Stan love it at first. The months in the slammer aren’t too bad – Stan tends chickens and Charmaine has a job administering medicine. Things get complicated when Charmaine becomes obsessed with the guy part of the couple who inhabits their house when Stan and Charmaine are in prison. Also, she discovers that her ‘medicine administration’ is simply a death cocktail for the unlucky recipients.

Like all dystopias, there are big brothers spying on everyone and so forth but that’s not important. Things get a bit crazier when they get involved with an underground movement to bring down the rulers of the place and the ‘possibilibots’ which are basically very advanced sex robots. Stan escapes disguised as an Elvis sex robot and, if possible, things get a little crazier.

Atwood is a highly talented and gifted writer and she has fun with this. I imagine you will too even though it has its flaws. Give it a try! https://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/30/books/review-margaret-atwoods-the-heart-goes-last-conjures-a-kinky-dystopia.html

Posted by Tom

Good Grief!

After the debate last night we all need something else to think about and calm down a bit. So…today is the birthday of Sylvia Peterson, lead singer for The Chiffons. You’ll probably remember them by their first hit – ‘He’s So Fine’. Note that they are not referring to our idiot President.

They also did this song which was another international hit for them. Incidentally, one of the writers of this song was Carole King who later covered it herself. Listen to these songs and remember a time when we were respectful of each other.

Posted by Tom in doo-wop, Music

If I Had Your Face

Book Cover

I just finished reading ‘If I Had Your Face’ a debut novel by Frances Cha. I very much liked it. It’s an interesting introduction to the lesser-known sides of South Korean culture.

It’s the story of four young women trying to make it in the brutally competitive world of modern Seoul. Covering everything from the unwritten rules of the country’s “room salons” to the excruciating pain one must endure following jawline surgery, the novel depicts South Korea’s oft extreme culture and obsessions through the lives of four young women in contemporary Seoul.

The story is narrated by the four women and is a fascinating introduction to the situations these women find themselves in as they try to find a life, and love, in a hyper-competitive world dominated by men. Rather than try to describe the book myself, here is a link to a NYT interview with the author. Give it a try – you’ll enjoy it! https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/14/us/author-frances-cha-on-achieving-the-feminine-ideal.html

Posted by Tom in Books, Literature

Milkman

I’m reposting here some of the book reviews I originally posted on Facebook. I’m trying to pick out those books that I loved the most and this is certainly one. I said in the original interview that it’s not an easy read but, upon reflection, I don’t think that’s true. Once you get used to her style, the book moves right along. Here’s my original review…

I just finished reading “Milkman” by Anna Burns, winner of the 2018 Man-Booker Prize (awarded annually for the best original novel written in English and published in the UK.) It’s a wonderful book that I really liked but it’s not for everyone. It’s told in an digressive, ruminative manner with repetitions and explanations that jump around in time – a bit like stream of consciousness but easier to read.The narrator is an unnamed young woman in an unnamed city in Northern Ireland during ‘The Troubles’ in the 1970s when sectarian violence threatened to overwhelm everything. Not only is the narrator unnamed (she’s referred to as ‘Middle Sister’) but so is everyone else. the city in which she lives is unnamed, England is referred to as ‘the country-across-the-water’ and characters are referred to by their habits or their relationship to the narrator (First Sister, Maybe-Boyfriend, Tablets Girl). The people who run her ‘area’ are the ‘Renouncers of the State’ or just Renouncers who wear balaclavas or masks, identify and execute informers and battle the police and the soldiers of the country-across-the-water.The namelessness is superstitious and futile. The idea that if you don’t name something it won’t have power over you. But everything about you gives away your allegiance even to the tea you drink: “There is “[t]he right butter. The wrong butter. The tea of allegiance. The tea of betrayal.” Middle Sister tries to hide from all of this (or merely survive) by shutting it out – reading only 19th century books because she hates the 20th century. Her life changes when she is approached by The Milkman who is a high ranking person in the Renouncers and though she tries to ignore him, he keeps showing up and everyone thinks she is ‘with him’. Her paranoia grows as does the gossip around her but she keeps going and her sense of humor and wry observations of the people and customs and goings-on around her keep us going. The author’s use of words is wonderful – they are wonderful words, piled on top of one another in glorious heaps. Her dad’s depressions were “big, massive, scudding, whopping, black-cloud, infectious, crow, raven, jackdaw, coffin-upon-coffin, catacomb-upon-catacomb, skeletons-upon-skulls-upon-bones crawling along the ground to the grave type of depressions.”The whole plot is compressed into the novel’s first sentence, but it’s such an enigmatic declaration that we won’t understand it for more than 300 pages: “The day Somebody McSomebody put a gun to my breast and called me a cat and threatened to shoot me was the same day the milkman died.” I loved this book but it takes some time and a bit of effort. You should really read this book. It’s available on the Maryland Digital Library.

Posted by Tom in Books, Literature

Fun to watch and hear

I see that the Metropolitan Opera has cancelled their entire 2020-2021 season which could be a bad sign for a lot of other live arts venues and organizations. I don’t consider myself an opera aficionado but I do enjoy a lot of the music and find some of the opera ‘flashmobs’ particularly fun to watch. This one is ‘The Drinking Song’ from La Traviata which seems to be particularly popular with flash mobs.

Posted by Tom in opera