Author Archives: bookdwarf

Ride a Cockhorse by Raymond Kennedy

Frances “Frankie” Fitzgibbons wakes up one day transformed from the complacent, gentle bank loan officer into a mad emperor who flexes her power with over the top self-confidence and charisma. Her first act with her new found powers is to seduce the high school drum major before she tackles taking over the bank. First published in 1991, the novel satirizes the excesses epitomized by the banking crisis of the late 1980s. Given the financial turmoil of the past few years, Ride a Cockhorse is just as relevant, and just as funny, today. You’ll find yourself both repulsed and attracted to Frankie as she gathers her entourage around her like a mad dictator. Her ludicrous, hilarious ride to the top is not to be missed.

Imogen Robertson and the Genre Canard

It’s sort of over to debate the merits of continuing to distinguish between genre fiction and literary fiction. Ursula K. LeGuin and Margaret Atwood were the ones who pointed it out to me first, and of course John Banville/Benjamin Black has hashed that out again more recently.

Nonetheless, I think it’s worth pointing out Imogen Robertson. Yes, there’s a murder involved in her stories, and an eccentric investigator and an intrepid lady. But Robertson doesn’t allow those elements to be a crutch. The characters are still finely drawn, the historical background carefully researched and annotated.

And frankly, the historical setting makes all of it quite plausible. In the late 18th century, there were in fact quite a large number of eccentric natural philosophers and intrepid ladies struggling against the confines of their societal expectations. Robertson’s fiction may involve murder and intrigue, but you’re doing yourself a disservice if you pigeonhole and ignore her.

Her latest, Island of Bones, should be available any day now. If you haven’t read the first two — Instruments of Darkness and Anatomy of Murder — start now and you’ll be able to sink into all three in a row.

Wise Words from The Wednesday Chef

From My Berlin Kitchen by Luisa Weiss:

I guess, dear reader, I want to tell you that even when you have found your person in this world, the person who you know, deep down in your mitochondrial DNA, is meant to be by your side in this life, it is no guarantee that this person will not also drive you completely batshit insane at some moments along the way. It is unfair to expect your sweetheart to be a perfect person or to consider yourself above reproach just because you love each other. Even if you have found your one true love, you will have exact ideas about how to clean a floor, whether your family is nuts of simply lovable, and just what, exactly, are the requirements for being a good driver.

I can’t tell you how much this paragraph spoke to me. Reading it makes me  even more eager to meet her at our event next Tuesday, October 2nd. Details are here.

Gone to the Forest by Katie Kitamura

Katie Kitamura’s spare novel Gone to the Forest begins in an unnamed country on the brink of civil war. The details on the setting and time period might be vague but it sets the tone for the main characters who seem lost in a fog of colonialism. Life for the white settlers has become more unstable. Tom and his father live on a large family estate, and run it as a fishing resort for other rich whites. Lacking his domineering father’s charisma and initiative, Tom seems an unlikely fit to one day inherit the estate.

His father arranges everything, including Tom’s engagement to the neighbor’s visiting niece, Carine. That engagement doesn’t stop his father from bedding her, nor does it stop Carine from becoming the victim of a horrible group assault at a dinner party. The family, the farm, and the country all seem to unravel at the same time, and Tom is ill-equipped to navigate through increasing confusion and violence.

The spare prose highlights the fragility of the country and the characters themselves. It’s a story that lingers in one’s memory like a sort of deja vu, but the details aren’t the point: It’s the feelings the novel evokes that are worth remembering.

The Poached Egg’s Moment In The Sun

Poached eggs are having kind of a moment these days, which is fine with me, although Bookdwarf isn’t as much of a fan. I like the way a poached or sunny-side-up egg can be both a protein and a sauce in a dish. But sometimes they don’t quite work out.

One of my friends has been recommending the Double Awesome sandwich at the Mei Mei Street Kitchen truck, so when I saw on the Boston Food Truck Schedule that it would be near my work, I stopped by. It’s a scallion pancake wrapped around two poached eggs, cheese, an herb pesto, and spicy ketchup.

That’s an ambitious project, especially for a food truck: It’s a lot of ingredients, a lot of last-minute assembly, and a completely absurd declaration of love for poached eggs. I can think of few things quite so ill-suited to being folded into a sandwich and served in a little box with no utensils. I guess it helps that you can eat this thing standing up, because you can bend forward at the waist to avoid dripping eggs all over your clothes. It’s messy and rich and soft and fun.

But it wasn’t great. The cheddar cheese overwhelmed the scallion pancake. The pesto was runny and under-salted and, if I can be pedantic, not technically pesto. The ketchup didn’t make sense with the pesto or the scallion pancake. Good, perhaps, but not up to the level that you’d expect from a revolutionary hipster food truck, not quite double awesome.

In contrast, Strip-T’s out in Watertown has a way with runny eggs and with everything else. You may have heard of this place, but if you haven’t, expect it to be everywhere shortly. It’s a great story as well as a great restaurant: Tim Maslow returns to his father’s old-school neighborhood joint after a stint with David Chang at Momofuku, and starts changing a menu that had been the same for 20 years. Cue the buzz on Chowhound, strong reviews from the Boston Globe, and coronation from Bon Appetit, and it rapidly becomes hard to get a table on a weekend.

It’s not just buzz. Grilled romaine with oxtail and poached egg – amazing. Chicken wings with a sweet/savory sauce made from Moxie – amazing. Homemade whole-wheat orichette with bottarga and tomatillos – amazing. A hamburger with a fried egg (yeah, there’s that runny egg again, and you can dip your fries in it) – amazing. Tripe with grilled cabbage – amazing. A donut – amazing. Panna cotta with raspberries and coconut pound-cake croutons and sea salt – amazing.

It all comes together: Concepts, execution, reasonable prices that come with a location on a side street near the Arsenal Mall. And those runny eggs.

War, What is it Good for?

Two excellent novels dealing with the Iraq War land this month on bookstore shelves, but they couldn’t be more different.

Kevin Powers wrote Yellow Birds in 2006, after two years in Iraq. His experience obviously shapes this novel about twenty-one year old Private Bartle and the younger eighteen year old Private Murphy. Bartle is charged with taking care of Murphy while deployed in Iraq. Powers tells their stories going back and forth between the war and the return home. He also makes you feel the the psychological effects of the war with the brutal descriptions of the soldiers becoming more and more aware of the pointlessness of their actions. Someone shoots someone and then they retaliate, going on and on and on in an endless loop. Powers makes you see and feel through Bartle’s eyes, a somewhat scary but powerful feeling.

Often the war gets drilled down to facts, drowning out everything to do with feelings. This is where David Abram’s novel Fobbit gets its story. His satire, which features the Army’s public affairs office or PAO in Baghdad, gets its from an acronym; FOB is Forward Operating Base with the “-bit” added to remind you of the Hobbit. The soldiers on the front lines don’t have particularly high opinions of those working back at the base, avoiding combat. The many acronyms thrown around in the novel only highlight how far removed they are from normal lives. Fobbit manages to be both ridiculous and serious at the same time. In Abram’s depiction of the war, those who are deployed to the war but not on the front line get their own version of PTSD. The folks back at home only get to see a portrait of the war that has been heavily edited by the Army’s PAO office. This black comedy works with enough absurdity mixed with real gory details.

The Story of My Assassins

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: A crusading investigative journalist with a knack for seducing disproportionately hot women finds himself in trouble when he uncovers…

Tarun J Tejpal’s new novel The Story of My Assassins (available for pre-order now and on shelves next month) isn’t that book. It’s way better.

For one thing, it’s better written. Maybe I just think that because of the way it’s littered with wonderfully new and exciting Hindi profanities, but I’m pretty sure it’s because it’s actually just well written.

And while the narrator is not exactly a likeable guy, I feel that he’s more believably unsympathetic than the characters in a certain series of Scandinavian thrillers.

Here’s how it opens: Sunday morning, he goes to the office of his failing news magazine to get away from his wife. His wife calls, but he’s ignoring her. Co-workers call, but he doesn’t want to deal with work either. Eventually the police and his wife and several TV news crews arrive and tell him there’s been an attempt on his life and they’re going to have to put him under 24 hour police protection. He ducks away from them all and heads to his mistress’ house. He doesn’t tell her about any of this, and she finds out from watching the news. He’s not, in other words, very honest or good to his family, his co-workers, his career, or even his mistress.

He’s not even sure if there’s actually been an attempt on his life. Maybe there has. Maybe he’s being set up for notoriety and there will be some kind of a sting later. The most likely explanation, he thinks, is that the assassins are being set up, and he’s just a convenient pawn. Despite his reputation as an investigative journalist, he makes every effort to avoid knowing the truth, but it eventually seeps in around the edges. It whispers in his ear: This isn’t even about you. You’re just a coincidence.

Later, the book profiles the five maybe-assassins, tracing their rise and fall, the coincidences and ways that their lives, too, are beyond their control, that the plot and theme involve them but don’t actually care about them.

It’s kind of brutal like that. And kind of brilliant.

NW, Three Ways of the Saw

From Mr. Bookdwarf:

I’m loving Three Ways of the Saw. It reminds me of the Denis Johnson short stories in the way it evokes a sort of fractured intensity of emotion.

Is there a better observer of English life than Zadie Smith? I suppose Phillip Hensher would be the other contender, although books like King of the Badgers illustrate a totally different England.

I also suppose I can’t really be a judge of authenticity. I haven’t organized an orgy in a gossipy seaside town, or been a poor teenage girl struggling to find my way in Northwest London. I don’t know if Hensher or Smith are truly accurate. But they certainly feel real.

I read an excerpt of NW in the New Yorker and loved it, and then tried to read the whole novel, but it just seemed so unutterably sad, and the characters so full of misgivings about themselves, that I had to stop. Beautifully rendered, realistic, heartbreaking sadness. I’m not… I just couldn’t do it.

Confession: I Love Westerns

My sister and I were obsessed with the channel AMC when we were kids. Left home along during the hot Alabama summers, staying indoors was often our only choice. This was way before their new programming with shows like Mad Men and Breaking Bad, when you could flip on the television to find some black and white movie playing at all hours (except in the middle of the night when it was all infomercials of course). We watched it all–the Thin Man series, anything with Cary Grant or Fred Astaire. Some Like it Hot with Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, and Jack Lemmon made us laugh hysterically.

I grew to love the Westerns. I was indiscriminate at the time, watching anything with cowboys and guns. Stagecoach might be on my top ten favorite  movies of all time. As I grew older, I became more discerning and critical of movies, as one does. Several movies made me realize that they could transcend the genre–The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of couse. And in particular Unforgiven in 1992 changed the way I watched Westerns, like many movie goers I imagine.

Of course as a huge reader, my movie habits transcended into my reading habits. I admit it, I read a bunch of Louis L’Amour. It was like my Sweet Valley High: Formulaic easy reads that fed my need for cowboys, a little dirty, doing stuff, with hearts of gold etc. I grew out of it when I discovered John Steinbeck.

But I still get excited when I see novels set in the West. The Sisters Brothers by Patrick deWitt was one of my favorite novels of 2011 (my dog Lucy thought it should have won the Booker). When I read about Little Century by Anna Keesey, my Western Spidey sense tingled. The novel mixes the classic genres of frontier and western, which is fine by me–after all, my sister and I also  loved Little House on the Prairie.

The novel opens with the arrival from Chicago of Esther Chambers to the small town of Century, Oregon; the town desires more than anything the railroad building a station and tracks through the town. Esther travels there after the death of her mother to find the last living relative. In Century, she finds a town in limbo, struggling between cattle herders and sheep herders. Her cousin Pick is a cattle herder and immediately she senses the animosity between the two groups. Pick talks Esther into helping his cause by falsely filing a claim on a piece of land that gives him control of the town’s water supply. At first, Esther gives her cousin her full support but as she lives in Century, she gets to know more people and sees beyond the black and white picture Pick paints for her. She also meets Ben Cruff, a sheep herder, whose friendship turns into a romance that will change her mind.

Though seemingly a conventional novel, I found Keesey’s writing really elevated the story. Long descriptions of the landscape, the cold winters, and her relationship with both Ben and Pick make it an artistic success as well as a home-run for Western fans.

Dinner Tonight, Well Last Night Technically

Mr. Bookdwarf and I have been eager to try cooking more recipes from Naomi Duguid’s Burma: Rivers of Flavor since our dinner party a few weekends back. Tonight we opted for a simple dish called Chicken in Tart Garlic Sauce.

Mince lots of garlic and ginger and make it into a paste with some salt. Heat peanut oil and saute until soft. Add in some green cayenne chilies, which I just happen to have growing on our porch. Add in some boneless chicken breast sliced into smallish pieces and cook for several minutes. Add in a cup of water. At first you think, woah that’s a lot of water. Trust me you want the sauce. It looks bland but it packs a lot of flavor. Bring the water a boil and continue cooking until the chicken is cooked through. Take off heat and add two tablespoons of lime juice. Salt to season. Garnish with some cilantro.

We made some brown rice to go with the dish. I winged a broccoli dish as well by stealing some of the ginger, garlic, and peppers before adding the chicken. Steam the broccoli. Drain the pan. Heat a little oil and add back in the aromatics. Toss in the broccoli and coat. I then threw in some fish sauce and chili oil that I had made for the dinner party. Delicious!