This article made me laugh out loud. Then I cried a little. That these people have nothing better to do is amazing. I understand they have issues with the idea of homosexual relationships. And I get that they want to ‘protect’ the kids. But from SpongeBob? C’mon.
Author Archives: bookdwarf
God bless us every one!
Ahem, excuse me. I got a little choked up reading this article on the wonders that are good independent bookstores. Granted, this is from a paper in the UK, but I think applies here in the US as well. My store is very much like the London Review Bookshop. We “try to filter out some elements of the mass market which the chains are better equipped to promote.” We rely on good selection, good staff, and good atmosphere. And it’s worked. We’ve been around for over 70 years!
Emerging Writers
I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention the great interviews that Dan Wickett has done with authors John Haskell and Dean Bakopoulos. I haven’t read either of them unfortunately, but now I really want to get their books.
Epileptic by David B.
Our Random House rep gave me a galley of Epileptic by David B. some time ago and it took me until now to read it. Jessa from Bookslut really loves this book, but I have to admit that I do not love it as much as she did. She’s a graphic novel fan and I am more of an admirer. I think David B. has extraordinary talent as an artist and as a writer, but it didn’t grab me with that much force.
Epileptic is David B.’s autobiography. He was born Pierre-François Beauchard in a small town near Orleans, France the middle of three kids. His childhood was idyllic—gangs of children to play with including his older brother and younger sister. That changes when his brother Jean-Christophe develops epilepsy at the age of 11. His parents embark on a quest to alleviate if not cure their son of the disease. They become involved in alternative medicine, exploring macrobiotic diets, magnetism, and even mediums. David B.’s world is disappearing as his family moves from locale to locale and Jean-Christophe gets no better.
In fact, his brother seems to give up and David B. explores the anger he felt as he feels so isolated growing up. Many of the drawings show the disease as a monster that holds him as well as his brother in its clutches. The illustrations in this book are at once beautiful and intricate. They really grab your attention and are great representations of the story and what is in the author’s mind. It’s a good book that shows a very personal struggle with epilepsy. I think the fault with it lies with me not the author. I find it difficult to lose myself in graphic novels, as arresting as they can be. Something about the movement of the eyes I think. This book is very good though.
Murakami update
Today Kafka on the Shore goes on sale. The Boston Globe reviewed it yesterday, saying among other things, “Indeed, in some respects this book is a primer on existentialism, but in Murakami’s capable hands, weighty philosophical matters are unpretentiously filtered down to a simple, poignant question posed by a boy who was abandoned by his mother, a man-child without moorings, who wonders, ‘All I know is that I’m totally alone . . . Is this what it means to be free?'”
Jared Diamond
I just returned from the reading at the First Parish Church where Jared Diamond spoke about his new book Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. He started by mentioning that he was born and raised in the area and attended Harvard. He told a few anecdotes about that. His accent may point to a Masachusetts upbringing as well, but I am not great at pinpointing them. And then he launched into a 35 minute breakdown of his book.
He started with the question of why write about how societies’ collapses? For him, it has always been one of the most interesting questions. Civilizations left behind are fascinating to teenagers. What can we learn from their fates?
Diamond then joked about the writing of the book itself and its publication. How interesting it is that his book shares the top 3 spots with books like the memoirs of Scott Peterson’s mistress and Jon Stewart. He’s a witty man—cracked a few jokes throughout the talk.
He chose several representative civilizations failures (Kakutani criticizes him in her review for the arbitrary nature of these choices, I think rather unfairly). Why do some civilizations collapse and others survive? Why do some recognize and solve their problems and others fail to see problems and go over a cliff?
He proposes a five point framework for why societies fail:
1. Societal impact on the environment—deforestation, overfishing, erosion, etc. This, by itself, is never the only cause.
2. Climate change. Again, not by itself a cause of collapse.
3. Enemies: hostile neighbors take advantage when a civilization is weakened by environmental changes and see a chance to take over.
4. Friends: trade partners can also damage as much as an enemy.
5. Political/Economic/Social cultures
A case in point is Easter Island, an extremely remote island in the Pacific (Europeans reached it in 1723) made famous for its huge stone statues built on a tree-less island without modern tools. Archaeological evidence shows that the island was once covered with forests. The islanders chopped down trees to create gardens, build canoes to fish the ocean and to build tools. By the end of the 17th century, all the trees were gone. They could no longer fish the seas and once they wiped out the animal life, there was only one animal left—humans. And as the food disappeared, agression between tribes rose and statues were knocked over. Ecological disaster set the stage for cultural implosion.
The opposite extreme was Greenland, settled by Norwegians who created a Christian civilization for over 450 years. The Inuit also lived on Greenland. The Norwegians lived on cattle and deer, the Inuit on fish. In the end, the Norwegians’ refusal to eat fish brought about the starvation of the people, while the Inuit thrived and managed to take over the island: one society made choices to survive, and one made choices that doomed them.
Diamond also spoke about big businesses—how in the past dozen years, he’s realized that some are good and some are bad (I think that previously he had regarded them as all bad). We need to figure out what motivates a company and praise the good ones before criticizing the bad ones. Also, people have a tendency to isolate themselves in First world nations now with gated communities, sending their kids to private schools, using private health care and private retirement funds. This shelters them from seeing and addressing societal problems like social security, etc. US isolation and our core value of consumerism has become dangerous in a nation where our resources have become finite.
He stated at the end that he was a cautious optimist. We have serious problems of our own making, which we can solve if we choose to. Media is a powerful resource at our disposal: we can learn from mistakes and disasters around the world, both past and present. I was glad to hear that he felt our problems were solvable, and that he wasn’t just another doomsayer.
Questions from the audience: Did he have opinions on the decline and fall of Greece and Rome? (Yes, they also matched his five-point outline for societal collapse.)
How about the decline of Russia and the USSR as superpowers? (Same.)
Could he go into more depth on multinational corporations? (They are a potent force in the world, and if they wish to survive they will have to act for the greater good, to preserve the world in which they exist. For example, Home Depot decided it was in their long term interest to purchase only sustainably-harvested lumber. He added that consumers can influence corporations through educated purchasing.)
How about the role of media? (A source of optimism for him: it can cause problems when incorrect information is spread, but it can also serve as a spur to societal progress and improvement.)
Was religion a help or hindrance? (He didn’t want to generalize; it depends on the society.)
Had he seen misguided conservation efforts? (Sure, lots. Australia introduced cane toads to control pests, but it’s become an unstoppable menace.)
How about war? (War falls under the “enemies” category of the societal collapse model.)
Overpopulation? (Yes, overpopulation is a major problem. The book closes with 12 problems we need to address, including overpopulation and per-capita consumption and waste).
It’s a crappy day for such a good event
I just want to remind everyone that Jared Diamond will be discussing Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed at the First Parish Church in Harvard Square at 6:30 tonight.
In fact, there are a number of great events this season. In February, we have among others Malcolm Gladwell, Adam Hochschild, Louis Menand, and Peter Carey. In March, Jorie Graham and Richard Parker. In April, Ian McEwan, Jonathan Safran Foer, Camille Paglia, Jeannette Winterson, and Ruth Reichl. And we are ending our event season with a real big one–David McCullough. I am going to try and attend as many of these as possible and report back.
Has anyone else read this article?
Does anyone else find this extremely disturbing? That someone should be paid such a huge sum of money to promote the ‘No Child Left Behind’ program seems totally wrong. “That almost no one would notice, let alone protest, is a snapshot of our cultural moment, in which hidden agendas in the presentation of “news” metastasize daily into a Kafkaesque hall of mirrors that could drive even the most earnest American into abject cynicism.” I think the deeper problem is that I don’t even watch Crossfire. I don’t know who to trust for the news. It seems like each media outlet has its own agenda and I feel like when I read news, I constantly have to be on the lookout for whatever they are pushing, be it pro-Bush or anti-Bush (and obviously I am more attuned to the anti-Bush stuff, but I try to see both sides).
Anyway, this article is really disturbing, but I doubt it will go far. People will read it and get mad and turn their attention elsewhere. It’s hard to constantly be angry about the state of the union especially when you feel like nothing changes and your voice doesn’t matter.
The slut makes good
The Chicago Tribune has a nice article on Jessica Crispin, the lady behind Bookslut.
” In a sea of competing Internet voices, Bookslut.com has distinguished itself through snarky, literate book reviews, thoughtful author interviews and a trend-tracking blog that attracts between 5,500 and 6,000 visitors daily.”
(Wow, that’s a lot of visitors. Now I am jealous.)
I think I’m going to throw up
It’s just really disturbing. I don’t think torture is necessary in any case, no matter what and I know that a lot of people disagree with this. People I know, who are prefectly reasonable, have told me that if it prevents more terror attacks, torture is justified. I just can’t stomach it. The pictures from Abu Ghraib show people enjoying themselves too much. And I refuse to believe that it is just a few ‘bad apples’. Once you start letting ‘small’ things slide, it becomes easier and easier to let other things go as well. It’s just too easy. So no one should be allowed to do it. I’m sure many disagree. But hey, this is America. We’re allowed to disagree with one another still, right?
