Here is a book review, in three parts going from least to most heavy. Dunno, been on a non-fiction kick lately.
1. The Pleasure of My Company ("PMC") by Steve Martin [Fiction]
I've said it before and I'll say it again: Who would have ever guessed that the comic genius behind "The Jerk" would emerge as one of the greatest fiction writers of our time? Martin has a deft touch with the English language and the ability to conjure vivid characters in a few words. Like other Martin works PMC is short and exceedingly sweet. Daniel Pecan Cambridge (the protagonist) is as lovable neurotic as you'll meet (it doesn't hurt that the story being told in the first person automatically conjures Steve Martin as DPC) and the women swirling through his life are well...vivid. You will laugh, I mean it is Steve Martin after all and you will cry b/c he gets your heart all hooked up and involved and starts tuggin those strings like Yo Yo Ma plays the cello. A really, really wonderful little book.
3.5 out of four Lemons.
2. Fast Food Nation ("FFN") by Eric Schlosser [Non-Fiction]
I am not sure why it took me a few years to pick up a copy of this one and read it. Probably because I've been living a life outside the fast food paradigm for the best part of a decade now, having read The McDonaldization of Society by George Ritzer during the middle 90s I've largely jettisoned patronizing chains, as possible. FFN is kind of a great follow-up to Ritzer's book and views the issue through a somewhat different lens. I guess for me personally FFN was mostly a re-run through truths I already hold to be self evident. But I happen to feel like I have a better handle on how food arrives at the plate than most people. What's that mean? If you haven't got any idea of how food is produced FFN is required reading. I promise, you won't ever look at a burger the same again. I will spare you all my chain screed.
If nothing else and regardless of your worldview; FFN will generate some great questions/challenges for you about how you would like to focus your consumption and what values you hold dear. At the end, I was getting REALLY PISSY as he launched into a series of regulatory and governmental reforms for the fast food problem until he delivers the final coup de grace, which transcends those suggestions in one shining, simple, brilliant moment and made it all worth "it."
Sadly, there isn't much in the way of practical advice for people to go about implementing a change. My long suffering wife is now way more on board with the Lemon Anti-Chain lifestyle after having read FFN.
Fair Warning: He has some occasionally hard words for Republican politicians.
Really though it is a quality book, one I think everyone should read. Two out of Four Lemons
3. Gulag Archipelago (abridged) by Alexandr Solzhenitsyn (Sole Jen Eat Sin)
Why oh why oh why did I get the abridged version? Cause I'm a lazy idiot I guess (in reality I just didn't see that and thought I was getting Vol. I when ordered). Now of course, after reading the abridged version I'm out to track down all of the unabridged volumes. First of all, let me say that if this doesn't haunt you, you've got something broken inside of you. Solzhenitsyn is not afraid to plumb the depths of Soviet evil and does so with a bravado and sarcastic wit that shines even through the reality of his situation while writing the book(s).
Solzhenitsyn takes you from the very beginnings of the Gulag system through basically to the "amnesty" offered up following Stalin's death. While it is about the gulags, he does touch briefly on other topics such as Western indifference, the Terror Famine, collectivization, application of the "law" etc...
Sadly, there are a lot of lessons here for us at the start of the 21st Century.
At times the abridgement is maddening. It would be worth reading all three volumes to get the whole story of his "confirmed escaper" who gets away but then the chapter detailing his time out of prison is cut
Admittedly, this is not a book for everyone. I have more of an interest in Russian history than average and am a prodigious reader. This book took over a month for me to read (a LONG time by my standards) and the other two books in this review were read during that time as well just to give me some light reading breaks. This book will drag you down emotionally and requires a stout heart with a lot of determination to force yourself to view naked evil with. Despite that, Solzhenitsyn lays in the laughs occasionally (and has a wickedly sharp sarcastic wit) and a current of positive emotion runs through the book as well (not optimism, more like good will).
It is a FANTASTIC book. Highly Recommended.
Three out of Four Lemons (Loses a Lemon b/c it is abridged)
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A note on the Lemon Scale. 3/4 is high praise indeed. Four Lemons are reserved for those works that truly transcend this world. A one Lemon book is still completely readable (I figure why waste time reviewing for you books that are less than that so the "bottom" of the scale is still quite high).
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Started "Kitchen Confidential" by Anthony Bourdain today and the first 1/8th of it ROCKS so far. It gets a tentative thumbs up.
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