Sunday, November 29, 2009

Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson

First of a trilogy "The Millenium-series" introduces a provocatively odd couple: disgraced financial journalist Mikael Blomkvist, freshly sentenced to jail for libeling a shady businessman, and the multi pierced and tattooed Lisbeth Salander, a feral but vulnerable super hacker.

A 24-year-old computer hacker, Lisbeth Salander, sports an assortment of tattoos and body piercings but is oddly emotionally dissociated with others and maybe afflicted with Asperger Syndrome or something of the like. She has been under state guardianship in her native Sweden since she was thirteen. She supports herself by doing deep background investigations for Dragan Armansky, who, in turn, worries the anorexic-looking Lisbeth Salander is "the perfect victim for anyone who wished her ill." Salander may look fourteen and stubbornly shun social norms, but she possesses the inner strength of a determined survivor. She sees more than her word processor page in black and white and despises the users and abusers of this world. She won't hesitate to exact her own unique brand of retribution against small-potatoes bullies, sick predators, and corrupt magnates alike.

Financial journalist Carl Mikael Blomkvist has just been convicted of libeling a financier and is facing a fine and three months in jail. Blomkvist, after a Salander-completed background check, is summoned to a meeting with semi-retired industrialist Henrik Vanger whose far-flung but shrinking corporate empire is wholly family owned. Vanger has brooded for 36 years about the fate of his great niece, Harriet. Blomkvist is expected to live for a year on the island where many Vanger family members still reside and where Harriet was last seen. Under the cover story that he is writing a family history, Blomkvist is to investigate which family member might have done away with the teenager.

On the surface this seems to be a cold-case but quickly develops into layers of hatred and corruption against women and men. Each section has a kind of statistic about crimes against women in Sweden. But we learn so much more. I really found this book fascinating and can't wait to read the other 2. I'm wondering if the 2 other books will hold up to this one.

Interesting side-note. The author, Stieg Larsson died just after submitting all 3 manuscripts in 2004. Already book 1 has been made into a movie under the original title "Man who hated women", interestingly enough in Spanish. Considering the original book was in Swedish, I expected it to have been done in that language first.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Undertaking: life studies of a dismal trade by Thomas Lynch

This is a collection of Thomas Lynch's essays. Lynch is the sole funeral director in Milford, Michigan, a business he became a part of because his father was a funeral director as are several family members. Each essay discusses a topic linked to death. At times this becomes a bit mind numbing has he dwells on the same topics in much detail and likes lists. But at other times there is a flash of almost brilliance and you see the poet come out. I think the most moving were the essays where death is brought home to him personally but I cannot say I personally enjoyed this that much.

It was part of my bookclub so I gave it a try but it will not be on my best book list. I really felt that he liked to read his own work and wish that he had had a better editor to help him be more concise and not dupliate so much. You can tell that these essays were written separately and then just put together. I think I would have enjoyed it more as single essays in the New Yorker versus a whole book put together.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

La's Orchestra Saves the World by Alexander McCall Smith

The story begins with two young men driving in the country side looking for a particular town. They finally find it and there begins the story of La "short for Lavender". This beginning is nicely tied up in the end as well.

La's life is pretty ordinary. She goes to college at Cambridge where she meets the man that will become her husband. He proposes just a month after they meet, she doesn't love him in a passionate sense but more in a settling for what life gives her. There marriage seems to be alright except that La cannot have children but her husband seems to accept it. Suddenly her life changes when her father-in-law comes to their home to tell her that he has left her for another woman in France. Not long after that he is injured and consequently dies.

La retreats to a small cottage in Suffolk given to her by her mortified in-laws. The isolation and peacefulness suit La, who joins the Women's Land Army soon after the outbreak of war. She is lonely but enjoys the isolation and feels determined to make something of her life. She takes care of hens who belong a local farmer who suffers from arthritis. Through a friend she meets Tim, who is a local military man, who mentions Feliks Dabrowski (Dab), an attractive Polish ex-pat soldier who lost the sight of one eye and needed a job. The farmer she helps needs a worker to do odd jobs on the farm so together they get Dab a job. La finds herself attracted to him, despite her suspicions that Feliks hasn't been fully truthful about his past.

When Tim finds out La used to perform in chamber orchestras in Cambridge he suggests she start an amateur local orchestra to boost morale for both soldiers and locals. This proves an unexpected success and helps give her purpose during the war's darkest days.

This is a quiet almost observant work of life in rural England during WWII. But we see it from La's point of view as she struggles to find herself up until the very end.

I so enjoyed this book. It was the perfect book to read over a weekend. It was a nice change of pace to see the author write outside his series. He has such a way of writing the female voice that one forgets the author is a male. There is no mystery in the true sense as it is more of La's living her life.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Hitchhiker's Guide to the Universe by Douglas Adams

Arthur Dent's day is not starting well. He wakes up with a terrible hangover and the realization that his house is about to be torn down to make way for an expressway. Unfortunately it's going to get worse as his friend Ford Prefect convenciences him to go have a drink and then says the world is ending in 6 minutes. Wouldn't you know it, the Earth is going to be blown up for an intergalexic expressway.

Ford Prefect, is actually a researcher for the book "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" from a planet somewhere in the vicinity of Betelgeuse, and has been stranded on earth for 15 years. Thankfully just moments before the Earth is destroyed Arthur and Ford hitch a ride on the Vogon space cruiser that has just destroyed the planet Earth. Poor Arthur wakes up confused and sick and not able to understand anything being said until he sticks a Babel fish into his ear. After Arthur and Ford are thrown out into space they are picked up by the Heart of Gold stolen by President of the Galaxy Zaphod Beeblebrox and his shipmate Trillian, both of whom Arthur actually met months before at a party. Such impossible coincidences are explained by the fact that the Heart of Gold is powered by the new Infinite Improbability Drive. More considents abound as they zoom through space. The ending leaves it open to the next book "Restaurant at the end of Universe".

I've read this several times but this was my first time hearing it read on CD. The reader was Stephen Fry and it was so well done. I just laughed and laughed and now want to continue the adventures by hopefully another tale online.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Cold Light of Mourning by Elizabeth J. Duncan

More than two and a half decades ago, Penny Brannigan left Canada to relocate in Llanelen, Wales where she opened a reasonably successful manicure shop. She recently just lost her best friend, Emma the retired school teacher for the area. Emma had been her first friend and was one of the reasons that Penny decided to settle in Llanelen. But life must go on so she continues giving her manicures and silently observing what goes around her. But when she ends up being the last one to see bride-to-be Meg Wynne Thompson the morning of her wedding to the squire's son, she is thrust into the thick of it. During her friend, Emma's, funeral something just doesn't seem right to Penny. So she contacts the local police to report her suspicions.

Detective Chief Inspector Gareth Davies and his lieutenant Morgan are assigned to the missing persons case but after talking to Penny determine foul play may be afoot. Penny informs Gareth about the strange client whom she now believes was not Meg but someone pretending to be the missing woman. As the police arrest the fiancé whose father suddenly dies Meg and her new friend Victoria Hopkird begin asking questions that bring them to the a startling conclusion.

This starts out as a typical cozy mystery but as the mystery progresses it gets more complicated as Penny peels the layers of the various suspects. I enjoyed this story and found it to have more depth than I originally anticipated. I'm looking forward to other books by the author whether the same series or not.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Dresden Files - # 1 Storm Front (Graphic Novel 1-4)
by Jim Butcher, adapted by Mark Powers and illustrated by Ardian Syaf

This Graphic Novel covers the first part of the book "Storm Front" that introduced Harry Dresden, a modern wizard who's set up shop in downtown Chicago. Dresden is called upon to determine how a double homicide, a bloody murder in which two people's hearts exploded out of their chests! Murphy, a female Chicago police detective needs Dresden to help them figure out if this could have been done supernaturally. Along the way, he runs afoul of a Chicago mob boss, a brothel-owning vampiress, an acid-spewing demon, and ultimately a drug-selling practitioner of the dark arts.

Harry is in bad standing with the White Council that governs wizards because he survived an incident in which he killed someone in self-defense using magic. He is under the Doom of Damocles in which if he breaks any rules, he will be executed. This makes his present situation a bit touchy. He is working a case involving the use of deadly magic that requires Harry to reconstruct the original spell in order to identify the murderer. If his watchdog who loathes him catches him performing an inkling of dark magic, he will be obliterated. Feeling he has no choice, Harry soon finds himself on the abyss by the dark magic he encounters.

Because this is a partial collection of a comic book it will be awhile before we see the conclusion to the story. But it is a decent adaption of the book. I need to go back and re-read it to compare.

Sunday, November 08, 2009

The Help by Kathryn Stockett

Three ordinary women are about to take one extraordinary step.

Twenty-two-year-old Skeeter has just returned home after graduating from Ole Miss. She may have a degree, but it is 1962, Mississippi, and her mother will not be happy till Skeeter has a ring on her finger. Skeeter would normally find solace with her beloved maid Constantine, the woman who raised her, but Constantine has disappeared and no one will tell Skeeter where she has gone. All of her friends are married and having children, leaving Skeeter feeling like an old maid. Her friend Hilly sets her up with a senator's son with mixed results. Her circumstances make her tied to staying with her disapproving mother and feeling like there is no future.

Aibileen is a black maid, a wise, regal woman raising her seventeenth white child. Something has shifted inside her after the loss of her own son, who died while his bosses looked the other way. She is devoted to the little girl she looks after, though she knows both their hearts may be broken. Aibileen is suffering from a silent rage which makes her respond to Miss Skeeter and sets all their lives in motion.

Minny, Aibileen’s best friend, is short, fat, and perhaps the sassiest woman in Mississippi. She can cook like nobody’s business, but she can’t mind her tongue, so she’s lost yet another job. Minny finally finds a position working for someone too new to town to know her reputation. But her new boss has secrets of her own. But Minny has her own problems, a drunk of a husband who beats her, leaving her future uncertain. So she keeps herself pregnant as then her husband usually leaves her alone.

Skeeter wants to be a writer but all she can find is a column about writing household hints, since she knows nothing about running a household she relies on her friend Elizabeth's maid Aibileen to help her out. But until she finds something to really write about she will never become a writer. After a chance conversation with a book editor from NYC Skeeter decides to start writing about the help of the women she are friends with. Aibileen is her first interview and then Minny does too but 2 interviews are not enough and it isn't until Skeeter is herself austersied from her community do other maids decide to step up and tell their stories. Some are happy and some are terrible but all ring true. Skeeter changed the names and the locations but it doesn't take long for the people of Jackson to figure it out. When it finally the truth comes to light what will happen?

It is an interesting mix of historical fiction during a time of tremendous turmoil in the US. JFK had just been assassinated, MLK was stirring things up and you see the different sides of the story from the stories told. I really enjoyed this glimpse into a very exciting time of American history.

Friday, November 06, 2009

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

It takes place in an unspecified future time in an anti-intellectual America that has completely abandoned self-control. This America is filled with lawlessness in the streets ranging from teenagers crashing cars to firemen who burn books instead of fight fires. Anyone caught reading or possessing books is, at the minimum, confined to a mental hospital while the books are burned by the firemen. It is never really specified what constitutes an illegal book but anything from the bible to works of literature.

One rainy night returning from his job, fireman Guy Montag meets his new neighbor Clarisse McClellan, whose free-thinking ideals and liberating spirit force him to question his life, his ideals, and his own perceived happiness. Clarisse always asked why and never just accepted a pat answer. Later Montag finds out that Clarisse is hit by a car and killed, her family gone.

After the first meeting of Clarisse, Montag returns home to find his wife Mildred asleep with an empty bottle of sleeping pills next to her bed. He calls for medical help; two technicians respond by proceeding to suck out Mildred's blood with a machine and insert new blood into her. The technicians' utter disregard for Mildred forces Montag to question the state of society.

In the following days, while ransacking the book-filled house of an old woman before the inevitable burning, Montag accidentally reads a line in one of her books: "Time has fallen asleep in the afternoon sunshine". This prompts him to steal one of the books. The woman refuses to leave her house and her books, choosing instead to light a match she had concealed from the firemen's view, prematurely igniting the flammable kerosene the firemen had sprayed her house with and, in a bizarre act subsequently burns herself alive along with her beloved books. This severely disturbs Montag, who wonders why someone would die for books, which he considers to be without value.

Jarred by the woman's suicide, Montag calls in sick, but gets a visit from his fire chief Captain Beatty, who explains to him the political and social causes which underlie the work they perform. Captain Beatty claims that society, in its search for happiness and in an attempt to minimize cultural offenses through political correctness, brought about the suppression of literature as an act of self-censorship and that the government merely took advantage of the situation. Beatty adds that all firemen eventually steal a book out of curiosity, but all would be well if the book is turned in within 24 hours. Montag argues with his wife, Mildred, over the book he himself has stolen, showing his growing disgust for her and for his society.

After Beatty leaves it is revealed that Montag has, over the course of a year, hidden dozens of books in the ventilation shafts of his own house, and tries to memorize them to preserve their contents, but becomes frustrated that the words seem to simply fall away from his memory. He then remembers a man he had met at one time: Faber, a former English professor. Montag seeks Faber's help, where after Faber begins teaching Montag about the vagaries and ambiguities but overall importance of literature in its attempt to explain human existence. He also tells him what books really mean. He also gives Montag a green bullet-shaped ear-piece so that Faber can offer guidance throughout his daily activities.

After a disastrous encounter with Beatty in which he kills him and severely injures 2 other firefighters, Montag flees to Faber's house. Even though he killed the hound another has been sent after him with television network helicopters in hot pursuit. The newscasters hope to document his escape as a spectacle, and distract the people from the oncoming threat of war, a threat that has been foreshadowed throughout the book via the reader being repeatedly told of planes flying over the buildings that the characters are in, as well as a radio broadcast that says "this country stands ready to defend itself".

Faber tells Montag of vagabond book-lovers in the countryside. Montag then escapes to a local river, floats downstream and meets a group of older men who, to Montag's astonishment, have memorized entire books, preserving them orally until the law against books is overturned. They burn the books they read to prevent discovery, retaining the verbatim content (and possibly valid interpretations) in their minds. The group leader, Granger, discusses the legendary phoenix and its endless cycle of long life, death in flames, and rebirth, adding that the phoenix must have some relation to mankind, which constantly repeats its mistakes.

Meanwhile, the television network helicopters surround and kill another man (who regularly walks about) instead of Montag, to maintain the illusion of a successful hunt for the watching audience. But in the end the war begins. Montag watches helplessly as jet bombers fly overhead and attack the city with nuclear weapons. Montag is sad to think that Mildred has died but he hopes that Faber has left the city. They assume that more cities across the country have been incinerated as well; a bitter irony in that the world that sought to burn thought is burned itself. While the initiation of modern society is clear Montag the survivors strive to create a new world in which literature and intellectual freedom will prevail.

I listened to this story on CD and it included a fascinating prologue that Bradbury wrote in 1979 where he talks about the play he wrote based on the book as well as told the progress he took to write the original story and the censorship he has gotten over the years. It is really incredible how a story from the 1950's could still be relevant in an even more profound way. I read this in college and really enjoyed it even more now.

Thursday, November 05, 2009

What's a Ghoul to Do? by Victoria Laurie

Book 1 in the
Ghost Hunter Mysteries

Introduces
M.J. and her partner Gilley who run a business in which M.J. communicates with ghosts and sends them on their way. M.J. and Gilley have known each other since college and their friendship helped them develop a business together.

They get their first big client, the wealthy, de-lish Dr. Steven Sable, where are at his family's lodge is the ghost of his dead grandfather. His grandfather allegedly jumped to his death from the roof-although Sable says it was foul play. When they arrive at the lodge M.J. contacts three ghosts but none of them seem to want to talk to her. In the meantime they have a bigger problem. Steven's father, who had never acknowledged him, is also in town and it is obvious he wants something and will do anything to get it. Steven and Laurie intend to stop him but they need the help of the ghosts to do it.

Lots of sexual tension between M.J. and Sable but enjoyed the antics of Gilley, who is gay, loves computers and is seriously afraid of ghosts. This was a fun read and I will try another to see if I want to read others by the author, who is known for her supernatural fiction.