Showing posts with label Magic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magic. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Special Post - Short Reviews #2

Sometimes I read books that are delightful but I just don't have time to write a full review for each. So, behold. Here are ten short reviews of particularly noteworthy titles. These are true gems, well worth your time for their unique characters, quality writing, and unexpected stories.

Happy reading.

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The Enchanted - Rene Denfeld

First Sentences:
This is an enchanted place. Others don't see it but I do
I see every cinder block, every hallway and doorway. I see the doorways that lead to the secret stairs and the stairs that take you into stone towers and the towers that take you to windows and the windows that open to wide, clear air. I see the chamber where the cloudy medical vines snake across the floor, empty and waiting for the warden's finger to press the red buttons. I see the secret basement warrens where rusted cans hide the urns of the dead and the urns spill their ashes across the floor untiled floods come off the river to wash the ashed outside to feed the soil under the grasses, which wave to the sky. 



Description:


What at first sounds like a castle of fairy tales in these first sentences soon takes on an ominous air with the realization that the "enchanted place" is a prison where the author writes from his death row cell. This is a fictionalized tale of the lives of people who have no names and are without hope, punished for their actions. Yet for the narrator, there may be a possible future through a woman and a priest who work with these men and have their cases re-examined and possibly change their sentencing. But not every prisoner, as we find out, wants to stay his execution.


Beautifully written, compelling, and shocking, the book still offers hope and love despite the darkness.


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The Thoughts and Happenings of Wilfred Price, Purveyor of Superior Funerals  - Wendy Jones

First Sentences:
It was because of a yellow dress.

She was wearing a yellow dress and her arms were bare. It was slightly tart, the colour of lemon curd. He couldn't remember seeing a dress in that shade before.



Description:

On a whim,
Wilfred Price, the mortician/narrator of this 1924 tale, proposes to the woman who is wearing the yellow dress, thus making a binding promise that he almost immediately regrets. He must think of how to break this promise of marriage to her and especially to the girl's stern father. It doesn't help that he also meets another girl who he feels real attraction to. And one of them turns up pregnant. A story of customs, social norms, love, honor, and duty ... all wonderfully wrapped together to present a picture of life in the early 1920s by ordinary people trying to do the right thing and yet searching for someone to be with forever.

A must read. This is a keeper for all lovers and readers, for people who understand what it means to love "like its possible to love when your heart hasn't been broken."


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Doc: A Novel  -  Mary Doria Russell

First Sentences:
He began to die when he was twenty-one, but tuberculosis is slow and sly and subtle. 
The disease took fifteen years to hollow out his lungs so completely they could no longer keep him alive, In all that time he was allowed a single season of something like happiness. 




Description:


Dr. John Henry (Doc) Holiday, a Southern aristocrat, moves to Texas for his health and opens one of the first dentistry offices in Dodge City. After becoming a gambler to survive when business is bad (always), he befriends Wyatt Earp in this rich, compelling historical fiction of the people and environment of the Old West. 


Highly recommended in every way for strong writing, historical details, and great characters.


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Down the Great Unknown:John Wesley Powell's 1869 Journey of Discovery and Tragedy Through the Grand Canyon - Edward Dolnick

First Sentences:
The first inhabitants of Green River Station, Wyoming Territory, gather at the riverfront to cheer off a rowdy bunch of adventurers...
Their plan could hardly be simpler. They will follow the Green River downstream until it merges with the Grand to become the Colorado, and then they will stay with the Colorado wherever it takes them





Description:


Here is a real life adventure. Ten men, including their one-armed leader, in 1869 set out 
in wooden boats to follow the Green River to the Colorado River and then row and float through the entire Grand Canyon. Uncharted and unseen water faces them, with rapids, cold, and starvation a daily trial. Hold-your-breath fascinating and gripping on every page. 

One of the best adventure books I have ever read.


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Inscribed in the plaster and finished in gold leaf, those five famous words appeared over the proscenium at the World Green Empire in north London, in the smooth white halo that formed the focal point of the theater, and surrounded the blood red, gold-tassled curtain.



Description:

Here is probably one of the most fascinating (and true) accounts of the world of magic, revealing the life of William Robinson, an ordinary magician in the early 1900s who tries to find a gimmick to make his performances stand out. He hits on the idea of pretending to be a silent Chinese conjurer, Chung Ling Soo. In his foreign make-up and Asian robes, Robinson works astonishing magic he has designed himself to audiences who soon become fascinated by his mysterious nature as much as his tricks, including catching bullets fired from a gun. 


The book shows the inner working of his illusions, his constant dedication to his craft, and the imagination and technical skill behind each performance. It is a great book that provides a peek into the world of magic, illusion, and performance.


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First Sentences:
The Essex was not going to founder immediately. That soon became clear to the men of the three whaleboats. 







Description:

Did the Great White Whale of Herman Melville's Moby Dick actually exist? Author Severin travels the world to record fascinating stories and eye-witness accounts of white whales and their behavior in today's world and in past history, leading credence to the idea that Moby Dick actually existed and was just as ornery as Melville portrayed him. 

I really loved this book, the riveting accounts from eye-witnesses, and the travel to exotic locations around the world that have reported sightings of a white whale. One of the side stories involve native tribesmen who jump from small boats onto the backs of giant manta rays to ride them upright until they can harpoon them, just as they did with whales many years ago, including, they say, one white one.

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Mammoth - John Varley

First Sentences:
The helicopter flew low over the landscape as barren as any to be found on planet Earth.
This was Nunavut. It wasn't a province and hardly a territory though they called it that. As far a Warburton was concerned they could give it all back to the Eskimos. 




Description:

When examining a rare find of a Mammoth elephant in the ice fields of Canada, a carefully-preserved man in animal skins is also found next to the animal's body. This is an astonishingly historic find. But there is something else. Strapped to the ancient man's wrist is a gleaming stainless steel briefcase, not exactly something a cave man would have in prehistoric times. 

A lovely, clever page-turner of a novel.


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Mortality  - Christopher Hitchens

First Sentences:
I have more than once in my time woken up feeling like death 
But nothing prepared me for the early morning in June when I came to consciousness feeling as if I were actually shackled to my own corpse. The whole cave of my chest and thorax seemed to have been hollowed out and then refilled with slow-drying. cement.



Description:

Christopher Hitchens is a remarkably clever, intellectual, and funny writer. In Mortality, he details his battle with esophageal cancer and his entrance into the "land of malady." While a depressing topic, Hitchens retains his caustic wit and piercing observations, beautifully writing about his own sickness, fears, treatment, friends, and life facing this disease.

As a cancer combatant, this book resonates with me as few other do on this topic. 


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First Sentences: 
Stuck to the cracked dashboard was a decal of the Dutch soccer team PVS Eindhoven.
A PVS Eindhoven fan in Ouagadougou? I tapped on the team's red and white logo and asked the driver if he was an admirer of Dutch soccer. He had no idea what I was talking about. He'd never heard of PVS, didn't give a damn about soccer. He didn't even know where the Netherlands was.




Description:

The delightful, witty true adventures of the author who hits on a scheme to sell a very old Mercedes automobile to people in a Third World country where these cars are wildly in demand. The only catch is that to make any profit at all, he has to drive the wreck himself to the destination; that is, from his home in The Netherlands to Africa, including a section across the Sahara desert. 


Desert, people, travel, and culture come into contact in adventurous and humorous situations, revealing aspects of each at their best (and worst). 



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First Sentences:
Rebecca Love met Tommy Odom ten years ago at a Renaissance fair. 
She had her booth selling clay sculptures of women's bodies; he ran the fool's maze.






Description:

Different cultures and people choose a wide variety of ways to deal with the bodies of loved ones claimed by death. The author 
explores these many methods with quiet fascination and respect, no matter how unusual the practices are. She talks with the people who offer these services and learns that bodies can be: 1) cremated and dropped from a crop-dusting plane; 2) mixed with cement that is shaped into a sculpture and tossed into the ocean as a habitat for fish; 3) buried in a natural cemetery without coffin or embalming; 4) turned into diamonds using the carbon found in their ashes. Of course, there are examples of even more exotic after-death options that she explores.  

Fascinating, thought-provoking, and most of all, strangely fun. 

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Carter Beats the Devil



Gold, Glen David. Carter Beats the Devil. New York: Hyperion. 2001. Print

First Sentences:
On Friday, August third, 1923, the morning after President Harding's death, reporters followed the widow, the Vice President, and Charles Carter, the magician.
At first, Carter made the pronouncements he thought necessary. "A fine man, to be sorely missed," and "it throws the country into a great crisis from which we shall all pull through together, showing the strong stuff of which we Americans are made." When pressed, he confirmed some details of his performance the night before, which had been the President's last public appearance, but as per his proviso that details of his third act never be revealed, he made no comment on the show's bizarre finale. Because the coroner's office could not explain exactly how the President had died, and rumors were already starting, the men from Hearst wanted quite desperately to confirm what happened in the finale, when Carter beat the Devil.


Description:

When I was thinking about what book should be the first on presented in this blog, Carter Beats the Devil kept coming back to me as the embodiment of what I hold true: that a great read is exposed in the first sentence or two, and doesn't complacently expect a reader's patience to keep reading until things hopefully heat up. In contrast, a great read immediately grabs your mind with mental pictures, interesting characters, and surprising word usage that compels you to keep reading. It is the author's job to keep you reading, to make you move from one sentence, one page, one chapter to the next. And author Gold does this from page one to the end in Carter Beats the Devil.  

Gold starts Carter with an opening sentence/paragraph containing all the elements I need to keep me going and promise a compelling read. Interesting characters? Check (a president and magician). Quality writing? Check (even got me to look up "proviso" ["A clause in a document making a  qualification, condition, or restriction. according to thefreedictionary.com]. And what exactly is done when you "beat the Devil")? Intriguing situation? Check ("President's last public appearance" possibly connected with a magic act's "bizarre finale" and the quiet statement that the "coroner's office could not explain exactly how the President had died"). I am definitely intrigued to read more. 

And who doesn't like magic? Mysterious death scenarios? Love stories? Intrigue? Carter Beats the Devil has them all, presented in a fast-paced style that will wrap you up like a blanket on a cold night. After Carter, (the lead character is based on the real life historical magician, Charles Carter), gives his last grandiose performance with President Warren G. Harding in the audience, the President returns home and dies mysteriously. The magician, under immediate suspicion, eludes pursuers and disappears. Did he or didn't he? And if he did, how exactly could he have killed a president so ingeniously that history would not mention Garfield's death as a murder? 

After this opening scene of magic performance, death, pursuit, and escape, the book jumps back to the beginnings of Carter's life, his introduction to magic via the book, The Practical Manual of Legerdemain by Prof. Ottawa Keyes, (and yes, I looked it up on Amazon and WorldCat, but couldn't find it). I love exploring new information, definitions, and pathways introduced in a great read such as this one.  

It's delightful to read of Carter's early performances and the people of his life: family, friends like Houdini, and lifelong rivals like Mysterioso. We watch Carter's drive to master old tricks, peering over his shoulder during his early years performing on the road, developing his craft, and eventually creating new illusions until he becomes a figure of international fame, as well as a hated rival and eventual fugitive of the law.

Of course, there is a love interest who emerges for Carter as well as the inevitable final confrontation between him and the embittered Mysterioso, but it is a testament to Gold's skills to make a fascinating read of these familiar conventions. 

This book enveloped me. I loved seeing in my mind Carter's performances, wondering at his illusions, and getting to know the variety of people in his life, ranging from Carter's love to the dogged Secret Service agent always in the wings, seeking to uncover the magician's role in the death of a president.

It's a long book, over 480 pages, but if you are like me, you accept and even relish the time necessary to unfold a great story with interesting characters and actions. So curl up on a weekend and let yourself fall into this novel and explore the lives of unique people and events of life magic, mystery, and love at the turn of the century. You won't regret it. 

Happy reading.  


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