Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Perjury – Allen Weinstein, 1978 ★★★★

Front Cover
Probing the Fundamental Why of Alger Hiss

Once upon a time, people wondered whether U. S. State Department official Alger Hiss transferred stolen government documents to Soviet intelligence. Then the question became more a matter of why.

Like why did Hiss steal the documents, and why did he keep lying about it after he served his time, right up until he died?

“The fundamental why” is the way Joseph Conrad put it in his epic novel about the nature of guilt, Lord Jim, contrasting it with “the superficial how.” Allan Weinstein quotes that passage in his famous takedown of Hiss, Perjury, which pretty much laid out the how part to most people’s satisfaction more than 30 years ago. Since then, he has never as satisfactorily addressed the why.

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Needful Things – Stephen King, 1991 ★½

Let the Buyer Beware

Imagine a whole town crammed to the gills with Gollums; a countryside alive to the steady murmurings of “My precioussss” every evening as the lights go down. If that sort of thing impresses you as profound rather than monotonous, Stephen King has just the novel for you.

As the setting for several King novels and shorter stories, Castle Rock, Maine has seen a lot of crazy things. Now it’s Leland Gaunt’s turn to warp its reality.

Gaunt is the proprietor of a new store, “Needful Things,” a sort of curio shop offering offbeat merchandise catering to the special desires of a diverse array of local residents. The price is always right, too; just what the would-be buyer has in hand.