The
movie business makes for strange bedfellows. How else to explain the collaboration
of Evan Hunter, gritty, streetwise creator of The Blackboard Jungle and the 87th Precinct series of
police procedurals under the penname “Ed McBain”; with that genteel and sophisticated
Master of the Macabre himself, Alfred Hitchcock? Hardly birds of a feather, but
what about results?
“At a certain point, books can have some usefulness. When one lives alone, one does not hurry through books in order to parade one’s reading; one varies them less and meditates on them more.” Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Thursday, May 18, 2017
Monday, May 15, 2017
Tintin In America – Hergé, 1932 [Revised 1945] ★½
No
great artist should be judged by their earliest published work; when plying
one’s craft it takes time to develop a signature style and voice. You might
think such consideration a bit much when said creation involves popular
entertainment aimed mainly at children. But in such a case achieving the right
calibrations can be even harder.
Case in point: The legendary Belgian
cartoonist Hergé.
Saturday, May 13, 2017
The Derby – Bill Levy, 1967 ★★½
The Most Exciting 200 Minutes of Sports
Since
1875, the Kentucky Derby has been drawing the greatest race horses ever known.
Okay, not Man O’ War or Seabiscuit, or famous 20th century
racehorses outside North America. But hundreds of top American thoroughbreds have
beaten their hooves along the dirt track of Churchill Downs for what is often
called “the most exciting two minutes of sports.” After nearly 100 years of
this, Bill Levy wrote a coffee-table book commemorating the event.
Wednesday, May 10, 2017
The Playboy Interviews With John Lennon & Yoko Ono – David Sheff, 1981 ★★★½
John
Lennon had the most fascinating life of any ex-Beatle, despite it being so much
shorter. In a succession of distinct if not exclusive public identities, he
went from blissful dreamer to tortured artist to committed radical to
party-hearty studio rat and finally bread-baking papa. Much of that time he was
in the company of his lover Yoko Ono, a conceptual artist who saw in John’s
celebrity an opportunity to advance big ideas and challenge stereotypes.
Wednesday, May 3, 2017
Masterpieces Of Mystery: The Golden Age, Part I – Compiled by Ellery Queen, 1977 ★★
What Was So Golden about the Golden Age?
Detective
fiction long ago moved from the whodunit to the whydunit; today it often
employs a complicated, psychological approach. So what can be learned from this
anthology of mystery writers from its simpler Golden Age?
Do any of them still
stand up to modern scrutiny, apart from Agatha Christie, still the reigning
Shakespeare of the form? After reading through these 350 pages, I’m still
wondering.
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