There’s
something to be said in favor of a biography of a living person. What you get
is incomplete, but unless it’s a book about Hitler or someone like that, less depressing
as you get to the end. Here, in the case of guitar hero Eric Clapton, you have
the additional benefit of capturing the subject at a high point in his
celebrity.
“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
Sunday, January 21, 2018
Sunday, January 14, 2018
Marco Polo, If You Can – William F. Buckley Jr., 1982 ★½
Can
a capitalist lackey catch a break after crashing a spy plane in Khrushchev’s
Russia? Will he effect a secret plot to tilt the balance of power for the free
world, still reeling from Sputnik and the rise of the Iron Curtain? Or will ruthless
interrogators wear him down?
I
wish I could have cared more this time than the last time I read one of William
F. Buckley Jr.’s spy novels starring his dashing alter-ego Blackford Oakes;
that being The Story Of Henry Tod.
Unfortunately, while the problems encountered this time were different, the end
result was the same: a flat tale pocked by stale characters and coincidence.
Sunday, January 7, 2018
Kill The Dutchman! – Paul Sann, 1971 ★★★½
The
book sat in my father’s den cabinet for years; I knew its title back
when Richard Scarry and Crayola were my reading companions. Forty-six years
later I finally got around to reading Kill
The Dutchman!, wondering after just one thing: What took me so long?
Wednesday, January 3, 2018
Unconditional Surrender – Evelyn Waugh, 1961 ★★★★
By
any conventional benchmark, Unconditional
Surrender is a depressing way to wrap a trilogy. Materialism triumphs over
spirituality and humanitarianism. People we care about come to bad ends. Long-suffering
protagonist Guy Crouchback suffers more. Yet the novel manages to be uplifting,
at times even amusing.
What
is it about Evelyn Waugh that makes misery positive company?
Monday, January 1, 2018
Officers And Gentlemen – Evelyn Waugh, 1955 ★★★
The
middle volume of any trilogy is heavy lifting. Either the author makes a case
for triple the usual reader investment, or weaknesses in plot and character
manifest themselves as unclearable hurdles.
Evelyn
Waugh’s Officers And Gentlemen makes
it over this challenge, just. It builds up the conflicts developed in his prior
“Sword Of Honour” installment Men At War,
introduces new characters to replace ones lost, and plunges protagonist Guy
Crouchback into real combat.
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