A Murky Business by Honoré de Balzac My rating: 4 of 5 stars Did Balzac write anything crummy? I’m not expert enough to know. This is another good one, though you really need a working knowledge of revolutionary and Napoleonic France to follow the plot. View all my reviews
Continue readingMonth: October 2012
Go cat go
Really obscure epiphany time: Listening to some early Carl Perkins tunes (best rockabilly ever), I realized that when he refers to “cats” he doesn’t mean guys, which is what I always assumed based on more recent usage, but to girls. That would include the famous “go cat go” line in Blue Suede Shoes.” Makes more sense.
Continue readingReview: What’s the Matter with White People? Why We Long for a Golden Age That Never Was
What?s the Matter with White People? Why We Long for a Golden Age That Never Was by Joan Walsh My rating: 5 of 5 stars A resonant and highly readable political memoir that attempts to unlock some of the most stubborn mysteries of modern politics, including why false promises work so well, without falling back on the tempting conclusion that people are just dumb. Walsh writes from a highly personal perspective, and it works. View all my reviews
Continue readingReview: public phenomena
public phenomena by Temporary Services My rating: 5 of 5 stars A cool little art book about the everyday, and mostly inadvertent, aesthetic experiences that turn up as people attempt to the adapt the urban environment to their needs (and occasionally as the urban environment adapts to people). Photos range around the world showing everything from post-snowstorm parking blockades in Chicago to makeshift barriers in Ljubjana to ghost houses all over. The book itself is a form of the adaptation it celebrates. Taking note of the aesthetic content hidden in plain view by the side of the road is a
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