Monday, June 18, 2012

I Think My Big Brother Lives On This Street




Maybe 1984 wasn't about dystopian futures or fascism or any of those other things.  Honestly, I always wondered if maybe George Orwell just had an older brother who was a dick.



So if you don't go within 500 meters of this sign, Big Brother isn't watching you.






Monday, June 11, 2012

Review: War And Peace, by Leo Tolstoy



War And Peace (Вoйнá и мир, Bitches)

Leo Tolstoy
1869


2 Alexandrine Couplets About War And Peace
It was the best of times—it was the worst of times
         Oh wait, that’s the wrong book—this one is much better.

Russian people hang out—speak a lot of French,
     fall in love, go to war—and then come back, mostly.


War And Peace.  Written by this guy:


I was going to be Tolstoy for Halloween, but it was too scary.



I once made it a goal to read the world’s longest novels.  I read them, so you don’t have to.  Except I didn’t get past the first 100 pages of Ulysses.  I couldn’t even finish that one on cd. 

The Oxford World’s Classics Edition of War And Peace weighs in 1440 pages and 561,093 words, though this varies based on translation. 



Eighteen trees died to make just this copy.


It’s a bit shorter in Russian because they have fewer words than English.  Regardless, it’s one of the longer novels ever published.  Were you at war, you could use it as a weapon; were you at peace, you could build houses out of it.  Though if you think of the Harry Potter series as one giant novel, that’s actually about twice as long – over 1,000,000 words.  Just sayin’.

  
J. K. Rowling devoted more pages to Luna Lovegood than Leo did to Napoleon Bonaparte. 
  

So what is it about?  Well, you know . . .



war . . .







and peace.


The story is too long to narrate here.  It starts before the Napoleonic Wars in Russia and ends after them, so the early 1800s.  Most of the characters are Russian aristocracy, but the book paints a vibrant picture of people throughout the country.

War And Peace is often considered the greatest book in Western Literature.  That doesn’t mean it’s the most fun or entertaining, has the best prose or construction, or is the best in any single way.  It means the totality of the book, the thing as a whole, towers above the rest.  Here’s why: 

War And Peace has everything.  I said this earlier about The Three Musketeers, but I was only referring to plot.  War And Peace has action, intrigue, romance, blah blah blah.  It’s as much a love story as it is a Western, a political treatise, a comedy, and a history.  But it also has every lifestyle, discussing in detail the rich, poor, royalty, merchants, slaves, men and women, soldiers and civilians, the sick and the healthy, rationalists, cultist, anarchists.  It uses every point of view and plot device.  It ranges from 3rd person omniscient to 1st person close.  It has long, cerebral, typically Russian inner monologues, and fast-pasted battle scenes.  It literally does everything.  I suppose it had the room to. 

You see, War And Peace really does have everything.  We could make allotments for some sci-fi ideas that didn’t exist yet, but the essential nature of the statement I’m about to make is true:  If you’ve read War And Peace, you’ve read every story ever told, and every way of telling a story.  Pause for a moment and let that sink in. 

Would I recommend it? – Only if you’re unemployed, a series bibliophile, or one of the 12 lovers of Russian literature out there.  It’s not that it’s not for everyone, it’s just that, like all Russian literature, it’s a commitment.  

Then again, if you’ve read all the Harry Potter’s in a row, this is no big deal.  


This is twice as long, so you have 1/2 the excuse. 




Monday, June 4, 2012

Review: The Rum Diaries, by Hunter S. Thompson


The Rum Diaries
Hunter S. Thompson
Written: 1959 (or so)
Published: 1999


An Alexandrine Couplet Containing Paul Kemp’s Advice For Your Early 20s 
                                         Move to Puerto Rico – wander around drinking
                                         and if you have spare time – existential crisis


There’s a reason that The Rum Diaries took so long to get published, and a reason it’s not Hunter’s most popular book.  For one thing, The Rum Diaries is NOT gonzo journalism.  It’s not exciting, thrilling, or different.  Hunter fans will tell you it’s really slow, laconic, and moody.  He wrote it 10 years before the Kentucky Derby article got him noticed and cemented his style. 


It’s like this painting


At least in pacing and content, The Rum Diaries is the opposite of virtually everything Hunter wrote.  To people who’ve read Fear and Loathing In Las Vegas, or seen the movie, this is not what they’re expecting.


The Rum Dairies is the story of Hunter Thompson Paul Kemp, a young journalist in Puerto Rico.  He spends most of his time bewildered, sweating, drinking beer or rum, eating in a back-yard-turned-burger-joint, and chasing after a pretty girl.  As the newspaper he works for, and the people he knows, slowly implode, Kemp is more and more disillusioned about the life he’s leading.


Paul was drinking this rum.



He should have been drinking this rum instead.


Unlike Fear And Loathing, there’s very little about drugs in The Rum Diaries – a few references to weed, but nothing pivotal or spectacular.  They drink a lot but in general it doesn’t end in mayhem.


Like it does in this scene from Fear And Loathing


Nor are their references to sports or political dissections, as there are in most of Hunter’s work.  The Rum Dairies is just Hunter writing about Hunter. 

Here’s why you should read it:

Okay, yes, the book is slow.  But it’s brilliant.  It really is.  It great because Hunter wrote this before he went bat-shit insane and turned into a drug addled, gun-toting maniac.  If you like Hunter’s other work, you can see in this how he goes from being essentially passable as a human being to who he became.  And what’s worse: he can, too.  He writes about how he’s torn between living a normal life or a life of bizarre, wanton depravity, and how he doesn’t feel like he’s the one making that choice.  You can see him seeing his own future, being slightly horrified, and being unable to do anything about it.  It’s fascinating as a character study and it informs Hunter’s later works.  It’s got nothing to do with Johnny Depp bumbling around Puerto Rico reprising his role of the Hunter Thompson character from Fear And Loathing.  Johnny played that part brilliantly, but in The Rum Diaries movie he made a fast paced, glib mockery of some of Hunter’s most poignant writing.  Johnny, a real life friend of Hunter, should be ashamed, or at least explain himself.

Overall, this is a great book.  You should give it a try, or give it a try again.  Just go in expecting long, carefully illustrated scenes and lots of cerebral monologues.  The thing is, this is really the exact same thing Hunter does so well throughout his career, and he does it as brilliantly here as anywhere else.  It’s just that later he was doing much more wild things while he was writing. 




Hunter S. Thompson