Saturday, May 22, 2010
Midpoint-Bonfire
I just passed the more than halfway point of Tom Wolfe's The Bonfire of the Vanities. The book has left me dumbstruck in a number of ways, first of all it is unlike anything i've ever read. Pound for pound it is the hardest book i've ever attempted to read. It's a 700 page (dense long pages with small font) observation of class warfare and general snobbery and general racism. It would appear that Wolfe has extreme disdain for all of these characters, which helps build a level of interest for a reader, and when the protagonist Sherman McCoy spends 20 pages discussing the dining room at the wealthy home he is eating in, it's more of a reflection on greed than a lesson on decoration. Sherman is an extremely interesting character who sees the world differently than any character before him. He posseses certain qualities that make him so hatable you just want to hear him talk to see what horrible things he has to say about the human condition. The man is so slimy he can actually justify cheating on his wife, because he believes that is what he deserves after a long days work on Wall Street. Using hindsight it's obvious to see how such a meltdown could occur on Wall Street if all those firms are populated with people like McCoy. It's not enough that McCoy is an unrepentant philanderer he is also a willing accomplice in a murder. I won't give anymore away, but to say that his racism and xenophobia allows him to commit this crime, he never ceases to surprise me.
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Final Blog: 3rd Quarter
Right now i'm reading the near 700 page The Bonfire of the Vanities, and it's going well enough that i'm about one fifth done and I really like the book. The book should take me to the midpoint of fourth quarter at least, after that I'm probably going to end the year with either some Raymond Chandler or James Ellroy, both detective novelists. As of now I've completed all the genre requirements and feel that i've read a diverse amount of books, but all books that were enjoyable except for my poetry book the unbearable Push by Sapphire. My favorite book of this quarter is a tie between The Name is Archer by Ross MacDonald and Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane. Both are detective novels, but both are hugely different. The former is a classic, but cut into short stories full of sensational characters, gritty narrative, and pulpy dialogue. The latter is psychological horror full of twists and bone crunching suspense. I loved both of them for different reasons, and reading wise this is probably my best reading quarter as I've read varied books and haven't dropped anything. I've learned that I like to read three different types of books, one being what I like to call "accomplished pulp novels" that aren't just quick violent reads, but also a product of smart writers bending what literature can do. The other kind of books are more modern classics by famous authors like Wolfe, Thompson and others. The other types of books are ones that interest me whether they apply to me or my beliefs, or based on movies I like or have an interest in.
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Character Connection between Catcher and Bonfire
Currently I've been reading The Bonfire of the Vanities by Tom Wolfe. The book about 80's me decade corruption, racism, and sexism that was so prevalent for the era. Sherman McCoy is a thirty-ish self proclaimed "Master of the Universe" who works at Pierce & Pierce Investments. He also is one of the biggest jerks ever published, his character is very similar to that of Holden Caulfield the snotty class concerned protagonist of The Catcher in the Rye. McCoy is what Holden Caulfield grows up to be, instead of teen angst Sherman has his mistress. Instead of worrying about the future, Sherman reflects on his past at the ficticious Buckley school. Sherman and Holden both come from the snobby set of the rich and famous in New York City. They might as well be the Dad's of the future Gossip Girl's. Sherman rationalizes when his wife finds out about his mistress that she's the villain because he makes the money and thus he is the savior. He's more devoted to his business than his little girl Campbell (yes everyone is pretentious). Holden is too busy worrying about the world, but we all know his rebellious streak will end and he'll become just another trader of stocks and bonds. Who knows, if he plays his cards right he might become another "Master of the Universe".
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Bonfire
The past couple of weeks I've finished Push by Sapphire. A poor, but short book of poetry that was somewhat appealing. Now my next task is Tom Wolfes monumental story about Wall Street greed and Racism (and people say it only works in the Eighties), Bonfire of the Vanities, Wolfes prose appeals to me as it's smart, but not too smart. It has the quick wit of a Thompson novel, minus all the weird antics and paranoia. I really look forward to analyzing the me decade and all of it's atrocities. I plan on reading alot on my flight. After this book I'm going to read Hunter S. Thompsons long lost novel, "The Rum Diary".
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Elmore Leonard Books
As of right now I'm juggling two books, Rum Punch and Road Dogs, both by Elmore Leonard. My favorite author of all time responsible for many great books including Out of Sight and Get Shorty, he's famous for his blend of comedy and crime that go so well together. He's a great pulp fiction writer who's actually a well merited writer and also has written some better-than-average western novels. Rum Punch is a book i've already read before, but when I first read it alot went over my head. Reading it with a little more knowledge makes the book all the more enjoyable. I'm still peeved by the fact it was never made into a sequel, because it would work perfectly. The plot consists of a flight attendant Jackie Burke (renamed Jackie Brown for the Quentin Tarantino movie of the same name as it's main character) who gets involved with many characters from many different facets of life: an aging bail bondsman, a weapons dealer, and a bevy of cops and cons who populate what could be either Miami or Los Angeles. Road Dogs, Leonard's most recent offering is a three character book about Jack Foley (a composite of all bank robber stereotypes), Dawn Navarro (a sexy mystic), and Cundo Rey a funny spanish crime boss who are all playing each other for a big score. Each character is from another Leonard novel, Foley being the most famous being that he's from Out of Sight. I'm enjoying both novel's very much.
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Shutter Island: Reflection
I have just finished Shutter Island, and I'm happy to say It's already in the pantheon of my favorite books. It's masterful craft of horror and thriller was wonderful, but it's the human emotion that makes the book great. It's author Dennis Lehane, is proven in the True Crime genre, and it makes sense he would have success writing a Psychological Mystery. Like his other books it takes place in Boston, this time on a little island brimming with convicts. Teddy Daniels travels there to track down an escaped murderess, who killed all her kids. His real motivation is to kill the man, Andrew Laeddis, that murdered his wife. All the while escaping the eyes of the psycholigists and the rascist warden who rules the island. All the while the book asks you to take a leap of faith and trust Teddy, a clearly traumatized veteran who liberated the death camps in Dachau, and who now may be the key to exposing the island where it appears that experimental surgeries, mass druggings, and manipulation occur. Of course nothing is what it seems, but to tell you would give away the hidden treasures that come from reading this book.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Shutter Island
So far i'm really enjoying my new book, Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane. This taut original thriller concerns U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels who is stationed at the Ashecliffe Hospital looking for an escaped murderess. This murderess, Rachel Solando, drowned her kids and then sat down for a meal. "It's as if she's evaporated into thin air" states the Island chief psycholigist ominously. The book makes you feel as if you're trapped on the island with no way out, just like Daniels and his good-cop partner Chuck Aule. The book is meticulously crafted and very scary. You never know what is going to be thrown at you. I can't wait to read this book some more, as it is the very esscence of the classic page turner. There is an obvious reason why this book's about to become a Martin Scorcese picture.
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