Monday, March 31, 2014

Breakfast of Champions


    
Breakfast of Champions
by Kurt Vonnegut
read: circa 2000
Guardian 1000 Novels

I read this back in college, but I remember almost nothing about it - just the fictional painting "The Temptation of St. Anthony," one vertical line on a solid field. The painting draws a lot of criticism, but the artist feels that the fact that any child can reproduce it is a good thing, not a drawback. I think about this a lot when it comes to music: many great folks compositions have simple rhythms, chord structures, and rhyme schemes.

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Sirens of Titan

    
Sirens of Titan
by Kurt Vonnegut
read: 2014
Guardian 1000 Novels

Vonnegut was one of the first "literature" authors I got into, reading books like Cat's Cradle and Slaughterhouse Five when I was in high school. He's a natural bridge into more serious stuff for someone like me who grew up reading science fiction almost exclusively, as his books often have sci-fi elements. He also has a conversational narrative style that's easy to read. Sirens of Titan was written in 1959, but the prose still feels fresh because it's written in the same style modern authors like Jonathan Safron Foer use today.

Friday, March 21, 2014

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man


   
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
by James Joyce
read: circa 2005, re-read 2014
Modern Library #3, Guardian 1000 Novels

Stephen Dedalus, the protoganist of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, is one of the more insular characters in literature. There are other characters in the novel - his father, some of his teachers, a few classmates - but their threads are vague and mostly irrelevant to the narrative. The story is about Stephen's interior journey, from star pupil at a prep school, to frequenter of whore-houses, to guilt-wracked religious zealot, and finally to the titular artist.

Stephen is drawn to language early in life, not just the meaning but the sounds of the words themselves, even commenting that the lines in his spelling book "were like poetry." When he ultimately writes a villanelle, his experience is that "the liquid letters of speech, symbols of the element of mystery, flowed forth over his brain." James Joyce is known for his use of language for rhythm and sound as well as meaning; we can see some of the foundation for that here.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Galveston

Galveston
by Nic Pizzolatto
read: 2014

Galveston is True Detective creator / writer Nic Pizzolatto's first novel. There are some similar themes to True Detective: it's ostensibly a crime novel, though protagonist Roy is on the wrong side of the law. It takes place in the same general area of the country, spilling from New Orleans to Galveston, Texas, and back. Most significantly, it features a hard-boiled character over a long period of time. In both Galveston and True Detective, Pizzolatto uses the passage of time to ruminate on the phenomenon of storytelling. Once events have passed, they exist only in the stories those who remember them tell. An ex-girlfriend of Roy's tells him:
"Listen to me," she said. "The past isn't real." This struck the center of me like a pickax. She said, "you remember what you want."
At another point, after explaining how he got into a life of crime, Roy thinks, "It was true, but the story didn't feel correct. It didn't really explain anything, did it?"

This is how Pizzolatto's worlds are built: on a shaky foundation of stories. The past is malleable, and since in the long run everything is past, all of reality is ultimately subject to the biases and vagaries of those who live to tell about it.

EDIT: That said, Pizzolatto isn't making the case that there's no such thing as objective truth; in fact, the objective truth is important to the characters in the story. Late in the story, Roy is confronted with the choice to tell his story to a new generation or let it die with him, and he elects to keep the truth alive.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

The Color Purple


The Color Purple
by Alice Walker
read: 2014
Guardian 1000 NovelsPulitzer Prize

The Color Purple is written in letter format. In the first chunk of the book, each letter is addressed to God. Later, Celie begins addressing her letters to her sister Nettie.
DEAR NETTIE,
I don't write to God no more. I write to you.
What happen to God? ast Shug. 
Who that? I say.
The novel doesn't have an atheist perspective, but more of a spiritualist one. The final chapter is addressed "DEAR GOD. DEAR STARS, DEAR TREES, DEAR SKY, DEAR PEOPLES. DEAR EVERYTHING. DEAR GOD." Celie's faith essentially carries her through periods of her life where very little good happens to her, whether that's faith in God, faith in Nettie, faith in her friend (and sometime lover) Shug, or just an irrational faith that things will somehow get better.

I was predisposed to dislike this novel based on Ralph Wiley's comments on it in Why Black People Tend to Shout, but I found I enjoyed it. Wiley objected to the portrayal of black men in Walker's world, but by the end of the tale some weight was given to the environmental factors that shaped Albert, Harpo, and even Alphonso. They aren't excused for their sins, but they aren't unredeemable either, and Albert in particular makes great strides to atoning for his wrongdoing.