Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Even the Dogs by Jon McGregor

Grim. Depressing. The story of a group of heroin addicts, alcoholics, psychopaths, and street people. The injection of heroin is described in disturbing detail. Not exactly Dickens' Drood in the opium den. Dickens softened the impact of Drood's drug use by including his characteristic virgin female and comic relief. There is no softening of anything in "Even the Dogs". Don't even wish for a happy ending. Nobody gets out of this one alive or recovered or even with any hope.

Which is not to say that the writing is not good. I think it is. The author does an excellent job of portraying the single-minded obsession of the addicts with acquiring their next fix, at whatever cost. I question the decision to turn this into a novel. There is quite a bit of repetition. Considering the distasteful subject matter I wonder why it wasn't shortened and presented as, for instance, the centerpiece of a short story collection, including other stories that could have buffered the hopelessness of "Even the Dogs". I can't see this selling many copies or being commercially successful as a novel.

One thing that the author does which is interesting is the inclusion of a "Greek Chorus" of dead addicts that comment on the action and scenes. That is the basic structure of the novel. One of the group has died alone in what we in the US would call a "crack house" and a small amount of backstory is woven into the narrative and commented on by the chorus as the body is discovered and autopsied.

So, I have to give it a good rating because of the fine writing, but I would not recommend this to any but the most hardened of readers.

Link to Amazon: Even the Dogs: A Novel

Sunday, January 24, 2010

The Beethoven Compendium by Barry Cooper

Not a biography, but an examination of everything Beethoven by four different editors. Not the type of book you would read from cover to cover, but an exhaustive reference to his life, influences, music, writings, portraits, career, students, and so on and so forth. Highly recommended for the serious amateur, music student, or professional.

Link to Amazon: The Beethoven Compendium (A Guide to Beethoven's Life and Music) [UNABRIDGED] (Paperback)

J.S. Bach - A Life in Music by Peter Williams

This biography takes a novel approach. It uses the printed obituary of Bach written by his son C.P.E. Bach, and examines it line by line, expanding it and speculating on the details. This is not a biography for the merely curious, since a knowledge of music theory and history is helpful, even though it includes a glossary. The target audience would be serious amateurs, music students, and professionals.

Link to Amazon: J.S. Bach: A Life in Music

Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison

What's most amazing about this book is the time that it was written - late 40s, published in the early 50s. Yet it pretty accurately predicts most facets of the civil rights movement for blacks, good and bad. In fact, the first scene in the book, the "battle royale" contains, in miniature, most of what happens later. Black man rewarded by white, reward turns out to be denigrating, blacks fight amongst themselves, whites are pulling the strings, and so on and so forth.

My advice, if you are reading this edition, is to skip the introduction - read it later if you want to. The author does quite a bit of pontificating.

The novel also is somewhat heavy-handed with the symbolism. Everything is a symbol, or can be viewed as a symbol. That gets old quickly, especially when it is so obvious.

Link to Amazon: Invisible Man