Thursday, February 29, 2024

Shelved: Roundup of Book Posts February 16 to 29, 2024

 


Audiobook preview

Naked Came the Florida Man.  Tim Dorsey.  Serge Storms book 23 of 26.  William Morrow, 2020.  336 pages.

Tim Dorsey is considered by readers and writers of Florida-based fiction as the master, maybe the creator, of "Florida Man" fiction, writing outrageous, unbelievable stories of Florida's unbelievable characters.  Following Tim Dorsey's death a few months ago, I read his first Serge Storms novel.  While I liked it and recognized some great writing, I wasn't sure about his leading character.  I just read the 23rd Serge novel, published in 2020, Naked Came the Florida Man, and I found it much more enjoyable.

Serge Storms is an incredible character, an anti-hero.  He is an obsessive, misanthropic, schizophrenic, homicidal psychopath, but he has a very strong sense of morality and justice, in his own way, if that makes any sense.  He absolutely loves Florida, its history, its nature, and its people - at least those people who don't violate his moral code.   He constantly shares this love and knowledge with his drugs-and-alcohol-impaired traveling companion, and thus with the readers.  Are you familiar with the animated duo Mr. Peabody and Sherman?  Well, picture Mr. Peabody as a homicidal psychopath and Sherman constantly doing drugs. But it's funny and entertaining, I swear! Serge Storms books are great fiction for history lovers, especially lovers of Florida history.  Dorsey's books are packed full of real history and information; they're like Florida guidebooks.  His most outrageous plot elements and scenes are often based on actual Florida events and people. I've learned lots of tidbits of Florida info and about sites that I've added to my list of places to visit.  It's obvious that the character of has developed over the course of Dorsey's books, and I want to read more.




The Art Thief:  A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession.  Michael Finkel.  Knopf, 2023. 240 pages.

Author Michael Finkel is attracted to seriously narcissistic and manipulative sociopaths and the stupid women who love them, and he forms relationships with them, starting with hand-written letters, that result in them telling all to him.  I'm not sure what that says about him, but it makes for incredibly interesting books, like this one.

Picture an art thief, and you probably pictured an egomaniac stocking a private vault with works for his own viewing like in the movies.  Or maybe you picture brazen robbers sneaking in at night and defeating high-tech security measures. Or maybe armed men tying up guards and slashing paintings from their frames like in the Isabella Gardner Museum heist in Boston. I bet you would never in your life picture a lazy, spoiled, unemployed-and-living-on-handouts, twentysomething Frenchman named Stephane Breitwieser. Nevertheless, over about 10 years from the 1990s into the early 2000s, Breitwieser and his girlfriend stole about 300 pieces of art from over 200 museums across Europe, with an estimated value of $2 billion. They chose mostly local and regional museums with little to no security, bought tickets, and stole in broad daylight, often with guards or visitors in the room.  His intent was never to sell and make profits. They displayed the art in the attic bedroom they shared over his mother's house, purely for their own pleasure. The acts and how they were committed is incredible enough, but then when you read what happened to the art and how European courts have treated the pair (and Breitwieser's mother), your mind will be blown.  Equally mindblowing is the sheer scale of art theft in the world and how little stolen art is ever recovered.



The Mothership lands.  Live, Houston, 1976


...And Your Ass Will Follow.  George Clinton.  Audible Original, Words + Music, Volume 39.

If you love music and audiobooks and are an Audible subscriber, you may have already discovered the "Words + Music" series there.  Each volume is about two hours long and features a particular artist discussing his/her life and work, complete with lots of music samples.

This particular volume features legendary funkster George Clinton who blended everything from doo-wop and soul to funk and rock and sprinkled in bits like songs he heard at friends' bar mitzvahs to create the one and only Parliament-Funkadelic sound, becoming one of the most influential and sampled artists in history.  He talks about the musical influences that literally surrounded him growing up in his New Jersey neighborhood where he interacted with diverse people and cultures and knew people famous and becoming famous from Sarah Vaughn to Dionne Warwick to the Shirelles.  He talks about his own musical journey from assembling a group in junior high to rejection by Motown to the Mothership.  It's a fun ride.  Check this one out or look for your own favorite artists on Audible.


Author talk

Golden Hill:  A Novel of Old New York.  Francis Spufford.  Scribner, 2017.  320 pages.

It's November 1746, and a young man named Richard Smith arrives in New York City from London.  He has no connections in the colony and seemingly no business, but he does have a line of credit worth a thousand British pounds sterling, almost 2,000 pounds in New York currency (or whatever crazy mix of paper, coins, and trade goods New Yorkers call currency at the time), an absolute fortune.  He's very  guarded and secretive about his background and his intentions.  He's also a little off-balance himself, having to adjust from the huge metropolis of London to the small backwater town that New York was in comparison.  His strange and closed-mouth character instantly raises red flags among the New York merchants and politicians that he meets.  Who is he? What does he want? Is the money real? Is he a con man, a criminal? Does he plan to use his money -if it exists - to involve himself in the unsettled commerce and politics of the city, on one side or the other?  These are all questions that the author leaves hanging in the readers' minds for most of the book as well, only providing answers at the end, and the answers are genuinely surprising, once revealed.  The ending was impossible to predict, but not too incredible or crazy to accept.

Spufford is a British author who has written several nonfiction books, and this was his first novel.  It won several awards and paced on several Best lists.  It's a very interesting depiction of colonial New York.  Golden Hill  is kind of in the picaresque genre, like Tom Jones, Joseph Andrews, and Candide, rollicking adventures of a rough, dishonest, but likable hero, complete with romance, intrigue, and swordplay.  However, like Candide, Richard Smith is not dishonest, just naive.  Or is he?  The reader really doesn't learn the truth until the end.  It's a fun adventure.








Thursday, February 15, 2024

Shelved: Roundup of Book Posts February 1 to 15, 2024

 



Author Talk

The Auburn Conference:  A Novel.  Tom Piazza.  University of Iowa Press, 2023. 199 pages.

Imagine that it's 1883, and you are in the audience for a "writers conference,"  whatever that is - no one has ever heard of one before.  Some of the biggest literary and cultural icons on 19th century America are the event's participants:  Mark Twain, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Herman Melville, and Walt Whitman.  Their stated mission is to discuss not only the craft of writing, but also America, its present and its future.  The thought of such an event is enough to excite any history buff.

Well, the Auburn Conference never happened, but author Tom Piazza created it in this novel.  He dreamed up the conference, gave voice to the above mentioned historical figures, and included a couple of fictional panelists:  a Confederate general and "Lost Cause" apologist and a popular romance novelist.  There are even a couple of surprise appearances by other historical figures.  He captures their personalities and uses their speeches and thoughts as commentary not only on America in 1883 but present-day America.  

I am often leery of historical fiction and alternative history fiction (and, sadly, more and more historical non-fiction) when the author endeavors to force 21st century sensibilities into historical events and onto historical figures, usually to push the author's own  personal point of view.  In spite of what seemed to me to be a slow start, the novel turned out to be interesting, and the personalities and discussions were well crafted.  However, the audiobook version that I listened to was kind of a disappointment.  The narrator's voice was like that of a 1930s radio melodrama actor and got on my nerves.  I had a quibble with the author as well.  The story is told by multiple narrators, and the narrator frequently changed abruptly and without warning (at least in the audiobook version), taking me several sentences sometimes to figure out who was speaking. All in all, the book leaves the reader with questions about the true character of America, questions worth thinking about in 1883 and in 2024.



Author Talk

On Savage Shores:  How Indigenous Americans Discovered Europe.  Caroline Dodds Pennock.  Knopf, 2023.  320 pages.

First, kudos to the longest "Introduction" in publishing history.  It has set a record.  It went on and on and on and on.  Why?  Basically so that the author could explain, justify, and apologize for all the word choices that she made because the language of writing history is so triggering these days.

Now, this book is by no means thrilling, exciting, suspenseful, or a page-turner, but it is groundbreaking in a major way. There are lots and lots of histories of European contacts with indigenous Americans and the African slave trade and the African  Diaspora, but this book is unique because it literally  takes the opposite direction. From 1492 to the early 17th century, hundreds of thousands of Indigenous people from the Caribbean and the Americas were taken to Europe, mostly to the Iberian Peninsula. Some were captured and enslaved, some volunteered or were sent by their rulers, maybe in hopes of receiving benefits for their people or for themselves. Some never returned home, some did, and some made multiple trips back and forth. Some were treated cruelly as property, some were presented as ambassadors in royal courts, some become affiliated with religious orders, and some used European laws  and courts to fight for their freedom and equality. 

Pennock has scoured archives and contemporary accounts to present the stories of these people, those who moved between two worlds. It's a fresh and necessary perspective.


A Life in Red:  A Story of Forbidden Love, the Great Depression, and the Communist Fight for a Black Nation in the Deep South.  David Beasley.  John F. Blair, Publisher, 2015.  224 pages.

During the 1920s and 1930s, maybe as many as million Americans called themselves Communists or leaned toward the principles of communism, attracted by the promise of economic equality.  It is not at all surprising that a large number of black Americans were drawn to communism, not only for economic equality and opportunity, but also for the promised racial equality.  Jim Crow laws, lynchings and racial violence, and racial discrimination were ubiquitous throughout the United States, and, in the 1930s,  the hardships of being black in America were exacerbated by the Great Depression, the rise of the KKK and racist demagoguery, and the racist implementation of the New Deal.  

The Communist Party of the Soviet Union worked to capitalize - pun intended - on the situation by inserting agents on college campuses and in black neighborhoods to recruit and to promote communism.  Some promising organizers were educated and trained in the USSR and then returned to the US as paid agents and agitators.  Some even saw their ultimate goal as the creation of a black state in the Deep South, following a violent revolution if necessary.

Herbert Newton was one of those black agents.  Along the way, he met and married Jane Emery, the white upper-middle class daughter of a former national commander of the American Legion.  His activities got him beaten, arrested, and indicted for promoting insurrection in Georgia for passing out party literature. An insurrection law in Georgia at the time (struck down by the US Supreme Court in 1937) made that activity a capital offense. For her communist beliefs and for marrying a black man, Jane was committed to a mental institution by a Chicago judge.  A Life in Red makes the most of limited information to depict the lives of the couple, including their friendship with author Richard Wright, who lived with them for years.  Jane served as a sounding board and inspiration for many of his works including Native Son.  Not a great book, but not bad.  3/5 stars.



"I Have Seen The Future: A Tour of the 1939 New York World's Fair"

Twilight at the World of Tomorrow:  Genius, Madness, Murder, and the 1939 World's Fair on the Brink of War.  James Mauro.  Ballantine Books, 2010.  432 pages.

I don't know who to blame, the author or the publisher.  Most likely the publisher.  The title of this book is very misleading, but it was still an enjoyable read.  

Forget the subtitle and approach this book as a history of the 1939 World's Fair in New York.  The goal was to showcase "The World of Tomorrow"  - well, actually, the goal was to make lots of money and bring millions of visitors and hundreds of millions of dollars into the city - when a group of men decided it was time to host a World's Fair that would outshine the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago and restore New York City's supremacy.  Where? On top of a huge landfill in Flushing, Queens.  It was doomed from the start.  The country was still in the throes of the Great Depression, the effort got off to a late start, it was difficult to raise money, and the world was on the brink of World War II.  Even the weather was a disaster, rain on top of rain.  In the end, the fair was a huge disaster, losing millions. The anticipated crowds never materialized. Exhibits and pavilions fell apart as countries fell to the German blitzkrieg.  Americans complained that the 75 cents admission was too expensive and that the fair was too high-brow for common folks.  Labor unions held construction and maintenance hostage to outrageous demands.  Bomb threats became common.  Power went out, and rides malfunctioned.  Issue piled on top of issue. 

James Mauro's book is an interesting and thorough account of the history of the fair, from the first idea of it through closing day.  The title should have stopped there.  I assume the "Genius" referred to is Albert Einstein, who is a bit player in the story at best, and could have been left out entirely.  I'm not really sure what "Madness" refers to.  And the "Murder" doesn't really show up until the last quarter of the book.  

Maybe the publisher's idea was to market the book as another Devil in the White City, but the book falls short, mainly because the story is just not there, and Mauro is no Erik Larson.  Still, it's a good companion read.  If you enjoyed Devil, you will probably like Twilight, as long as you lower your expectations just a tiny bit.