I've recently come across an excellent webcomic by John S. Troutman called Lit Brick. The premise, as stated in the first comic: "I'm gonna read the entire Norton Anthology of English Literature and draw comics about it." It's a wonderful mix of archaic literature and modern pop culture. For example, strip #2:
Included with each comic is a brief post about the source material. The whole thing is pretty cool. you should check it out.
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Monday, October 27, 2014
1993: The Bridges of Madison County by Robert James Waller
The Author:
Robert James Waller (1939- ) was born in Rockford, Iowa. He attended the University of Northern Iowa, and married Georgia Weidemeier in 1961, with whom he had a daughter. He received his PhD in business from Indiana University, Bloomington, in 1968. He went on to teach business, management, and applied mathematics at the University of Northern Iowa, also serving as dean of the business school from 1979 to 1985. His first two books were collections of travel essays: Just Beyond the Firelight (1988) and One Good Road Is Enough (1990). With a grant, he left his job as a professor and wrote a scholarly work on the future of Iowa's economy, Iowa: Perspectives on Today and Tomorrow (1991). Not long after, he tried his hand at fiction, and wrote The Bridges of Madison County. His subsequent books have been successful, but not to the extent of his first. Since 1993, he has published seven novels, two works of non-fiction, and a book of photography. He divorced Weidemeier in 1997. In 2004, he married Linda Bow. He currently lives in Texas.
Robert James Waller (1939- ) was born in Rockford, Iowa. He attended the University of Northern Iowa, and married Georgia Weidemeier in 1961, with whom he had a daughter. He received his PhD in business from Indiana University, Bloomington, in 1968. He went on to teach business, management, and applied mathematics at the University of Northern Iowa, also serving as dean of the business school from 1979 to 1985. His first two books were collections of travel essays: Just Beyond the Firelight (1988) and One Good Road Is Enough (1990). With a grant, he left his job as a professor and wrote a scholarly work on the future of Iowa's economy, Iowa: Perspectives on Today and Tomorrow (1991). Not long after, he tried his hand at fiction, and wrote The Bridges of Madison County. His subsequent books have been successful, but not to the extent of his first. Since 1993, he has published seven novels, two works of non-fiction, and a book of photography. He divorced Weidemeier in 1997. In 2004, he married Linda Bow. He currently lives in Texas.
The Book:
Length: 171 pages
Subject/Genre: Romantic wish fulfillment/Romance
The Bridges of Madison County takes the form of a novelization of true events. The introduction features Waller being brought the story by a friend of his, and discusses his attempts at accurately depicting what happened. To be clear, it is entirely fictional. The story itself focuses on a brief affair between Francesca Johnson, a stay-at-home farm wife in small town Iowa, and Robert Kincaid, a freelance photographer. Kincaid has been hired by National Geographic to photograph the covered bridges of Madison County, and meets Francesca when asking for directions. Francesca's husband and children are away at a state fair for the week. We learn that Francesca grew up in Naples, Italy, and as a teenager left with and married Richard Johnson, an American soldier. She and Kincaid fall in love and have a brief affair. She decides not to leave with him for the sake of her family. Sticking to the non-fiction structure, Waller ends the novel with a short essay by Kincaid, a letter by Francesca, and an interview with someone who knew Kincaid after he and Francesca parted ways.
First, let me say that this was a corny, overwrought romantic fantasy aimed at middle-aged women. Francesca Johnson is the epitome of a Mary Sue. We're told she's from Naples, but she might as well be from Paris, or London, or St. Louis, anywhere but a small rural town. In fact, the only traits that consistently inform her actions are her dissatisfaction with her life as a stay at home mother, a dissatisfaction with her husband (personally and sexually), and a love for her children. She is nothing but a vague mirror for the reader. Robert, on the other hand, is given tons of backstory and personal traits. He's sensitive and graceful (unlike Mr. Johnson), he was a combat photographer, which makes him brave, but he doesn't like war, which makes him humane, his body is frequently described as lithe and hard. He's basically a safe fantasy, with enough history to be all things to all people. As wish fulfillment goes, Waller had a good eye. He created a fantasy about the stay at home wife's dream man coming to town. The adulterous aspect of the story is offset by the wife's sacrifice of true love out of concern for her children.
The prose is overwrought. I'll let the novel speak for itself:
"'Oh, Michael, Michael, think of them all those years, wanting each other so desperately. She
gave him up for us and for Dad. And Robert Kincaid stayed away out of respect for her
feelings about us. Michael, I can hardly deal with the thought of it. We treat our marriages so
casually, and we were part of the reason that an incredible love affair ended the way it did.
'They had four days together, just four. Out of a lifetime. It was when we went to that
ridiculous state fair in Illinois. Look at the picture of Mom. I never saw her like that. She's so
beautiful, and it's not the photograph. It's what he did for her. Just look at her; she's wild and
free. Her hair's blowing in the wind, her face is alive. She just looks wonderful.'"
Bridges is sappy wish-fulfillment that found a huge audience. It led to a film version in 1995, directed by Clint Eastwood and starring Eastwood and Meryl Streep, and for which Streep received her tenth Academy Award nomination.
The novel was adapted into a musical, which had its official premiere this past February.
The novel also inspired two sequels by Waller. A Thousand Country Roads: An Epilogue to The Bridges of Madison County was published in 2002 and follows Robert Kincaid after the events of the first novel. High Plains Tango (2005) follows the story of the son Kincaid never knew he had.
The Bridges of Madison County has a reputation as a sappy romance novel, and that reputation is well earned. I really can't see any reason to recommend it to people who aren't fans of the romance genre, and for those who are I can't see any reason to recommend this book particularly.
1st Edition Cover |
Length: 171 pages
Subject/Genre: Romantic wish fulfillment/Romance
The Bridges of Madison County takes the form of a novelization of true events. The introduction features Waller being brought the story by a friend of his, and discusses his attempts at accurately depicting what happened. To be clear, it is entirely fictional. The story itself focuses on a brief affair between Francesca Johnson, a stay-at-home farm wife in small town Iowa, and Robert Kincaid, a freelance photographer. Kincaid has been hired by National Geographic to photograph the covered bridges of Madison County, and meets Francesca when asking for directions. Francesca's husband and children are away at a state fair for the week. We learn that Francesca grew up in Naples, Italy, and as a teenager left with and married Richard Johnson, an American soldier. She and Kincaid fall in love and have a brief affair. She decides not to leave with him for the sake of her family. Sticking to the non-fiction structure, Waller ends the novel with a short essay by Kincaid, a letter by Francesca, and an interview with someone who knew Kincaid after he and Francesca parted ways.
First, let me say that this was a corny, overwrought romantic fantasy aimed at middle-aged women. Francesca Johnson is the epitome of a Mary Sue. We're told she's from Naples, but she might as well be from Paris, or London, or St. Louis, anywhere but a small rural town. In fact, the only traits that consistently inform her actions are her dissatisfaction with her life as a stay at home mother, a dissatisfaction with her husband (personally and sexually), and a love for her children. She is nothing but a vague mirror for the reader. Robert, on the other hand, is given tons of backstory and personal traits. He's sensitive and graceful (unlike Mr. Johnson), he was a combat photographer, which makes him brave, but he doesn't like war, which makes him humane, his body is frequently described as lithe and hard. He's basically a safe fantasy, with enough history to be all things to all people. As wish fulfillment goes, Waller had a good eye. He created a fantasy about the stay at home wife's dream man coming to town. The adulterous aspect of the story is offset by the wife's sacrifice of true love out of concern for her children.
The prose is overwrought. I'll let the novel speak for itself:
"'Oh, Michael, Michael, think of them all those years, wanting each other so desperately. She
gave him up for us and for Dad. And Robert Kincaid stayed away out of respect for her
feelings about us. Michael, I can hardly deal with the thought of it. We treat our marriages so
casually, and we were part of the reason that an incredible love affair ended the way it did.
'They had four days together, just four. Out of a lifetime. It was when we went to that
ridiculous state fair in Illinois. Look at the picture of Mom. I never saw her like that. She's so
beautiful, and it's not the photograph. It's what he did for her. Just look at her; she's wild and
free. Her hair's blowing in the wind, her face is alive. She just looks wonderful.'"
Bridges is sappy wish-fulfillment that found a huge audience. It led to a film version in 1995, directed by Clint Eastwood and starring Eastwood and Meryl Streep, and for which Streep received her tenth Academy Award nomination.
The novel was adapted into a musical, which had its official premiere this past February.
The novel also inspired two sequels by Waller. A Thousand Country Roads: An Epilogue to The Bridges of Madison County was published in 2002 and follows Robert Kincaid after the events of the first novel. High Plains Tango (2005) follows the story of the son Kincaid never knew he had.
The Bridges of Madison County has a reputation as a sappy romance novel, and that reputation is well earned. I really can't see any reason to recommend it to people who aren't fans of the romance genre, and for those who are I can't see any reason to recommend this book particularly.
Bestsellers of 1993:
1. The Bridges of Madison County by Robert James Waller
2. The Client by John Grisham
3. Slow Waltz in Cedar Bend by Robert James Waller
4. Without Remorse by Tom Clancy
5. Nightmares & Dreamscapes by Stephen King
6. Vanished by Danielle Steel
7. Lasher by Anne Rice
8. Pleading Guilty by Scott Turow
9. Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel
10. The Scorpio Illusion by Robert Ludlum
Also Published in 1993:
A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest Gaines
The Giver by Lois Lowry
Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud
Private Parts by Howard Stern
Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh
Sources:
"Robert James Waller." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2007. Literature
Resource Center. Web.
Waller, Robert James. The Bridges of Madison County. New York: Warner Books, 1992. Print.
Sources:
"Robert James Waller." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2007. Literature
Resource Center. Web.
Waller, Robert James. The Bridges of Madison County. New York: Warner Books, 1992. Print.
Friday, October 24, 2014
David Lynch's Industrial Symphony No. 1 (1989)
Hey, wouldn't it be weird if David Lynch directed a made-for-tv musical starring Laura Dern and Nicolas Cage? Well, weird is what David Lynch does. Enjoy.
(Note: some nudity, so don't watch this at work. And don't try to hard to make sense of it (at work, or anywhere else).)
(Note: some nudity, so don't watch this at work. And don't try to hard to make sense of it (at work, or anywhere else).)
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Drunk Shakespeare
On Monday's post, I included a highlight reel from the recent Dolores Claiborne opera. But don't think that this is the only way modern theater is being strange and wonderful. Just check out New York City's Drunk Shakespeare society:
Monday, October 20, 2014
1992: Dolores Claiborne by Stephen King
The Author:
Stephen King (1947- ) was born in Portland, Maine. His father abandoned the family when King was two, leaving his mother to raise King and his older brother. King attended the University of Maine, earning a B.A. in English in 1970. King and Tabitha Spruce had their first child in 1970, and married in 1971. Their second child, Joseph Hillstrom King, was born in 1972. (He, like his mother and father, is a writer. He writes under the name Joe Hill.) King taught high school and supplemented his wages by selling short stories to magazines.
In 1973, he published his first novel, Carrie. The first of his novels to make the annual top ten bestsellers list was The Dead Zone (1979). Between 1980 and 2012, King appeared on the annual top ten list 34 times, in one case having three books on the same year's list. He has since written multiple non-fiction works, as well as serving as a columnist for entertainment weekly. At current count, King has published twelve short story collections, two comic series, six books of non-fiction, fifty-six novels, seven novellas, ten screenplays, and a musical libretto.
Dolores Claiborne is about the eponymous woman, an sixty-five year old maid on Little Tall Island, a small, working class area of the coast of Maine. The novel begins with her turning herself in to the local sheriff, denying responsibility for the recent death of her long-time employer, Vera Donovan, but finally admitting to murdering her own husband decades prior. Thus Dolores begins to tell her story, a story of abuse, helplessness, and retaliation, starting in the middle and slowly circling in toward the deaths.
Dolores Claiborne is very unusual for a King novel. The most immediate difference to his usual style is the narration: The entire book is one monological confession (in dialect) with a small epilogue tacked on. Further, there is almost no supernatural element to the story. The only supernatural element, brief glimpses of a little girl in a far away town, are completely irrelevant to the novel, both in terms of plot and symbolism. As explained in the brief preface, this little girl is Jessie Burlingame, the main character of Gerald's Game, released the same year as Dolores Claiborne. Basically, these scenes are saying "If you want to find out what the deal was with this girl, buy Gerald's Game, now available wherever books are sold!"
That said, Dolores Claiborne is a very strong novel. It's less horror than it is gothic, in the sense that Flannery O'Connor or Shirely Jackson's works are gothic. It does have a number of King tropes, the small town Maine setting, the attempt to make everyday objects terrifying, but it doesn't suffer from them as much as some of his other works. The novel paints a vivid picture of a desperate woman, and sucks you into life on that that small island in Maine.
Dolores Claiborne is possibly the least well-known of the King novels on the list. This despite the fact that it had a film adaptation in 1995 starring Kathy Bates as Dolores, Jennifer Jason Leigh as her daughter Selena, and smaller parts played by John C. Reilly, Christopher Plummer, and playwright Eric Bogosian.
Stephen King (1947- ) was born in Portland, Maine. His father abandoned the family when King was two, leaving his mother to raise King and his older brother. King attended the University of Maine, earning a B.A. in English in 1970. King and Tabitha Spruce had their first child in 1970, and married in 1971. Their second child, Joseph Hillstrom King, was born in 1972. (He, like his mother and father, is a writer. He writes under the name Joe Hill.) King taught high school and supplemented his wages by selling short stories to magazines.
In 1973, he published his first novel, Carrie. The first of his novels to make the annual top ten bestsellers list was The Dead Zone (1979). Between 1980 and 2012, King appeared on the annual top ten list 34 times, in one case having three books on the same year's list. He has since written multiple non-fiction works, as well as serving as a columnist for entertainment weekly. At current count, King has published twelve short story collections, two comic series, six books of non-fiction, fifty-six novels, seven novellas, ten screenplays, and a musical libretto.
Dolores Claiborne is about the eponymous woman, an sixty-five year old maid on Little Tall Island, a small, working class area of the coast of Maine. The novel begins with her turning herself in to the local sheriff, denying responsibility for the recent death of her long-time employer, Vera Donovan, but finally admitting to murdering her own husband decades prior. Thus Dolores begins to tell her story, a story of abuse, helplessness, and retaliation, starting in the middle and slowly circling in toward the deaths.
Dolores Claiborne is very unusual for a King novel. The most immediate difference to his usual style is the narration: The entire book is one monological confession (in dialect) with a small epilogue tacked on. Further, there is almost no supernatural element to the story. The only supernatural element, brief glimpses of a little girl in a far away town, are completely irrelevant to the novel, both in terms of plot and symbolism. As explained in the brief preface, this little girl is Jessie Burlingame, the main character of Gerald's Game, released the same year as Dolores Claiborne. Basically, these scenes are saying "If you want to find out what the deal was with this girl, buy Gerald's Game, now available wherever books are sold!"
That said, Dolores Claiborne is a very strong novel. It's less horror than it is gothic, in the sense that Flannery O'Connor or Shirely Jackson's works are gothic. It does have a number of King tropes, the small town Maine setting, the attempt to make everyday objects terrifying, but it doesn't suffer from them as much as some of his other works. The novel paints a vivid picture of a desperate woman, and sucks you into life on that that small island in Maine.
Dolores Claiborne is possibly the least well-known of the King novels on the list. This despite the fact that it had a film adaptation in 1995 starring Kathy Bates as Dolores, Jennifer Jason Leigh as her daughter Selena, and smaller parts played by John C. Reilly, Christopher Plummer, and playwright Eric Bogosian.
Strangely enough, Dolores Claiborne was adapted into an opera and premiered in San Francisco last year. It looks kind of bizarre:
The trailer for the movie on the other hand, looks pretty fantastic.
If you're not a fan of King, looking to get into his work, or if you enjoy the gothic or suspenseful, I'd really recommend Dolores Claiborne. Most of the negative reviews I've seen have boiled down to not liking the monologue structure or finding it not exciting enough (though, as a suspense novel, tension is everything). It's definitely worth checking out.
Bestsellers of 1992:
1. Dolores Claiborne by Stephen King
2. The Pelican Brief by John Grisham
3. Gerald's Game by Stephen King
4. Mixed Blessings by Danielle Steel
5. Jewels by Danielle Steel
6. The Stars Shine Down by Sidney Sheldon
7. The Tale of the Body Thief by Anne Rice
8. Mexico by James Michener
9. Waiting to Exhale by Terry McMillan
10. All Around the Town by Mary Higgins Clark
Also Published in 1992:
Children of Men by P. D. James
Jazz by Toni Morrison
The Emigrants by W. G. Sebald
Sources:
"Dolores Claiborne." IMDB. Amazon
King, Stephen. Dolores Claiborne. 1992. New York: Signet, 1993. Print.
Sources:
"Dolores Claiborne." IMDB. Amazon
King, Stephen. Dolores Claiborne. 1992. New York: Signet, 1993. Print.
Friday, October 17, 2014
Don DeLillo's BBC Documentary on the new meta-narrative
It's a bit longer than the videos I usually post, but here's an excellent documentary by Don DeLillo about the shift in the American meta-narrative, and the increasing role of television news and film in our identity. It also includes dramatized scenes and discussions of the origins of some of his novels.
(Note: the documentary contains graphic archival footage of the Kennedy assassination, the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald, and the assassination attempts against George Wallace and Ronald Reagan)
(Note: the documentary contains graphic archival footage of the Kennedy assassination, the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald, and the assassination attempts against George Wallace and Ronald Reagan)
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
The Simpsons Guest Couches
The Simpsons couch gag has become a pop culture landmark. Although the show creators have kept coming up with original gags for a couple decades at this point, they've invited other writers and filmmakers and artists to take a stab at it, most recently with avant-garde animator Don Hertzfeldt.
The Simpsons couch gag has also played host to cartoonist Bill Plympton:
Graffiti artist Banksy:
And director Guillermo del Toro:
And just in case you didn't get every reference in the del Toro one, watch the next video and everything will be enumerated.
Monday, October 13, 2014
1991: Scarlett by Alexandra Ripley
The Author:
Alexandra Ripley (1934-2004) was born in Charleston, South Carolina, as Alexandra Braid. She describes her upbringing as that of a Southern belle, who, nonetheless, left the south to attend Vassar college, where she received her B.A. for studying Russian in 1955. In 1958, she married Leonard Ripley, who she divorced in 1963. Her first novel, Who's That Lady in the President's Bed? was published in 1972. In 1981, she published her second novel, a work of historical fiction titled Charleston. That year, she also married university professor John Graham, with whom she had two daughters. She published three more historical fiction novels in the 1980s: On Leaving Charleston (1984), The Time Returns (1985), and New Orleans Legacy (1987). The Mitchell estate tapped Ripley to write Scarlett, the sequel to the classic Gone with the Wind, which was published amid great publicity and controversy in 1991.
After the publication of Scarlett, Ripley wrote two more novels: From Fields of Gold (1994) and A Love Divine (1996). She died of natural causes at her home in Richmond, Virginia.
Alexandra Ripley (1934-2004) was born in Charleston, South Carolina, as Alexandra Braid. She describes her upbringing as that of a Southern belle, who, nonetheless, left the south to attend Vassar college, where she received her B.A. for studying Russian in 1955. In 1958, she married Leonard Ripley, who she divorced in 1963. Her first novel, Who's That Lady in the President's Bed? was published in 1972. In 1981, she published her second novel, a work of historical fiction titled Charleston. That year, she also married university professor John Graham, with whom she had two daughters. She published three more historical fiction novels in the 1980s: On Leaving Charleston (1984), The Time Returns (1985), and New Orleans Legacy (1987). The Mitchell estate tapped Ripley to write Scarlett, the sequel to the classic Gone with the Wind, which was published amid great publicity and controversy in 1991.
After the publication of Scarlett, Ripley wrote two more novels: From Fields of Gold (1994) and A Love Divine (1996). She died of natural causes at her home in Richmond, Virginia.
The Book:
Length: 823 pages
Subject/Genre: Gone with the Wind characters/historical fiction
Scarlett takes place soon after the ending of Gone with the Wind. It opens at Melanie's funeral, where Scarlett finally comes to terms with her past infatuation with Ashley Wilkes and, in preventing Ashley from throwing himself into Melanie's grave, commits a major faux pas, further solidifying her status as a social outcast among Atlanta's elite. She goes back to Tara for a bit, only to find Mammy dying. Rhett shows up to see Mammy before she dies, then leaves, telling Scarlett that he'll help maintain the illusion of their marriage, but he doesn't want to see her again. Scarlett, however, is determined to get him back. This leads to the rest of the novel, detailing Scarlett's descent in Atlanta's social life, and from there to Rhett's family home in Charleston. She gets knocked up by Rhett before he leaves again. Scarlett then goes to live with her father's relatives in Ireland, which is on the verge of its own civil war. Here she gives birth to a daughter and sets up a new home.
I usually try to avoid giving away the endings in the summaries, but it's important in this case. Whereas in Gone with the Wind, Rhett and Scarlett's daughter dies, causing Rhett to flee, in Scarlett, they team up to save their second daughter, and then profess their love to each other. Ripley has, essentially, rewritten the close of the first novel, to give it a Hollywood happy ending. This approach is evident throughout the novel. Scarlett has become a whiny socialite who thrives on the attention of others. While she was never a really generous person, in Gone with the Wind, Scarlett's self-centeredness is offset by personal boldness, by determination and ambition, and by the dire necessity of her circumstances, much like Sabra Cravat in Edna Ferber's Cimarron. Here, all she really cares about is getting her man back. She's become petulant, with everyone else's success or misfortune considered only in terms of how they affect Scarlett. Mammy's death hurts Scarlett most because, as she repeats incessantly, this is when she really needs Mammy's support. She has no problem associating with nouveau-riche con-men scamming Southerners, until they start scamming "her type of people." Scarlett has become a typical historical romance heroine, pining for her distant lover. The word 'simpering' comes up a lot in reviews of this novel.
Basically, Scarlett is Gone with the Wind if Gone with the Wind were content with being a potboiler. Although, it's not entirely fair to blame Ripley, who has herself admitted to taking the job for the money, arguing that after this, she'd be able to write whatever she wanted.
The fact is, Margaret Mitchell had been vocally against a sequel while alive. So had her husband, who managed the rights after Mitchell's death in 1949, and her brother after that. But soon enough, the estate was in the hands of more distant relatives. An attempt at a film sequel in the mid 1970s got tangled in legal problems and never came to fruition. Over a decade later, the publication rights to Scarlett were sold at auction, with Warner Bros. paying nearly $5 million. The sequel was the subject of considerable advertising, and the controversy merely fueled public interest upon release, leading a mediocre historical fiction novel by a little-known author to be an international bestseller.
Because the cash-grab that is Scarlett wasn't enough, a miniseries debuted in 1994, starring Joanne Whalley and Timothy Dalton as Scarlett and Rhett.
Length: 823 pages
Subject/Genre: Gone with the Wind characters/historical fiction
Scarlett takes place soon after the ending of Gone with the Wind. It opens at Melanie's funeral, where Scarlett finally comes to terms with her past infatuation with Ashley Wilkes and, in preventing Ashley from throwing himself into Melanie's grave, commits a major faux pas, further solidifying her status as a social outcast among Atlanta's elite. She goes back to Tara for a bit, only to find Mammy dying. Rhett shows up to see Mammy before she dies, then leaves, telling Scarlett that he'll help maintain the illusion of their marriage, but he doesn't want to see her again. Scarlett, however, is determined to get him back. This leads to the rest of the novel, detailing Scarlett's descent in Atlanta's social life, and from there to Rhett's family home in Charleston. She gets knocked up by Rhett before he leaves again. Scarlett then goes to live with her father's relatives in Ireland, which is on the verge of its own civil war. Here she gives birth to a daughter and sets up a new home.
I usually try to avoid giving away the endings in the summaries, but it's important in this case. Whereas in Gone with the Wind, Rhett and Scarlett's daughter dies, causing Rhett to flee, in Scarlett, they team up to save their second daughter, and then profess their love to each other. Ripley has, essentially, rewritten the close of the first novel, to give it a Hollywood happy ending. This approach is evident throughout the novel. Scarlett has become a whiny socialite who thrives on the attention of others. While she was never a really generous person, in Gone with the Wind, Scarlett's self-centeredness is offset by personal boldness, by determination and ambition, and by the dire necessity of her circumstances, much like Sabra Cravat in Edna Ferber's Cimarron. Here, all she really cares about is getting her man back. She's become petulant, with everyone else's success or misfortune considered only in terms of how they affect Scarlett. Mammy's death hurts Scarlett most because, as she repeats incessantly, this is when she really needs Mammy's support. She has no problem associating with nouveau-riche con-men scamming Southerners, until they start scamming "her type of people." Scarlett has become a typical historical romance heroine, pining for her distant lover. The word 'simpering' comes up a lot in reviews of this novel.
Basically, Scarlett is Gone with the Wind if Gone with the Wind were content with being a potboiler. Although, it's not entirely fair to blame Ripley, who has herself admitted to taking the job for the money, arguing that after this, she'd be able to write whatever she wanted.
The fact is, Margaret Mitchell had been vocally against a sequel while alive. So had her husband, who managed the rights after Mitchell's death in 1949, and her brother after that. But soon enough, the estate was in the hands of more distant relatives. An attempt at a film sequel in the mid 1970s got tangled in legal problems and never came to fruition. Over a decade later, the publication rights to Scarlett were sold at auction, with Warner Bros. paying nearly $5 million. The sequel was the subject of considerable advertising, and the controversy merely fueled public interest upon release, leading a mediocre historical fiction novel by a little-known author to be an international bestseller.
Because the cash-grab that is Scarlett wasn't enough, a miniseries debuted in 1994, starring Joanne Whalley and Timothy Dalton as Scarlett and Rhett.
Of course, if one sequel is successful, why not try for another? In 2007, Donald McCaig's Rhett Butler's People was released. The novel tells of events before, during, and after Gone with the Wind from Rhett's perspective. Oh, and McCaig doesn't consider Ripley's novel to be canonical, so he contradicts it whenever possible (which, to be fair, isn't necessarily a bad thing in terms of the quality of the novel, although what it says about the Mitchell estate is less than flattering).
All in all, I can't recommend this book to anyone. As I've said before, I like to look at the goodreads reviews from readers with an opposite opinion to my own. Most of the positive reviews fall into the 'wanting closure/a happy ending' category. If you loved Gone with the Wind, but hated the fact that everything wasn't tied up with a neat bow, if you can't sleep at night because Scarlett didn't get the man of her dreams, if the very idea that a story can live on past the final page gives you migraines, then read Scarlett. Otherwise, save yourself the time, money, and disdain.
Bestsellers of 1991:
1. Scarlett by Alexandra Ripley
2. The Sum of All Fears by Tom Clancy
3. Needful Things by Stephen King
4. No Greater Love by Danielle Steel
5. Heartbeat by Danielle Steel
6. The Doomsday Conspiracy by Sidney Sheldon
7. The Firm by John Grisham
8. Night Over Water by Ken Follett
9. Remember by Barbara Taylor Bradford
10. Loves Music, Loves to Dance by Mary Higgins Clark
Also Published in 1991:
Possession by A. S. Byatt
Mao II by Don DeLillo
American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis
Outlander by Diana Gabaldon
Sex by Madonna
Sources:
"Alexandra Ripley." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2004. Literature Resource
Center. Web.
Ripley, Alexandra. Scarlett: the sequel to Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind. New York:
Warner Books, 1991. Print.
Sources:
"Alexandra Ripley." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2004. Literature Resource
Center. Web.
Ripley, Alexandra. Scarlett: the sequel to Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind. New York:
Warner Books, 1991. Print.
Labels:
1991,
alexandra ripley,
bestseller,
book review,
civil war,
gone with the wind,
historical fiction,
margaret Mitchell,
melanie wilkes,
novel,
o'hara,
rhett butler,
romance,
scarlett,
sequel,
tara,
timothy dalton
Monday, October 6, 2014
1990: The Plains of Passage by Jean Auel
The Author:
Jean Auel (1936- ) was born in Chicago as Jean Untinen . In 1954, she married Ray Auel (pronounced 'owl'), with whom she had five children. She attended the Portland State University (Oregon), and in 1976 received her M.B.A. from the University of Portland. From the sixties through the seventies, she worked as a clerk in a tech company and later as a technical writer, before publishing her first novel, The Clan of the Cave Bear (1980), the first book of the six part Earth's Children series and a commercial success. The second book of the series, The Valley of Horses (1982) sold well, ending up sixth on that year's annual bestseller list, and the third and fourth books take the #1 spot in their respective years. The fifth book in the series, The Shelters of Stone (2002), appeared seventh on the annual bestseller list, and the series was finished in 2011 with the publication of The Land of Painted Caves.
Jean Auel (1936- ) was born in Chicago as Jean Untinen . In 1954, she married Ray Auel (pronounced 'owl'), with whom she had five children. She attended the Portland State University (Oregon), and in 1976 received her M.B.A. from the University of Portland. From the sixties through the seventies, she worked as a clerk in a tech company and later as a technical writer, before publishing her first novel, The Clan of the Cave Bear (1980), the first book of the six part Earth's Children series and a commercial success. The second book of the series, The Valley of Horses (1982) sold well, ending up sixth on that year's annual bestseller list, and the third and fourth books take the #1 spot in their respective years. The fifth book in the series, The Shelters of Stone (2002), appeared seventh on the annual bestseller list, and the series was finished in 2011 with the publication of The Land of Painted Caves.
The Book:
Length: 760 pages
Subject/Genre: Prehistoric Society/Historical fiction.
The Plains of Passage is the fourth book in the Earth's Children series, following 1985's bestseller The Mammoth Hunters. For a recap on the events of the first three books, refer to my review of The Mammoth Hunters.
The novel begins with Ayla and Jondalar, as well as the horses Whinney and Racer and the Wolf named Wolf, continuing on the long journey towards Jondalar's tribe, the Zelandonii. The novel is largely just a sequence of loosely related events that occur to and around the characters during their travels, and these events mostly serve as excuses for Auel to talk about whatever she finds interesting, regardless of whether it is necessary to any other aspect of the story. In fact, Auel's desire to inform supersedes all other aspects of the novel, from character to plot to tone to pacing. This leads to another incredibly frustrating aspect of the novel, which is that most of what happens is characters explaining/talking/wondering about something around them. And if they don't know, there's a good chance Auel will spend a few pages narrating the answer. Whether it's the uses of particular shrubs or the mating habits of woolly mammoths, you're going to learn a lot about it, even at the expense of the novel as a coherent whole.
The fact is, this was an incredibly frustrating read. Much of the book could be summarized as such: The cavemen talked about the horses. The cavemen talked about the wolf. The cavemen talked about the other cavemen. The cavemen talked about the other cavemen vis-à-vis the horses. The cavemen looked at the river. The cavemen talked about the river. The cavemen talked about the river and the horses and the wolf. The cavemen crossed the river. The cavemen talked about the dirt. The cavemen thought about the plants. The cavemen thought about the plants vis-à-vis the wolf. Etc. etc. etc.
Add to this a fundamental paradox to the entire novel. Auel's desire to demonstrate the typical world of prehistoric man depends on following a character who is entirely atypical of that time. I pointed out in my previous review that Ayla has single-handedly made major medical discoveries, as well as being personally responsible for the domestication of animals. This trend continues, as she here successfully develops the techniques of dog training. Between Ayla and Jondalar, techniques and discoveries that occurred piecemeal over hundreds and thousands of years are condensed into less than a decade. I don't plan on reading the fifth and sixth book, but it wouldn't surprise me if they ended up personally inventing the wheel, agriculture, and alphabet.
All this is really a shame, because Auel clearly knows a heck of a lot about her area of expertise. If she had written a non-fiction account of life in that time and region, it could have been quite good. But instead we get a novel that is simply tedious. I'm not a huge fan of the rule "show, don't tell," but I believe you need to do one or the other, not both, which Auel does consistently. She shows us something then explains it, and vice-versa.
Unless you are completely enrapt by the series up to this point, I can't really recommend it.
1st Edition Cover |
Length: 760 pages
Subject/Genre: Prehistoric Society/Historical fiction.
The Plains of Passage is the fourth book in the Earth's Children series, following 1985's bestseller The Mammoth Hunters. For a recap on the events of the first three books, refer to my review of The Mammoth Hunters.
The novel begins with Ayla and Jondalar, as well as the horses Whinney and Racer and the Wolf named Wolf, continuing on the long journey towards Jondalar's tribe, the Zelandonii. The novel is largely just a sequence of loosely related events that occur to and around the characters during their travels, and these events mostly serve as excuses for Auel to talk about whatever she finds interesting, regardless of whether it is necessary to any other aspect of the story. In fact, Auel's desire to inform supersedes all other aspects of the novel, from character to plot to tone to pacing. This leads to another incredibly frustrating aspect of the novel, which is that most of what happens is characters explaining/talking/wondering about something around them. And if they don't know, there's a good chance Auel will spend a few pages narrating the answer. Whether it's the uses of particular shrubs or the mating habits of woolly mammoths, you're going to learn a lot about it, even at the expense of the novel as a coherent whole.
The fact is, this was an incredibly frustrating read. Much of the book could be summarized as such: The cavemen talked about the horses. The cavemen talked about the wolf. The cavemen talked about the other cavemen. The cavemen talked about the other cavemen vis-à-vis the horses. The cavemen looked at the river. The cavemen talked about the river. The cavemen talked about the river and the horses and the wolf. The cavemen crossed the river. The cavemen talked about the dirt. The cavemen thought about the plants. The cavemen thought about the plants vis-à-vis the wolf. Etc. etc. etc.
Add to this a fundamental paradox to the entire novel. Auel's desire to demonstrate the typical world of prehistoric man depends on following a character who is entirely atypical of that time. I pointed out in my previous review that Ayla has single-handedly made major medical discoveries, as well as being personally responsible for the domestication of animals. This trend continues, as she here successfully develops the techniques of dog training. Between Ayla and Jondalar, techniques and discoveries that occurred piecemeal over hundreds and thousands of years are condensed into less than a decade. I don't plan on reading the fifth and sixth book, but it wouldn't surprise me if they ended up personally inventing the wheel, agriculture, and alphabet.
All this is really a shame, because Auel clearly knows a heck of a lot about her area of expertise. If she had written a non-fiction account of life in that time and region, it could have been quite good. But instead we get a novel that is simply tedious. I'm not a huge fan of the rule "show, don't tell," but I believe you need to do one or the other, not both, which Auel does consistently. She shows us something then explains it, and vice-versa.
Unless you are completely enrapt by the series up to this point, I can't really recommend it.
Bestsellers of 1990:
1. The Plains of Passage by Jean Auel
2. Four Past Midnight by Stephen King
3. The Burden of Proof by Scott Turow
4. Memories of Midnight by Sidney Sheldon
5. Message from Nam by Danielle Steel
6. The Bourne Ultimatum by Robert Ludlum
7. The Stand by Stephen King
8. Lady Boss by Jackie Collins
9. The Witching Hour by Anne Rice
10. September by Rosemunde Pilcher
Also Published in 1990:
Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton
L.A. Confidential by James Ellroy
The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien
Sources:
Auel, Jean. The Plains of Passage. New York: Crown Publishers, 1990. Print.
"Jean M. Auel." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2012. Literature Resource
Center. Web.
Sources:
Auel, Jean. The Plains of Passage. New York: Crown Publishers, 1990. Print.
"Jean M. Auel." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2012. Literature Resource
Center. Web.
Labels:
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Friday, October 3, 2014
Reasons to Never Return: The Paper Plane Pilots Anthology (2014)
The Paper Plane Pilots is an online group of creative writers from across the world, with a large-ish cluster located in the Los Angeles area. Predominantly poets, with a sizable batch of fiction nonetheless, they've recently released their first anthology, Reasons to Never Return.
In the interest of journalistic integrity, I should point out that I'm friends with one of the founders of the Paper Plane Pilots, who also appears in and edited this volume. However, she knows well enough that if I didn't like it, I would say so. Fortunately for both of us, I did like the anthology.
That's not to say there are no rough spots. There are, and any anthology, especially one of up and coming young writers, will have them. But they are more than offset by the high points, of which there are many. I'll be the first to admit that I'm a terrible judge of poetry, largely falling into a mere 'I dis/like this, and I don't know why' approach. Overall, the anthology has a heavy Beat vibe, a reactionary pathos easy to get swept up in, which is a good thing, if that's your kind of thing.
The first piece, "Winter Tapes," is by far the most avant-garde, and I'm still honestly not sure what to make of it, to be quite honest. The rest of the anthology is mostly poetry, the majority in verse, with some prose poems, and a handful of stories. To get a better idea of the tone and variety of the anthology, check out their Best of 2013 page.
If you like poetry and want to check out some new writers, visit thepaperplanepilots.com, and if you like what you see, consider buying their anthology.
That's not to say there are no rough spots. There are, and any anthology, especially one of up and coming young writers, will have them. But they are more than offset by the high points, of which there are many. I'll be the first to admit that I'm a terrible judge of poetry, largely falling into a mere 'I dis/like this, and I don't know why' approach. Overall, the anthology has a heavy Beat vibe, a reactionary pathos easy to get swept up in, which is a good thing, if that's your kind of thing.
The first piece, "Winter Tapes," is by far the most avant-garde, and I'm still honestly not sure what to make of it, to be quite honest. The rest of the anthology is mostly poetry, the majority in verse, with some prose poems, and a handful of stories. To get a better idea of the tone and variety of the anthology, check out their Best of 2013 page.
If you like poetry and want to check out some new writers, visit thepaperplanepilots.com, and if you like what you see, consider buying their anthology.
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