July 3, 2023

Recent Reads 7.3.2023

 Thoughts on Roadside Picnic by the Strugatsky Brothers

 

I read Hard to be a God last year, and really liked it. I read this one as a follow up and since it is more famous. The difference is that Roadside Picnic is less plot driven. This one feels more like a making of atmosphere as the reader gets deeper into understanding the Zone but never really understanding it. In this it feels a lot like Lem’s Eden, where the exploration is the point. It’s a work from a different tradition of science fiction and it is incredibly interesting but a slower read.

 

 

Thoughts on Kerouac’s Desolation Angels

 

Jack Kerouac climbed up a hill and then down it eighty pages later. Then he spent time together with his friends and got drunk. There was a time when this would have been more compelling to me, but there were too many writing classes where I read so many things that were derivative of this sort of thing that going back to the source doesn’t work for me. It reminded me that when I read On the Road two decades ago, it didn’t really work for me then. Like I need more work in the structure. At the very least this is the most genuine realization of the exhortation to write what you know.

 

 

Thoughts on Mumbo Jumbo

Man, I was about eighty pages of this one before I picked up any sort of plot. It was interesting but I kept waiting for the thing to cohere, but it never did for me. It was more like watching a slow strobe where you would only get brief glimpses of the plot and try to figure out what was going on in the periods of darkness.

 

 

Thoughts on Jean Toomer’s Cane.

 

This book came out in 1922, which would have been the same year as the Wasteland and Ulysses and the author should be on the same tongues as those that speak the names of Joyce and Eliot. But Toomer isn’t a forgotten name from a hundred years ago.

The individual stories are well structured and beautifully rendered, the problem with the text is that it jumps around a good bit and there’s an issue with some thematic flow. It takes the reader from the Midwest to the south and to DC and back. The whole thing shows just such incredible skill and promise, and if you look at the publication cadence of the stories and poems it shows just such an incredible output in the one year of 1922. And it was the only book he published. What a loss for the culture.

 

 

Thoughts on A Culture of Growth by Joel Mokyr

First off, whoever designed this book needed to increase the font size a point or two. I’m getting older, but not that much older. In terms of the book, Mokyr does string a nice thread from Bacon to the Enlightenment as the source of the eternal question of why the industrial revolution happened when and where it happened. Not 100% sure why solely in England and not the rest of Europe, but the continent and the intellectual environment of the Republic of Letters seems to have a good connection. I have not read any criticism of the text, so I imagine that this is accepted as gospel truth in the economic history community since the publication of the text. One thing that I find really interesting is that at the end of the text he looks at China in the same period and examines some factors that might have inhibited the industrial revolution there, even though they had a technological lead. The most crucial point is not that China (Or elsewhere in Asia or Africa) failed by not grabbing onto the rocket of the industrial revolution, but that it was a unique set of intellectual institutions that really helped grow the economy as we know it. As a side note, it’s probably time to read McCloskey on similar issues.

 

 

On Wilhelm Reich’s The Mass Psychology of Fascism.

 

I don’t think I’m the right audience for this book. I’ve long been skeptical of any sort of Freudian-based psychological framework (and I do accept that the text is going on a hundred years old at this point). However, Reich does seem to be convincing that there is a psychological basis for fascism in all populations. I just don’t think there’s a good explanation for why it rose up in Italy and Germany but didn’t really anywhere else embedded in the text. So, there’s a few places you could find some good pull quotes, but it doesn’t really work as a coherent whole for me.

 

And then there’s the whole thing with Orgone energy in the background of the whole thing. The edition I have is a third edition and he says that this edit is after the discovery of this phenomenon, and it was incorporated into the text. I am really curious about what the first or second edition was like when it was more based on the psychological / class-based approach. I have some friends who get a lot of Reich, but this just didn’t do it for me.

 

 

Thoughts on Boys Weekend by Mattie Lubchansky

 

There are a lot of books like this coming out now. There is the protagonist who is going through a gender transition. There is a set of friends meeting for a bachelor party. There is a near future sea-steading utopia where laws don’t exist. There’s a cult recruiting at a conference in the hotel where the characters are staying who might be working to unleash horrors unknown that come from out of time and space. And it’s up to the protagonist to bring all these threads together to a resolution.

 

Like I said, we all know the story. The thing is here that Lubchansky (a well-known, national treasure) does it better than anyone else. I don’t want to get too deep into spoilers, but there is a scene where the protagonist hunts their own clone that is worth the price of admission. (Why Lubchansky here is giving their approval to clone is beyond me, but I’m quite sure it’s a direct endorsement of the sport.)

 

No comments:

Post a Comment