Friday, October 7, 2016

BOOK REVIEW: Rochester Knockings by Hubert Haddad

Rochester Knockings: A Novel of the Fox Sisters BY HUBERT HADDAD
In a laudable project for the University of Rochester’s press, Haddad combines high literary style and unity of effect in this believable and engrossing historical journey. Set at the beginning of the late 19th-century Spiritualist movement in Western New York, coinciding in time and origin with the broader religious Great Awakening which swept the country, the book presents a meticulously researched tableau. The historical Fox sisters –Margaret, Kate, and the much older Leah – interact with the spectral causes of mysterious rappings in their home. Their seeming ability to communicate with spirits launches them to overnight acclaim. Their later confession to fraud is well known, but Haddad imagines a rich inner life in the youngest sister, Kate, which persists in the reader’s mind, just as the Spiritualist movement itself persists today, contrary to common reason. Her anxiety, as the family moves house three times during her childhood, evokes widespread beliefs in the connection of pre-teen angst to psychokinetic phenomena. But it is the book’s resonance with the zeitgeist of our own era that is most compelling. Western New York at the time was a crossroads culturally, religiously and economically. It was a gateway for immigration of European peasants to the rich lands of the Ohio Valley and the West, and the children of its earlier settlers felt disenfranchised. Notable is the character of Marshall McLean as a sort of mediator cum observer of the mix of these influences with Canadian, native, Mormon, and other religious splinter groups. Strongly recommended. Review first published in the Historical Novel Review

Monday, October 3, 2016

BOOK REVIEW: Ophelia's War by Alison L. McLennan

Ophelia’s War: The Secret Story of a Mormon Turned Madam

Ophelia’s War tells the riveting life story of Ophelia Oatman, an orphaned Mormon girl coming of age and fighting for physical and spiritual survival on the 19th-century Utah frontier. Ophelia is at once heartbreakingly vulnerable and heroic as she battles exploitation and abandonment to preserve her social identity and mixed family legacy. At the story’s core is her long-hidden ruby necklace, both treasure and burden. It will ultimately prove to be her very personal salvation.
Each chapter is a jewel in itself, threading through the barren landscape like told beads, presenting a fascinating array of characters: Ophelia’s abusive Uncle Luther, a riverboat gambler; Pearl Kelly, infamous Madam; and the astonishing lone Native woman who saves Ophelia’s life when she is left to die in the desert. Ophelia is an existentialist champion, who navigates all hazards thrown her way, refusing to be victimized. McLennan’s style is reminiscent of Hemingway in its demonstrative elegance, and her historical realism is flawless.
A truly compelling novel of moral exile and self-redemption. Enthusiastically recommended.

Review first published in the Historical Novel Review

Saturday, October 1, 2016

BOOK REVIEW: The Secret Book of Kings by Yochi Brandes

The Secret Book of Kings

This is the English translation of the latest Biblical fiction offering by a popular Israeli author. Set in the tumultuous Davidic period, young Shlom’am comes of age and sets out to unravel the mystery of his bloodline – a journey that will take him to the very throne of Israel.
Brandes builds upon her flawless historicity with a profound appreciation for scripture as literature. She is unique in her ability to render complex, almost Falstaffian, characters who are themselves conscious of their place in the multigenerational narrative. Rizpah, the concubine of Saul from 2 Samuel, compares herself and her experience to Tamar, the prostitute who “stole” the seed of Judah in Genesis 38 – a mere oral tradition during the reign of Saul. While neatly defining Rizpah’s moral conundrum, Brandes presents a fascinatingly accurate timeline and mechanism of historical influence. This is authoritative scholarship brought to life, without a hint of pious overlay. The reader’s respect for the material, regardless of faith, grows with every page, and Brandes’ dynamic style and vibrant characterization keep the pages turning. The heroic but dangerously ambitious David, the “Mad Princess” Michal – we are treated to a deep dive into their relationships and motives.
The narrator accuses himself of a childhood tendency to “embellish.” A self-criticism by Brandes herself, perhaps? If so, it is charming, but she’s selling herself short. The Secret Book of Kings combines historical integrity with great and approachable storytelling.

First published in the Historical Novel Review

 

Sunday, September 25, 2016

BOOK REVIEW: A Loaded Gun by Jerome Charyn

A Loaded Gun: Emily Dickinson for the 21st Century

An endnote to his novel The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson, Charyn’s A Loaded Gun further supports his case for a fresh vision of America’s most studied, yet persistently enigmatic poet. According to Charyn, we don’t “get” Dickinson – nobody does. Not the first beat of that drum in literary criticism. But his Emily is an attractive notion. Beneath the metaphysical recluse, he paints a highly sexual, almost predatory domestic goddess, whose writings testify to a rebellious, powerfully manipulative force in the lives of those around her.
A celebrated master of literary voice, Charyn inhabits Dickinson from the first page, splicing excerpts from her letters and poems with critical quotations, channeling her style, and kneading her metaphors. He draws from the vision of select contemporaries, as well as a broad range of later expressionists who claim her influence. From elemental artist Joseph Cornell, to scholar Marta L. Werner, even ballerina Allegra Kent, Charyn discloses his personal nexus to each, and weaves subjective, sometimes improbable comparisons into an interpretive tapestry which feels quite genuine. If Dickinson would fail to see herself in the finished product, she certainly would recognize his method.
The book makes for a gratifying nut of poetic analysis, historical psychology, and the passionate homage of a lifelong disciple of the beloved Belle of Amherst.
Review first published in Historical Novel Review

BOOK REVIEW: The Evening Spider by Emily Arsenault

BOOK REVIEW: The Evening Spider

Based on publicized 19th-century New England murder trials, The Evening Spider Is the first foray into the supernatural by noted psychological suspense author Emily Arsenault. It will appeal not only to her existing fan base, but also to lovers of both forensic mystery and Victorian ghost stories.
Its converging storylines follow the first-person experiences of two new mothers living in the same house a century apart. Present-day schoolteacher Abby Bernaki is troubled by guilty dreams from her past, and unexplained phenomena centered in baby Lucy’s nursery. Her attempts to unravel both take on an obsessive mood as she investigates local history, and interconnections of birth, death and betrayal. Mysteries of motive and conflict are Arsenault’s strong point, and bind well with the tale of Abby’s historical counterpart, Frances Barnett, the troubled young wife of a local lawyer.
It takes a few chapters to track the narrative structure. Frances speaks from two perspectives: the pages of her early journal and in an interview spoken to her twin brother, Harry, from Northampton Lunatic Asylum – an eerily historical setting. The payoff does come, however, and the nuanced differences in Frances’s literary voice before and after the big plot point become integral to the story. Arsenault has a valuable stylistic benchmark in the detailed contemporary press coverage of the murder trial. The dimensionality of her modern characters seems to suffer a bit in comparison, their dialog often having a filler quality.
A bonus for crime scene investigation fans is the sea change in forensics which the trial chronicles. For the first time in the late 1800s, scientific methods appeared in the courtroom, and criminal justice would never be the same.
We look forward to more historical fiction from Arsenault.

First Published in Historical Novel Review

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Cyberbullied Politicos Want to Bomb Syria without Getting their Feelings Hurt

 British ministers of parliament are complaining of Internet trolling in the wake of their votes to escalate military action in Syria  http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/nov/20/chuka-umunna-labour-mps-being-trolled-and-threatened-over-security

"It's just hurtful"  A senior British MP said.

 At least that is apparently how a constituency expessing it's disapproval and anger is now being defined. Showing it, by the way, over the same social media these politicians used to attract voter attention in the first place; the same Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram channels which these MPs  themselves use to cyber-blurt their every vapid sound byte to the millions of "trolls" who elected these carnival barkers in the first place.

Poor babies,  just wanting to be left to bomb in peace. Let's have a moment of silence for them. Remember, the first priority of post-Bush government is that these delicate hothouse orchids "keep the people safe."  In order to do that, they increasingly need to feel safe from the people.

But first let us not fail to notice where the culture of victimization has brought us.  Free-speech has always been dangerous; now it's being classified as predatory, abusive.

There oughtta be a law.

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Latest Episode: "Why are we only Hearing about this Now?"

A massive toxic damn collapse which destroyed the town of  Rio Doce Brazil on November 5 has now reached the Southern Atlantic Ocean and is dumping millions of gallons of waste laced with arsenic and other toxins into what will soon be a sprawling 200 mi.² dead zone in already polluted coastal fisheries.

 http://www.mining.com/toxic-elements-found-in-water-weeks-after-brazils-mine-disaster-vale/

Why again has the U.S. media ignored what has been called "Brazil's Fukoshima" and its "worst environmental catasrophe in history?"

Why havent we seen this on the news before now, or heard of the U.N report which found levels of toxins in high "multiples" of survivable concentrations, and criticized both the company and the Brazilian government for a "defensive" coverup? http://www.mining.com/bhp-questions-un-probe-that-said-samarco-spill-toxic/

Yahoo news finally did a report yesterday when the Brazilian government sued BHP Brillion S.A., the mining company, for the equivalent of USD 5 Billion. http://news.yahoo.com/brazil-sues-bhp-vale-5-billion-damages-mine-034850784--finance.html

Potential big money trial...now we're interested.