Alvah's Books

Book Reviews, Essays, and Author Interviews
Subscribe

Archive for March, 2009

In Today’s Post. . .

March 20, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

. . . two new books arrived, and they are: 

  • Parenting, Inc.: How the Billion Dollar Baby Business has Changed the Way we Raise our Children by Pamela Paul.
  • One Nation Under Dog: Adventures in the New World of Prozac-Popping Puppies, Dog Park Politics, and Organic Pet Food, by Michael Schaffer.
Special thanks goes to Jason at Henry Holt for sending these so quickly!
Share

Review: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson

March 19, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

As I mentioned in another post, I recently discovered Scandinavian Crime fiction. One book that caught my attention after reading the review on Book a Week was The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, the first book of the Millennium series, written by Stieg Larsson, the former editor in chief of the magazine Expo and a leading expert on antidemocratic right-wing extremist and Nazi organizations. 
I was lucky to acquire it via a free credit I had on Audible and when I was sick with the flu, I listened to it and I was hooked. Afterwards I had to read more of Stieg Larsson’s books. However, I found out Mr. Larsson passed away in 2004 of a sudden heart attack and there were two other books within the series, now known as the Millennium trilogy. Below is the review for the first book of the series, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Stieg Larsson (translated from the Swedish by Reg Keeland)
Alfred A. Knopf
465 pages
$24.95
The first volume of the Millennium trilogy, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo introduces readers to investigative journalist and publisher of Millennium magazine Mikael Blomquist and the enigmatic, genius hacker Lisbeth Salandar.  
Titled in Sweden as Men who Hate Women, Larsson weaves themes of misogyny and violence against women within the novel’s primary plot. The story opens with Blomquist’s conviction for libeling a major Swedish financier, and then moves quickly to  Blomquist’s investigation of the 40 year-old disappearance and possible murder of Harrier Vanger, favorite great-niece to Swedish industrialist Henrik Vanger.  
After Blomquist is hired by Henrik Vanger to write a family history and investigate what happened to Harriet, Blomquist hires Lisbeth Salandar, the actual girl with the dragon tattoo to help him research all the twists and turns in the cold case. Salandar is a 24 year-old hacker who has photographic memory and serious relationship and trust issues that were caused by numerous incidents during her childhood. Larsson alludes to these issues, but doesn’t go into detail. What readers learn is that Lisbeth is under a government sponsored guardianship. Her well-being and finances are managed by a creepy lawyer who takes advantage of her and later pays the price–a tattoo that brands him as a sadist. 
As Blomquist’s and Salandar’s investigation moves forward, readers learn that there’s much more to the Vanger family and that Harriet’s fate was somehow connected to a series of grisly and sexually-motivated murders that occurred in the 1950s and 1960s. 
Once the mystery of Harrier Vanger is solved, Larsson switches back to Blomquist’s libel case and his attempts to bring down the financier. At this juncture, the novel’s quick pace slows down as Blomquist tries to get his reputation back.
The heart and soul of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is Lisbeth Salandar who hides beneath a very tough exterior of assorted tattoos and piercings and who doesn’t hesitate to use her hacking skills to speed up justice. In spite of her personal issues and her tendency to violent outbursts–usually provoked by someone else– Salander is a very sympathetic character and makes the reader want to know what haunts this young woman.
Blomquist shines through the Harriet Vanger investigation, but as a character he’s not as fully-developed as Lisbeth. He’s a likeable sort, but with little meat to his bones. Apparently, Larsson seemed more enamored by his Salandar creation who has the nuances of a actual living being. 
Despite some pacing failures and secondary characters who are not fully-developed, Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is a stunning and suspenseful mystery with an unforgettable heroine who leaves readers waiting anxiously for her next escapade. 
Share

In Today’s Post…

March 17, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

. . . three new books arrived, and they are:

  • Almost a Miracle: The American Victory in the War of Independence, John Ferling. Special thanks to Lauren at Oxford University Press. You are awesome. Thanks to you and your associates I will be the best read beach bum this year.
  • Gabriel Garcia Marquez: A Life, Gerald Martin.  Okay shame on me, I’ve never read any of Garcia’s books. Magical realism has never intrigued me. I’m hoping reading this bio will persuade me to read his books. This review is actually for another online publication, The Feminist Review.
  • Letters from Barcelona: An American Woman in Revolution and Civil War edited by Gerd-Rainer Horn. My thanks go to the great publicity department at Palgrave Macmillan.
Share

Review: The Kindly Ones by Jonathan Littell

March 15, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

My review of The Kindly Ones appeared on the Internet Review of books. Below is the opening paragraph: 

THE KINDLY ONES 
By Jonathan Littell (translated from the French by Charlotte Mandell) 
992 pp. Harper $29.95

Oh my human brothers, let me tell you how it happened. I am not your brother, you’ll retort, and I don’t want to know. And it is certainly true that this is a bleak story, but an edifying one too, a real morality play, I assure you. You might find it a bit long — a lot of things happened, after all—but perhaps you’re not in too much of a hurry; with a little luck you’ll have some to spare. Toccata, The Kindly Ones

This intriguing opening paragraph is how Jonathan Littell in his controversial behemothThe Kindly Ones lures readers into the abysmal world of Dr. Maximilien Aue, the book’s narrator. Aue, an unrepentant Nazi bureaucrat, takes his audience on a journey back through history to the most miserable places— Babi Yar, Stalingrad, and Auschwitz—and reflects about his past as a young man before the war and as an SS officer, reasoning with his readers that if he was able to commit atrocities in the name of country and duty, weren’t they capable as well?

To read more click here.

Share

Ack! Which Book Should I Read?

March 13, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized


I have a 13 books to choose.  Which one will be next?

  • Lucky Girl: A Memoir, Mai-Ling Hopgood. I didn’t request this one, but Algonquin Books sent it to me. Ms. Hopgood was one of the first wave of Asian adoptees to arrive in America, faces her past when her Chinese birth family requests a reunion after more than two decades. I’m not very keen on memoirs, but this does seem interesting that her birth family wanted to meet her.
  • Siren’s Feast: An Edible Odyssey, Nancy Mehagian. This is another memoir. 
  •  A Mad Desire to Dance, Elie Wiesel. I have a soft spot for Elie Wiesel. Everytime I look at his photograph and stare into his sad eyes, my heart does a little flip. I’ve only read Night and Dawn so I thought I would venture to read more of his books.  This one is about a European expat living in New York who suffers from a profound sense of desperation  and loss and his relationship with his psychiatrist. 
  • Three books from Palgrave Macmillan all on Spain:

Franco and the Axis Stigma, David Winegate Pike

Republicanism and Anticlerical Nationalism in Spain, Enrique A. Sanabria
Roosevelt and Franco during the Second World War, Joan Maria Thomas
  • From the great publicists (Lauren, Susan, and Sarah) at Oxforford University Press:

After Hitler: Recivilizing Germans, 1945-1995, Konrad Jarausch

Fleeing Hitler: France 1940, Hanna Diamond
The Day Wall Street Exploded: A Story of America in its First Age of Terrorism,                     Beverly Gage
  • Target Patton: The Plot to Assassinate General George S. Patton, Robert K. Wilcox
  • Etta, Gerald Koplon. This is historical fiction. It intrgued me because it’s about Etta Place, The Sundance Kid’s girlfriend. Not much is know about her and I’m curious of how he’s handled this.
  • The Last Dickens, Matthew Pearl
  • Drood, Dan Morris 
Share

Review: Stuffed: An Insider’s Look at Who’s {Really} Making America Fat by Hank Cardello with Doug Carr

March 11, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Book Reviews

Stuffed: An Insider’s Look at Who’s {Really} Making America Fat
Hank Cardello with Doug Carr
Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers
272 pages
$25.99
In 1995, Hank Cardello had a serious health scare and later an epiphany. His doctors thought he had leukemia. After several tests, it turned out he was suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome, and Cardello learned that he could no longer eat the foods he desired or burn the candle at both ends. What he had to do was change his lifestyle. Easy enough, but there was one little catch–Hank Cardello was a marketer to some of the largest food and beverage corporations in the world. He realized after his health problems that his nutritional needs had to change and, in good faith, he could no longer advocate products and practices that would negatively affect consumers’ health. With that new mindset, he decided to “to do my part to reenvision how the food industry dealt with health.”
In his new book Stuffed, Cardello explores how food companies have spent the last 50 years focused on the bottom line and profits and ignoring healthier options while pushing consumers to growing portions and junk food. 
Cardello doesn’t really offer anything new, but as a former marketer, he does provide some interesting tidbits including the “arc of activity,” which represents the critical six inches above and below five foot six–the average female height–of supermarket shelving and one of the most coveted spots for any product. Products geared for men are shelved higher (at about five feet eight inches) because they are taller; for women lower at five feet even. 
Cardello also examines the restaurant business and “the people behind the menus” and explains how restaurants practice the science of Menu Engineering “a design strategy that increases overall sales and profits by promoting your low-cost and high-priced menu items.” Later in the chapter, he discusses the how government has played a role by mandating that restaurants list the caloric content of the foods served.
Subsequent chapters deal with purchasing agents and how they determine which food items are cheaper to buy, but provide higher profit margins to the role of government within the food industry, and finally to the quest in healthier food. Overall, Stuffed is a very good introduction for readers interested in an insider’s view of how food has been marketed and politicized.  
Share