Alvah's Books

Book Reviews, Essays, and Author Interviews
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From Globe Books: Interview with Jonathan Littell

May 02, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Interviews, News Items

Back in March I reviewed The Kindly Ones for The Internet Review of Books. I haven’t come across many interviews with Jonathan Littell, but I found this one today. Below is portion of the interview.

Inside a ‘perverted fairyland’

The author of the controversial novel The Unkindly Ones talks to the Globe about the brutality of war and his effort to do it justice

Globe and Mail Update

For a guy who swears he can’t stand doing interviews, Jonathan Littell has a lot to say.

Sitting in his Barcelona home after a day’s work and nursing a whisky while an unseasonably cold Spanish rain falls outside, the infamously media-shy author of The Kindly Ones stays on the telephone for an unprovoked 45 minutes. The immensely well-read graduate of Yale pauses for so long to consider each question that his long-distance interviewer keeps jumping in with the follow-up too quickly. In the background plays the kind of mournful violin concerto Hannibal Lecter listens to while making dinner.

Late in the interview, Littell, 41, makes it clear how much he dislikes talking to reporters. He says the unexpected obligations incurred by writing an international bestseller are the only reason he has agreed to speak to a Canadian newspaper, and he vows with future books to “tell my publishers I won’t do any interviews, any publicity, any promotion, and that’ll be the end of it.”

But even if he has a reputation for being prickly, he doesn’t come across that way. He is polite, funny and sincere in his discomfort — a philosophical unease that’s been felt by many authors before him.

“Hence the vanity of asking the writer what he ‘wanted to say’ … as if writing came from his wanting, from his free and sovereign will.”

Littel, in short, is not simply being difficult. “I deeply feel I have nothing to say on the matter, and the little I maybe did have to say at the beginning, I said it, and then it’s said and there’s no reason to say it again,” he says between sips.

“And I feel each additional interview just adds to the misunderstanding, because, of course, I never say properly what I want to say because I’m a lousy talker, so it just creates more misunderstanding.”

Misunderstanding is one way of putting it.

To read the rest of the interview click on the title.

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Review: A Priest in Hell: Gangs, Murderers, and Snitching in a California Jail by Randall Radic

April 22, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Book Reviews

I recently reviewed A Priest in Hell: Gangs, Murderers, and Snitching in a California Jail by Randy Radic for The Internet Review of Books. I had some questions concerning the book, but Randy, who has contributed to this site, took my comments very gracefully and viewed them as constructive criticism. Below is the opening paragraph of the review.

a_priest_in_hellA PRIEST IN HELL:
Gangs, Murderers, and Snitching in a California Jail

By Randall Radic
ECW Press
342 pgs 
$17.95

In early November 2005, Randall Radic, the former pastor of the First Congregational Church in Ripon, California, was arrested for fleecing his flock. The specific crime: Radic sold his parsonage and the church for more than $725,000. With the loot, he went out and bought himself a spanking brand new BMW valued at $100K, wined and dined at exclusive California restaurants, and smoked pricey and aromatic Hoya cigars. When he made a sizeable deposit in his bank account, he writes, “…somebody flushed the toilet.” The bank became suspicious and all bets were off-Radic’s accounts were frozen before he could transfer the dough down to San Diego and make a swift getaway. The church has its main building back, but still owes huge transaction fees.

To read the rest of the review, please visit the April issue of The Internet Review of Books.

Within the next week, I’ll post an interview with Randy about his life, writing, jail, and his plans for upcoming books.

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Weekly Reads

April 06, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Weekly Reads

I wasn’t very successful with my first round of Weekly Reads. I only completed:

  • Etta, Gerald Kolpan

And I still have to finish:

  • In the Woods, Tana French
  • One Nation Under Dog: Adventures in the New World of Prozac-Popping Puppies, Dog Park Politics, and Organic Pet Food, Michael Schaffer

But this week I need to read for The Internet Review of Books:

  • Peace First: A New Model to End War, Uri Savir

A review for Etta will be posted within the next day or two. 

 

 

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Introduction to Exiled at the Beach Book Reviews

January 09, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Editor Comments

Readers who have stumbled on Exiled at the Beach will know that I was an editor of The Internet Review of Books until very recently. At IRB, we had a few guidelines I found a little restrictive. Sometimes we were pitched a book that might be a year old (this exceeded our no more than six months old limit) or a category or genre we normally wouldn’t review such as poetry or cookbooks.  

So this got me thinking, why not personally review the books we rejected and then some?  The then some led to more thinking. Why not review or, perhaps, introduce books that were published long ago to readers. And that’s how this site came to be. 

As I’ve written on Exiled, two of my many interests include the Spanish Civil War, and writer Alvah Bessie, a veteran of the Abraham Lincoln Battalion, who fought in Spain, and was one of the Hollywood Ten.  For the next few months, I will introduce readers to books on the Spanish Civil War and to acquaint them with Alvah Bessie’s works.  Many of you may have already read some Spanish Civil War literature such as Orwell’s Farewell to Catalonia or Hemingway’s For Whom the Bells Toll; however, not many readers are familiar with Bessie’s masterpiece, Men in Battle, his personal account of fighting in Spain with the Lincolns. Men in Battle received a glowing review from Time Magazine, yet sales were disappointing–the review came out the same week Hitler invaded Poland. According to Bessie in his autobiography, Inquisition in Eden, “people had other things to read–the newspapers.”
Along with the reviews, I’ll give you an idea why I chose a specific book, some historical context, if necessary, and, if the book interests you, a link of where you can purchase it online. 
This site is a work in progress. My goal is to grow it, include other reviewers (after all, I can only read so much), offer advertising, and even have an occasional giveaway.  Please check in often. First book to be reviewed will be Helen Graham’s The Spanish Civil War: A Very Short Introduction
 
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