... Roll is interested in your remarks, thoughts and ideas and encourages comments (below each review )...

Thursday, July 30, 2009

RollnSmoke Reviews: LE DIVORCE

Le Divorce by Diane Johnson (Plume, 1998). An amusing, quick summer read features Isabel Walker, a young American from Santa Barbara, who has recently dropped out of USC Film School to head to Paris to live with her step-sister, Roxy, who is pregnant and separated from her French husband who has run off with a Czech sociologist named Magda. Because Isabel is young and fun and seemingly “indifferent to her future,” the reader experiences the high culture and sumptuous food and worldly sights of Paris from an unpretentious, newcomer’s point of view. It’s not long before Isabel begins a secret affair with one of Roxy’s in-laws, a seasoned and accomplished 70-year old French political figure. A string of somewhat far-fetched tragedies, including a suicide attempt, a kidnapping and a homicide, jars the frivolous vibe of the first half of the book, and Isabel’s response to these events reveals her to be deeply flawed, narcissistic and greedy (8/10).

Friday, July 24, 2009

RollnSmoke Reviews: THE SONG IS YOU

THE SONG IS YOU by Arthur Phillips (Random House, 2009).

Called a “dark comedy about obsession and loss,” this newest novel by acclaimed author Arthur Phillips is his least cohesive and absorbing. For recently-divorced and grieving protagonist Julian Donahue, longing and music go hand-in-hand. Living in New York and working as an advertising director, he fixates on an emerging club rocker Cait O’Dwyer, who is half his age, as a conduit out of deep despair. In the course of pursuit, his musical taste is revealed as dated (“the rock of aging”), his sexuality emerges as defeated and his stalking is creepy. The strategy of slowly revealing truths – about a dead son, a manic ex-wife -- doesn’t work here mainly because the present tense non-romance between this narrator and the young girl-rocker fails to compel. (6.5/10).

Sunday, July 12, 2009

RollnSmoke Reviews: THE WORLD IS WHAT IT IS: The Authorized Biography of V.S. Naipaul

THE WORLD IS WHAT IT IS: The Authorized Biography of V.S. Naipaul (Patrick French, Knopf, 2008). When I chose this fat book from the shelf, I had a vague idea of who V.S. Naipaul is – I’d read A Bend in the River – and knew that he’d won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2001, but I had no idea I would find his life story so irresistibly – I couldn’t put this book down!

Naipaul was born to a poor East Indian Brahmin family in colonial Trinidad in 1932 and rose to become a great writer, at once outrageous, funny and offensive. Vividly written to reveal the truth of an imperfect life, biographer Patrick French shows how Naipaul struggles in constant exile – neither Indian nor British nor islander – a writer of the world without a homeland – to achieve a writing style that is a combination of travel, fiction, history, politics, literary criticism and autobiography.

What is most interesting about Naipaul’s life, however, is his fascinating relationships with women: His mother, always poor and at home in Trinidad, whom he refuses to see towards the end of her life; his tragic, literary spouse, Pat, whom he relentlessly taps for deep and comforting loyalty; his own claim to once “being a great prostitute man”; his lover, Margaret, an Anglo-Argentine, with whom he has a torrid and twisted affair for 24 years; his sister, Kamla, to whom he is devoted during his lifetime; and his second wife, Nadira, a divorced journalist from Kenya and Pakistan, whom he marries directly after Pat’s death from cancer. Indeed it is his relationships with these women that bring his full writing character to the fore: “His scope, irascibility, outsider status, rudeness, Pat’s silent presence.” (9.5/10).

... a cold Kalik, anyone?

RollnSmokeRecords Recommends: BEST NEW BOOKS

...NONFICTION...

BATTLE HYMN OF THE TIGER MOTHER (Amy Chua, Penguin, 2011). An ambitious Professor of Law at Yale University, Amy Chua builds a defense for results and skills-oriented Chinese parenting – ruthless, where parents have “higher dreams and higher regard” for their children -- over Western parenting – which she presents as indulgent, choice-offering and overly-nurturing of self-esteem (8/10).

JUST KIDS
(Patti Smith, Harper Collins, 2010). In spare, thoughtfully collected diction Patti Smith celebrates in memoir her relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe that began one summer in New York City in 1968, two artists, in love (9/10).

LIFE (Keith Richards with James Fox, Little Brown, 2010).
The infamous guitar player for The Rolling Stones offers up an account of his own, spirited and adventurous life, very much in his own words – unliterary and British raw -- this is indeed, quite a Life (8.5/10).

UNBROKEN (Laura Hillenbrand, Random House, 2010).
A fascinating, non-fiction story that reads just like flowing fiction, featuring track Olympian, Louie Zamperini, who survives a wrenching Pacific bomber crash to float for weeks on a rubber raft until he is captured by the Japanese and held as a POW for years (9.5/10).

THE IMMORTAL LIFE OF HENRIETTA LACKS (Rebecca Skloot, Crown, 2010) This debut book by a young, accomplished science writer tells the story of the infamous HeLa cell, which came from the ovarian cancer mass of a poor, young black woman who accessed John Hopkins University Hospital for medical care in the early 1950’s (9/10).

...FICTION...

FREEDOM: A NOVEL (Jonathan Franzen, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2010). A love story between two people who meet and marry young, grow up together and slowly learn the thresholds of wanting to be together vs. not wanting to lose each other (8.5/10).

STATE OF WONDER (Ann Patchett, HarperCollins, 2011)
Patchett’s sixth novel is a fast and fun summer read situated in the steamy Amazonian tropics of Brazil where a doctor named Marina is sent by her employer, the head of a drug company that is funding research for an emerging fertility drug, to uncover the circumstances of a dear colleague who recently disappeared there (8.5/10)

PRIVATE LIFE (Jane Smiley, Knopf, 2010). Smiley writes with a smart, keen eye, stringing her narrative like holiday lights among historical American icons – The St. Louis World’s Fair, the Great San Francisco Earthquake, two World Wars and the U.S. encampment of Japanese – while at the same time slowly revealing the sad and intimate details of an unraveling marriage (9/10).

THE IMPERFECTIONISTS (Tom Rachman, Random House, 2010). This engaging, fast-reading, debut novel centers on an English-speaking newspaper opened in Rome by American Cyrus Ott in 1954 and reveals the characters – primarily the editors and writers – who work there (9/10)

LET THE GREAT WORLD SPIN (Colum McCann, Random House, 2010). Winner of the National Book Award, this novel is Colum McCann’s emotional response to the devastation of the 9/11 attacks. He achieves resolve, hope and rebuilding by harkening back to New York City as it was in 1974 when Viet Nam was raging, art was flourishing, liberation theology was emerging and technology was quickly developing (9.5/10).


...Recently Read Old School …

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD (Hachette Book Group, 1960)
Winner of The Pulitzer Prize, this debut novel is filled with sustained mystery & suspense and compelling misdeeds & murder. Told from the endearing and feisty point of view of 8-year-old Scout Finch and set in 1935 rural Alabama, this classic novel is loaded with timeless lessons about racism; good, honest parenting; the meaning of honor and conscience; and the importance of empathy: “… you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them” (10/10).

A MOVEABLE FEAST by Ernest Hemingway (1964)
Ernest Hemingway’s only memoir, published posthumously several years after his suicide, covers the years 1921-1926 when he was young and married to his first wife, Hadley. What rises in retrospect as most poignant and wise is Hemingway’s lasting love for her. “I wished I had died,” he writes in the end, “before I ever loved anyone but her.”


THE END OF THE AFFAIR by Graham Greene (Penguin, 2004)Greene’s provocative story about an affair that fails to disintegrate is considered one of his greatest “catholic novels” in its wide consideration of faith. What emerges in the wake of passionate and illicit relationship is a shared struggle with hatred, love, jealousy and ultimately, belief, which Sarah catches “like a disease” (9/10).