Tuesday, January 24, 2023

The Collectors, by Philip Pullman

This is another short tale associated with Pullman's His Dark Materials series, published as a small book, illustrated by Tom Duxbury. This time the tale is set in another world, visited in the past for a short time by Marisa van Zee, known to Pullman's readers as Mrs. Coulter. Marisa was painted as a young girl, and her monkey daemon was rendered as a one foot high bronze statute of special malevolence. This story concerns the history of art collectors acquiring  the painting, or the statuette, seemingly then randomly acquiring the other, with ill results. The tale is self-contained, but one wishes there were more meat to it. The story was originally released as an audiobook in 2014. The printed book came out in 2022.

Thursday, January 19, 2023

The Good Neighbours, by Nina Allan

This is an odd mix of a murder mystery with elements of a fairy novel. Cath is photographer who works in a Glasgow record shop, but she returns to the island where she grew up, intending to photograph murder houses. One of these is the house where her best friend was murdered when both girls were in their teens. Killed at the same time were the mother and the younger brother, followed quickly thereafter by the death of the father (the presumed murderer) in a car accident. Twenty years later Cath wants to understand the murders, and her amateur investigation leads her haphazardly to new friends and new theories. One of the theories involves the fairies, or the "good neighbours" as they are sometimes called.  Cath's leaps of intuition seem followed by discoveries that lead her further, but the internal logic of the narrative is flawed. And the ending (like the ending in Allan's earlier novel The Rift) is very unsatisfying. The dust-wrapper blurb describes the book as "an enquiry into the unknowability of the past and our attempts to make events fit our need to interpret them"--which seems a highfalutin way of saying that the book is about misdirection and failure. Certainly the author means this, but the author writes well enough to keep the reader going, even as one realizes the frustrating direction that the tale is following.

Sunday, January 15, 2023

Stalking the Atomic City, by Markiyan Kamysh

The subtitle gives a good picture of what this book is about: "Life Among the Decadent and the Depraved of Chornobyl"-- published originally in Ukrainian in 2015, and translated into an occasionally chic (by intention) but faltering (in slangy expression) English in 2022. It is a quasi-memoir of a man from Kyiv who is obsessed with exploring the Exclusion Zone around Chornobyl, the site of the 1986 nuclear disaster. He leads westerners through the area in a kind of disaster tourism, all the while drinking heavily, smoking heavily, and complaining about the winter cold and snow obsessively. Kamysh wonders frequently what its the point of him doing so, and so does the reader. He stalks the area (the apt terminology is clearly intended to echo Andrei Tarkovsky's 1979 film, The Stalker, doubtless an inspiration), encountering looters and scrap hunters, and trying to avoid the police who chase them. All the while he has a complete indifference to the toxicity of the area. There are photos (which are bland) and a map (which leaves out many of the sites visited in the text). Otherwise the text is merely a paean to danger fetishism.

Monday, January 9, 2023

Mr. Bear Squash-You-All-Flat, by Morrell Gipson

The oddly-titled children's book originally came out in 1950. The comics writer Gary Larson found the book when he was three, and made his mother read it to him over and over again, many times. Thus the book and its quirky humor were in some sense a kind of spark which inspired The Far Side. Larson said in 1986:  "There was something so mesmerizing about the image of this big bear going through the forest and squashing the homes of these little animals. I just thought that was the coolest thing in the world."  And it might just be one of the coolest things in the world.  The story is amusing and clever, and the illustrations (particularly of the "very stupid" and at times surly bear) are complementary--they are signed only as by "Angela." The book was reprinted in 2000 with a short Foreword by Gary Larson.  And it came out again in 2014, credited as the 65th anniversary edition, with Larson's piece moved to the end of the book. Fun.

Thursday, January 5, 2023

The Light Between Worlds, by Laura E. Weymouth

This is basically Narnia fan-fiction. Of course its details are altered, for copyright reasons, from the C.S. Lewis books, but the basic premise is: what happened to the Pevensie children after their return from Narnia?  Only here it is three children instead of four, the world is called the Woodlands not Narnia, and its figurehead is a white stag named Cervus, not a lion called Aslan. If you like Narnia a lot, you may find interest here, but if Narnia leaves you cold (as it does me), this is a pallid remembrance, and not especially well-written. It reads like something thought up in a cynical publisher's marketing department, and executed by a pre-selected hack writer. Readers looking for at least some originality should steer clear of this exploitation.