In His Own Words

Category: Review

You need these reviews in your life.

  • If On A Winter’s Night A Traveler

    If On A Winter’s Night A Traveler

    Review: Without doubt one of the most peculiar and yet most enjoyable books I have ever encountered. To describe it is difficult. A man starts to read a new novel and finds it cuts off after the first chapter. So he goes back to the shop to complain and meets a woman who had the… Read more

  • Opera Anecdotes

    Opera Anecdotes

    Review: Excellent selection of opera anecdotes from Monteverdi to Britten, and from Aida to Zerlina. I read this a few pages at a time, daily, while taking a shit. I shit a lot, so I like to make use of the time. Now I’m flushed with success. Most, almost all of these anecdotes never happened,… Read more

  • Riders on the Storm

    Riders on the Storm

    Review: I ordered this book with zero pre-conceptions and zero knowledge of The Doors. Okay, fractional knowledge. Like I had heard of them, and I had heard the main singles, and I knew Jim Morrison was their singer and that he died. Other than that, not much. This was written by the drummer, and is… Read more

  • Wagnerism: Art and Politics in the Shadow of Music

    Wagnerism: Art and Politics in the Shadow of Music

    Review: DNF. After a month I’m on page 423 of 770 and I’m tappin’ out. Great read, but so dense and scholarly. Wagner, Wagner everywhere, but not a drop to think. Essentially the author finds Wagner and Wagner references everywhere: because he’s looking for them. Learned a lot, and a fabulous reference for me Too… Read more

  • A Farewell to Arms

    A Farewell to Arms

    Review: Fuck am I stoned. Right off me tits. This was an excellent book. Intense prose in a jerky, staccato delivery. The action moves very quickly but then stalls and dies in Book V. There’s denouement and denou-disappointment, which this was. Illustrates the futility of war and armies especially in the Great War. If you… Read more

  • The Narrow Road to the Deep North

    The Narrow Road to the Deep North

    Review: Surrounded by a thick foliage of cedars, your house stands, pregnant with autumn. A wonderful, unique little volume. Part travel diary, part poetry, it describes the wanderings of a 17th century Japanese poet named Matsuo Basho. The main narrative is prose and breaks into haiku or linked verse when appropriate. Not a flaw there… Read more

  • Vanity Fair

    Vanity Fair

    Review: Too long. Way too fucking long.1 Some good prose, but comic opera characters with no basis in reality. Made it 70% of the way through then skipped every two chapters. Missed nothing. Jos Sedley dies at the end. Nobody cares. Published in serial form in 19 monthly installments. No wonder it is so long:… Read more

  • The Troll Garden

    The Troll Garden

    Review: A glorious selection of seven short stories. Capturing the sense of silence and emptiness on the Great Plains, like you are there. “A Wagner Matinee” is amazing and also very tragic. In the true sense of that word. “The Inconceivable Silence of the Plains” Last trains and slow sunsets, snow and frozen fields. First… Read more

  • The Makioka Sisters

    The Makioka Sisters

    Review: This was excellent. Elegantly crafted prose and a strong central narrative. A fascinating look at middle class life in Japan during the late 1930s. Four sisters with one foot in the past and one in the modern westernized world. This was a great read, but far too long and the ending was rushed and… Read more

  • The Iceman Cometh

    The Iceman Cometh

    Review: Wow. Totally not what I was expecting. Really, I had no idea what to expect. But I figured with the -eth suffix it would have been more old-timey, like Ibsen maybe, or Sheridan. A bunch of no-hope drunks in a dead end, last resort tavern in the years just prior to WWI. I could… Read more