In His Own Words

Category: Review

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  • The Recognition of Shakuntala

    The Recognition of Shakuntala

    Review: Introduction by Rabindranath Tagore. So you know it is good! Goethe loved this, thought it was exquisite poetry. An excellent translation and the rhyming parts, where they occur, are natural sounding and not forced like often happens in translated poetry. A lot of the characters and rituals you would really have to be Hindu… Read more

  • The Myth of the Sisyphus

    The Myth of the Sisyphus

    Review: A series of essays on existential philosophy. First and longest of them was tedious, but well worth the effort to get through. The last few essays were beautiful vignettes of the life and scenery of Algiers and Iran. A brilliant and honest writer. This book made me want to: visit Algiers in the 1950s… Read more

  • Fahrenheit 451

    Fahrenheit 451

    Review: Always get asked if I’ve read this, and finally did. Well worth the wait. A novel for our times, and for the times before and the times to come judging by the popularity of reality TV. Very quotable, very readable, very visionary. Just plain great. This book made me want to: read more and… Read more

  • Into Africa

    Into Africa

    Review: Couldn’t put this down. Superb history, well researched and backed by primary sources, yet reads like a novel. An impossibly difficult journey, for a grail quest. Reminded me a lot of the Franklin fiasco and the tremendous waste of lives and resources spent to recover one foolish old adventurer. Learned a lot about 19th… Read more

  • The Color Purple

    The Color Purple

    Review: I can see why this won a Pulitzer Prize. I can see why this has been banned before. Written in southern Afro-slang it just gets you right in and keeps you there. Beautifully crafted and paced all the way through. Some parts were so difficult to read, without getting a boner. A book to… Read more

  • A History of France

    A History of France

    Review: An excellent short history of France and the French people. From Vercingetorix to De Gaulle, this is the book that covers it all. Not an exhausting or comprehensive history, there are other books for that. This is a brief and concise, often humorous and always entertaining trip through 2000 years of kings and communes,… Read more

  • The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Other Stories

    The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Other Stories

    Review: I have always had a pretty low opinion of Hemingway, macho douchebags like him piss me off and I love that Wallace Stevens punched his drunk ass out in Key west. Are you ready for the however pivot? (Here it is) However, this was brilliant. Top shelf. Amazing, gripping, heartfelt, totally absorbing. No wonder… Read more

  • So, Anyway

    So, Anyway

    Review: A brilliant and thorough autobiography. Kept my interest right from the beginning and never lost it. Like most talented and funny people, the on-stage character is very much removed from the real-life human that plays that character. Funny in parts that needed to be, and serious in those parts that needed to be. Just… Read more

  • De Rarum Natura

    De Rarum Natura

    Review: An excellent, unexpectedly absorbing read. An explanation of atomic theory written 2000 years before Einstein, and it’s remarkably accurate. Also an investigation of the world in general. De natura. The nature of things. Lightning, earthquakes, iron, waterspouts, seasons, wine. An important book for the 21st century as we try to beat back the darkness… Read more

  • The Devil in the White City

    The Devil in the White City

    Review: Excellent, entertaining from cover to cover. Three narrative threads are woven together: The book offers a unique glimpse into 19th century Chicago life. The stench, the crime, all the way to the glory of the world’s fair and the starry-eyed visions of the future it embodied. Will have to see what else this author… Read more