Archive for January, 2011

The Last Brother: book review

The Last Brother, by Nathacha Appanah. Publisher: Graywolf Press (February 1, 2011). Fiction, 176 pages. Paperback.

Often I wonder how many additional unique stories about WWII remain to be told. Apparently, quite a few. The Last Brother tells about the mass exodus of European Jews turned away at Haifa and deported as illegal immigrants to the British island of Mauritius. In 1944, nine-year-old Raj, a resident of Mauritius, remains unaware of the battles waging beyond the small island he calls home.

While others struggle for survival, this young boy endures daily beatings at the hands of his father. After both his brothers die during a massive storm, Raj and his parents move to another village where his father takes a job as a prison guard. The prisoners are unlike any Raj ever imagined. Varied in age, tired and weary, these white people look identical to him. He becomes rather taken with David, a boy his own age, and when he ends up in the prison hospital after a particularly nasty beating, he and David become friends. Raj misses his brothers and thinks that David could fill the void. He decides to rescue David from prison. The residents of Mauritius, a British island off the southeastern coast of Africa in the Indian ocean, remain deliberately oblivious to the war waged on far away lands. Raj doesn’t even realize the truth about his friend David until he researches the events himself many years later.

In this impressive novel, writer Nathacha Appanah charms and delights in recounting an appalling time told through a child’s viewpoint without precocious airs. She’s created an endearing, courageous character in Raj. Told in a haunting yet magical style, The Last Brother is an intriguing, heartfelt story about loss, belonging and place.

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MUSIC: This is Why We Fight by The Decemberists

Afghanistan

lyrics:

Come the war
Come the avarice
Come the war
Come hell

Come attrition
Come the reek of bones
Come attrition
Come hell

And this is why
Why we fight
Why we lie awake
This is why
This is why we fight
And when we die
We will die
With our arms unbound
This is why
This is why we fight
Come hell

Bride of quiet
Bride of all unquiet things
Bride of quiet
Bride of hell

Come the archers
Come the infantry
Come the archers
Of hell

And this is why
Why we fight
Why we lie awake
This is why
This is why we fight
And when we die
We will die
With our arms unbound
This is why
This is why we fight
Come hell
Come hell

And this is why
Why we fight
Why we lie awake
This is why
This is why we fight
And when we die
We will die
With our arms unbound
This is why
This is why we fight

So come to me
Come to me now
Lay your arms around me
This is why
This is why we fight
Come hell
Come hell
Come hell

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Lifetime TV movie review: Taken from Me: The Tiffany Rubin Story

Do you know how many children I have? Just one. I’m not going to be patient.
–Tiffany Rubin [Taraji P. Henson]

Based on a true story, Taken from Me: The Tiffany Rubin Story reveals the risky plan that school teacher and mother Tiffany Rubin [Academy Award® -nominee Tarji P. Henson] took to rescue her son Kobe [Drew Davis] after the boy’s father abducts him and takes him to South Korea. Tifanny agrees to let her ex-boyfriend take Kobe for the weekend to Disneyworld. She buys Kobe a cell phone and worries about letting him go but realizes she cannot keep her son away from his father. Days later, she hasn’t heard anything from Kobe and finds herself in a nightmare scenario. After exhausting every conceivable path imaginable, Tiffany turns to Mark Miller [Emmy Award®-winner Terry O’Quinn] and his charitable organization The American Association for Lost Children. As a teacher, Tiffany accesses a teaching-exchange web site in South Korea and locates her son. From there, she and Mark come up with a plan to travel to South Korea and bring home Kobe. They have a limited window of opportunity to get Kobe from his school to the U.S. Embassy where as U.S. citizens they are safe from any prosecution by South Korea. The daunting aspect is that if Kobe’s father finds out what’s happening and reports Tiffany and Mark to the authorities, they’d end up being prosecuted. As Tiffany, Henson convincingly elicits fear, frustration and anger at her devastating situation. Viewers know that Tiffany will succeed or the story wouldn’t be a Lifetime movie. It’s well-done and has enough intrigue to keep us engaged.

Taken from Me: The Tiffany Rubin Story premieres on Lifetime on Monday, January 31 at 9pm [ET/PT]

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Choice Quote: Chloe in the Afternoon

That’s why I love the city. People pass by, and vanish. You don’t see them grow old.

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MUSIC: Portland Cello Project Covers Kanye West

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FOOD: Vegan Winter Mash

ingredients:

2 tsp cumin
2-4 cloves garlic
2 tsp sage
2 medium yellow onions, chopped
4 carrots, chopped
1 cup turnip, chopped
1 cup collard greens [any greens will work]
1 cup brown rice
1 cup orange or brown lentils
8 cups water

add olive oil to pan that’s on medium heat. add carrots, onions, cumin, garlic, sage and cook until onions and carrots are a bit softer. add in rice and two cups water. stir. add lentils and 4 cups water. mix in greens and turnip and 2 more cups water.

turn heat to high, bring to boil. lower heat and simmer approximately 40 minutes until liquid is absorbed and everything is tender.

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STEELE INTERVIEWS: author Melissa Jones

One of my favorite books of 2010 was Emily Hudson by Melissa Jones. She’s been kind enough to answer some questions.

Amy Steele: Why did you want to write a book based on Henry James’ relationship with his cousin?

Melissa Jones: I have always been interested in Henry James’ work – particularly his attitude to his heroines. I did already know of Minny Temple’s reputation as James’ muse, but when I read Lyndall Gordon’s biography, she came alive for me – not as a tragic sacrificial image but somebody of immense life and energy who had the misfortune to die young.

Steele: Henry James has written some strong and memorable female characters. Why do you think he was successful in writing women?

author Melissa Jones

Jones: He was successful because he was a great writer. I think he was also very much in the thrall of women – but at the same time wary. The distinctive way he evokes and then punishes women in his fiction seems sinister to me and denotes a kind of obsessive/carnivorous interest.

Steele: What attracted you to writing historical fiction?

Jones: It was Minny Temple’s story – I tried not to think of it as historical fiction or I would have lost my nerve. But I have always been a tremendous fan of the nineteenth century novel: the plots are so gripping and the period was one of immense change.

Steele: How did your writing process differ from your previous works of fiction?

Jones: I read the biography and at first thought of adapting it for the screen. But then the idea began to change from a straight translation of a true story and took on its own life. The inspiration was James and Minny Temple, but the themes are both contemporary and historical, I think. Once it was established in my mind I tried to write as I had the other books.

Steele: What was the greatest challenge in writing a work of historical fiction?

Jones: To avoid pastiche while feeling true. I wanted it to be believable but not overly concerned with style and of showing off research. The story was the most important thing.

Steele: What type of research did you do before writing the novel?

Jones: Having read so many nineteenth century novels (some in themselves, historical for their time) I felt I had a solid grounding in the way the world worked and how people spoke and behaved. I backed this up with online research and trips to the Cambridge University library – but a lot of that came up while I was in the process of writing. The book is a work of the imagination primarily.

Steele: Some novels of historical fiction contain too many extemporaneous details. How did you edit what to include and what not to include in order to fully develop the characters and to allow the story to move along at a reasonable pace?

Jones: I agree that ‘period detail’ can often do nothing but show the author’s knowledge: so I tried to follow the example of actual nineteenth century novels and concentrate on the story. Once the parameters were established I focused on the plot and characters and hoped that the reader would ‘see’ it as I did. No character ever sees themselves as part of history – they are just living their lives and that is what I wanted for Emily.

Steele: What do you like best about your character of Emily Hudson?

Jones: Her courage. Not only to be forthright and to battle her illness, but to learn from her mistakes.

Steele: What characteristics of Emily’s do you feel are most unique?

Jones: Her irreverence. I read Minny Temple’s letters and I think people always think the inhabitants of the past were somehow different from us and all terribly proper – she wasn’t at all. That was why she got in such trouble, obviously, but it is a very refreshing and I think moving part of Emily that she is so determined to be ‘true.’ Today it is also easy to be confined by convention.

Steele: It’s interesting that you include a close relationship between Emily and her doctor that she sees about her consumption. What interests you about TB back then?

Jones: TB was not only a brutal killer but a shameful condition – seen as a stain to those who bore it. Little was known about how it was contracted, or how to cure it, except with rest. For Emily it is a kind of hidden badge of her ‘otherness’. I am also interested in it because I think it was a huge part of the nineteenth century psyche – that terror of imminent death. (The same was true of the cholera and influenza epidemics.)

Steele: Emily is such a strong feminist for her time and nearly any time. What type of challenges would a woman like Emily have faced in upper-class England or Boston in the mid-19th century?

Jones: I think the main challenge was of self-determination without money. While that is also a great challenge today, many women can make their way in the world unimpeded by such obvious disapproval. I don’t think Emily would see herself as a feminist – she just couldn’t help but be herself, and that was also to do with her upbringing.

Steele: I liked that Emily Hudson is historical fiction but doesn’t read like a classic. How did you keep the tone contemporary while still adding plenty of historical elements to the story?

Jones: I wanted the narrative voice to be a bit more modern than the voices in the letters – that was part of the reason why I used both, so the reader could have that ‘looking over the shoulder of the heroine’ feeling. I also felt that a character rarely sees themselves as others see them so it was useful to show the letters in contrast to the scenes. I do not know really ‘how’ I did it (!)

Steele: What inspires you to write?

Jones: I am compelled to write as all writers are, I think.

Melissa Jones website

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The Get Up Kids: music review

Quality Hill Recordings
Available: January 25, 2011

There Are Rules is the first full length release in seven years for Kansas-city-based The Get Up Kids. It’s mostly power punk pop with edgier songs “Tithe,” the rousing “Pararelevant” and the booming “Birmingham.” But then there are a few surprisingly experimental sounding tracks such as the techno-infused “Shatter Your Lungs”—my favorite song on the release– and the splendidly morbid “The Widow Paris.” There’s enough here to appeal to newer listeners and rabid fans alike. There Are Rules just isn’t a total keeper to me.

Website

buy at Amazon: There Are Rules

Newbury Comics

iTunes

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Support Women in Film: 2010 films by female directors

Of all the films released in 2010, I found merely 14 directed by women:

The Kids Are All Right—Lisa Chodolenko
–smart film about family, relationships and when challenges threaten the status quo

Please Give—Nicole Holofcener
–darkly amusing film about a jaded New York couple and the two sisters that live in their building, who affect them more than expected

Somewhere—Sofia Coppola
–a spoiled film star gets real with an undeniably sweet, gentle relationship with his tween daughter

Country Strong—Shana Feste
–the challenges of staying young and relevant in the music industry without letting the pressures steal your individuality

The Extra Man—Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini

Going the Distance – Nanette Burstein
–cute rom-com about a long distance relationship w/ Drew Barrymore and Justin Long

The Greatest—Shana Feste

Just Wright—Sanaa Hamri
–Queen Latifah plays a physical therapist who gets her dream assignment: personal rehab to one of the New York Knicks. It’s funny and touching.

Nanny McPhee Returns—Susanna White

Ramona and Beezus— Elizabeth Allen

The Runaways— Floria Sigismondi
–pretty tame biopic of the all-girl punk rock band The Runaways with Joan Jett and Cherie Currie

The Tempest—Julie Taymor

Winter’s Bone— Debra Granik
–gritty, harrowing, suspenseful and one of the best films of 2010

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Caribou Island: book review

Caribou Island, by David Vann. Publisher: Harper (January 18, 2011). Hardcover. 304 pg.

Alaska, an attraction for both adventurers and loners, is the ideal setting for a novel about crumbling relationships that hide behind happy facades. When I read David Vann’s collection of semi-autobiographical stories, Legend of a Suicide, the introspective darkness of the stories impressed me. Caribou Island explores many of the same emotions: isolation, regret, settling. The storytelling flows with honesty and grace. The simple writing provides depth, empathy and a glimpse into the thoughts of each character.

In the novel, the main focus is on Gary and Irene, a 50-something couple who moved to Alaska three decades ago. They met in California where Gary was completing his PhD dissertation and Irene taught elementary school. Gary convinced Irene to travel to Alaska as an adventure and two adult children later [Rhoda, a planner, and Mark, a carefree guy], the couple still lives in small-town Alaska and now they resent each other. Gary’s goal is to build a cabin on the isolated Caribou Island. Irene’s not so happy about being stranded out there through the winter, completely cut off from her daughter Rhoda and civilization. As a child, Irene found her mother hanging when she arrived home from school. How much does this effect Irene today? She may not have dealt with it completely and as her marriage deteriorates so does her physical and mental health. Only recently did Irene tell her daughter Rhoda about it and the two women have a close mother-daughter relationship. The magic of Caribou Island is that the content can be as sad, cold and unforgiving as Alaska’s weather and as stunning as its landscape.

Vann remains brutally honest about relationships from the beginning. It seems that Gary and Irene settled with each other. Both realize they could have and should have done better. There is much focus on that fact that the men seem to have more options and choices in marriage than the women do. I’m not sure I can agree with that. For instance, Rhoda, Irene and Gary’s daughter, has been living with a successful dentist, Jim, for several years. She’s waiting for him to propose. Recently however, Jim had an affair and now thinks that he can be safe by marrying Rhoda and have affairs on the side. Why marry Rhoda? She cooks his dinner whenever he wants it. Even gets up to get him more to drink. She cleans and just does whatever he wants. Yet if she moved anywhere but this small town in Alaska, Rhoda might have many more options in men.

Both Irene [Gary had seemed so promising. A doctoral student, bright enough to get into Berkeley. She felt tied to him, felt wanted, felt like she belonged.] and Rhoda [What she didn’t understand about Jim was where his filling was. Nice golden crust on the outside. A dentist, with money and respect. When she first told people she was dating him, they were all impressed. His house fit the dream, too. A buttery life.] suffer inferiority complexes in that their partners could have chosen smarter women instead of safe women. Is this due to lack of selection or because the men are faulty specimens? Caribou Island delves deep into these relationships and in doing so explores why we choose to be with whom we end up with long-term and whether we are truly fulfilled and retain our independent spirits.

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David Vann website.

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