THE SUM OF HIS SYNDROMES

REVIEW BY KATHERINE WEIKERT | posted October 27, 2009 | permalink

The Sum of His Syndromes by K .B. Dixon
★★★★★

author:
K.B. DIXON

Fiction
142 pages
Academy Chicago Publishers

Forget stream of consciousness. I don’t know about you, but my stream of consciousness generally consists of fully formed sentences latched together into comprehensive paragraphs, often incorporating plot and lots of action verbs. This may be why The Sum of His Syndromes works so well. Composed of the narrator’s notes from a sixth floor bathroom as he avoids work, K.B. Dixon’s short novel hits life from workplace gossip to the larger questions of love and happiness. And it works. Protagonist David uses blunt emotion and unintentional humor in describing his depression, his frustrating tête-à-têtes with his pill-pushing therapist, his boring and nondescript job, and his budding relationship with a woman he’s pretty certain won’t stick around.

The story with its tenuously connected notes parses out brilliantly, from the thoughtful (“Aren’t you ever afraid of catching something from us – like an overwhelming sense that it is all for nothing?”) through the sad (“We pretend I am brave because I am here, but I can’t believe in our heart of hearts that either of us feels this is true”) to the completely mundane (“Angie Huffman’s four-year-old daughter killed her pet guinea pig, Max. She thought he was cold so she put him in the microwave to warm him up.”) Throughout, the topics return to life, depression, friendship, and relationships as David struggles to align the pieces of his life, but it’s the little jewels of the everyday that make this book both a piece of humor and a fiction that actually relates to its audience.

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A CIRCLE IS A BALLOON AND A COMPASS BOTH

REVIEW BY KATIE ANNE ELLSWEIG | posted October 27, 2009 | permalink

A Circle is a Balloon and a Compass Both - Stories About Human Love by Benjamin Greenman
★★★☆☆

author:
BENJAMIN GREENMAN

Fiction
225 pages
MacAdam/Cage

Benjamin Greenman makes me want to be single for the rest of my life. Seriously. Never before has a collection of stories about “love” left me so jaded, miserable and repulsed at the thought of committed relationships. If I had a boyfriend, I would have left him after reading the story about the girl who broke Bigfoot’s heart and made him want to die. Thanks Ben, you have officially ruined my life.

A Circle is a Balloon and a Compass Both is a collection of short stories, all written by Yale graduate, editor, freelance writer, journalist, etc., Benjamin Greeman. Each story is centered around a relationship and loosely based on an aspect of love such as art, music, sports, power and humor. These relationships are anything but functional and most of them end in one character being utterly miserable.

“Clutching and Glancing” is about a young artist who takes a summer job at a hotel with the intention of seducing her way through the season. She begins a brief affair with a married doctor and after meeting his wife, inconspicuously turns him in after wearing her wedding band while she has sex with him on the hotel room floor. We can only assume she goes on to keep breaking up marriages and he goes on to sleeping on the couch.

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ZEITOUN

REVIEW BY SHAWN EWERS | posted October 25, 2009 | permalink

Zeitoun by Dave Eggers
★★★★☆

author:
DAVE EGGERS

Non-fiction
342 pages
McSweeney’s

When Dave Eggers publishes a new book, I get pretty excited. Partly because his work rarely disappoints, but also (largely!) because McSweeney’s books are a work of art.

Much like his last book, the cover of Zeitoun in many ways reflects not only the story contained inside, but the prevailing mood. It pictures a man paddling a canoe through the flooded streets of New Orleans. His face looks serene as he glides through calm water, and despite submerged houses and the hood of a car jutting out of the unnatural sea, the scene doesn’t conjure up the sense of devastation that we would expect from a book about the disastrous events of Hurricane Katrina.

The story revolves around a man named Abdulrahman Zeitoun, a prominent and well-liked man in his community. Early on, we follow his day to day interaction with family and friends, neighbors and clients, demonstrating not only that he is a likeable and dependable guy, but someone with character – with principles. And so, when things start to go downhill for our hero, it is extremely disenchanting. Infuriating even. Thankfully, this is a game Eggers is well-acquainted with, and it is where he shines. In every calamity, Zeitoun sees opportunities to help. For every disgrace he suffers, he sees a reaffirming trace of humanity. When things seem dark, he never abandons hope. In the dreariest moments, through his eyes we are left with a sense that all is not lost. It’s a nice feeling. In fact, if Zeitoun hadn’t been so steadfast throughout his trials, I probably would have grown discouraged reading; but that is not meant as a criticism – it is largely the charm of this story. Dave Eggers has a definite skill for this type of emotional balancing act.

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ALPHABET JUICE

REVIEW BY SEANN MCCOLLUM | posted October 25, 2009 | permalink

Alphabet Juice by Roy Blount, Jr.
★★★★★

author:
ROY BLOUNT JR.

Fiction
384 pages
Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Roy Blount, Jr. shares his passion for words in this delightful, rollicking book. He mixes etymology with anecdote to create as entertaining a book about the origins of words as one could hope for. Blount fairly gushes with enthusiasm for words which he deems “sonicky” that is, any word “whose sound doesn’t imitate sound, like boom or poof, but does somehow sensuously evoke the essence of the word: queasy or rickety or zest or sluggish or vim..” He goes on to state that, “If you were a caveperson earnestly trying to communicate how you felt digestively, you might without benefit of any verbal tradition come up with something close to nausea.” You get the picture. Mixed in with all the wordplay and bon mots are oodles of examples of how slippery and dynamic our language is, as well as how ridiculously silly it can seem. Blount makes no attempt at being objective; though he’s obviously done his research over the years, this is far from a straightforward reference book, though at first glance it looks kind of like one. The book is arranged alphabetically, with each section beginning with a discussion of the letter in question, sometimes criticizing the placement of a letter in the alphabet, such as T (“It ought to be the last in ours”) or merely expressing appreciation (“Let us pause to enjoy the movement between sliding and sidling”).

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THE HELP

REVIEW BY KATHERINE WEIKERT | posted October 13, 2009 | permalink

The Help by Kathryn Stockett
★★★★☆

author:
KATHRYN STOCKETT

Fiction
464 pages
Putnam Adult

In the Deep South of the early 1960s the civil rights movements gained force and the institutions that had held back African Americans for generations fought to keep their laws and traditions in place. It was a time and place of assassinations, lynching, riots, and demonstrations. It was also a place where regular people dealt with racism in everyday lives. This is the Jackson, Mississippi, of The Help, the story of three women, the quiet constraints on them, and the measures they take to rebel.

Skeeter is just back from college and expected to marry, though she chafes under the control of her parents and her upright Junior League friends. Aibileen, a maid, has lost her own child and finds that she can’t raise her white charges after they are old enough to echo their parents’ casual racism. Minny might be the best cook in the city, but her short mouth and temper prevent her from keeping jobs even as she struggles to raise her own children and avoid an abusive husband.

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THE LONG SHOT

REVIEW BY KATIE ANNE ELLSWEIG | posted October 12, 2009 | permalink

The Long Shot by Katie Kitamura
★★★★☆

author:
KATIE KITAMURA

Fiction
208 pages
Free Press

I will not lie, I bought this book because it had tattoos on the cover and the author and I had the same name. Pathetic criteria for selecting reading material but we all have our methods, and thankfully they led me to this novel. It had been a long time since I read a book so gripping that after I finished I spent the rest of the afternoon continuously re-reading the last thirty pages or so thinking that by some miracle there would magically be more book left to read.

This is Katie Kitamura’s first novel and without a doubt not her last. While her writing style has been compared to the beautiful simplicity brought to literature by the great Ernest Hemingway, I don’t see it. With her there is more of an edge; a greater intensity in her storytelling.

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SPOOK

REVIEW BY KATHERINE WEIKERT | posted October 12, 2009 | permalink

Spook by Mary Roach
★★★☆☆

author:
MARY ROACH

Non-fiction
320 pages
W.W. Norton & Co.

Nonfiction author Mary Roach tackles the science of the afterlife in Spook, a New York Times bestseller when published back in 2005. Spook is less an examination of the evidence of the afterlife as a historiography of the scientific study of the afterlife, from the 21 grams theory of Dr. Duncan Macdougall, introduced in the early twentieth century, to present studies on out-of-body or near-death experiences at the University of Virginia Hospital. Along the way, Roach touches upon reincarnation, spiritualism, EMFs and telecommunications, ectoplasm, mediums, and the formation of the soul.

Despite all this cool stuff to get into, the book doesn’t quite hit the level of examination or humor that it promises. There’s nothing immediate at fault: Roach’s writing style is breezy and entertaining (her footnotes, encompassing topics such as the underestimation of the sea urchin, the breadth of research topics funded at Harvard, and Occam’s editing pencil, are a complete hoot and reminiscent of Terry Pratchett’s liberal use of the device), the chapters are all on interesting subjects, and the flow is quick and light. The problem is simply that the topic coverage was simply too wide: I could have done without the chapters on reincarnation and the soul-weighing but done much more with spiritualism as a religious phenomenon, ectoplasm, and mediums. This is a matter of personal taste, surely, and others will feel different.

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THE GHOST IN LOVE

REVIEW BY JASON ERIK LUNDBERG | posted October 12, 2009 | permalink

The Ghost in Love by Jonathan Carroll
★★★★☆

author:
JONATHAN CARROLL

Fiction
320 pages
Tor Books

According to Benjamin Franklin, “In this world nothing is certain but death and taxes.” And though it’s highly unlikely that author Jonathan Carroll would tackle the latter in one of his novels, he does seem to have a preoccupation with the former. Many of his long-form works deal explicitly with death, but it is in The Ghost in Love, Carroll’s 17th book, that the concept of death itself is turned on its head.

Right off the bat, Carroll does something remarkable in making us care about a protagonist who is a complete dick, and care enough to keep following him through to the end. Ben Gould slips on some ice, hits his head, and is supposed to die, but doesn’t; more weirdness follows, leading to a breakup with his girlfriend. Ben’s ghost, who is supposed to escort him to the afterlife and clean up any unfinished business, must stick around to see what happens next. Ben’s ex-girlfriend, German Landis, keeps coming back into his life, caught up in the side effects of his non-death (including meeting her past selves). Ben’s dog Pilot has the ability to talk (a favorite trope of Carroll’s). The Angel of Death is a plate of runny eggs.

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THE IMPOSTOR

REVIEW BY AHMAD QARI | posted October 12, 2009 | permalink

The Impostor by Damon Galgut
★★★★☆

author:
DAMON GALGUT

Fiction
249 pages
Atlantic Books

How many of us have run away from things at some point in our lives? Personal failure is what Adam, the protagonist of Damon Galgut’s “The Impostor” is running from. Moving to the country, he seeks solace in solitude and poetry. Instead he finds himself embroiled, through an outlandish coincidence that still rings true, in a crooked scheme that encompasses a lot of what modern Africa is all about.

The novel never shifts from Adam’s point of view but the character that drives the book is Canning, an acquaintance of Adam’s from boarding school. Adam barely remembers Canning but he considers Adam to be someone that saved his life and calls him his best friend. Galgut weaves the contradictions of post-Apartheid South Africa into the very lives and thoughts of his characters. Canning displays an awkward ambivalence towards his vengeful and corrupt plan to destroy his dead father’s dream, although never towards money. Adam himself pursues an ill-conceived dalliance with Canning’s cold wife, a woman whose past has turned her into a cruel individualist with upward mobility her only goal. And there is Adam’s solitary and mysterious neighbor, a man from South Africa’s ugly past who seeks Adam out as his confessor.

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