Do you believe in magic? Silly question. You’re human. You obviously believe
in magic. Now you may not call it magic. You may call it science or religion or
politics or rock & roll or art or even baseball. But you do believe in
magic. You believe you can be transformed, transported, changed by a process
that is outside yourself, your woefully inadequate self: a good fairy, a spell,
three magic wishes, coins in a fountain, a formula, a program, a chance
meeting, the lucky fall – Providence. That is magic, pure and simple, hard and
fast and deeply embedded in the human psyche. In Providence: The Story of a Fifty-Year Vision Quest by Daniel
Quinn (Bantam, $19.95 hard), the author of Ishmael (the $500,000
winner of the Turner Tomorrow Award) uses his life story and the story of the
origins of Ishmael, a 50-year process of dreams, visions, writing and
re-writing, of burning 100,000-page manuscripts and starting over, of facing
rejection after rejection, to explore that magical bridge between the person
inside and the other outside, whether that other be parent, lover, neighbor,
enemy, or even nonhuman others.
Providence, as was Ishmael, is essentially a monologue, the
conceit this time being that a fan of Ishmael (and there is a large,
almost cultish following for the environmental-cry-in-the-wilderness novel) has
broken into Quinn’s house and demanded to know how Ishmael came to be
written. This conceit initially annoyed me more than Ishmael the talking
gorilla of the original, but I quickly realized that this was perhaps the best
way to “break into” this philosophical mystery/autobiography.
Again, as in Ishmael, Quinn manages to be crisp and bracing in his
unraveling of a seemingly simple tale. Few autobiographies have such novelistic
timing, keeping the reader hungry for climax. His telling of his adventures
with a talking dream insect at the age of six, his one-month stay as a 19-year-
old with Thomas Merton and the Trappists (Merton apparently thought one of
Quinn’s visions, one that eventually led to Ishmael, was, in fact, a
psychotic episode and therefore refused Quinn’s admittance into the order), as
well as with Midwestern bookies and the education industry is by turns
poignant, acerbic, treacly, pompous, matter-of-fact, mystical. But
Providence is always compelling and excruciatingly truthful, in short,
terribly, wonderfully human, and, as in Ishmael, replete with new ideas,
yes, new ideas on how we live our lives and how we must come to
understand that there isn’t a bridge to cross between me and you, only a
joyous, very much alive relationship to be explored, a magical union that is of
the life of the planet itself. – Ric Williams
“My mind is crazed by Homo-
sexuality,” Allen Ginsberg writes in late 1955, almost halfway through his
now-published journals from the mid-Fifties. Oh, really?
Excavated from the archives of Columbia University where they were held
hostage for a time, one is hard-pressed to find a page in these Journals
Mid-Fifties 1954-1958 by Allen Ginsberg (HarperCollins, $27.50 hard) of
literary history where sex is not described, alluded to, or internalized by one
of the most famous poets alive. A testament to every aspect of sex –
psychoanalytical, romantic, physical, and philosophical – Ginsberg’s musings
not only display sex as a motivational factor permeating every realm of our
thoughts but also as a vehicle to something higher. At first titillating, at
times tiresome and self-pitying, but always seemingly honest, Ginsberg’s
personal writings are fodder for his world-class poetry, alive with
sensitivity, silliness, and common human frailty.
Though not easy to follow chronologically and not rife with frequent
appearances from other Beat icons (save Neal Cassady, with whom he was in
love), these journals deliver a sense of Ginsberg that his character in
literature sells short. It gives substance to the caricature of the sex-crazed
intellectual nerd, grasping at Eastern religion, shipping off with the merchant
marines, and playing in a literary league that for him doesn’t seem to come as
easily. Fastidious is not the word that comes to mind to describe Jack Kerouac,
Neil Cassady or William Burroughs. But Ginsberg was the hardworking glue of the
Beat generation, chronicling and corresponding, and not just toiling for his
own ends, either. He was responsible for the publication of many of his
friends’ literary works, namely Naked Lunch, which he collected
sporadically through the mail and kept in a binder until it was complete, and
On the Road, which he peddled for years until its publication in 1957.
Ginsberg’s Journals are most interesting as a character study. As the
young poet grows and matures before our very eyes, so does his poetic voice.
How gratifying for the reader to spend an average day in the life of Ginsberg,
with smart friends who provide endless sexual possibilities, informed debates,
and the unwitting inspiration for poems with tenfold the glory. A longtime love
affair with Peter Orlovsky gives him the courage to explore more deeply the
American homosexual psyche, and his signature work, Howl, takes shape
with each entry as he experiences life and literature. (Monthly reading lists
are documented, well-stocked with the classics.)
Allen Ginsberg had sex on the brain all right; he was neurotic with it.
Although he contemplates the self over and over with words on the page, his
insecurity is vanquished in a work not meant for public eyes. The lack of
self-awareness which emanates from the pages of these handsomely published
journals is lovely – not a tribute, but an uncensored piece of an important
literary mind. – Jennifer Scoville
This summer, I’m going to dive
into two books with titles almost as long as they are – ‘Scuse Me While I
Kiss This Guy (And Other Misheard Song Lyrics) by Gavin Edwards (Fireside,
$8.95 paper) and The Fairly Incomplete & Rather Badly Illustrated
Monty Python Song Book (HarperPerrenial, $14 paper). I’ll even be
learning things, like the complete lyrics to “Penis Song (Not Noel Coward)” and
what exactly the hell it is Michael Stipe is saying in “The Sidewinder Sleeps
Tonite” (It’s “Call me when you try to wake her”; now, say it five times fast).
There probably isn’t even a word for books like these, because nobody ever
brings them home; they just nose through them while they’re waiting on their
girlfriends at BookStop. But these are fine examples of summer reading: light,
lots of pictures and drawings, not too many words on a page – real
in-one-eye-and-out-the-other stuff.
It’s frighteningly hard to tell where one book ends and the other begins. Is
“Hey, wait, I’ve got a naked plate” part of “Spam Song,” or is it just
misinterpreted Nirvana? What about “You’re like a German parakeet?” Is that
Robert Plant or Eric Idle? Either way, both books are extremely lightweight and
extremely fun. Python maniacs will enjoy the complete words and music (there
are instructions on how to play the piano) to classics like “Lumberjack Song,”
“Never Be Rude to an Arab,” “Knights of the Round Table” and “Every Sperm is
Sacred,” while rock & roll trivia nuts will freak when they see the sheer
volume of insignificant minutiae (and misheard lyrics from Beck’s “Loser,”
“Stairway to Heaven,” and the entire R.E.M. catalogue) in ‘Scuse Me. Fun
reading, many pictures, no intellectual investment. Ahhh… the joys of summer. – Chris Gray
What a beautiful place a golf course is. From the meanest country pasture to the Pebble Beaches and
St. Andrews of the world, a golf course is to me a holy ground. I feel God in
the trees and flowers, in the rabbits and birds and the squirrels, in the sky
and the water. I feel that I am home. With these words from For All
Who Love The Game, Lessons and Teachings for Women by Harvey Penick with
Bud Shrake (Simon & Schuster, $20 hard), the late pro reminded
us that he was not only the greatest golf teacher of all time, he created the
true vision of what the game of golf is. Pure and simple.
Until recently, only his students had the opportunity to “study at the feet of
the master,” but thanks to his son Tinsley Penick and local author and golfer
Bud Shrake, Penick’s words will live on forever through their series of golf
books. Lessons And Teachings For Women combines the mental guidance from
the Little Red and Green books with the physical guidance to make
it work for female golfers. Penick’s love of teaching women golfers shows
through on every page and every story throughout this book. Besides
remembrances of teaching pro golfers Betsy Rawls, Kathy Whitworth, and Sandra
Palmer, Penick’s recollections of helping all women golfers feel better about
their game is what strikes you as his most cherished attribute.
There have been thousands of golf instruction books written that clog the mind
with pictures and swing thoughts until you forget why you are on the golf
course in the first place. Penick’s swing thoughts are basic, the mental image
of the act made as simple as …Swing the club like a weed cutter, it’s like
swinging a bucket of water, clip the tee and of course, take dead aim.
The last line of his foreword for this book is, “The day I stop learning is
the day I quit teaching.” Harvey Penick may have passed on, but a lifetime of
knowledge has been left for all to learn from. Thank you again, Mr. Penick. – Louis Jay Meyers
Broken Mirrors/Broken Minds: The Dark Dreams of Dario Argento by Maitland McDonagh (Citadel
Press, $18.95) nicely utilizes a line of beautiful and appropriate dialogue
from Argento’s ownSuspiria for its title and finds smart fantasy movie
critic Maitland McDonagh diving head-first into the twisted landscape of
Italian horror filmmaker Dario Argento for an in-depth examination of the
common themes and symbols that make up his wild filmography. The result is a
telling piece of work that, while not always wholly supportive of Argento’s
films (for that, one must turn to John Martin’s equally intriguing Dario
Argento: A Deep Red Opera), does treat them with the respect and
intelligence not often afforded this unique talent.
The book opens with a highly literate introduction, in which everyone from
Dashiell Hammett to Stephen Heath is quoted, so complex in its allusions that
it almost immediately warrants a second reading before the reader can
comfortably move into the main text, which presents a blow-by-blow analysis of
each of Argento’s 11 feature films, starting with 1970’s A Bird With a
Crystal Plumage to 1990’s Two Evil Eyes. Each chapter, as filled as
they are with detailed cinematic allusions and startlingly astute observations,
prompt those familiar with Argento’s pictures to view them in a new light, and
should raise more than just an eyebrow of interest in those who haven’t seen
them, or who have been unfortunate enough to view only the butchered stateside
versions that pass for domestic releases.
However, although both Tim Lucas and the aforementioned John Martin have
covered this territory before, what’s different here is the sheer scholastic
nerve, not to mention the daunting willingness to challenge the incoherence and
slight characterization that arguably mars Argento’s movies – particularly in a
closing interview. This occasionally leads to some uncomfortable stand-offs,
climaxing in a memorable moment in which McDonagh’s obnoxious questioning (“Do
you lie on the beach and think up disgusting ways to kill people?”) prompts
Argento’s vicious response: “Why don’t you just make up a reason for me?”- that
manage to set McDonagh’s writing apart from her peers.
Despite these drawbacks, which seem designed solely to tick Argento off in
order to get a extreme reaction, they can’t fully mask what is obviously a deep
enthusiasm for the films of the Italian director. Previously available only in
England, the Citadel version contains an added “Afterword to the American
Edition,” which sports a disappointingly simplistic critique of Argento’s most
recent film Trauma that seems especially bland in lieu of the detailed
commentaries preceding it. Otherwise, it’s the same great book, and beyond its
occasionally smug attitude, proves to be a fascinating, wildly intelligent
examination of an equally fascinating subject. – Joey
O’Bryan
If you’ve ever felt the fanciful
urge, like former Austinite Steven Saylor, to visit ancient Rome, The
Venus Throw (St. Martin’s Press, $22.95 hardcover) should transport you
there with spellbinding effectiveness. The fourth installment in Saylor’s
Roma Sub Rosa series of historical mysteries, The Venus Throw
finds the Roman milieu that Saylor sketched and colored in over the three
previous volumes bursting into a full-blown alternate reality that the reader
visits with a sense of excitement and awe.
Of course, one couldn’t find a finer guide to the Forum, the gardens, the
villas, the baths, and the back alleys of Imperial Rome than Saylor’s hero,
Gordianus the Finder, a true moral actor in an immoral world, and a figure
whose wisdom and humanity makes him feel, by this point for loyal readers of
the series, like a beloved family member. To wit, Saylor has enhanced a classic
lone ranger like the Finder each time out with a growing family of his own, all
of whom play their own surprising parts in this cannily drawn tale. Mixing
mystery fiction with actual historical figures and events, The Venus Throw
draws ancient Rome out of the parched texts and cinematic myths into a
tangible realm where the sights, smells, and even the touch of the cobblestone
streets seem as real as everyday modern life, inferring parallels that are
undeniable. Drenched in the intrigue and turbulence of the day, and perfumed
with strong whiffs of eroticism, The Venus Throw and the books that
precede it form an engrossing time machine where both scholarship and
storytelling unite in a masterful and entertaining collection.
– Rob Patterson
Nothing excites a child like
a sense of discovery; finally, a publishing company has hit on a truly
enchanting way to ignite that sense. One of a series of such sets, The
Ancient Rome Discovery Kit by Joseph Farrell, Ph.D (Running Press,
$19.95) comes with a small paperback book on the life of ancient Romans and
a mini archaeological “dig.” Following two families through a day in their
lives in ancient Rome, the book has some amusing information, but is still
quite dry, at least for my eight year-old. The activity part of the kit,
though, is anything but. This kit comes with the pieces of a bisque pottery
sundial embedded in a block of porous gypsum. The child’s task is to play the
archaeologist, carefully scraping away the gypsum with the provided tool (a
popsicle stick) to unearth the pieces of the sundial and then to put them
together to make a working sundial.
It was slow going, but the first time my daughter hit a piece of the sundial,
she did everything but shout “Eureka!” While physically tedious (she had to
take several pauses to rest tired fingers), the “dig” completely absorbed her
for nearly two hours. And though I read the book to her while she dug, her
questions were not so much about the early Roman life as they were about the
life of an archaeologist or paleontologist. We even had to get a paintbrush to
carefully whisk the dust away. As a book, Life in Ancient Rome gets only
mediocre marks. But as a hands-on learning tool and a fun way to while away an
afternoon (important to both children and parents), The Ancient Rome
Discovery Kit is a winner. At $19.95, it’s a bit pricey for a birthday
party present, but it is a wonderful special gift. With this kit, you get a
process and a prize in the same package. – Hollis
Chacona
The clean, reserved colors and
misty black & white photo of seashells on the book jacket for
Drinking the Rain by Alix Kates Shulman (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux,
$20 hard) bespeak simplicity, the casting off of whatever is extraneous and
hampering. But Shulman’s memoirs of life after 50 are more than just another
get-back-to-nature book; Drinking the Rain combines ecological
questions with a feminist sensibility, a human search for meaning and
endurance, and the sense of life lessons being related. It’s a slow walk down
a long road with a favorite, trusted aunt.
After 30, the saying goes, most people begin to live off of their intellectual
fat. At 50, activist and writer Shulman left a life dense with family and
political and literary activity for a summer alone on an island off the coast
of Maine. “This was in the early Eighties, years of glut and greed,” she
writes, “when we who had come alive in one of the great liberation movements of
the century, the liberation of women, watched helplessly as much that we had
hoped to accomplish seemed arrested, forgotten, on the verge of being lost.”
More than political frustration prompted her retreat, however. At 50, her
children grown, her marriage dissolving, Shulman felt what every woman, I
suppose, fears: empty, unsure of how to conduct her life. Her summer alone in a
cottage without electricity or plumbing provided her not with a vacation, but
with hard, joyous, sometimes enigmatic instruction in how to live. “I’ve come
here not to vacate my life, but to fill it.”
Drinking the Rain is written in the tradition of philosopher
naturalists such as Thoreau and Annie Dillard. Shulman’s descriptions of
nature are luminous, leaping from page to mind with the strength of simplicity.
But it is her descriptions of the changing seasons within herself that raise
the memoir to the level of numinous. Shulman relates how she confronted
external and internal disapproval and fear not only during the summer in the
cottage but in her attempt to integrate what she learned into her life beyond
that time. Notably, some of the strongest opposition came from other women
activists, women who had internalized images of a solitary woman as dangerous
(And it’s certainly true; a woman alone is dangerous, just not necessarily to
herself).
As a woman in her twenties, I feel that Shulman’s is the older voice I have
been waiting to hear. Raised in the decades before second-wave feminism,
Shulman can recount incidents that portray the difficulty of being a woman in
that time, and her brief descriptions of herself and her fellow activists lend
a wonderfully human perspective to the women’s movement. But her feminist
sensibilities serve to clarify a larger human context, the context of a search
for individual meaning at a time when most women and many men begin to consider
themselves meaningless – this is a book that anyone can read and enjoy. Alix
Kates Shulman’s clarity, compassion, and bravery make Drinking the Rain a document of joyous living and change.
– Barbara Strickland
This article appears in June 9 • 1995 and June 9 • 1995 (Cover).
