Friday, May 23, 2008

An Eater's Manifesto

As much as I loved Omnivore’s Dilemma, I found Michael Pollan’s follow up book, In Defense of Food, to be flat and uninspiring. He makes the case that most of what the “experts” tell us about how to eat is wrong – based on flimsy or non-existent evidence and the wrong-headed, reductive way of thinking about food as a combination of individual nutrients that can be consumed in isolation from whole food. This makes sense to me, and I agree with the wisdom of his overall message: "Eat Food. Mostly Plants. Not too much." I just wasn't drawn in the way I was with Omnivore's Dilemma.

Motherless Brooklyn

There are many things to recommend this book. First, I think, are the characters. Lionel Essrog ranks up there with Oskar Schell and Owen Meany. And it's not only his Tourette's syndrome that makes him memorable; he is a good guy trying to the right thing despite the fact that the whole world sometimes seems to be against him. And he is surrounded by other equally interesting characters. Second, Jonathan Lethem is a great writer. He has a great ear not only for the language of his characters but also for the sounds of the city (Brooklyn here as in a lot of his books). Third, he has crafted a quick moving and compelling plot, with some interesting twists. Some of the people in my book club found this book a difficult read, I think because Lethem does such a good job of getting inside Lionel's head to make you understand what Tourette's is like. But I found this just fascinating.

Two at a Time

During a long drive to Washington DC and back, I listened to A Golden Age by Tahmina Anam, which was read by the actress, chef, and cookbook author Madhur Jaffrey. The story takes place in Bangladesh as the country struggles for independence from Pakistan in 1971. As the book begins, Rehana has lost her husband to a sudden heart attack. In a culture where a widow is powerless and seemingly helpless, she is also about to lose her two young children, who are being “adopted” by her husband’s brother and his wife. Yet she refuses to accept this cruel fate and somehow, through a series of events that become clear only much later, manages to get her children back. Her much loved son, Soheil, and her diffident daughter, Maya, grow up to become embroiled in the fight for independence, and they eventually drag Rehana into it as well. Through her tremendous love for her children, this “weak” little woman develops great strength and becomes a hero not only to her country but to her children. Against a backdrop of war and tragedy, this is really a hopeful book about love and persistence

When I wasn’t in my car listening to A Golden Age, I was reading Brazzaville Beach by William Boyd. I had picked up this book when I read a review of another newer book by Boyd, a British author whom I had never heard of but who has written a number of highly praised books. What a fortunate discovery! Brazzaville Beach has so much to recommend it: two interesting intertwining stories, a bunch of good characters (many of them chimpanzees), exotic settings (one at least), romance, and danger. Hope is an ethologist who has gone to Africa to observe chimpanzee behavior, working with the person who basically wrote the book on the subject. She is also in search of herself and trying to escape a tragedy in her native England where her anthropological endeavors were decidedly more sedate. In Africa, she observes chimpanzee behaviors that call into question the life’s work of her mentor, and her reports about these behaviors put her life in danger. I found the science in this novel to be fascinating and as compelling as the intrigue and romance.

Thursday, May 01, 2008

My New Toy


I have lots of books to write about, although I haven't had time to post anything for awhile. But I'm still reading, now on my new Kindle!
It's pretty cool and I've found that I read more slowly and carefully since their is so much less text on the page with more space between lines. Downloading books in 10 seconds, browsing the Kindle store, and looking up words I don't know as I'm reading are other neat features. Now what I need is to find other Kindle owners so we can share books!