Picks of the Week

  • Benjamin Black: The Lemur: A Novel

    Benjamin Black: The Lemur: A Novel
    Anyone who thinks John Banville lacks a sense of humor clearly did not read his serial for the New York Times magazine, available in novella-ish format in July. The story has all the basic crime ingredients - blackmail, adultery, murder, betrayal, that sort of thing - but it is so, so clear how much fun Banville had writing this pseudonymous exercise, loading up sentences filled with bizarre but well-placed metaphors and gently (or not so gently!) lampooning his characters as he moves them around his narrative chess board.

  • Cassandra Clare: City of Bones

    Cassandra Clare: City of Bones
    I read this on the flight home from the LA Times Festival of Books and it really is about the perfect airport read: fantastic storytelling, characters whose adventures and melodramas wrap you in their spells and really ass-kicking action scenes involving demons and all manner of underworld types. Sure, Clare clearly owes a huge debt to Buffy and Harry Potter, but dammit, I want to find out what will happen next to Clary, Jace, Simon & co. - and that's exactly the button that's supposed to be pushed.

  • Ibi Kaslik: ANGEL RIOTS

    Ibi Kaslik: ANGEL RIOTS
    Reading this novel was like being transported back to the mid-1990s Montreal I knew during my college years. But it also affords an inside look at the ups and downs, the politics and the dramas, the hookups and breakups endemic to a rising rock band. It's clear, whether told from the vantage point of the young violin prodigy with a boy's name or her bandmate looking to redefine himself outside the orbit of his best friend (and leader) that Kaslik knows this world cold, and we're privileged to share in this knowledge.

  • Irene Nemirovsky: David Golder, The Ball, Snow in Autumn, The Courilof Affair (Everyman's Library (Cloth))

    Irene Nemirovsky: David Golder, The Ball, Snow in Autumn, The Courilof Affair (Everyman's Library (Cloth))
    I'd recommend this simply based off of the utter gobsmacking brilliance that is LE BAL, one of the most crystalline and shocking novellas I've ever read, but the other three works simply confirm Nemirovsky's literary brilliance. THE COURILOF AFFAIR is a wonderful surprise for mystery readers because it's her version of a spy novel, tackling the moral quandaries of terrorism for a so-called greater good by personalizing the narrator's deeds and misdeeds. In other words, Nemirovsky's entire backlist can't be translated fast enough for me.

  • Sarah Hall: Daughters of the North

    Sarah Hall: Daughters of the North
    Goddamn, Hall can write, and her chosen dystopian subject matter gives her the chance not only to show off her sentence-by-sentence chops but to demonstrate how few steps removed our current culture is from the apocalyptic fervor of her world, where the reproductive rights of women are trampled on so definitively it takes an army of women to try, however futile the exercise might be, to take some independence back. I can't think of enough good things to say about this except that it should be read, now and years to come.

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September 07, 2006

Greatness in the making

Hat tip to Jaime for pointing me to sections from D.A. Pennebaker's documentary on the original cast recording of COMPANY. Watching Elaine Stritch struggle with "The Ladies who Lunch" - then finally, finally, nail the recording - is really something special.

June 22, 2006

Takin' care of business

So perhaps you may have noticed that my output at Galleycat has increased quite a lot this week. That's because next week I'll be rather scarce, what with taking a much-needed long weekend (so the Weekend Update won't be posted till late Monday at the earliest, or not at all) and ThrillerFest beginning Thursday. As a result posting will be, to say the least, rather light for the next little while.

It's also summer, and I like my summer hours just like everyone else. So aside from bringing back August's Great Guest Blog Extravaganza - more details on that in a future post - I'm also lightening the load on Thursdays considerably by introducing a new, completely frivolous feature.

Welcome to YouTube Thursdays. What is it? Mostly me posting wacky, thoughtful, or otherwise hard-to-find clips made available through that fabulous, completely time-sucking feature. As I was saying to my brother last night, I wonder sometimes how the Internet got along without it - that's how popular and pervasive it's become.

To kick things off, here are Pitchfork's picks for the 100 Most Awesome Music Videos (link via Ed) which should suck away your time quite nicely. It sure did for me....

And for the rest of the afternoon, learn English with the Zuiikin Gals! (Here and here, also.)