Round trips booked from this week over the next five:
- Sydney
- Sydney
- Brisbane
- Adelaide
- Perth
- Sydney
- Canberra
If I had something going on in Tasmania and Darwin, I’d have the full house. At least there’s no New Zealand in there …
Round trips booked from this week over the next five:
If I had something going on in Tasmania and Darwin, I’d have the full house. At least there’s no New Zealand in there …
I had a rather foolish experience to this one - when recommended by someone that I read it, I said I’d read enough lately of the development of various number systems. I’d been thumbing through Meta Math (another take on Gödel’s incompleteness theorem), and I just really didn’t feel up to reading another popular science treatise on mathematics.
Of course, I looked the right fool when they told me the book was actually about Pi, an Indian kid raised in a zoo who ends up trapped on a boat with a Bengal Tiger after his transport ship sinks. So, out of wounded pride, I went out and bought it. And, I’m glad I did.
It’s a brilliant example of well constructed writing. Set as the documentation of someone else’s story, it makes the reader question their own perceptions and philosophy. And, even better, the entire novels clicks in a philosophical sense, but only in the last five pages. Like a good murder mystery, it’s probably possible to discern what the messages are before you get there, but there’s nothing lost if you just enjoy the ride and reflect afterwards.
I’m dying to write more, but I can’t for fear of spoiling the plot. Maybe that’s an opening for another post some other day. In any case, it’s well worth reading - it may not help you find religion, as per the back of the book, but it will remind you what makes a good story.
In-between more “serious” novels, I’m on a bit of a graphic novel trip - I just finished The Arrival, I’m waiting on a delivery of Bone, Watchmen, and From Hell, and the almost full set of Akira’s sitting on my shelf waiting to be read. Which, ironically, was why The Invention of Hugo Cabret surprised me so much.
The book’s a fascinating cross between a traditional book, a graphic novel, and a movie. It’s about three inches thick, and jam-packed with high quality art. Interestingly, and quite uniquely though, the art has a strong storyboarding feel to it, selectively and deliberately highlighting specific points and temporal aspects of various scenes to emphasise the cinematic nature of the narrative. Right down to the greasy hair of the protagonist, in fact. Powerfully so, given the tale. It’s not so much a book as a graphic movie, using text to support the story where appropriate.
The book follows the experiences of inventor, thief, and clockmaker, Hugo Cabret, after he’s left an orphan in a train station through an unfortunate chain of events. Saying any more would spoil the story, so I won’t.
Whether or not I’d recommend it is a hard one. As a story to read your kids, yes. Wholeheartedly, in fact. It’s a touching tale, told in a highly unique way. And, it’s strong enough to appeal to both adults and children. As an introduction to the graphic novel? Probably not - it’s very enjoyable, but the art quality and story isn’t as complex or creative as other entry points such as Sandman or Watchmen. On the balance, I’m coming down on the side of recommended, given I have kids.
Stephen King’s an old dog, and I doubt he’d disagree. The thing with old dog though, apart from being inable to learn new tricks, is that they’re persistant. They’re set in their ways. And, if they’re well trained, they still know a thing or two that’ll impress you.
Bag of Bones is classic King. I was never a fan of his mid-life work, always preferring his earlier work. The Stand, The Dark Tower (bearing in mind that the majority of it was written later in his career), It, Tommyknockers - anything with ghastly, fantastical monsters. Misery was borderline, just about everything after The Dark Half was too realistic for me. “Realistic” in the sense of, “it could really happen”, anyway - I always found King at his best when he dealt with the things that really go bump in the night.
Bag of Bones is somewhat of a hybrid of the two - it deals with relationships and semi-”real” characters, but it also delves into the fantastical (and phantasmagorical). Without getting too involved in it, I’d also add - there’s ghosts a plenty, but they don’t dominate the story. The novel basically follows the experiences of a writer coming to terms with the sins of his forefathers - anyone reasonably read in King’s back catalogue already knows this character. About the only change is that he doesn’t drink too much before things go wrong.
King’s real ability comes in his ability to distill a story into its rawest elements without losing any clarity, transparency, or accessiblity of language. There may be too many words, but that probably has more to do with indulgence than sheer filler. And, unlike Dan Brown, he doesn’t become facile in the process - he’s no James Joyce, but that’s also probably his biggest strength. Almost without fail, King’s stories are good yarns - they’re not literature, but then again, they don’t aspire to be either. And, he’s prolific enough that if you enjoy one, you’ll probably enjoy at least another five.
It’s a good book, but I can’t really recommend it. Too many plot elements have been pulled from his previous books, and while I quite enjoyed it, it’s not exactly King at his absolute best. The family trees become complex enough to become distracting, and with a relative dearth of plot (compared to other books he’s written), there’s far too many words. Probably a quarter of the book could have been cut, but that’s not really anything new - it’s a rare book of King’s that couldn’t be condensed a little.
It’s enjoyable, but it’s light. There’s better out there, but if you’re a King fan, you’ve probably already read it. If you haven’t read King, there’s better places to start.
The Arrival isn’t quite what you’d expect. It’s a graphic novel with no words, yet it has at least four distinct languages. It tells a tale that’s almost clichéd, yet it does so in a way that’s breathtakingly unique. And, most importantly, it’s profoundly moving.
The Arrival describes the experiences of a family looking for a better life. Written by an immigrant to Australia, it outlines the challenges faced by immigrants all over the world by describing the journey undertaken by a father to a mythical (strange) land. Honestly, there’s not much more that should be said without spoiling the creativity of the story - the artwork’s of a very high quality, and the story, while familiar, is different enough to make it a fascinating read. The characters are well developed, especially given no English words are written through the entire book. It’s important to remember English words, because Tan has done an amazing job of creating not one, not two, but a number of distinctly recognisable languages without ever explaining what they mean.
It’s an excellent book, well worth checking out. I could write a lot more about the power of symbolism and analogy, but I won’t. It’s in there, and that’s all that’s important. It doesn’t have the scale or scope of an Akira, a Maus, or even a Bone, but it makes a great read for adults and children alike, one that almost brings tears to the eye by the conclusion. Definitely recommended.
Ho hum. Waiting for a job to finish running. I love doing things that I’m not supposed to as part of my job. It’s great fun. Really.
Incidentally, Windows Live Writer is actually really cool. Surprisingly so - it even imported all my categories automatically. And, more importantly, it speaks WordPress. Two thumbs up from me.
Various things in development at the moment - might actually start writing again soon hopefully. Have written a few things that I think are somewhat worthwhile and the feedback’s been good, so hopefully I’ll get it up soon. So to speak, anyway.
Still reading, have yet to update with reviews of The Arrival and Competing on Analytics. I’m probably about 3/4 of the way through Bag of Bones, hope to get it finished this weekend. I’ve also gone Podcast crazy with the new iPod, but that’s probably the subject of another post.
Pretty darn impressive, actually. Just installed automatically as an update to Messenger (which is busy upgrading even though I want to go home). Pulls the template across and gives you a WYSIWYG approach to post creation, complete with theme integration. Nice!
I’ll be interested to see how this turns out when I hit post. I’ll have to have a proper play at some point - maybe when I have more time.
Now, where the darn post button …