Monthly Archives: July 2009

THANK YOU, ART SCOTT!

If you’re in the mood for something very bizarre, I urge you to click on http://www.m2film.dk/fleggaard/trailer2.swf and be prepared to be amazed.  Danish e-commerce website Fleggaard has recently made a “not-safe-for-work” commercial that depicts a group of topless skydivers who, during their descend, come together in mid-air to spell out an advertisement for a washing machine.

Watch out Maytag, Kenmore, and GE!  You’re going to step up your advertising game after this. Thanks to the ever vigilant Art Scott for the link.

FORGOTTEN BOOKS #25: ROBOTS HAVE NO TAILS By Henry Kuttner


Henry Kuttner’s wacky scientist, Galloway Gallegher, is an average technician when sober. But once he’s drunk, his subconscious genius takes over and creates incredible inventions. Yes, this is not a politically correct approach today, but Kuttner wrote these stories over 60 years ago so you have to cut him some slack. The formula of these stories is that Gallegher wakes up and finds a strange device in his lab. He hasn’t a clue about its purpose or operation. Clients show up demanding results for the money they’ve paid Gallegher to solve their problems. The rest of the story follows a mystery story format where Gallegher investigates both his half-remembered clients and the strange machines he’s created. The word that best captures the sense of these stories is whimsical. If you like P. G. Wodehouse, you’ll like Henry Kuttner’s Gallegher stories. Planet Stories is to be commended on returning these classic stories back to print.

KELLEY COLLECTION PULP COVER ARTWORK

SUNY at Buffalo has digitized more paperback and pulp fiction covers from the collection I donated to them. To see them go to: http://www.oclc.org/contentdm/
Then click on “Featured Collections, July” on the right side of the page.  Click on the “See more customer collections”   and click on “Pulp Fiction Cover Art.”  Then click on “Browse this collection” to see the wonderful covers.  These librarians have done a super job promoting this collection.  I give them my heart-felt thanks.

THE ASCENT OF MONEY

I read Niall Ferguson’s history of finance and the banking system, The Ascent of Money, when it came out last year. I found it a breezy historical survey. Tonight on PBS, we’ll see Niall Ferguson turn his book into video. I’ve read several of Ferguson’s books. He’s an engaging writer. In interviews, he comes off as a very smart but personable academic. If you’re interested in money, the financial system, and dry British humor you might want to check this out. Tonight is the first of four episodes to be broadcast on Wednesday nights. Check your local PBS listings for times.

BEETHOVEN: THE COMPLETE PIANO CONCERTS By Richard Goode

I own about a dozen sets of these Beethoven concertos. So why buy another set? The answer is Richard Goode. Richard Goode is one of my favorite pianists. I have practically every CD he’s ever recorded. Goode’s approach is always intelligent and original. He finds aspects of the music you haven’t heard before. This set displays Goode’s skill and panache. The Budapest Festival Orchestra with Ivan Fischer is more than adequate. There are flasher performers, but Goode’s approach is sleek and stylish without excesses. I love these performances with Goode’s crisp, clean playing. GRADE: A

FAR By Regina Spektor

From the first song, “The Calculation,” to the last song on the CD, “Man of a Thousand Faces,” Regina Spektor’s distinctive, plaintive voice and her piano playing deliver a captivating experience. I loved Regina Spektor’s Begin to Hope CD from a couple years ago, but this new CD has more energy and variety. If you like Neko Case, you’ll love Regina Spektor. GRADE: A

A POCKET FULL OF RYE By Agatha Christie

I’ll be interested to see how the “new” Miss Marple, Julia McKenzie, does in her first of four PBS MASTERPIECE MYSTERY episodes. Again, like in the novel version of Cat Among the Pidgeons where Poirot makes his appearance two-thirds of way into the story, Miss Marple shows up about half-way (Chapter 13 of 28) into A Pocket Full of Rye. I’m assuming she’ll show up sooner in the TV version. Wealthy Rex Fortescue collapses in his office, poisoned. There are plenty of people who wanted the odious Fortescue dead: his sons, their wives, and his own hot, sexy wife. But then other murders occur that fit the pattern of an old nursery rhyme. Miss Marple is the only one who can see the murderer’s design. A Pocket Full of Rye was published in 1953 when Christie was at the top of her game. GRADE: A-

FORGOTTEN BOOKS #24: THE CHINESE GOLD MURDERS By Robert van Gulik

Although Robert van Gulik wrote Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee (aka, Dee Goong An) first, in the chronology of the Judge Dee series, The Chinese Gold Murders is the first book. Set in the year 663, Judge Dee becomes the magisrate of Peng-lai, a fictional district on the northeast coast of China. Judge Dee’s predecessor had been murdered so that’s the first priority of the investigation. A tiger is terrorizing the countryside, the ghost of the murdered magistrate appears, the body of a murdered monk has been placed in the wrong grave, and a prostitute delivers a secret message to Judge Dee. From this tangle of events, Judge Dee solves the crimes in his own quirky style with the help of his colorful staff. There are seventeen books in the Judge Dee series. I’ve read them all, loved them all, and recommend them unabashedly. Be warned: like potato chips, once you read one of these excellent books, you’ll find it nearly impossible to stop reading Judge Dee’s adventures.

INTO THE BADLANDS & BACK TO THE BADLANDS By John Williams


Earlier this month, Kent Morgan wrote about John Williams’ Into the Badlands: Travels Through Urban America for Patti Abbott’s FORGOTTEN BOOKS FRIDAY. It sounded interesting so I picked up a copy and a copy of its sequel, Back to the Badlands: Crime Writers in the USA. Back in 1988, John Williams left England to tour the USA by interviewing crime writers. Into the Badlands includes interviews with James Lee Burke, James Crumley, James Ellroy, Joe Gores, James Hall, Gar Anthony Haywood, Carl Hiaasen, George V. Higgins, Tony Hillerman, Eugene Izzi, Joseph Koenig, Elmore Leonard, Sara Paretsky, Nick Tosches, and Andrew Vachss. Plus, Williams gives his opinions of restaurants, cab drivers, and American culture in general. Back to the Badlands was published in 2005. The first half of the book is an abridged version of Into the Badlands. The second half features interviews with Vicki Hendricks, Kem Nunn, Kinky Friedman, Daniel Woodrell, and George Pelecanos. I enjoyed both books. GRADE: B (FOR BOTH)