ALL THAT ECHOES By Josh Groban

I confess: I bought Josh Groban’s All That Echoes CD because “The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress” is on it. I’m a big fan of Jim Webb’s classic song (and it’s one of Robert Heinlein’s best novels, too). Some people love Josh Groban (mostly women) and many people dislike Groban’s bombastic singing. I’m on the fence. I like some of Groban’s songs, and quickly skip over others like “Un Alma Mas” and “E Ti Prometterò.” Since I bought the “deluxe” version of All That Echoes at TARGET, I got four “Bonus Tracks” not include on the CD if you buy it elsewhere. Of the Bonus Tracks, “Satellite” is my favorite. GRADE: B+
TRACK LIST:
1 Brave (3:59)
2 False Alarms (4:33)
3 Falling Slowly (4:20)
4 She Moved Through the Fair (4:55)
5 Below the Line (3:28)
6 E Ti Prometterò (3:56)
7 The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (3:45)
8 Un Alma Mas (4:10)
9 Happy In My Heartache (3:08)
10 Hollow Talk (5:34)
11 Sincera (3:35)
12 I Believe (When I Fall In Love It Will Be Forever) (5:58)

BONUS TRACKS:
1. Changing Colors
2. Satellite
3. Grazie
4. Play Me

WRECK-IT RALPH

I loved Wreck-It Ralph! This animated feature explores video-game characters who are anything but ordinary. Wreck-It Ralph’s life consists of wrecking a video game hotel. Then players get Fix-It Felix (with his magic hammer) to fix the damage Ralph has caused. But, after 30 years, Ralph finds his role unsatisfying. Ralph wants to be a Good Guy not a Bad Guy. Ralph’s quest for an item that might turn his life around creates plenty of laughs and tears. John C. Reilly is the voice of Ralph. Jane Lynch wowed me as Calhoun, the sexy Space Commando from Hero’s Duty. And Sarah Silverman is perfect as “the glitch” character Vanellope. I haven’t had this much fun at an animated feature since UP and The Incredibles! GRADE: A

FORGOTTEN BOOKS #208: THE YELLOW CABOCHON & 9 TALES OF HENGHIS HAPTHORN By Matthew Hughes



Matthew Hughes’ 9 Tales of Henghis Hapthorn is the first ebook I’ve reviewed for Friday’s Forgotten Books. Hughes has collected his Henghis Hapthorn mystery stories published in SF magazines, collections, and anthologies and put them in one handy ebook bargain priced at $2.99! Henghis Hapthorn is a Sherlock Holmes clone who operates aeons in the future. I enjoy his rational investigations. And, as I’ve mentioned before, Matthew Hughes channels Jack Vance like no other writer. In The Yellow Cabochon Hughes goes to the Dark Side with his master criminal Luff Imbry involved in another caper. If you’re a fan of creative larceny, you’ll enjoy The Yellow Cabochon. Both books are highly recommended!

RECOMMENDATION #6: STELLA ADLER ON AMERICAN MASTER PLAYWRIGHTS Edited by Barry Paris


While I had to invest weeks in watching DVDs of the plays of Ibsen, Strindberg, and Chekhov to understand what the heck Stella Adler was saying in Stella Adler on Ibsen, Strindberg, Chekhov, I didn’t have to do much viewing to follow Stella Adler’s analysis of American playwrights: Eugene O’Neill, Clifford Odets, Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller, Edward Albee, Thorton Wilder, William Saroyan, and William Inge. Once again, Stella Adler approaches the plays writing by these great writers from an actor’s point of view. Stella has plenty to say about how certain roles should be prepared for and how the role should be interpreted. Call it an insider’s view of theater. If you’re a fan of great American theater and American playwrights, there’s plenty to learn in this wonderful book! GRADE: A
Table of Contents

EUGENE O’NEILL(1888-1953)
Overview Beyond the Horizon (1920)
Mourning Becomes Electra (1931)
Long Day’s Journey Into the Night (1956)

THORTON WILDER (1897-1975)
Overview The Skin of Our Teeth (1942)

CLIFFORD ODETS (1906-1963)
Waiting for Lefty (1935)
Golden Boy (1937)
Golden Boy: Text Analysis The Country Girl

WILLIAM SAROYAN Overview
Hello Out There!

TENNESSEE WILLIAMS (1911-1983)
Overview The Lady of Larkspur Lotion (1941)
The Glass Menagerie (1945)
Summer and Smoke (1948)

WILLIAM INGE Overview
Come Back, Little Sheba (1950)

ARTHUR MILLER (1915-2005)
Death of a Salesman (1949)
After the Fall (1964)

EDWARD ALBEE (b. 1928)
The Zoo Story (1959)
The Death of Bessie Smith (1959)

SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK


I’ve been a fan of Jennifer Lawrence since her memorable performance in Winter’s Bone. In Silver Linings Playbook the movie revolves around two characters with mental problems. Bradley Cooper plays a bi-polar former teacher who snaps when he returns home early to find his wife in the shower with his hated rival from the History Department. After eight months in a mental institution, Cooper’s character finds himself living in his parents’ attic. Robert De Niro plays Cooper’s gambling-addicted father. Cooper meets another troubled character, Tiffany, played by Jennifer Lawrence. She suffers from depression. After plenty of psychotic mis-bahaviors, Cooper and Lawrence begin to work together on a project. The predictable ending doesn’t detract from two fine performances. GRADE: B+

STELLA ADLER ON IBSEN, STRINDBERG, AND CHEKHOV Edited By Barry Paris


For the past few weeks, I’ve been watching DVDs of Ibsen plays, Strindberg plays, and Chekhov plays in order to understand Stella Adler’s analysis in Stella Adler on Ibsen, Strindberg, and Chekhov. Stella Adler had an acting career (you might have seen her in Shadow of the Thin Man (1941). She founded the Stella Adler Studio of Acting in 1949. Her students included Marlon Brando, Judy Garland, Dolores del Río, Robert De Niro, Elaine Stritch, Martin Sheen, Manu Tupou, Harvey Keitel, Melanie Griffith, Peter Bogdanovich and Warren Beatty. Stella Adler was generally considered the best acting teacher in the U.S. After reading Stella Adler on Ibsen, Strindberg, and Chekhov I have a more detailed understanding of what these playwrights were attempting in their works. Adler confesses that Chekhov is her favorite writer. But his plays are usually failures outside of Russia because international actors don’t grasp Chekhov’s story-telling technique. The actual story happens in the past or off-stage. If you’re interested in theater, I highly recommend this book. GRADE: A

WAITING FOR THE BARBARIANS By Daniel Mendelsohn

Daniel Mendelsohn writes essays that provoke me to read more books. For example, when Mendelsohn reviews a new translation of The Iliad, he causally mentions that Alexander Pope’s translation of The Iliad (which took Pope seven years to produce) is one of the best translations EVER. So, of course, I had to try to dig up a copy of Alexander Pope’s translation of The Iliad. Luckily, I found a free ebook version on AMAZON. Mendelsohn is also the celebrated translator of C. P. Cavafy: Collected Poems. Mendelsohn likes to sprinkle lines from Cavafy into his essays which then motivates me to want to read Cavafy. Topics Mendelsohn tackles range from Avatar to Susan Sontag. Each essay makes you think. GRADE: A
Table of Contents
FOREWORD………………..ix
The Wizard (James Cameron’s Avatar)………………..3
Truth Force at the Met (Philip Glass’s Satyagraha)………………..19
Why She Fell (Julie Taymor’s Spider-Man)………………..37
The Dream Director (Aleksandr Sokurov’s The Sun)………………..51
The Mad Men Account (Mad Men)………………..65
Unsinkable (Why We Can’t Let Go of the Titanic)………………..81
Battle Lines (Stephen Mitchell’s Iliad)………………..103
In Search of Sappho (Anne Carson’s If Not, Winter)………………..121
Arms and the Man (The Landmark Herodotus)………………..139
The Strange Music of Horace (J. D. McClatchy’s Horace, The Odes)………………..159
Oscar Wilde, Classics Scholar………………..179
Epic Endeavors (Three Novels on the Classics)………………..195
After Waterloo (Stendhal’s Charterhouse of Parma)………………..213
Heroine Addict (The Novels of Theodor Fontane)………………..223
Rebel Rebel (The Poems of Arthur Rimhaud)………………..241
The Spanish Tragedy (Antonio Muñoz Molina’s Sepharad)………………..259
In Gay and Crumbling England (Alan Hollinghurst’s The Stranger’s Child)………………..275
Transgression (Jonathan Littell’s The Kindly Ones)………………..291
But Enough About Me (The Memoir Craze)………………..311
His Design for Living (Noël Coward’s Letters)………………..333
On the Town (Leo Lerman’s Diaries)………………..349
Zoned Out (Jonathan Franzen’s The Discomfort Zone)………………..365
Boys Will Be Boys (Edmund White’s City Boy)………………..381
The Collector (Susan Sontag’s Reborn)………………..399