After much delay, Mad Men returns to AMC with a new 2-hour episode tonight at 9 P.M. EDT. Check your local listings for the time in your area. I’ve been a fan of Mad Men from the beginning. I’ve even persuaded some of my students in my ADVERTISING classes to watch Mad Men and see how advertising was done in the 1960s. Mad Men surprises its viewers with deft plot-twists and startling behaviors by the remarkable cast of characters. Although Jon Hamm as Don Draper gets most of the attention, I love the women in this program: Peggy Olson (Elisabeth Moss), Betty Francis (née Hofstadt, formerly Draper) (January Jones), and Joan Harris (née Holloway) (Christina Hendricks). They could be the best cast of women on TV. If you haven’t been watching Mad Men you’re missing one of the best series ever.
THE HUNGER GAMES
The wait is finally over and The Hunger Games delivered on all the hype. The movie version follows Suzanne Collins’ Young Adult dystopian novel very closely. Jennifer Lawrence is brilliant as Katniss Everdeen, a teenager who volunteers to participate in the future society’s version of gladiatorial games broadcast as reality TV. After a vaguely referred to catastrophe, the United States has been replaced by a Capitol District and 12 Districts. Katniss is from District 12, a mining district. Each year, all the districts must send two teenagers to complete in the Games. Of the 24 contestants, only one will survive the battle of the fittest. Yes, it’s grim. But, the movie version tones down the violence of the novel (probably to get that coveted PG-13 rating) while not compromising on story elements. Although the movie is over 2 hours long, character development is sketchy. I found that reading the book first gave me more insight into the characters. The Hunger Games should be one of the box office champs of 2012. GRADE: A-
FORGOTTEN BOOKS #160: PAST MASTER By R. A. Lafferty
Todd Mason mentioned R. A. Lafferty and his first novel, Past Master, in a comment months ago, but I didn’t forget it. I just moved Past Master higher in the Read Real Soon stack. I read Past Master back in 1968. Rereading Past Master brought back the zaniness of Lafferty’s writing and the impatience I sometimes experience reading Lafferty’s work. A thousand years in the future, an Earth colony called Astrobe, is in severe crisis. Their perfect society is disintegrating. The elite spirit Thomas More (the author of Utopia) from 1535 Old Earth time. More’s time on Astrobe resembles a dream-like series of encounters with witches, hydras, mechanical killers, and bizarre aliens. And that’s always been my problem with Lafferty’s work. In small doses, Lafferty’s wackiness can amuse. But in excess, the extreme surrealism can prove tiresome. The Past Master was nominated for a Nebula and a Hugo, but won neither. If you’re in the mood for something very “different,” check out Past Master.
ON REREADING By Patricia Meyer Spacks
Art Scott and Steve Stilwell have reread the Nero Wolfe series over 50 times! I am not a rereader. There are just too many books I haven’t read. But Patricia Meyer Spacks makes a strong case for rereading in this enlightening book. Spacks starts out writing about the books of her youth: Alice in Wonderland and the Narnia series. She moves on to books that do not fare well with rereading: Lucky Jim and Catcher in the Rye. Spacks favorite books to reread are Jane Austen’s novels of manners. Emma and Pride and Prejudice are her favorites. As Spacks points out, the book doesn’t change, but the reader does. After reading Spacks’ eloquent defense of rereading, I’m more open to the possibility of rereading some of my favorite books. After all, I reread Slayground by “Richard Stark” for the recent Forgotten Books celebration of Donald E. Westlake. GRADE: B+
PULPHEAD: ESSAYS By John Jeremiah Sullivan
John Jeremiah Sullivan’s off-beat collection of essays has something for just about everyone. Sullivan goes to a religious rock concert and comes up with some surprises. Sullivan’s brother gets electrocuted and nearly dies; an incident that becomes an episode on William Shatner’s Rescue 911. Then Sullivan visits post-Katrina Mississippi. Horrors abound. Sullivan writes about the recording of Michael Jackson’s best albums with Quincy Jones and legendary recording engineer Bruce Swedien. I had to break out my copies of Off the Wall to hear what Sullivan was writing about. In that vein, Sullivan’s searing “The Final Comeback of Axl Rose” (the Guns N’ Roses leader) brings Rose’s bizarre life into focus. There are essays on cave art and the teen soap opera, One Tree Hill. Sullivan’s range is impressive and so is his writing. GRADE: A-
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
1. Upon This Rock
2. Feet In Smoke
3. Mr. Lytle: An Essay
4. At the Shelter (After Katrina)
5. Getting Down To What is Really Real
6. Michael
7. The Final Comeback of Axl Rose
8. American Grotesque
9. Lahwineski: Career of an Eccentric Naturalist
10. Unnamed Caves
11. Unknown Bards
12. The Last Wailer
13. Violence of the Lambs
14. Peyton’s Place
THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO [Three-Disc Combo Blu-ray / DVD + UltraViolet Digital Copy]

I love the Swedish version of the DRAGON TATTOO trilogy, but director David Fincher’s The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo holds plenty of delights as well. Daniel Craig plays the obsessive reporter, Mikael Blomkvist. Rooney Mara portrays the enigmatic Lisbeth Salander. Although I prefer Noomi Rapace’s more gritty performance as Lisbeth Salander, Rooney Mara is very good in her role. I picked this version of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo as one of my FAVORITE MOVIES OF 2011. If you haven’t seen either the Swedish or American films of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, you’re missing out on world-class thrills. GRADE: A
HISTORY OF A PLEASURE SEEKER By Richard Mason
“Like Henry James on Viagra.” After reading that blurb on the back of the book jacket on History of a Pleasure Seeker I fell for the cunning marketing. It’s 1907 and Piet Barol, a talented but poor young man, is hired to be the tutor to a disturbed young son of a wealthy hotel tycoon in Amsterdam. The tycoon’s beautiful but neglected wife begins an affair with Piet. That, you would think, would be enough for the reader to concentrate on. But the author throws in the tycoon’s two flirtatious daughters, the mysterious mental problems of the son, the banking crisis that required J. P. Morgan to intervene, and flashbacks to Piet’s past. Piet isn’t so much a pleasure seeker as an ambitious young man on the make. History of a Pleasure Seeker is basically a Horatio Alger story with some sex thrown in. If you’re looking for pleasure, you’ll have to seek it elsewhere. GRADE: C
BARGAIN OF THE WEEK: Sangean PR-D9W AM/FM/Weather and Alert Digital Rechargeable Portable Radio

Our ancient General Electric portable radio needed replacement so I hopped on the Internet and after some searching found this bargain. The Sangean PR-D9W features a built-in dual alarm clock, battery selector for alkaline/rechargeable NiMH, an AC plug, 19 total memory presets, sleep and snooze functions, and an easy to read large LCD display with adjustable illumination. What more could you ask for? The Sangean PR-D9W lists for $134.95, but AMAZON is selling it for $56.52. That’s a 58% discount! If you need a portable radio, the Sangean PR-D9W should fit your needs. GRADE: A
AGENT 6 By Tom Rob Smith
Agent 6 is the final book in Tom Rob Smith’s Soviet trilogy, but it can safely be read without reading the previous two books, Child 44 and The Secret Speech. Once again, Smith’s hero, Leo Demidov is tossing into a boil cauldron of violence and deceit. Leo is an adviser to the Soviet Army in their invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. Of course, Leo counsels against the invasion, but his advice is ignored. The brutality of the Soviet occupation is graphically presented. At the same time, Leo is also trying to get to America to solve a murder. The plot is deliciously convoluted. Tom Rob Smith captures the loopy Soviet group-think perfectly. The only book I can think of that comes close to the excellence of this Soviet trilogy is Martin Cruz Smith’s Gorky Park. GRADE: B+
THE COMPLETE SLAYERS: Fast One and the Complete Short Stories of Paul Cain

Let’s start with the eye-popping Ron Lesser cover. The Complete Slayers, originally conceived by Keith Alan Deutsch, (the proprietor and conservator of Black Mask Magazine copyrights) includes Cain’s classic novel, Fast One (in its original serial form) and the complete 14 “slayers”—brilliant works of noir fiction. This is the first time that six of the stories appear in book form. And this the first time that all of Cain’s fiction has been collected in one marvelous book! Centipede Press produced a fabulous collection!
This new edition includes a brilliant biographical introduction by Max Allan Collins and Lynn F. Myers, Jr. In addition, The Complete Slayers includes wonderful a cover gallery of old issues of Black Mask as well as old covers of the Fast One and Seven Slayers collections. This limited edition is signed by Max Allan Collins, Lynn F. Myers, Jr., and Ron Lesser, the cover artist. Buy it now, before all 500 copies are sold out!