How many deaths can a book, itself never even notionally alive, come back from? If anyone is the avatar of books that return from the dead, it's Harlan Ellison. He's killed and been killed, resurrected and been resurrected so many times, in so many ways, that one begins to wonder how, exactly the notion of life applies and appears to this deathless author. This is a man who has a FastPass for the Bardo.
I'm not going to go through all the supposed-to-be's. Why bother? Here's a book that just about every damn science fiction reader worth the snot in their hankie had better have read, at least once. 'Deathbird Stories' is Harlan Ellison's iconic collection from thirty-gods-damned-five years ago. Sure, it's the sort of book we all remember fondly. It was a great one for "cutting your teeth on," in this case, a curiously appropriate metaphor. Harlan Ellison is one of those authors who might hope to create a reading experience that is like gargling barbed wire. The question is, is that wire still barbed after thirty-five years of ... what passed for history? Even though misery is probably a better term.
Well, here's the deal. In theory, and with Harlan Ellison books remain strictly theoretical until you hold them in your hot little hands – in December of this godforsaken year, when, we are told, the corporate elite will once again have taken the reigns of government and commerce with the intent to strangle every last cent from the great white underbelly – Subterranean Press will issue a 25th/30th/35th anniversary edition of 'Deathbird Stories' for, to my mind, the bargain price of $45 for a trade hardcover. They will do so with no regards as to the then-current political climate, publishing climate or global climate, which is, according to skeptics, not changing, not one damn bit. But I guaran-fucking-tee you that should said skeptics read 'Deathbird Stories,' which would be only likely to happen on their deathbed, it would indeed bring them to their deathbed.
Let's say the book is a done deal; the state of the ARC I have indicates that this is so. If you're going to drop $45 for a book, I have to say that this is at least physically a very handsome volume. It's oversized with a glorious painting by (we are told by the author) Ellison's buddy Tom Kidd. I've written about Kidd for this website in the past, so it should come as no surprise that I like this offering a lot. It has a sort of creaky, labyrinthine magnificence that just seems right for the stories.
Inside, things look equally nice, with some great separator pages, nice typesetting for the stories and a general feel of heft and quality. If you buy it and don't read it, at least you'll have the experience of a owning a nice looking book that you can ooh and aah the refugees from the GWU with as they pass tghrough on their way tot he homeless day camps.
Of course, there is the possibility that you could read the book. My experience may be unique. I am told that I have catholic tastes, that is to say, wide ranging and quite variable. Sometimes books just set my teeth on edge from the get-go and I cannot read them, while others, perhaps less worthy, sing to my tiny brain until I immerse in a sleazy bit of monsterama. This is like none of those. I'd suggest that reading 'Deathbird Stories' again, or for the first time, if you managed to remain a virgin all these years, is sort of like turning the volume to eleven, popping in your friggin' ear buds, because nobod uses real, manly headphones anymore and queuing up Never Mind the Bollocks, Here Come the Sex Pistols after your morning meditation.
It's likely to rain on your sunny mood.
It's going to spit in your food, right in front of your face.
As it happens, barbed wire is no more fun to gargle some thirty-five years on than it was fresh off the roller. Ellison is a true master of getting in your face and holding your attention for the length of a short story. I quite remember how forbidden these stories seemed when I read them the first time, and they remain just as outré. They're sort of like literary pornography; upsetting and graphic yet unstoppably powerful. Ellison himself suggests at the front of the volume not to read them all at once, and he's right about this. These stories remain as vital as they were before the Rewind.
The collection is also simply chock full o' classics; 'Along the Scenic Route,' 'Shattered Like a Glass Goblin,' 'Paingod,' 'The Whimper of Whipped Dogs' – these are stories that have ended up in so many other collections that they have a life of their own. Here's where they were born. Screaming, like good babies.
07-07-10:Kitchen Testing 'The New Vegetarian Epicure' and 'Get Cooking'
Lentil Power
The test of any cookbook is how much you use it. The deal with any cookbook is how much money it saves you by virtue of making it easy and attractive to cook for yourself instead of going out. By any measure, Mollie Katzen's 'Get Cooking' and Anna Thomas' 'The New Vegetarian Epicure' are worth your money because they will, in the short and long run, save you money. Moreover, they'll save you something you cannot make for yourself — time.
Today's column is gong to focus on the very underappreciated lentil. That tiny little seed is the basis of two fantastic recipes that you can easily make at home that are healthy, hearty and will cost you less to make than the "value meal" you can order at any restaurant in the land.
From 'The New Vegetarian Epicure,' my wife made Lentil Salad. We used Green Lentils for this, a $2.50 bag of fancy French green lentils. The ingredient list is short and interesting but easily found in a decently stocked kitchen. Basically, lentils, white (also called "Yukon gold") potatoes, green onions garlic salt and pepper. The ingredients here are — and this is important — unthreatening. Nothing too weird, nothing too exotic. Lentils is about as exotic as you get. Cooking is a snap, a bit of boiling here and there, and some spicing. Allow to cool, season to taste. Chill in the refrigerator, and it keeps great overnight. In fact, we found that the flavor was more piquant the next night. Also, this is a large recipe that keeps very well. Because it has both starch (the potatoes are very light) and the lentils, you can really serve this as your main dish. It's hearty, not heavy and very tasty. If you're me, serve it with a slice of Niman Ranch ham, and you're in heaven. If you're serving four, you get two meals, and if you're serving two you get four meals; you can half the recipe quite easily if you have leftover phobia. So here's one spin on lentils, cool, with potatoes, sort of a lentil-ified potato salad that can, as you might imagine, be easily slotted into a variety of meals.
But lentils are becoming increasingly common chez Kleffel. For the past few weeks, we've been having Mollie Katzen's North African Red Lentil Soup at least once a week. Here's a dish that costs about $3.00 for a meal for two with a leftover bowl for lunch, and is as hearty as any meatified soup; and in fact, in the "Get Creative" portion of the recipe, Katzen suggests that you can add a lamb sausage to the soup. The ingredient list here is just as unthreatening as that in Thomas' recipe. The only twist (and Katzen mentions this) is that red lentils are not red, they're orange, they look more like lentil chips than lentils, and they cook up gold, not red. They're RLINO, Red Lentils In Name Only.
Katzen's soup has you slowly sautéing an onion and a sliced carrot or two (we cook half a recipe here), adding some cumin, then adding that mixture to the lentils. It is startlingly easy and amazingly delicious. That direction to add sausage is the sort of thing that you might think this meatatarian would leap upon, but to be honest, I've not done it yet. This is that satisfying.
Both of these dishes are something else as well, which is important to know — they are convenient to make, quick and easy enough so that if you find yourself at home wondering whether you want to get take out food or make one of them, you're likely to find yourself deciding to Get Cooking because you Love Soup. It's all that easy.
07-06-10:Anna Thomas Cooks Up 'Love Soup'
Recipes, Menus and Meals
A good cookbook offers more than a series of chemistry experiments. They're the result not of science, but culture and art. That's because cooking is not really just or even about eating. Cooking is about nurturing both yourself and those for whom you cook. A single note meal generally won't work.
Anna Thomas is passionate about cooking. She's the author of 'The Vegetarian Epicure.' I just had her lentil-potato salad from the book for part of my breakfast. Of course to make a meal, I added the leftover half of my pulled pork sandwich from the local BBQ joint. Now that is a meal. But only one of many possible meals.
Going in, you need to know: the latest cookbook from Anna Thomas, 'Love Soup' (W. W. Norton & Company ; September 21, 2009 ; $22.95) is not just soup. Yes, there's a preponderance of soup, but this is a cookbook, not a chemistry book, and it is put together with family and friends and giving in mind. That's important, because you can find everything you want here. From soups to breads to casseroles, 'Love Soup' offers readers and cooks lots of well-written prose about how to nourish yourself and those around you.
Readers might have gathered that I am not a vegetarian. Far from it. But 'Love Soup' is about what you can cook, about how you can take the simplest and most healthy ingredients to make the heartiest and most flavorful meals. I'm going to begin at the beginning, because the introduction of this cookbook is a sort of call to arms. On one hand, Anna Thomas missed her calling, since she is fantastic at rallying the troops. She could lead an army across the Alps. But what she does in her introduction is marinate her readers. She soaks us in fine prose that inspires us to get in the kitchen and make great food to feed ourselves and those we love. Then she gives us recipes, meals and menus to do just that.
Thomas does focus on soups in 'Love Soup,' but there is quite a bit more in here than just soup. Sure she gives you Green Soup, a perfect template that can be frozen and fiddled with in a million ways. It's a great way into the Thomas vision of cooking. But this is not, as I said, just about soup. Bread, hummus, casseroles, even desserts are offered, along with menus and meals combining the items. Here's a whole guide to good eating, and you can't go wrong. If you think you're a meatatarian, then just serve up anything with a nice pan-fried, then broiled bit of filet mignon. You get the full flavor and texture of meat, a fantastic meal with subtle flavors and get closer to the kind of eating that really serves your health best.
The thing to remember with cookbooks is that they are indeed books, and that the writers are indeed artists, not technicians. Every cookbook writer has their style, and Thomas has a delightfully complete take on things. She's the kind of person who would give your directions that would mention scenic buildings and landmarks, not just turns and mileage. Her recipes follow suit, and are easily made; moreover, they are easily modified. They are sturdy enough to stand up to your experimentation and the fact that you forgot to buy or didn't have on hand, ingredient x. Thomas, after all, knows what cooking is about. It is not about going to the store to buy the ingredients for each meal. It is about using what you have to hand effectively, and buying the best of the season, making sure that you have the best vegetables at the best time. This is a book creating meals, nurturing those around you. Bring your own steak!
07-05-10:Abraham Verghese Will Not Be 'Cutting for Stone'
Stories of Spirit and Words of Comfort
Abraham Verghese doesn't waste any time. In the first sentence of 'Cutting for Stone,' he lets us know we're in for an epic story that starts with the birth of twins — by a nun. Obviously, we're not in for an ordinary epic.
Marion Stone, the twin who tells the story, speaks with authority, humility and a delicate sense of the absurd. Born in Addis Ababa in 1954, the twins will become doctors, aqnd for readers, something more. 'Cutting for Stone' is a grand, engaging novel that will enters readers' lives by offering them memories of a lives that are not their own. This is how we make this small world bigger than life.
Verghese (vur-geese) manages to bring these wildly extravagant lives into the reader's world with a powerful balance of great prose, intricate details, characters that are big enough to move from page to memory, plotting that seems organic and carefully orchestrated, and a unique vision that tempers internal surgery with spiritual nourishment. Obviously, he needed an epic just get everything in, and happily he succeeds at crafting a novel that unfolds, unpacks and satisfies our need for life — more life, lived well.
There's a definite danger when a writer ventures into this territory. The thin line between great drama and melodrama is easily crossed, and it takes a strong talent to steer the right course. Verghese starts off with the superb prose voice of Marion Stone, and never makes a wrong decision with regards to tone. He has a great way of slyly undercutting the seriousness of events by viewing them with a very understated sense of humor and absurdity. We're introduced to Marion and Shiva as infants born to a doctor and nun. The novel is written from a very practical medical perspective. Marion understands that we humans are made of not just the glistening viscera upon which the doctors operate, but of some ineffable spirit as well. He doubts his worth, but the reader does not. It's a great way to keep us engaged and immersed in Marion's life. Verghese gets a prose voice that catches us from the very beginning and holds us to the very end.
Verghese offers us, via Marion, all of life's rich pageant, with enough plot twists, grand successes and stunning failures to keep the reading lively, but never so much as to overwhelm. The plot is not confined to the events, the moves from one country to another, the deaths, the lives of these twins, each of whom becomes a different sort of doctor. Verghese moves the plot by developing his characters, keeping the reader riveted at two levels. The big themes and events of the past century; war, mass emigration, the unequal distribution of wealth between continents and countries, are mirrored in the richly described cast of characters.
Readers will quickly find that Verghese, himself a surgeon, offers an epic with a lot more medicine and surgery than the average grand saga. But this speaks directly to his particular vision of what exactly medicine can be versus what it is in practice. As Marion moves from war-torn Ethiopia to New York City, Verghese explores how culture affects the practice of medicine for good or for ill. There's no cut-and-dried conclusions to be reached, but the dialogue between technology and spirituality is deftly handled. Moreover, it is mirrored in the characters of Marion and Shiva Stone, and in the plot itself as their lives are recombined with expertly designed literary DNA.
'Cutting for Stone' offers readers an imaginative, immersive story, with just a touch of the fantastic around the edges. There's a glimmering sense of the ineffable at work here in the lives of Marion and Shiva Stone, even as they literally plunge their hands into the bowels of their fellow humans. Curing and healing are not the same, Verghese suggests, and if medicine may cure us, it is words, and the spirit found in creations like 'Cutting for Stone,' that will ultimately heal us.
New to the Agony Column
09-01-10: Commentary : Tim Pratt Finds 'Sympathy for the Devil' : "...Hell for the company..."
Agony Column Podcast News Report : A 2010 Interview with Dan Basta at the Blue Ocean Film Festival : "Experiential learning is the way we learn best."
08-31-10: Commentary : Peter S. Beagle Reveals 'The Secret History of Fantasy' : : Telling Lies for a Living
08-30-10: Commentary : David Doubilet Captures 'Water Time Light' : Painting with Pixels
Agony Column Podcast News Report : A 2010 Interview With David Doubilet and Jennifer Hayes : "Everything people have always feared about photography comes true underwater."
08-25-10: Commentary : Vendela Vida 'The Lovers' : Reading and Revelation
Agony Column Podcast News Report : A Live Reading and Interview with Vendela Vida At Bookshop Santa Cruz : "...there was an owl that came into this place we were renting one day..."
08-24-10: Commentary : Jeff VanderMeer and 'The Third Bear' : Absurd Is as Absurd Does
08-20-10: Commentary : Joe R. Lansdale Takes 'Deadman's Road' : Deader Than Thou
Agony Column Podcast News Report : On the Phone with Vendela Vida : "You do all this background information, most of which never makes it into the book."
08-19-10: Commentary : Gary Shteyngart Tells a 'Super Sad True Love Story' : Retro-Prescience
Agony Column Podcast News Report : Gary Shteyngart Live Reading and Interview at Bookshop Santa Cruz : "...please like me, this will make up for Hebrew school if all of you like me.."
08-18-10: Commentary : Mark Pilkington Unleashes Weapons of Mass Deception : "ECM+CIA=UFO"
Agony Column Podcast News Report : David Corbett and Barry Eisler for The Agony Column Live at Capitola Book Café, August 7, 2010 Q and A : "This is NewSpeak."
08-16-10: Commentary : Howard Norman Asks 'What is Left the Daughter' : The Past Always Rises
Agony Column Podcast News Report : A 2010 Interview with Howard Norman : "I'd wanted to write from the beginning an epistolary novel; this is just an epistolary novel that's consisting of one letter."
08-12-10: Commentary : James O'Neal Copies 'The Double Human' : Proceeding into the Future
Agony Column Podcast News Report : Barry Eisler and David Corbett Live at Capitola Book Café on August 7, 2010 : "If anyone thinks it's absurd that the government might assassinate the founder of WikiLeaks, it's quite a bit less absurd than I wish it were".... — Barry Eisler
08-11-10: Commentary : Joe R. Lansdale Takes Huck Finn to 'Dread Island' : "Classics Mutilated"
Agony Column Podcast News Report : Barry Eisler Reads at The Agony Column Live on August 7, 2010 : "...they'll pick up that angle and run interference for us..."
08-10-10: Commentary : David Corbett Asks 'Do They Know I'm Running?' : Crossing Borders
Agony Column Podcast News Report : David Corbett Reads at The Agony Column Live on August 7, 2010 : "These Families are making incredible sacrifices..."
08-09-10: Commentary : David Mitchell and The Thousand Autumns of Jacob De Zoet : The World is Ever the World
Agony Column Podcast News Report : A 2010 Interview with David Mitchell : "The periodic table of the human heart is still the same now as it was then."
08-06-10: Commentary : Tim Powers Sails 'On Stranger Tides' : History, Fantasy and the Reality of Reading
08-03-10: Commentary : Robert M. Price Spins 'The Tindalos Cycle' : Terrorize, Horrify, Repeat
Agony Column Podcast News Report : A Short Chat with Gary Shteyngart : "...the technology is outpacing our ability to absorb what it is doing to us..."
08-02-10: Commentary : A Second Tour Through 'The Passage' : Sending Characters into Time
07-30-10: Commentary : Subterranean Press and Robert R. McCammon Wake at 'The Wolf's Hour' : The Time Before Cheese
Agony Column Podcast News Report : Three Books with Alan Cheuse : Allegra Goodman, 'The Cookbook Collector,' Noam Shpancer's 'The Good Psychologist' and Elie Wiesel 'The Sonderberg Case'
07-28-10: Commentary : Rule Britannia, In Space 2 : En Route, RJ Frith and Peter F. Hamilton
Agony Column Podcast News Report : Brian and Wendy Froud at SF in SF on Monday, July 19, 2010: Q & A : "The people you deal with at the publishers ... if they last the end of the week, you're lucky."
07-27-10: Commentary : Rule Britannia, In Space : UK Space Opera Demonstrates Excess is Not Enough (Part one, the Arrived)
Agony Column Podcast News Report : Brian and Wendy Froud at SF in SF on Monday, July 19, 2010 : "Well, I thought if I do faeries then nobody's going to say that I've got it wrong."
07-26-10: Commentary : Brian and Wendy Froud Seek 'The Heart of Faerie Oracle' : Cards, Books and a New Perspective