Wednesday Book Club: Twilight

Wednesday, 14 January 2009 — 11:44pm | Book Club, Literature

This week’s selection: Twilight (2005) by Stephenie Meyer.

In brief: There is a difference between supernatural and superficial. Stephenie Meyer disagrees.

(The Wednesday Book Club is an ongoing initiative of mine to write a book review every week. I invite you to peruse the index. For more on Twilight, keep reading below.)

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Wednesday Book Club: The Rights Revolution

Wednesday, 7 January 2009 — 11:46pm | Book Club, Canadiana, Literature

This week’s selection: The Rights Revolution (2000) by Michael Ignatieff.

In brief: The text of Ignatieff’s appearance in CBC Radio’s Massey Lectures series makes for an effective plainspoken introduction to the complex balance of rights in modern liberal democracies. What remains to be seen is whether the positive vision of Canadian-style governance, founded on civic notions of identity rather than ethnic ones, has a realistic chance of spreading to the societies that need it most.

(The Wednesday Book Club is an ongoing initiative of mine to write a book review every week. I invite you to peruse the index. For more on The Rights Revolution, keep reading below.)

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Runaway fifths

Tuesday, 6 January 2009 — 10:17am | Game music, Jazz, Music, Video games

My dedicated readers may be aware that one thing I used to follow quite closely, on this journal and elsewhere, was the composition and arrangement of video game music. I haven’t attended to it in some time, and am in no way up to date on what’s been going on with it apart from the occasional press releases that land in my inbox about how (to pick one example) contributors to OC ReMix provided the official soundtrack to a high-definition remake of Street Fighter II.

So I was surprised to discover that a video game band—and a jazz band, no less—had sprung up in my very own a mare usque ad mare backyard under the name of The Runaway Five, after the Blues Brothers spoof band that lets you hop on their tour bus in the oddball Super Nintendo classic EarthBound. I saw them live at the Beat Niq on Saturday, and walked away pleased with a lot of what I heard.

I am careful to say “what I heard” because, in a bungled cross-product of the sound engineering and where I was sitting (but mostly, I conjecture, the former), there were serious acoustic issues that worked against the band. Never mind the unfortunate trend of miking and amping everyone in sight in tight basement clubs where a live sound would serve them better—there were fundamental EQ problems with what was coming out the other end, as if the treble had entirely dropped out. A lot of what the band was trying to do harmonically got lost in the midrange mud-crunching.

As for the band itself—a guitar-piano quartet in the first set and an octet with four horns in the second set—it is the very archetype of the young 2000s band that draws on a potpourri of stylistic influences without necessarily committing to one or another. If their point was to illustrate the versatility of their source material, I’d say they got it across. I jotted down their whole set list but I won’t bother reproducing it here; instead, here are a few performance notes.

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Wednesday Book Club: Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy

Wednesday, 31 December 2008 — 11:36pm | Book Club, Literature

This week’s selection: Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1974) by John le Carré.

In brief: Cerebral, meticulous, labyrinthine—though not what I would call gripping, and almost certain to be better on second reading. This is the sort of mystery where the procedure of discovery largely involves retelling fragments of the story and sewing them together. The resulting patchwork is everything a character-driven spy novel should be, conscious of both the seriousness of Cold War realpolitik and the human failings of the operatives in play. It’s an expository plod, but the destination is well worth the trek.

(The Wednesday Book Club is an ongoing initiative of mine to write a book review every week. I invite you to peruse the index. For more on Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, keep reading below.)

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Wednesday Book Club: Hexaflexagons, Probability Paradoxes, and the Tower of Hanoi

Wednesday, 24 December 2008 — 11:26pm | Book Club, Literature, Mathematics

This week’s selection: Hexaflexagons, Probability Paradoxes, and the Tower of Hanoi (2008) by Martin Gardner.

In brief: This revised anthology of Martin Gardner’s “Mathematical Games” columns in Scientific American, the first of fifteen volumes, is an ample exhibition of the author’s repute as the canonical journalist of recreational mathematics. Though the brevity of the articles leaves the details of proofs bottled up in the extensive bibliography, the non-technical approach goes a long way towards illustrating the everyday relevance of esoterica in topology and combinatorial theory.

(The Wednesday Book Club is an ongoing initiative of mine to write a book review every week. I invite you to peruse the index. For more on Hexaflexagons, Probability Paradoxes, and the Tower of Hanoi, keep reading below.)

Continued »

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