Reviews

April 9, 2024

Fire and Snow

We’re in Colorado, enjoying some beautiful late-season snow squalls. There was an inch and a half on the ground when we woke up this morning. We headed out to meet Bill’s son John and grandson Charlie at the playground. We used the snow mounded on the slide to make snowballs...

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August 1, 2021

Vuong: Young and Beautiful

Review: On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeousa novel by Ocean Vuong I don’t want to forget this is a novel. But when the main character is adressing the story to his Ma, it’s hard to keep that thought in mind.I can’t forget for a minute that Ocean Vuong is a poet. Every...

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November 5, 2020

We Can’t Breathe

It’s day two after election day, and we still don’t know who will be president. In an effort to avoid obsessive magic wall election coverage, I’ve turned to Exhalation, a short story collection by a master of speculative fiction, Ted Chiang. I found there the first story I had read...

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August 31, 2020

And the Books Go On

Today I actually went through the doors of a library for the first time since March. Our little Sheldon branch of the Eugene Public Library is now open. I’ve been picking up and dropping off books curbside for a few weeks, but today I picked my own books off the...

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February 19, 2020

Do Tell: Girl, Woman, Other by Bernardine Evaristo

Evaristo’s poetical narrative style isn’t hard to settle into. Breaks are more frequent than standard paragraphing. The story is plot-driven and the style supports a clear narrative account of the lives of its multi-generational cast of characters.   “Show, Don’t Tell” is a writing cliche.we have lots of novels now where...

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February 10, 2020

Relentless

Review of Black Leopard Red Wolf by Marlon JamesNew York: Riverhead, 2019. 620 pp. This wild African-flavored fantasy is the most original book I have read this year. Marlon James has created a complete world of unique magic. Comparisons to Tolkien aren’t going too far. Although author Marlon James wrote...

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December 30, 2019

Holy Convergence

Review of There, There by Tommy OrangeNew York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2018 It is interesting, refreshing, and heart-gripping to hear the voices of contemporary urban Native Americans groping for threads of identity in the challenging environment of Oakland, California. Tommy Orange handles multiple first-person narrative voices beautifully. The characters have...

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December 28, 2019

In the New Year: The Will to Fight for our Planet

Review: Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out?By Bill McKibbenNew York: Henry Holt, 2019: 256 pp. This is not a particularly ground-breaking or distinguished book, but it is a thoughtful and clearly-written summary of some of the pressing moral and technological problems we face in 2020. Primarily,...

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December 14, 2019

Too Nice

Review of The Dutch House by Ann PatchettNew York: Harper Collins, 2019, 337 pgs. I am a devoted fan of Ann Patchett. Her writing is rich and smooth, and I have found all her main characters fully developed and credible. Until I encountered the Conroy family of her most recent...

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