A Moment Of Silence


Please bow your heads as we honor the passing of Marco Rubio’s chances of being president.

I kid, of course, but yeah… I mean he actually gave a decent, though bland and uninspired, speech, but that dry mouth and his desperate lip smacks before grabbing the water bottle… his handlers may be telling Rubio that it won’t overshadow his introduction to the national stage, but, um, yeah, it totally overshadowed his introduction to the national stage and when his name is mentioned for the next four years, this will always be brought up (and in eight years, he’s going to be bald, and that’s never good for one’s presidential ambitions).

Midweek Staff Meeting – Use Your Words


_65587521_20011de3-1c96-48cb-8fec-63b6a0141238Vocabulary is the secret to success.

Poetic picks.

Reading is expensive.

A city that truly loves its books.

Used e-books. This could be a real thing (actually, no it couldn’t be a ‘real thing,’ but it could be an elaborate scheme Amazon uses to get a monopoly on the business of books).

DC’s Best Bookstores


After DC got named the nation’s most literate city, someone got up and made themselves a list of our fine city’s best bookstores. Thankfully, they did not include some bookstore in Alexandria or another one of DC’s suburbs, which is something people do when making ‘best of’ lists about DC and which annoys me greatly. I don’t make a list of the five best coffeeshops in New York City and claim that number three is a hipster cafe in Jersey City, so don’t come around here and tell me the Arlington or Bethesda are part of DC.

You know what I like about this list? It doesn’t open up with Politics and Prose.

P&P is great bookstore, don’t get me wrong, but for the local man about town, I don’t actually think it’s the best.

This one names Kramer Books as the best. I’ll accept that. About ten years ago, I used to drink at the bar over there (yes, inside the bookstore) several times a week with a friend. Politics and Prose may be more nationally iconic, but as far as being a local culturally touchstone, Kramer Books probably better.

I’ve actually never been to the Lantern nor Books For America, both on the list. And I was disappointed that Bridge Street Books wasn’t on the list, though happy that our delightfully cluttered local hangout, Capitol Hill Bookstore, made the cut.

 

Out Of The Silent Planet (New Year’s Resolution, Book Six)


Reading the first book in C.S. Lewis’ trilogy of Christian science fiction, I realize how huge his debt is to the planetary romance of early pulp writers like Edgar Rice Burroughs and his Mars and Pellucidar books.

Lewis certainly gets his theological apologetics in, but the descriptions of his hero (Dr. Elwin Ransom, professor of philology) exploring the planet (which is Mars by the way!), encountering native flora and fauna, and his interactions with the native life, including quickly learning their language… well if you replaced Dr. Ransom with John Carter and added a couple of sword fights (though, there is a harpoon hunt of a giant, freshwater monster in Out of the Silent Planet) you could probably have sold this as a long lost novel of Barsoom, especially since it even takes place on Mars, though the natives here call it Malacandra, not Barsoom. It also uses the trope of having this story be Ransom’s unbelievable story told to Lewis so he can sell it as a novel, because it would otherwise be too unbelievable if sold as fact.

The apologetics come in the time honored fashion of presenting a fictional (or fictionalized) society as expressing the utopian ideals of the author’s religion or philosophy. There was one little throw away line where Ransom wonders whether it is his duty to evangelize to the alien hrossa and then realizes they more truly represent the ideals of his High Anglican Christianity than whatever he could express in their alien tongue.

The (more or less) climax is a little preachy and Lewis lays it on too hard in one area. Ransom must translate the arguments being made by the villains of the novel (Devine and Weston, if you must know) into the native language of Malacandra. Because of both the limitations of the language (having a relatively utopian society, they don’t have words for some negative things) and his own understanding of it. The result is Ransom giving the Malacandrans such a straw man version that it becomes irritating.

Despite that Caveat, Lewis is always and engaging and earnest writer, though never as good a writer as his fellow Inkling, Tolkien (upon upon whom, apparently, Ransom was based). This book is not as good nor the world as well thought and engaging as that built in his Narnia books, but it is still a good book by an important twentieth century writer.

I read this book years ago, but this time, I will go on and read the rest of the trilogy (though not next week, I’m thinking Alexander Pope for next week). In fact, I have the complete trilogy already downloaded onto my Nook. So, maybe sometime in March… Perelandra.

Washington Celebrities


So, I was walking down to the bank to withdraw some money for the offertory at church when I saw what seemed a familiar sight.

Andrew Schwartz, whose impromptu adoption of the lead role in the Folger’s Henry V had so impressed me, was walking down Pennsylvania Avenue.

Nothing special, but it was nice to be able to tell him in person how much I had enjoyed his performance.

So, that’s kind of what passes as a celebrity sighting in DC – or at least, what passes as a celebrity sighting once you’re bored of seeing Boehner standing outside a bar with a cigarette hanging out of his mouth.

The Sunday Paper – Roman A Clef


Politic0: The Novel

Beyond the ‘big six.’

Ferlinghetti: The Movie

Animal poetry.

Small town poetry scenes.

Mainstreamin’ Marx.

Bad Start To The Hexagonal


But it’s not hard to guess what happened.

And, to an extent, I am guessing. I was at work during the World Cup qualifying match against Honduras – a match that we lost 2-1 – and could only follow the action as best I could on twitter.

I know that the defense was overmatched and played poorly, but that will have to come with time. Geoff Cameron is a quality defender and Omar Gonzalez has to come good because the pipeline of good, young defenders with the potential to be international quality players isn’t exactly overflowing. Same goes for the fullbacks. Steve Cherundulo will probably be on the roster in 2014, but we’ll need someone under thirty in the right back spot to cover for what will be, by 2014 Cherundulo’s thirty-five year old legs.

I like Klinsmann. I really do. I want to like him as our coach.

But he as consistently gotten the midfield wrong.

Eddie Johnson on the left? Meh. I can live with it.

But the trio of Jermaine Jones, Danny Williams, and Michael Bradley doesn’t have enough attacking quality. Bradley can attack, but he can’t be the only one of the trio with the ability to link midfield and attack. Personally, I’m a big Sacha Kljestan fan. He started out as an attacking midfielder, but has improved his defense and range of passing from deeper positions since joining Anderlecht in Belgium. He help out at defense, but also provide a wide range of passing and help keep possession. Arguments could also be made for Maurice Edu (more defensive, but with better passing ranges than Jones or Williams and a penchant for driving forward) or Jose Torres (plays in the center circle and helps keep possession with his passing and ball control) or even Freddy Adu (has good close control in tight spaces). But with so many defensive minded folks in the midfield, too much space was given to Honduras and too little help the offense. Ugh.

And what irks is that he had players on the bench like Kljestan (he did come on in the second half), Jose Torres, and Graham Zusi (who could have provided some width and delivery into the box) – and at least one of them should have started.

Klinsmann keeps talking about playing attacking soccer. Let’s start seeing some. We won’t win anything by sitting back.

Weekend Reading – The Real Advantage


The reason why Borders went bankrupt and Barnes & Noble is still surviving actually has little to do with differing e-books and online strategies.

College kids still prefer the old fashioned kind ‘o textbook and aren’t really into ‘enhance e-books’ or other such nonsense.

What is ‘the work of art?’

An interview with Michael Moorcock.

For the third year in a row, Washington, DC is ranked the most literate city in America. I can only assume that my New Year’s resolution to read a book a week will help us secure the title a fourth year running, so… you’re welcome, DC.


Tardis bookcase

Reviewed: Henry V At The Folger Shakespeare Library


Last night, I got my Christmas present – a night at the theater with a lovely lady.

She took me to see the Folger’s production of Henry V.

Back in the day (well, back in 1989), my friend Matt and I were taken by Beverly and Joe, two grown ups (Matt and I being in junior high) from my church (that was during an interlude in my longstanding atheism/agnosticism), to see the Kenneth Branagh movie of the play. It was definitely one of those defining moments in my life: the classics were freaking cool! People were executed, slaughtered in the field, hung from the neck until dead (I was a fourteen year old boy, so this was the kind of stuff that impressed me).

This Henry V was something very different.

The entire production emphasized the stage bound aspect of the play. The set itself was a series of scaffoldings which were set with beams on ropes that were partially lowered at various times to indicate various locales, but which still served to emphasize the artificiality of the set. Actors also played multiple roles, which, again, brought the audience’s gaze onto the fact that this was a play and not real. It wasn’t as explicit as that moment in The French Lieutenant’s Woman (the book, not the movie, people) when the author pulls up short and flat out tells the reader that this is just a book s/he is reading and that the characters aren’t real and none of this really happened, but it was pretty explicit. Though, of course, the broad sweep of events in Henry V actually happened.

Henry himself was played by Andrew Schwartz, instead of the usual actor, who was, apparently, ill last night. While he was at times uncertain and stumbled over a line or two, that also served the purpose. While still making clear the artificiality of the entire act of staging a play, it also really pushed the costs of war. This Henry was callow and uncertain and didn’t truly understand the cost of his actions to others around him. It’s actually hard to imagine anyone else playing the part in this production.

The notes in the playbill talked a good bit about how the quagmire-ish conflict in Ireland informed Shakespeare’s play. I don’t know whether it was intentional, but having read that, I can’t help but think of this and the Iraq War. The staged aspect brought to mind the political staging of the war by neocons for our consumption. At the end of the play, the Chorus reminds the audience that things went to hell in a hand basket almost immediately after the events depicted, what with  the disastrous, brief reign of Henry’s son (Henry VI) and the whole War of the Roses thing. So the entire episode could be viewed as the initial, made for television, stage of the Iraq War, when the statue toppled, before… the entire rest of the war and occupation.

Anyway, the run of Henry V has been extended, so go see it or something.