lisa_goldstein: (pic#11299236)
The Dawn of Everything, David Graeber and David Wengrow.  When I was in college I had friends who would listen to an album called “Everything You Know Is Wrong,” by the Firesign Theater.  I thought of this phrase a lot while I read this book, which has new and startling ideas on nearly every page.  Most anthropologists think that humanity started as migrating hunter-gatherers and then learned basic agriculture and settled in towns, and that the towns brought problems we’re still familiar with: war, armies, taxes, rulers, and oppression.  The authors show that prehistory was far more diverse than that, that communities could be a mix of hunter-gatherers and farmers, and that towns didn’t necessarily mean hierarchies.  Historians have started giving credit to the Haudenosaunee confederation for contributions to the U.S. Constitution, but Graeber and Wengrow go way beyond that, saying that it was Native Americans who inspired the Enlightenment, that books about these new civilizations (new to the Old World, anyway) flooded Europe in the 1600s and caused Rousseau and others to think in different ways about liberty and the organization of societies.  One group of indigenous people, the Creek, even got together in what looked like coffee houses, with tobacco and a stimulating beverage called the “black drink.”  The colder temperatures in Europe in the 1500s might have been a result of genocide in the New World: the deaths of around 90% of the people meant that forests took over cultivated areas, which meant more carbon uptake.  The ideas here about hierarchy and mutual aid, about all the different ways societies have been organized over thousands of years, give hope in a pretty despairing time.

Demon Copperhead, Barbara Kingsolver.  People keep opining on the Great American Novel, which in their judgment usually turns out to be a book about some guy going off to war or murdering some animal.  It’s a stupid idea anyway, because the country is so vast and so diverse that no one book can really sum it up, but I always thought that if anyone asked me my opinion I’d say Kingsolver’s Poisonwood Bible.  It’s about a missionary family living in Africa and barely takes place in the U.S. at all, but the perspective gained by their move shows the country they left in a new light.  (My other choice would be Toni Morrison’s Beloved, but that’s a whole other argument.)

Anyway, you could make a good case for Demon Copperhead as well.  The title hints at a connection with Dickens’s David Copperfield, but you don’t need to have read that book to enjoy this one.  A young boy in southern Appalachia goes through many of the scourges of the twenty-first century: growing up with a single mother, experiencing poverty and hunger and insecurity, let down by the adults who are supposed to help him.  He gains some fame as a football hero in high school but then becomes injured, just in time for the opioid epidemic.

I know this sounds a bit cliched, maybe even like a Young Adult Problem novel.  All I can say is that it isn’t.  The characters are well rounded, sometimes extraordinary, their twists and turns surprising.  The writing, as in all of Kingsolver’s novels, is perfect, and she seems to know everything about her world, from the various ways to score and use opioids to how to harvest tobacco.

It’s obvious she loves this part of the country, despite all its flaws.  She argues against the stereotype of Southerners as backwards and ignorant rednecks, showing us a varied and complex region and some enlightened characters.  (Also, there’s a great explanation of the term “redneck.”)  And it is true that a lot of Northerners look down on the South: a friend of mine from North Carolina told me that when she went to college people laughed at her accent, and she had to get some tapes and do speech exercises to sound like everyone else.  On the other hand, why does the South keep electing idiots?  Some of the reason for that is racism, but Kingsolver downplays its existence.  (And I have to say quickly: Not all Southerners are racists.  Not all racists are Southerners.  I hope that covers everybody.)

Speaking of Harpo, Susan Fleming Marx.  I wrote about this here.  It was terrific to read another book about Harpo Marx after all this time, especially one from his wife of thirty years, someone who probably knew him better than anyone.  She gives a slightly different perspective than Harpo himself did in Harpo Speaks; she tells some new and delightful stories; and she shows us a loving marriage that lasted until Harpo’s death in 1964.

Nona the Ninth, Tamsin Muir.  I wrote about this here.  We find out a bit more about John Gaius, the Emperor or God who learned necromancy and gained the ability to kill and resurrect whole planets.  The story isn’t about him, though, and it isn’t even about Gideon from the first book or Harrow from the second one.  Instead it features whole new characters, Palamedes and Camilla Hect, the necromancer and cavalier of the Sixth House; Pyrrha Dve, the Emperor’s lover; and Nona, who seems to have been created about six months ago.  But who is Nona?  And is she really a new character?

Nona the Ninth solves some mysteries, but it also raises new ones.  The more I read these books the more intricate they turn out to be, each one opening out into a wider and more complex world than the last.  They repay careful reading.

Also, I’m just glad that someone who started an intriguing series is continuing it, and in a timely fashion.  Believe me, it’s appreciated.

Fevered Star, Rebecca Roanhorse.  Another compelling series, and another author who doesn’t let her readers wait too long between books.  In Fevered Star we learn more about the main characters from Black Sun: Serapio, a man who changed the world, and himself, on the winter solstice, Xiala, the ship’s captain who transported him to the holy city of Tova and is now searching for him, and Narampa, a sun priestess who lost a game of power and is trying to survive.  And we learn more about Roanhorse’s captivating world, which is based on myths from Mesoamerica.

The Road to Unfreedom, Timothy Snyder.  I wrote about this here.  The Road to Unfreedom was written before Russia invaded Ukraine, but it’s prescient in explaining how that war came to be.  Putin thinks that the Soviet Union lost the respect of the world after the fall of Communism and wants a return to the status of world power, with the old borders and old prestige restored to what they were.  But in his vision Russia is an autocracy, and to this end he keeps his people locked in an eternal present, with no history to learn from and no future to look forward to, flooded with a combination of truth and lies until the two blur together and the difference between them becomes irrelevant.  Even more frightening, Snyder shows how easily the U.S. can follow the same path.

The Past Is Red, Catherynne Valente.  The world has been nearly destroyed by untethered consumerism, leaving only rising seas and garbage.   But humans still survive, and some of them, like the main character Tetley, even thrive.  This is despite the fact that she did something (no spoilers) that caused everyone in her home town of Candle Hole to hate her.

The garbage has been sorted into piles, so as Tetley goes questing through her world she comes to places like Pill Hill, Teagate, and Electric City.  It gives the landscape a surreal aspect, and this, along with Tetley’s unflagging good cheer, turns what could be just another climate change novel into something bright and strange and wonderful.  But Valente never lets us forget the mistakes of previous generations, here called Fuckwits, and how they (we) literally trashed the planet.


lisa_goldstein: (pic#11299236)
I fell in love with Harpo Marx when I was a kid, and there are still times when I think What Would Harpo Do to get another perspective on things.  So a new book about Harpo, by his wife Susan Fleming Marx, is very welcome, especially after a decades-long drought in which little has been written about him.

Speaking of Harpo talks about Susan Marx’s early life, her Broadway and movie career (she didn’t much like being on stage but it was easy for her to get parts -- probably every actor who reads that will be filled with instant envy), how she met Harpo and what their courtship was like, their life together and with their four kids, and, of course, what she did during the long years after Harpo died.  (She was twenty years younger than him and died in 2002.)  She comes across much as Harpo described her in his autobiography Harpo Speaks, private, level-headed, funny, devoted to her family, enjoying Harpo’s escapades or at least tolerant of them.

This is pretty interesting, but the best part is that there are new Harpo stories.  A Harpo story is unmistakable.  Of course it’s funny, but it also, for one instant, throws the world out of kilter. “Wait, what?” you say, but he’s already moved on.

“In New York the phone in the hotel room started ringing the moment we checked in, and it seemed to never stop.  There was a young woman desperately trying to get an interview with Harpo.  He gracefully declined but she kept calling, and after not answering the phone for a couple of days he picked it up and she was still trying.  So, he agreed to do the interview… As they were speaking the phone started ringing.  Harpo ignored it.  The woman asked, ‘Aren’t you going to answer that?’  Harpo replied, ‘No.  It’s probably you.’”

In fact there’s a lot here that’s new.  For one thing, it turns out that Harpo was a hypochondriac.  Biographies and his own book emphasize how untroubled he was, how he rarely worried about anything, so the fact that he was preoccupied with his health comes as a surprise.  It seems to make him a more rounded person — no one could be as easygoing as he portrayed himself.

For another, Susan’s account of their courtship contradicts Harpo’s in a lot of ways.  In Harpo Speaks it was Susan who did the pursuing, and Harpo who wanted to stay a carefree bachelor.  Susan shows that both of them dated other people at first, and that Harpo seemed jealous of some of the men she went out with.  Harpo says that they got married because, after a years-long courtship, Susan asked about moving into his new house.  Susan says he went on one knee and said, “Miss Fleming, will you marry me?” to which she replied, “Mr. Marx, this is so sudden.”  Was she upset by his portrayal?  She doesn’t say so, but she makes sure to give her own side of the story.

Susan may remember the facts differently, but the sense she gives of Harpo is a lot like the person we meet in Harpo Speaks.  He’s kind, doesn’t play Hollywood games (he and Susan disguised themselves when they got married, to keep it from the gossip columnists), knows how to enjoy himself and how to bring out the best in other people.  He adds a little more wonder to the world.

And so, here’s a final Harpo story:  When they moved to Palm Springs he’d placed his harp near a glass sliding door, shaded by an awning.  “The first morning as Harpo tuned up, a big yellow cat slid down the awning and laid there with his head hanging over the edge, listening blissfully…” They moved to a new house, and a few days later Harpo started to practice.  “Look who’s at the window,” he called out.  “Harpo’s audience had followed him the two miles across the desert,” Susan says.  Well, of course.

——

I wouldn’t start here if you want to read about Harpo, but with his own book, Harpo Speaks.  I think it’s a masterpiece — a strong claim, I realize, especially since he never finished second grade.  He comes across as a kind of trickster, someone who can tilt the world toward absurdity, who sees nearly every situation as an excuse for mayhem — and tricksters, as we know, rarely write their own autobiographies.  He and his brother Chico try to sell money to a policeman.  He drops a pocketful of fake jewels in Tiffany’s.  He leaves a theater where he’s performing still wearing a hat gaudy with gold and braid, and as he’s walking with a friend he somehow manages to switch it for the friend’s hat, and the friend makes it all the way home without noticing.  What Would Harpo Do?  He’d probably stand on his head.

Profile

lisa_goldstein: (Default)
lisa_goldstein

January 2025

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
192021 22232425
262728293031 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 13th, 2025 05:55 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios