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Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Long long ago




Author: Greg Trine

I liked this book better than the 'Dinos are Forever' for its time travel. Pro superhero Jo itches for some action and so does her dog. they time travel to 1850s California. There they are looking to capture Wyatt Burp who causes trouble with his burp. Even though Jo is a superhero, she cant swim. With her sidekick's help she can overcome evil intentions from any era(thats another big concept).
The fog is described as thick as milk shake and peanut butter, which children can relate to. I also like how the concept of tsunami is built from ripple to waves to tsunami even if its a metaphor for the rise of crime. Because the people from a century ago are not familiar with superheroes, they mistake Jo and Raymond for witches which shows how people think in the times they live. Some of this concepts might be big for children to understand but hey dont be surprised if they give their explanations.

Dinos come alive






Author: Greg Trine

Jo Schmo is a fourth grader. She just received a mystery package. with its contents, Jo and her sidekick dog Raymond are about to become full scale superheroes with a superfast vehicle. With help from her retired Sheriff grandfather, Jo is all set to take on the bad elements, even if they are smart with a PhD like the mad scientist. But what are dinos doing in this story? They are extinct. Who has the power to being them to life. May be a super hero but a super hero wouldn wreak havoc. Or wait we have to ask Jo if her manual has a section about it.
In the end, she even learns the magic lofty word that can make her fly like a real superhero.

The illustrations are sketches like comics. Some really make you wonder. 

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Looking at a thing myriad times





With simple language and logic, the poet reverses the universally accepted truths. In 'Marriage' poem, it seems to the surviving partner that death liberated his partner to a happier future. Many stories convince us that life is all about love and here comes this poem.
The titles are on the upper right corner, obscure. Its fun to read the poem and then the title and then the poem with new eyes. The characters - shepherd and the animals, are fixed and so is the stanza format.
The poems move from a aha single line to a whole wonder when they are about specific animals. Here each animal gets its character. The animals are no longer a cluster.



Saturday, July 7, 2012

Spillway Issue 18: Games people play


spillway





Fairy tales fast forwarded to future, set in modern time
'This morning' by Nan Fry is a fill in the missing letters poem. An apple poem elsewhere is looking out from inside of an apple.

Punch and Judy
Emmett Kelly
Mazel tov
Thibodaux

From the missing letters poem, I take an inspiration but in the opposite direction, word stuffing like Bit stuffing but meaningful insertion.
dilligence(sic)

A contributor

Games People Play

Thursday, July 5, 2012

It began fine




Author: Tony Judt


The author's inspiration for this book, his thoughts running always in the wake of ALS took me through his childhood, the food, cars and life then. I got lost in the 'Lord Warden' ship chapter wit too many specifics.

Birds in their throats




I had read that Meghan O Rourke had written of her grief in poetry form too. I am unwilling to ride the wave of grief with the authors and poets. And so Joan Didion's good prose too loses it lacquer wit no grief to nurse. 

'Red fingernails' in My Aunts
Word play of exist and insist in 'Diagnosis'.
Te poet cant help notice the parallels of gradual decay of a dead squirrel with the effects of chemotherapy.
some poems from Kenyon Review -
in 'Twenty first century fireworks poem -

The future hasn't arrived. It is all still a dream, 
a night sweat to be swum off
in a wonderland of sand and bread


Inventory of grief
poems about her mother and a while after her passing away. While the first is true for ever, the second came into being because of the mothers death.
normal vs complicated grief


A mother makes a daughter
     by dividing
The hands, the nose, the feet
all grow by multiplying
 in 'Inventory' poem







Minced words





I have tried writing with my left hand. Recently my right hand was aching. While cutting vegetables, I wondered why not cut with the left hand. Such a common place idea, but never thougt about it. Except for the main cuts, I could chop fine with my left hand.

poems from left handed
In Water poem, I love how sometimes the abstract seems more clear and understood than plain facts.
In most poems the line breaks are such that the words are split and spilt into the next line forming internal rhyme. A kind of breaking to form.

In 'Who Remembers', 'The Shorter days', there is a nudge to enjoy the present.


Monday, July 2, 2012

The man with a mask, scissors...




If you want to know the details of an operation, ask your surgeon for an Operative report says Dr. Paul A Ruggieri. 
This book is supported by three pillars of the surgeon's experience, generic details of the surgery world and the patients experience. It is very structured. The text moves in between these three modes unifying them into a good narrative.
When the surgeon zeroes in on his/her area of focus to operate, the description sounds like man is a machine but machines don't go into Hypovolemic shock.

Its interesting how I picked up this book to read. It was on the stack in the library but I didnt feel pressed to read it. My eyes caught another book
. Then I thought why not the 'surgeon memoir'. A note about 'the dark side' of pharmaceutical drugs and the guinea pigs they are tested on, the example of Shoemaker is scary. The text was too scholarly.


Vicryl
resection
scut work
Sword of damocles

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Woman: profit and loss





The 'twin' cities, the bifurcation and the wholeness at the physical as well as in the mind is revisited in many poems. The poet uses this fork element  of conjoining and dividing even in her marriage.
Consistently the author looks at the status of women in different countries. What an unveiled head can bring upon the life. How widows were once treated in India. The poet muses upon mythical strong women too. A poem on Camilla. I wish there was a painting of this.
Neither words nor acquaintances are wasted.

Essence




Author: Rusty Morrison


Like the blurb 'says 'numb' is what ricochets off the words and lines, but there is a space for every reader to dwell and relate to it.

Saturday, June 30, 2012

A cooking life





Having read the first chapter, I can now guess that the book cover has Berbere spread, in which the title is written in perfect alphabets. Its a touching search for his mother who passed away when he was 3. I almost teared up at the end of first chapter.
As I read the wordy letters of some dishes, I am reminded that Ikea food too is from the place where the author grew up. The author's first encounter with management of pantry began at his grandmother's house.
Before jumping into cooking dream full time, the author had another dream- soccer. A playground which looks down upon underbuilt even if skilled.
Its the professional kitchens where the interns and the novices are to bow a 'Yes, Chef' for everything, that the title of the book is derived from.
The division of the book into three chapters boy, chef and man says it all. That it’s a bildungsroman. By the end of his boyhood, he owned a coveted set of cooking knives and a kitchen boy experience at a restaurant. That’s telling of where the boy is headed. Geographically, he wanted to get to France. In the meantime, he went to top restaurants in Switzerland, NY.  While in NY, he took the place in. The diversity of NY expanded his palate. From his mentors he learnt how to meld international flavours into existing traditions. With his focus on learning as much as he could, by the age of 24, he became the head of a three star kitchen. He arrived.
Having reached his goal, hurtling through a pregnancy and two funerals that he couldn’t attend, at a QA with cooking students, ‘What are some of the modern cooking trends in Africa?’ was the tipping point. His search to find his roots became his diving board into manhood too where the self he had made until then had a hefty price attached to it as it was under another person’s tutelage. Everywhere he goes, he cooks to show ‘honor, respect and love’. His food was appreciated by awards, TV show win, preparing state dinner. His restaurant ‘Red Rooster’ is about letting the past and present speak from the same place. Just like in his life where he embraced his past by taking up the responsibility of his natural father's family from another marriage.
Chef Samuelsson’s life is similar to the others in the hours that he had to put in scut work. His life is different too from other chefs. We hear how it is tough for chefs to have a life. The author got around it by getting to the top fast and then found time to tie up the lose ends in his life – finding identity, building family bonds.
In the kitchen, he learns of the rituals where mentors let the best stage at other famous kitchens. Demographics in there.


Wednesday, June 20, 2012

American trait




Author: Jack Hitt

Gungywamp was sought out and placed in history by an amateur.

The author began the book with Ben Franklin and ended with it. Towards the end we are introduced to Claude-Anne Lopez. Her life story summary is interesting enough that we don’t ask why we need to know about her until we recall after few pages that the lady we just read of is a biographer of Franklin. The author is skilled at story telling.
There is a conflict in the book between trying to be exhaustive about a topic – rare birdwatching, race, skywatching and not to forget that all this has to be viewed with the lens of amateurism. The subtitle ‘a search for the American character’ is a catchall for the variety of the book. For the amazing content, I can overlook the ‘the case of curious title’ as miscataloging (who would have thunk that there’s no need of a u).
The first chapter looks at Franklin Vs John Adams that goes like Frederick Vs Voltaire each at odds with the others behavior. When I caught sight of ‘Ivory bill’, I couldn’t brace myself to read about it.  When there is a talk of this bird, fuzzy is not far. It is not clear if this bird is alive or not. The proof is a grainy video which has been questioned by many amateurs. In each chapter the author talks of the reigning theories and the dents made in them by amateurs.
The book is result of Immersive journalism. Where the author follows amateurs – birdwatchers in chase of ivory bill, extracting DNA using cleverly rigged gadgets instead of the expensive equipment used in lab, astronomers in search of a good ‘seeing’ and making lenses with them.
In the race chapter, the author questions flimsy claims and has a paragraph that lists all the biases that we could be prone to while analyzing data. Kennewick man is shown as one such multi-biased case and an example of how floating symbols can be weaved into different cultures to support their ‘manifest destinies’.
Amateurism is not only about clever individuals but collaboration among many of them on a scale made possible by the today’s ‘open-source’ – bioweather maps, Galaxy zoo.
The author has a way of keeping a thread running among the chapters – the power of myth in the Gungywampers case, Native American origin tale involving ice, the myth of Ivory Bill’s continued existence. That said there are some leaps in the narrative that we can overlook for the book’s far reach.
To live in a world where another discovery changes our history, but do we all recalibrate ourselves with that new knowledge? Before I heard of the Clovis, I thought that America was very young and with the pre-Clovis and a harmless T-rex, I can imagine a story with a T-rex in an unlikely friendship with another animal but with the man, we will probably keep looking for an evidence that explains all the migrations of the Neanderthal man or we’ll just look up to the sky until we meet our future – ET.
Hail the people with DIY in their genes!

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Becoming of a curator




Author: Darcy Lockman


When we follow famous legal cases, sometimes we hear that the defendant was deemed unfit for trial. It is interesting to know of the procedure used to reach that conclusion. While the author is sharing her experiences in an internship at a hospital, she also supplements the branches of psychiatry with their history.
Most of the book is about evaluations of a patient's mental status. There are two kinds, one which the author calls the talking cases where you talk to the patient to see their readiness for discharge and their assessment of the situation. In the other as a consultant liaison, we learn of cases where the CL has to assess how the mental health of the patient is affecting the medical treatment the patient is undergoing. In some cases, the book does seem like retelling of what happened as an advisor looking for more analysis in the notes complains.
I find that sarcasm being a sign of intelligence in a mental evaluation, points to how our complex talk can reflect the working of our mind.
Throughout the internship, the author is enraged that psychoanalysis is not given its due. She decries the use of meds as they don't make a patient capable of independent life.
An internship is a before-after experience. True to that expectation, when the author enters the Kings County hospital she feels ignorant but at the end of it she realizes that she can make a difference.
The books format of snapshots of the cases leaves the reader looking for closure for each case which does not arrive in all the cases because of the nature of the hospital where discharges happen without psychiatrist's goodbyes.
But what of mind is ever simple and organized, thus goes a memoir like a montage of myriad ways heads can go wrong. Quotes on the mental states by some authors is not surprising considering the inordinate amounts of time they spend thinking about the human condition. I hope the quotes are only for comment sake and not part of the `treatment plan'.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

In Indian

the Vietnamese girl

would be called

Meenakshi

-eyes of a fish.


***********


Bunny is a cute cat

with slightly round face

easy to figure skin colors

black and white.

Not the stripes,

no angular face bones.


Humor has its hike boots on




Author: Hape Kerkeling

I have some idea of the pilgrimage to the end of the world from 'Off the road: A modern day walk down the pilgrims route into Spain' by Jack Hitt.
This traveler is having way too much fun - staying at hotels, taking off from the walking for a movie. I have to follow the journey of his self discovery.
He is down to earth in terms of spirituality. Oh oh! This route aint easy with mischievous people giving wrong directions. Now that I have seen the scallop symbol, I will recognise the path. Butterflies as trail markers. whatever works.
I am now lined up with the date at the bottom of the page.

read by June 21, 2010
4/5


After liking this book, I was interested in  reading 
It wasnt captive.