Archive for the ‘Books’ Category
Posted by paragraphonline on August 17, 2010

From its opening line, ‘Wit’ took me by the jugular and never really let go. It is a compact and wickedly funny tour de force – both intellectually engaging and emotionally immediate. But make no mistake: its bite is really a kiss; an essentiality which somehow atomizes the world, so that it may reconstruct itself in a slightly improved way.
It asks the most compelling question I find, of whether the quest for humanity in mortality is best cerebral-led or compassion-driven. Having this inquiry into Cartesian dualism occur amidst a highly-rationalized medical system challenges the reader to continually dissect the many sides to what the human ‘condition’ entails, to no real end.
Medical or interactional, lines of offense and defense are often drawn up by the hearts and minds. These lines keep our emotions and rationality at bay, but collisions will still happen. There will be times when we apply them inadequately, and in wrong doses. All these while in the stream of life, death, life. Mortality (towards immortality) continues to happen. ‘Wit’ is one of the most humanistic plays ever written to so elegantly surface these almost-taboo issues, without being self-important. And as a first play, Edson’s achievements are quite awe-inspiring.
PS: There is a HBO film adaptation of the play directed by Mike Nichols and starring Emma Thompson.
Contributed by: s.t.
Posted in Books | Tagged: Wit, Margaret Edson, Mike Nichols, Emma Thompson, HBO | Leave a Comment »
Posted by paragraphonline on May 31, 2010

The allure of this beloved book is that it keeps our empathy for the children at bay. They are not sympathetic victims, but if you ask me, mere irritating mice. Through imaginative anthropomorphism, Dahl makes cruelty to children at times, justifiable. Characters here defy their traditional (read: man-made) stereotypes. The witches are enigmatic creatures of wondrous powers, speech and nature. They are not really women, don’t you find? Strangers are not necessarily always dangerous especially when silly obnoxious (grand)parents are more shackles than saviors. So forget about Dahl the misogynist or pessimist. Dahl was a magician, an illusionist; every child’s best mate. Last I checked, I do not have square ends for toes or purple irises. Like any child mesmerized, I went wherever my instincts wanted to go: to the delightful transformations Dahl conjured. And what shimmering smoke and mirrors!
PS: Quentin Blake’s penchant for fuzz in his lines enhances the crookedness of the tale, and adds that extra “kazaam”.
Contributed by: s.t.
Posted in Books | Tagged: Roald Dahl, The Witches | Leave a Comment »
Posted by paragraphonline on March 2, 2010
If there were an activity I love more than reading, it would be eating. And if there is any activity that combines the both together so very well, it’ll be reading about food. Lucky for me, so many people have ventured into writing about food: from the preparation of it, to the stories behind it, from the cooking of it and right down to the eating of it.
Before I talk about Jay Rayner’s “ The Man Who Ate the World”, let me first state that food writing is an art, and it is an art that not many people do well. So what if you are JK Rowling? You can’t depend on an excellent word bank or good amount of imagination to write about food. It takes a skilled writer with plenty of guts to write about food in the most glorified detail without sounding like Nigella Lawson. You can’t be so explicit that your reader gets too hungry to go on reading, and you also can’t be too cursory that your writing becomes something you find in the lifestyle and cooking section of the newspaper.
Which is why I quite enjoyed Rayner’s book. I gravitated to the book when I saw it in a book sale because from the cover I figured it would make me laugh. It did, at the preface, when he warned me to read this in a café with no obstructing glassware and snacks within reach. As a food critic, you would think he might be pretty adept about all things food, but then he gets himself in strange places (Sushi in Moscow?), eating even stranger food (lamb cooked in sour milk?) and meeting the strangest people (descendents of Stalin’s chefs?). I liked that he didn’t make me that hungry – I wanted to relish the next story as much as I wanted to savour the garlicky escargot and the foie gras terrine buried beneath a leaf-fall of summer truffle shavings.
Jay Rayner set out on a quest to see if those fabled Michelin-starred restaurants are really something to shout out about. And he tells us what we already know, and that is the perfect meal can’t be found anywhere with Baroque fittings or a €200 degustation menu. It just can’t be found.
Contributed by: D.C
Posted in Books | Tagged: Jay Rayner, The Man Who Ate The World, Writing about Food | Leave a Comment »
Posted by paragraphonline on February 25, 2010

It takes a really gifted writer with the precise recipe of unabashed honesty, wicked intellectuality and sly wit to make an autobiographical memoir truly readable. De Assis (1839-1908, Brazilian) achieved this feat in 160 intentional chapters, each illuminating luminously the trials and tribulations of his (alter) ego. Reflecting an astute style-choice (he opts for the posthumous route from the get-go since the dead could always only have fun!), these disparate tracks re-create the digressive nature of consciousness-in-being by skipping lithely between life’s predominant polarities both across and within chapters: objectivism and subjectivism (or depiction and conversation; reflection and refraction, reality and philosophy). The result is an intimate reading experience facilitated through an embracive literary structure. There are many addictive and attractive things about ‘Epitaph’, the greatest of which would be the reader’s desire to eventually obtain a fragment of Assis’ bravery in his ability to reminisce a life’s worth in glee. I affirm that this is quite possibly one of the ‘greatest novels you never heard of’.
Contributed by: s.t
Posted in Books | Tagged: Epitaph of a Small Winner, Machado de Assis | Leave a Comment »
Posted by paragraphonline on February 3, 2010

The Holocaust, arguably a historical individual, has always been fascinating because of its extraordinary components. It is a bizarre circumstance where incomprehensible evil is dealt a worthy opponent in the incarnation of unwavering will and mercy. Depictions of this battle swarmed with documentarian value are abundant; what are few and far between are the ones which could deliver an ease of literary accessibility during reading, while keeping the horror at arm’s length. Yes, I am talking about non-fiction literature. Impact-wise, Capote’s In Cold Blood comes close to what I consider to be Primo Levi’s opus, The Drowned and The Saved. (How about Elie Wiesel’s Night?) Levi, an Auswitch survivor, writes with such fluidity that you would think that the blood which once flowed never stopped. Yet somehow, you could feel that it had, because of his willingness to understand analytically the conditions (psychological, structural) of the rested dead and the walking ones. Through Levi’s writing style, one is able to get a sense of his personal struggle for mnemonic reconciliation: it is not about getting closer to the heart of suffering; rather, it is to manufacture and then maintain a delicate distance with that emotional core, through a beautiful mind.
Contributed by: s.t
Posted in Books | Tagged: Elie Wiesel, In Cold Blood, Night, Primo Levi, The Drowned and the Saved, Truman Capote | 6 Comments »
Posted by paragraphonline on February 3, 2010


The Hours is one of the subtlest novels you will ever pick up, yet also one of the most powerful and haunting. Nothing seems to really be happening, yet so much has already happened because everything interior is alive and well. Just as there is not much to be said about the impending grief of losing a dear friend to AIDS, why not realize the breeze and its whispers while fetching him flowers in an early spring morning full of possibility? Such is life.
Therefore, instead of fashioning characters that hover above their banality, Michael Cunningham wisely chooses to locate personal stories amidst their everyday condition. Characters and their pasts meander in and out of their structured circumstances, showing their faces like hallowed ghosts. The choices that are revealed under such setting render the characters’ humanity, in all its shades, starker, and it is a very beautiful thing to witness. Standing tall on the shoulders of Virginia Woolf’s vision in Mrs Dalloway, The Hours is perched as a fitting postmodern companion. The durable scaffold of the former is revived as a recurrent situational text for reality referencing in the latter. However, what is borrowed are never the mere details and manners of one era (early 20th century England), but the common emotional undercurrents that echo through time, such that the years that divide them erode away, only to exist as convenient chapters of one same book. Cunningham knows this, and here, his interpretation allows a re-reading of Woolf, updating her text with an urgent contemporary relevance. This is a great personal homage that is tastefully done. The visionary is dead, long live the visionary. Unlike in Specimen Days (c.f. Walt Whitman was his muse) where this strategy was employed to a slightly contrived and inconsistent effect, the result here is an intricately-woven cross-stitch of life’s tapestry that is ‘equally poised between despair and the desire to live’ (Meryl Streep, 2002).
Contributed by: s.t
Posted in Books | Tagged: Meryl Streep, Michael Cunningham, Mrs Dalloway, Specimen Days, The Hours, Virginia Woolf | Leave a Comment »
Posted by paragraphonline on January 14, 2010

There is something incredibly textured that is retained amidst the physical flatness of Martone’s Mid-West USA. The emotional peaks and gorges, composed of vanishing men and their memories, can only be captured scrupulously by someone who knows better than to submit to sentimental overkill. Martone is just such a ‘someone’. The thing I appreciate most in his carefully-crafted collection of eulogies is that reality is presented as a smudged proxy to the spirit and essence of living in (and subsequently, leaving) this beloved region. He knows that writing too much of reality into reality is just not enough to make it real. At this point, I have to admit that the genre of ‘creative non-fiction’ provides timely aid to his enterprise. Thus, he arrives at the manners of poetics, parallel universes as narrative streams, and mythology, as useful catalysts to awake the latent contours of the landscape he is serenading, albeit at a distance. Because Martone recognizes that the Mid-West is more than a geographical location – it is also a temporal and imagined one, the occasional flights of fancy he takes in his story-telling ironically, help anchor the Mid-West experience to its truly multifarious core, without leaving a maudlin aftertaste. Highly-recommended.
Contributed by: s.t
Posted in Books | Tagged: Michael Martone, The Flatness and Other Landscapes | 2 Comments »
Posted by paragraphonline on December 8, 2009
Dear Murakami-san,
I just saw a trailer of a documentary titled ‘Dinner with Murakami’. Of course, true to your elusive form, you didn’t appear in the trailer at all, and I don’t think you will appear in the film either. Heck, I don’t think you even know that there was this documentary made about you back in 2007.
I wasn’t disappointed, unlike the others who commented on the youtube video. I’ve learnt, after all these years of reading all your books (yes, I’ve read them all, but in English, of course), that I cannot and should not expect anything more from you other than your words, because really, that’s all you have got to give. You are a man of much privacy and I know you hate doing book tours, let alone documentaries . And even though you would have made me a very happy girl if you actually came here to sign my books and let me gush whilst I tell you how your stories have the ability to comfort and haunt me at the same time, I have come to respect and admire your insistence on keeping a low profile.
(I think at this point you would agree with me that it is quite a sad thing now that for some authors, it is their faces that are more recognised than the works they create, or worse, they are known first for the movies that their books are based on.)
So anyway, I hope all’s well with you. Just so you know, I won’t be catching ‘ Dinner with Murakami’ when it screens here in Singapore, but like many others, I’m looking forward to your next book.
Keep running,
D.C
Posted in Books, Literary Gossip | Tagged: Dinner with Murakami, Haruki Murakami | Leave a Comment »
Posted by paragraphonline on December 2, 2009

Reading Bergman is like deboning a fish (god bless his soul, though he would probably contest that):
There is a meticulousness of skill needed to get this screen-to-print undertaking right. For one, such precision is expressed through the work of effective translation that manages to retain the humanist core of Bergman’s (many) odysseys. The journey from screen to page presents a juxtaposition which is at once stark, but also transitional. Never has a foreign language been so available; never has scaffolding seemed so essential. On-screen, Bergman dominated with his powerful use of imagery (the scene on the book cover depicts Death leading a reverie march into the fading sun). Now, his once-subtitles take centre-stage, meeting between the pages in this worthy companion to his art.
Bones do inform of the dead: by allowing an understanding of the flesh.
Recommended reads (and watches): The Seventh Seal, Wild Strawberries
Contributed by: s.t
Posted in Books | Tagged: Ingmar Bergman, Screenplays | Leave a Comment »
Posted by paragraphonline on November 5, 2009
“The world is blue at its edges and in its depths. This blue is the light that got lost…For many years, I have been moved by the blue at the far edge of what can be seen, that color of horizons, of remote mountain ranges, of anything far away. The color of that distance is the color of solitude and desire, the color of there seen from here, the color of where you are not. And the color of where you can never go.”

I came across the book, “A Field Guide to Getting Lost” by Rebecca Solnit, in a bookshop when I was traveling alone in Oregon. The title of the book was what did it for me. I had spent the few days prior wandering the sprawling city of Portland without much of a plan, and the title seemed to capture the spirit of such exploration without expectation.
Since then, the book has been a companion on every trip I have made. Morning reading in a traditional Balinese house; flipping pages in between skipping stones along a riverbank in Taipei; half-reading and half-squinting in New York’s summer sunshine. It is reassuring to have a constant amidst the new and unfamiliar. Yet, it is a constant that engages me in a different conversation each time around.
Solnit is a prolific writer from San Francisco whose breadth and depth of writing has inspired comparisons with Susan Sontag. Her essays and books span the environment, politics, history, art and travel. Her writing meanders through these topics leisurely, as if their correlation is a given, but her points are always inspired and incisive. The confidence with which she moves across these different domains likely comes from her childhood growing up surrounded by nature, from her journalism experience in her adult years and from a general curiosity about the world. What distinguishes Solnit’s writing from other authors though, are her delicate, beautifully-crafted sentences that ensconce powerful ideas.
“A Field Guide to Getting Lost” provides a thought-provoking reflection of both Solnit’s writing style and interests. A Field Guide is a story of Solnit’s explorations across landscapes, across time and across genres. She shares personal narratives of loss, childhood, memory and discovery, while bringing in the views of philosophers, historians and random strangers whose words have moved her. Every other chapter is titled “The Blue of Distance”, and each explores a different facet of the theme. Blue of light and the horizon. Distance in exploration. The twang of the blues. The block colours of Yves Klein’s paintings. These chapters punctuate the flow of the book and remind the reader of the unexpected insights and associations that exist through discovery of the self and the world.
The intimacy of Solnit’s writing and her sensitivity for life’s nuances make this book feel like you have spent the afternoon catching up with a close friend. Reminiscing about childhood memories, talking about growing older, and everything in between. It is a conversation I know will continue through the years ahead.
Contributed by: Diana Ng
Posted in Books | Tagged: A Field Guide to Getting Lost, Rebecca Solnit | Leave a Comment »