Sunday, November 16, 2014

Short Attention Span Book Reviews

As a rule, follow-through isn't one of my strengths. I'd go as far as to say that it's one of my most obvious weaknesses, if I'm being honest. My life is littered with the detritus of business ideas, short stories, home projects, and any number of other notions that I started and didn't finish. Given the fact that I'm clearly aware of this character flaw, you'd think that age would give me the wisdom to rectify it, or at least be aware of not taking on things that I'll struggle to finish. Instead, the opposite seems to be be happening as I grow older.

A recent case in point: my inability to focus on one book long enough to complete it before starting another. By my count, I am currently in the middle of five different books, having just this week finally finished Pat Conroy's excruciatingly honest memoir, The Death of Santini.

Because it's really difficult to have any idea when (or even whether) I'll finish any of the five, I thought you might be interested in a partial review of each book. Consider it sort of a bizarro Sentence of Dave.

Mark Leyner, The Sugar Frosted Nutsack

That same sentence artist turned me on to Leyner's sui generis brand of literary lunacy a long time ago. The author's dizzyingly comedic style reminds me of nothing so much as a coke-fueled Robin Williams standup routine with a plot, albeit a loosely connected one that may or may not choose to resolve itself. According to my Kindle app, I'm about 39% of the way through 'Nutsack', which is, as near as I can tell, the story of a group of modern-day gods ensconced in a Dubai skyscraper and obsessed with an unemployed anti-semitic plumber from New Jersey named Ike Carton, who may or may not be Jewish.

The story presents itself as the ritualistic chanting of a tribe of bards, with every diversion and recursion folded into the story as a natural extension, and in true Leyner fashion, nearly every paragraph is a diversion - he's a master of the non-linear. As Ben Marcus explains in a New York Times review of the book, "[Leyner] is either a genius or a freak, and it may not matter which, because his books are compulsively readable, created by a literary mind that seems to have no precedent." Frankly, it's exhausting, and made moreso by my lack of attention span. I'm doing a lousy job of reading this book, to be honest.

Michael Chabon, Telegraph Avenue

This is my first Chabon book, though I'm familiar with his lofty reputation. I picked this up at a little bookstore in Healdsburg, CA a few weeks ago, because I obviously needed to carry one more book home on the plane.

Set in 2004 on a decaying street on the border between Berkeley and Oakland, the first 92 pages of Telegraph Avenue tell the story of a failing vinyl record store owned by a pair of friends. Brokeland Records' demise seems to be hastening, as the community's most prominent political force as brokered a deal to attract a big box megamedia store owned by a football star-turned entrepreneur.

The book moves easily between its modern setting and the early days of one of the protagonists' father's modestly successful blaxploitation film career. Chabon has a gift for detail, and for conveying sounds and smells that drive the action. Both cinematic and musical, the book tackles themes of race, gender, social equality, and gentrification. Or at least I think it will.

Bob Ryan, Scribe

The veteran sportswriter's memoir is a fairly straightforward account of his time in the game, at least up to 1987, but it's told with brevity and wit. It doesn't hurt that Ryan got to cover some of the best NBA teams of all-time, pre-Jordan Bulls. His love for sports, particularly NBA basketball, is clear, as is his obvious gratitude for the life he's led.

Ryan's not looking to break any news in this book, but his choice of John Havlicek as the greatest basketball player in history might at least offer a starting point for an interesting barstool debate.

Chad Harbach, The Art of Fielding

Harbach's debut novel was highly touted upon its release in 2011, later being named one of the New York Times' Best Books of the year. It's equal parts Chip Hilton and Jane Smiley, a slowly-unfolding story about the baseball team and President of Westish College, a fictional Division III school hard on the Wisconsin shores of Lake Michigan. It's got romance (both in baseball and human terms), bromance, and a bit of Kinsellan mysticism.

I'd read some reviews of this one when it was released, and am apprehensively turning pages in dread of the Knoblauchian plot twist that befalls the story's mild-mannered and decent central character. And so while Harbach's book is beautifully drawn, it may take me some time to work up the courage to finish it.

Jamie Summerlin, Freedom Run

One of my co-workers is an avid endurance athlete, and as a formerly overweight kid and young adult, particularly drawn to stories of perseverance and overcoming limits. (He's also, coincidentally, married to one of my wife's college roommates, so I've known him for many years prior to working with him.) In a previous professional life, he was a professor at West Virginia University, where he taught Summerlin.

The subtitle to this book is 'A 100-Day, 3,452-Mile Journey Across America to Benefit Wounded Veterans'. Summerlin, a former Marine, decided in 2010 that his training as an endurance athlete could be put to use in service of a greater good. As he writes in the prologue, "Maybe running is what I can use to accomplish something more meaningful. Maybe that is my calling in life."

And then he went and ran from Coos Bay, OR to Rehoboth Beach, DE. I assume he made it, though I've only read the first few pages. I started reading this one expecting that I would meet Jamie at the Richmond Marathon yesterday, where I'd planned to run the half. My absurd work (and eating) schedule over the past few weeks led me to defer my race entry until next year, so I've got 365 days or so to finish the story.

Maybe I'll have completed one or two of the other books on this list by then.

35 comments:

  1. Rob and I have started more unfinished endeavors than I can count. We'd start a list of them but we'd never complete it.

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  2. Also, I'm on a limobus headed for FedEx Field.

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  3. Do these endeavors include a few episodes of coitus interruptus?

    I keep starting blog posts and fail to finish them.

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  4. Clarence- tell the Bucs they're an embarrassment for me. Thanks.

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  5. the skins shouldn't be favored by 7.5 against anyone, but it's the Bucs. i need to take the Skins, don't i?

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  6. Muschamp is gone.

    I may or may not be dancing right now.

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  7. I don't know, Teej. Over the past 5 to 10 years, Washington has proven to be very adept at losing to doormat teams. They seem to lose to the Rams or Raiders once every year or two, and I think Detroit's first win in 19 or 20 games (after their O-for season) came against them.

    It probably says something about my current state of mind as a fan that I am somewhat curious about what the town reaction will be if they lose this game. It seems like there is a different scapegoat every week, but a loss today might explode everyone's collective mindgrapes.

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  8. Speaking of explode, we got sushi last night from our reliable local place and their Kumamoto oyster "special" is only special in that it was filled with bacteria and/or Protista. I've destroyed my toilet every 90 minutes since 1:30 am. I'm officially in the bumming dome.

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  9. Mindgrapes. Never not funny.

    Diarrhea. Not ever funny.

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  10. Mark - congrats on Muschamp. Do you think they are going to officially announce it before the end of the season? And what is the benefit to doing so rather than doing it at the end?

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  11. I would imagine in placates fans and donors to dump him now.

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  12. Wow, there is some impressive sucking going on in the Nation's capital. Teej, skins need to score at least 18 to cover now, and I'm not seeing it.

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  13. that's as bad a muff as you'll ever see, non-meth freak division.

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  14. Mayhugh, I swiched back to the Bucs +7.5 at 12:58.

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  15. preemptive loud noises in mark and danimal's direction. high temperature in the nation's capital on tuesday will be 33. fuck that.

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  16. I almost feel bad for Gruden. At least I can stop watching.

    We are approaching levels of incompetence on the field that were only sniffed during the Zorn period.

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  17. TB is on the road in cold-ish weather with the league's worst pass defense. Give it time.

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  18. doc gooden turned 50 today. this makes clarence really old.

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  19. Skins running Miss St's offense from yesterday. Griffin has 16 passes and I would guess conservatively that at least 8 have been behind the LOS.

    Rob has reminded me with his "That's so R-skins" comment of other things that would fit:

    -Score a touchdown, extra point blocked
    -30 yard play called back for illegal procedure
    -long pass play resulting in 1st down results in unsportsmanlike penalty for WR spinning the effing football on the ground

    What am I leaving out?

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  20. Mayhugh- as Rob said, firing him now placates fans and boosters. More importantly, it also allows the AD to begin the coaching search. Florida is at the front of the line now for any HC candidates.

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  21. QB concussing himself by head butting a goal post in celebration.

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  22. Todd Gurley tore his ACL last night. That sucks and is total horse shit.

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  23. both of my fantasy squads are facing mike evans today. that's not really working out very well for me.

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  24. Mike Evans is awesome. One of the few bright spots in another shitty Bucs season.

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  25. Other teams' players having their coming out parties against them? That's so skins...

    Can't wait for the yelling fan phone calls tomorrow.

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  26. Like Michael Sam coming out?

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  27. Brian Hoyer threw the ball 50 time today in what was a relatively close game for three quarters. Brian. Hoyer.

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  28. nascar finale is a little bonkers

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  29. Apparently Kevin Durant got into a bit during the Thunder-Rockets game. KD said to Dwight, repeatedly, 'Youre a pussy'.

    I like KD more than ever.

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  30. I urge you to check out Courtney Barnett's full performance on KEXP.

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  31. Just read my last comment. Not a good job typing by me. In my defense I was at the store buying a thermometer for a (possibly) sick toddler. Oh, and the older kid has pink eye. Good times.

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  32. zwoman got a rectal thermometer for zdaughter. The instructions said it requires a water base lubricant. Turns out that's KY jelly. So I had to go to the local CVS to buy KY jelly for my infant daughter. Traumatizing.

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