Saturday, November 29, 2014

Dancing at the Rascal Fair

The title refers to the farmer’s market in the narrator Angus McCaskill’s home town in Scotland. This is book 2 of Doig’s Two Medicine Trilogy. We have jumped back several generations to the first McCaskill to immigrate from Scotland to Montana with a friend. The story begins in the hold of an steamship amid single males in the forward steerage compartment of the ship where they are packed in little better than cattle. We follow the pair across America by train, stage coach, and freighter wagon. What follows is the story of how two 19-year-olds who emigrated from Scotland homesteaded in Northern Montana and helped found a nation. Had I known this book should have come first. It will take longer to read than the book’s 373 pages would first suggest as a lot happens in these pages as they tell the decades of a community’s life. Ivan Doig’s turns of phrase will give you pause to stop and think, “What did he just say?”.

SPOILERS FOLLOW

This book 2 in the series is narrated and tells the story of Jick’s, of books 1 & 3, grandfather. It explains how the man Angus, fell in love with a woman who became the mother of Jick’s father’s wife by another man. Why that grandmother returned to Scotland when her husband died. Marrying your best friend’s sister leads to complications when that relationship and business partnership sours. All three books examine the often inharmonious relationships between fathers and sons.

A dissertation on farming.

My reading brings to mind the precarious nature of farm life. There is Davie, the young lad who gets thrown from his horse and dragged by a boot caught in the stirrups under the animal’s heels and survives to be maimed for life. Or Barclay who drowns with Angus’ old horse for similar reasons. The National Forest that gets imposed on the region restricting the sheep-herder’s grazing rights. [Think Brokeback Mountain and Annie Proulx.] The plus side being employment for Varick and a stop to the herds of cattle the local conglomerate was sneaking onto those grasslands. The hundreds of thousands of (home)steaders who settled on marginal land and were starved out when the drought years came. Read Steinbeck. The hot dry summers when grazing land was sparse and the following long cold deep winter when feed was scarce for sheep and cattle alike that died of starvation and exposure. The crash of prices when the War ended and the later depression years.

The Raven Boys

Made it fifty pages into this book before I bogged down. The writing style is reminiscent of a newspaper report and the author seems to lack any sense of tense for the verbs she uses making for reading discomfort. The subject matter is fantasy and ESP but the writing style serves to destroy the reader’s suspension of disbelief and therefore fails to draw one in .

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Ride with me Mariah Montana

In book 3 of the Two Medicine Trilogy fifty years have passed. Jick has been married, divorced and Marcella, his second wife has died of cancer. Their farm is being run by a younger couple and Jick in his Winnebago is setting out on travels with his middle-aged newspaper photographer daughter and the reporter husband she divorced. We learn the details by means of Jick’s memory flashbacks. This is a good read but not as engaging as book one in the series.

Stranger at Sunset

This is a requested review of a freebie described as  a psychological mystery/thriller, not my normal genre. The book is well-edited often the bane of e-books that were OCR-scanned and/or self-published. From the elaborate descriptions of both men’s and women’s bodies and the mentions of sex the author’s usual concentration on writing erotica is apparent. The prologue has a voyeur see what appears to be a body drop from  a balcony into the sea but the voyeur with his binos is more interested in the fact that the woman on the balcony is naked. As the story unfolds the mystery seems to be who gets killed and who is walking around sans attire thinking her suite is private. Later the question becomes will she get away with it. There are a few awkward turns of phrase in this book but it is better written than most I’ve read lately. If you like the genre you should enjoy this read.

Wednesday, November 05, 2014

The Moon is Down

We’ve crossed the Atlantic and the action of this piece takes place in Europe in an unnamed country invaded by a superior opposing force. The novella is totally out of touch with the other short novels set among paisanos in Southern California. What it shows is the means a conquered people use to resist their captors. The culminating scene in which sticks of dynamite dropped bundled with bars of chocolate blow up rail lines and other key points while the town leaders are lined up to be shot figures in a famous movie.

Tuesday, November 04, 2014

The Red Pony

Steinbeck’s is no fairy tale world. His stories report the harsh realities of life where happily ever after rarely exists in the lives of his characters. Farm boys see hogs slaughtered, animals give birth, get sick and die. Discipline is harsh and obedience expected without question. There’s an episodic feel to this novel, the common theme of the vignettes being 10-year-old Jody’s discovery that adults are not perfect infallible beings. One is left wishing Steinbeck had written more.

Monday, November 03, 2014

The Pearl

A Steinbeck novella set among simple Mexican divers who seek for pearls while diving for oysters. A pearl is the oyster’s reaction to the discomfort caused by a grain of sand inside their shell. The peasant fishers react in similar fashion to the vicissitudes of their lives. When the young pearl fisher discovers a magnificent pearl all the powers that be seem poised to cheat and rob him of the rewards of his discovery. His greatest success becomes his greatest tragedy, one of Shakespearian proportions.

Tortilla Flat

The title seems a play on words a tortilla being Spanish flat bread the flats in question being the two houses Danny inherits from his grandfather. Danny is a paisano, a mongrel Spanish peasant of dubious parentage. There are no good guys here, ever it is a matter of the level of larceny. Money, should any of these characters acquire it burns a hole until it can be spent on alcohol, wine being the poison of choice. Anything not nailed down is fair game. Only the rich can afford a conscience. Steinbeck seems to have a unique sympathy for the mentality of the people about whom he writes. I would not call these people downtrodden for aside from their addictions they have chosen the lifestyle they lead and wouldn’t be happy living any other way.