Archive for the ‘Reviews’ Category

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Confessions of an English Opium-Eater : Ramblings of an Unquiet Mind

May 23, 2008

 

I am forced to answer a question whose answer I’ve always taken for granted all this time :  Do you have to be able to fully understand a book to appreciate it as a work of art ?.  I reckoned that the answer must be yes.  Boy, was I wrong.

Confessions is a difficult work.  De Quincey apparently did not try very hard to make himself as readable as possible.  Instead, he resorted to a strange method where he seemingly just recorded whatever happened in his head.  The proverbial flight-of-ideas, so to speak.  I did not relish this at all when I first tried to read this.  His ramblings are so difficult to follow, and sometimes even incoherent.

But then it dawned on me that this is exactly where the genius of Confessions is located.  It succeeded excellently in giving me a picture of how exactly a mind of an addict work : frantically.  It forces me to challenge the way I comprehend good literatures so far.  It disturbed me.

If there is one thing I complain about Confessions; it would be its unattachment from reality.  While the journaling-style of writing fits neatly his intention to document his thoughts as an addict, I seriously doubt whether this book will appeal greatly to the greater part of readers.  Always philosophical in nature, his ramblings are sophisticated, to say the least.  At worst, imagine studying philosophy when you’re stoned on marijuana or something.  Anyone who ever went to school surely can imagine what a humongous task it would make.

A good work indeed, but not recommended for those who gets tired easily on long discourses about Philosophy.  Oh, and while you’re at it, I also lament the fact that de Quincey spent so many pages in descrying Coleridge and praising Wordsworth.  It’s too much, methinks.  But then again, maybe it was his intention ? :)

Link :  Download from Project Gutenberg

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The Big Book of Hoaxes – I’m Asking for More..

April 24, 2008

What can I say ?  This book speaks for itself.  A tour-de-force of human tendency to believe strange things.  In fact, it’s eerie how Hitler words ring true about this :”It’s easy to lie, just make it big.”

Factoid did a very good job by bringing this series.  You could read some serious references without diving into that scholarly encyclopedia.  In other words, this is information made enjoyable.  With honest, humorous and sometimes cheeky illustration, it’s also easier to grasp some concepts which otherwise would need a lot of pages to explain.

The book itself contains any famous ( and not-so famous ) hoaxes in history.  From Poe’s balloon hoax, the notorious Howard Hughes’ autobiography;  I actually learnt that Boxer rebellion in China was made several times worse by a hoax !

A very good work, indeed.  I found myself asking for more.

You can download the book here.  Again, I’m only sharing the link.  Have fun !

 

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Me Talk Pretty One Day – dangerously funny

April 22, 2008

 

Some preliminary facts and datas from Wikipedia are due first :

Author David Sedaris
Cover artist Jacket design by Chip Kidd
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Essay collection
Publisher Little, Brown and Company
Publication date May 2, 2000
Media type Print (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages 288 pp (first edition, hardcover)
ISBN ISBN 0-316-77772-2 (first edition, hardcover)

This book is guaranteed to make you giggle like crazy. At some of its best point, you would even shake with laughter.

David Sedaris wrote with some shameless sense-of-humor here. He freely talked about his speed-addiction, sexuality, and characteristically, even some childish hilarity like turd ( you heard me right, turd ). Based on this tone, this book is not for everyone’s fancy, though. Some will enjoy it very much for its brainlessness, allowing you to laugh at someone else’s folly without realizing that you are indulging in your own’s stark naked forbidden guilty self. While for the others, this book will risk being categorized as simply disgusting.

As for myself, I enjoyed a lot reading this with one note : I found that Sedaris’ humorous take on drugs ( methamphetamine, aka. speed, aka. shabu ) is deeply disturbing. It definitely can lead to some serious misled choices.

All in all, if you can read it with some open mind, a good read this one really is..

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My Name is Red – lost in translation ?

April 17, 2008

 

A little bit disappointing for a Nobel Prize winner really.  Oh, yes it was well-researched, but doesn’t have a good pace necessary for a thriller, but too shallow for a drama.

Then again, probably it’s the literature’s world version of the-now-popular movie genre : crime drama.  I still itch for more fascination from a crime story, though.  My best guess would be there’s something lost in translation as I read it in English.

This eBook can be downloaded here ( This is a link, I do not share any copyrighted material )

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From Hell – an unnecessarily complex work ?

April 10, 2008

Like I promised before, this is my first review I post here.

First of all, some data :

Author Alan Moore
Illustrator Eddie Campbell
Cover artist Eddie Campbell
Country Australia & United States
Language English
Genre(s) graphic novel, true crime
Publisher Eddie Campbell Comics & Top Shelf Productions
Publication date 1999 (collected edition)
Media type Print (paperback)
Pages 572
ISBN ISBN 0-958-57834-6

( source : wikipedia )

Initially, the book impressed me very much. Moore did a very good job by using a meticulous research as a foundation. The explorations and insinuations are also courageous, despite being a little bit far – fetched in its speculations.

Now, the idea that Jack the Ripper murders were done to cover – up the birth of an illegitimate child of England royal family is not a new one. It was brought forth by Stephen Knight. Moore borrowed this idea as an open door into in – depth exploration of more complex factor involved in that era. This led into a study of medic, psychology, culture, sociology and even occultism at some part. Which is very sound and good, to do him some justice.

However, what makes it work also cause it shortfall. If you are looking for a good read to enjoy, From Hell simply could not do it. It does not entertain you like any good old ‘whodunnits’, but provokes you and makes you question some things you hold true.

I don’t know about you, but one of the reason I read fiction is to entertain. Clever works are enlightening, – but too heavy to enjoy if there is too much of it. It almost feels like reading a textbook.

Leave a comment if you have other thoughts. For Indonesian reader, feel free to leave yours in Bahasa Indonesia.

Download links :

More info from wikipedia

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