Glen David Gold’s “Sunnyside”

This novel of Charlie Chaplin only has its main character in about a third of the book. The rest is … everywhere. To say that this is a "sprawling" novel is an understatement. There are some wonderful parts, but I had a hard time figuring out how they all related to each other. By the end, the through-line appear to be simply, "movies." And Gold really captures the way that they cross culture and boundaries. (I recall Kate Winslet telling a story of hiking somewhere remote in northern India, where she met a monk. The monk squinted at her and Read more…

Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds

Earlier this week Mary and I saw Inglourious Basterds. It is a very good movie. It is surprisingly not as violent as some of Tarantino's other films, but all that means is that when you get to the violence, it stands out all the more. I definitely flinched from the screen a few times. I do think the Stranger had a pretty accurate take: Everything you love and hate about Quentin Tarantino films finds a home in his cartoon Nazi thriller Inglourious Basterds: the colorful prattle, the insistent thrills, the horrifying violence, and the long, boring conversations you're manipulated into Read more…

I learned something about soil erosion last night …

Last night at City Club we heard from David Montgomery, a geomorphologist at the University of Washington. I've never heard of geomorphology, but it was an interesting presentation on … soil erosion. Really! Montgomery's main argument breaks down pretty simply: Farming allows civilization to happen. But plowing the earth, by default, erodes soil faster than it can naturally come back. Therefore over time, a civilization's soil becomes unable to keep up with the demands put on it. And then they fail. It takes a big leap to go from soil erosion to the collapse of civilization. And in fact, Montgomery Read more…