Monthly Archives: June 2009

Journalism Above the Fold

Christopher Buckley’s book excerpt “Growing Up Buckley” in the April 26 New York Times Magazine on his parents’ passings is revealing, heartfelt and funny. From his memoir: “Losing Mum and Pup,” the article and book are too good to pass up.

Verlyn Klinkenborg’s “Some Thoughts on the Pleasures of Being a Re-Reader” in the May 30 New York Times is a neat short essay on the refuge that familiar novels bring.

The Los Angeles Times article “The Typist’s Tale of Last Tycoon” by David Ulin about what F. Scott Fitzgerald’s secretary witnessed is fascinating. At 92, Frances Kroll Ring is still alive, and offers a unique glimpse of the great author. For more, check out her 1985 book: “Against the Current: As I Remember F. Scott Fitzgerald.”

Pico Iyer’s op-ed “The Joy of Less” in the June 7 New York Times hits home in a time of recession on the happiness that a simple life brings.

“A Personal Touch in Taliban Fight” by Greg Jaffe in the June 22 Washington Post is a noteworthy portrait of a company commander’s work in the Afghan mountains. Continue reading

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The Hangover

I’m still laughing after seeing this movie about a groom and his three groomsmen who road-trip to Vegas for the bachelor party; whereupon they wake up the next morning not remembering the night before, nor where the groom is, and have to try to retrace their tracks to find him in time for the wedding. The groomsmen share equally pretty funny roles, and even a tiger-owning Mike Tyson makes an appearance.

It’s pretty hysterical and I was quite dubious beforehand, thinking it would be just the same old buddy genre of immature men, bathroom humor and bad taste, without much behind it. But “Hangover” is pleasantly and surprisingly more than that. It’s still crazy, for sure, utterly nutty and far from politically correct, but there’s some substance here and some genuinely funny humor, making it a thoroughly entertaining wild ride — sure to be the summer’s hit for laughs. So get a babysitter, or do what you have to do, and get thee to a theater. You deserve a corrupt break like this.

ps. It’s safe to say the movie gets a strong R rating if you’re wondering about the kiddies etc. Continue reading

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Restless

I needed a quick read for a flight and came across William Boyd’s spy novel “Restless,” which did the trick and more. It’s an absorbing thriller about an aging mother, Sally Gilmartin, who thinks her life is in danger and reveals in a series of written accounts to her daughter, Ruth, of her clandestine past — born Eva Delectorskaya, a half-Russian, half-English émigré recruited into the British Secret Service in 1939. Ruth, a single mom and graduate student, thinks at first her mother is going crazy, but is drawn into her account as details of “Eva’s” life emerge.

The story unfolds with chapters alternating between her mother’s life as a spy in 1940-1941 and Ruth’s life in Oxford in 1976, procrastinating her thesis and earning a living teaching English as a second language. Undoubtedly, the chapters of Eva and her work under boss Lucas Romer are more suspenseful, but Ruth’s life also contains a couple of mysterious characters (dubious house guests Ludger and Ilse from Germany and an Iranian suitor Hamid) that keep things up in the air.

Boyd has cleverly based the novel on the history of a covert propaganda group called the British Security Coordination, whose aim was to change the minds of isolationist Americans and lure the U.S. into World War II. In the book, Eva’s work, as part of the secret unit under Romer, includes “feeding clever false information out into the world” through the medium of a small press agency and couriering a forged map of Hitler’s South American ambitions to bait the U.S. into action.

But after a couple missions go badly, Eva realizes someone in her unit has betrayed her and she flees, using her spy training to live life on the run. The BSC unit is rolled up after Pearl Harbor, and Eva (now Sally Gilmartin) marries, keeping her former life hidden.

Thirty-five years later, Sally, still on the lookout for someone who might bring her down, decides to try to put an end to her life undercover by writing her account of the BSC and getting her daughter to track down her former boss.

The 2006 novel, one of the first on the BSC, makes for a snappy, interesting read, conjuring a time in the run-up to WWII when Britain had a secret agency of news manipulation and black propaganda operating right out of N.Y.’s Rockefeller Center.

For more on this hardly heard of agency and the role of British agents in the U.S. before Pearl Harbor, read Boyd’s fascinating article in the Guardian. Continue reading

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