Archive | January, 2008

Lost in a Good Book, Jasper Fforde

posted on January 20, 2008 in Books // View Comments

The sequel to The Eyre Affair in the inventive series about Thursday Next, Literary Detective. She enters books. She time travels. She saves the world. All in a day’s work. Fforde’s as an imaginative author as I’ve ever come across. Fforde knows his classics and constantly drops allusions.

www.jasperfforde.com

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An Arsonist’s Guide to Writer’s Home in New England, Brock Clarke

posted on January 10, 2008 in Books // View Comments

Not quite as strange as I was hoping, although some touching scenes abound. A hard-luck story where the protagonist constantly tries to redeem himself.

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There Will Be Hype

posted on January 09, 2008 in Movies Websites // View Comments

There Will Be Blood, Paul Thomas Anderson’s new movie, hasn’t been hyped in the traditional sense; it’s just won or been nominated for a plethora of awards. I plan on seeing it, but the following review makes me even more anxious to view it, especially in light of the movie I took in last night, The Kingdom:

Though not a political film in the traditional sense, Blood nevertheless captures the blood-oil-Iraq-evangelicals-capitalism zeitgeist far better than the countless Lions for Lambs-type films have this year. It got me thinking about the presidential election, and how—like Plainview and his “conversion” to Sunday’s church—so many candidates are pandering to religion not out of spiritual need but material necessity. Like Plainview, it’s not that they necessarily want God on their side; they want God’s people—and the money and support that comes with them. This sort of melding of sacred and secular purposes, however, proves toxic for all involved.

There Will Be Blood is a stunning, thoroughly modern work of art that paints a stark picture of what happens when greedy capitalism and power-mongering is bedfellow with something so contrary as Christianity. As the title forebodes, the results—for all parties involved—will not be pretty.

- Brett McCracken’s The Search