Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Book Review -- Final in this series

The Truth Will Out: Unmasking the Real Shakespeare by Brenda James & William D. Rubenstein
I won’t pretend to be a Shakespeare expert. I’ve only seen a few of the plays and these would be in movie form, and I remember having to read some in English class while in High School. It is not easy for me to read or comprehend sometimes but since he is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the history of everything, I have to take it seriously. Although, I love his sonnets, especially #29 as it is so beautiful and sad, and who hasn’t felt this way at one time or another:
When in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes,
   I all alone beweep my outcast state,
And trouble deaf Heaven with my bootless cries,
   And look upon myself, and curse my fate,
Wishing me like to one more rich in hope,
   Featur'd like him, like him with friends possess'd,
Desiring this man's art, and that man's scope,
   With what I most enjoy contented least:
Yet in these thoughts myself almost despising,
   Haply I think on thee,--and then my state
(Like to the lark at break of day arising
   From sullen earth) sings hymns at heaven's gate;
For thy sweet love remember'd such wealth brings
   That then I scorn to change my state with kings'.

I have a few books about the man from Avon, watched and enjoyed some movies that purport to portray him, and have seen some documentaries (especially good is Michael Woods In Search of Shakespeare [although all of Michael Woods documentaries are fabulous]) about his life because this period of English history is so fascinating to me and he is an intricate part of it. But as most people, I always assumed the accepted canon, that William Shakespeare from Stratford-Upon-Avon, the actor who made good, was the writer of these timeless tales. I had no reason to think otherwise. Funnily, it took a computer game to make me pursue an interest in those who don’t accept the party line and really take a look at their arguments. I enjoy playing hidden object games and I was playing one called Midnight Mysteries: Devil on the Mississippi. The whole plot of it is to help the ghost of Samuel Clemens (aka Mark Twain) defeat a demon and uncover the truth about Shakespeare. So I started to do a little research and it seems that many of the elements and inconsistencies that the game featured were in actual fact correct. Apparently, there has been a growing movement of the authorship question since the middle of the 19th century (actually the first question about his authorship was published in 1791) and has gained an incredibly diverse and impressive following including such luminaries as Charlie Chaplin, Charles Dickens, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Sigmund Freud, Sir John Gielgud, Henry James, Mark Twain, Orson Welles, and Walt Whitman. These are some of the brightest minds of this or any time and if they take this subject seriously, who am I to argue? Coincidentally, a big budget movie on just this subject came out recently called Anonymous, its plot follows one of the most prominent alternate authors and why he was not allowed to claim the works that flowed from his pen.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Book Review # 3


The Last Jew of Treblinka: A Memoir by Chil Rajchman

This is a tiny book but important. As the years go by, more and more of those living voices that can attest to the holocaust die out. The only legacy they will leave will be the imprint left on the pages of books or on film. The horrors of the German camps of WWII are not as fresh in our memory as they might be. And though the records that are left to us can help, it is easy to feel that this will pass into the same dusty realm that is occupied by stories from WWI and the Civil War. This is not ancient history by any means, but the memory of man is so short and ever so ready to repeat the same mistakes over and over again.

This is a memoir, a first person account, written by the author about his time in a death camp. If you are like me, you might have thought that all the camps in Germany were the same. They were not. There were two distinct types of camps: work camps which are better known as concentration camps that included Auschwitz and death camps which the subject of this book is one, Treblinka.   The distinction is fine but there. Work camps killed you because of the harsh conditions, lack of everything that can prolong life like food, clothing, medical care, and adequate shelter. Plus, the inmates were often subjected to extremely brutal treatment by the guards and could be murdered with impunity for sport. In these camps, death was an afterthought once they got what they wanted out of you and the camps themselves started life as regular detention facilities that were converted to the other purpose. In the death camps, death was the main event. They sent people there to die, they were built to kill you, and that was their only intention.  Let me say this again, the death camps were purpose built with the sole intention of killing as many men, women, and children as possible in the most efficient method possible, it was killing on an industrial scale. Really think about the horror of that and why it is so imperative that it never be forgotten.

Treblinka was complete in June of 1942 and by the time of its Liberation nearly 800,000 people had passed through its gates and taken the “road to heaven” never to be seen or heard from again. Chil managed to survive by being chosen at the time of his arrival to be a Sonderkommando, while he watched his entire family marched off to their doom. These were Jews whose services were needed by the Nazis to help them do the work of killing. Most didn’t last long; they died from physical abuse, starvation, or suicide. Their jobs consisted of sorting through the belongings of the dead, pulling teeth, shaving hair, pulling the corpses out of the gas chamber, only later being forced to disinter the rotting bodies so they could be burnt in a frantic and doomed effort to hide what they were doing as the war drew to a close and the Nazis faced the reality that defeat was inevitable.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Book Review # 2

Mary Tudor: Princess, Bastard, Queen by Anna Whitelock
I am sensing a theme with the titles of my reading; English royalty and three word summaries of what the book is about.
This is the author’s first book and an impressive introduction it is to the world of historical biographies. I went into it with a profound dislike of Elizabeth’s older sister and this account of her life did little to ameliorate that. Personally, I find her to be an unredeemed fanatic whose trials in life did not teach her anything but only hardened her convictions and gained her the title “Bloody Mary” which I feel she richly deserved. The author tried to convince the reader that she is undeserved of the hatred surrounding her name and that her history and reputation was rewritten by the victor, her little sister. I find it extremely interesting how 2 lives that were so parallel turned out 2 such disparate personalities.
·        Both Mary and Elizabeth’s mothers were cast out. One eventually dies from neglect; one leaves the block a full head shorter. But, Elizabeth’s mother was killed when she was three while Mary was lovingly raised by her mother until her teens.
·        Both were their father’s legitimate heirs and only acknowledged children who could inherit the throne upon his death (Prior to them, Henry had one bastard son who died at 17 of consumption. I find it curious how weak the males are in the Tudor line of which Henry himself was the glaring exception. Henry’s elder brother Arthur died at 15, as did Edward, his only legitimate son of Jane Seymour). Both were loved and feted by their glorious father until their mother’s fell from favor, stripped of their titles, and bastardized.  
·        Both were persecuted for their religion at different points almost unto death. Mary for her Catholicism during her Brother Edward’s strictly Protestant reign when any plot, insurrection, or supposed treachery was laid at her door, regardless that there was never any proof. Elizabeth for her Protestantism during Mary’s fanatical Catholic reign when any plot, insurrection or supposed treachery was laid at her door, regardless that there was never any proof. But, Elizabeth was the only one to spend time in the tower.
·        Both were extremely bright, educated, and intelligent women thrust into the “unnatural” role of ruling over men at the apex of power at a time when being a regent really meant something and was not just a figurehead.
The differences lie chiefly in how each woman dealt with the tragedy and adversity in their life, and in comparison, Mary does not come off good. Certainly Mary made it possible for Elizabeth to inherit the throne, and in many ways was a trail blazer but she had so many faults. When Edward died, there was a crisis. The Seymour’s, his mother’s brothers, were greedy and hungry for the power they received from ruling in Edward’s name. When he died they were not willing to give that up and tried to disinherit Mary and put a Protestant, Jane, on the throne. The English rose up to rally behind Mary and the nine-days Queen was stripped of her crown and Mary’s coronation was greeted with jubilation and high hopes. By the time her 5 year reign was over, she was as hated as she had been loved at the beginning.  

Monday, March 5, 2012

Book Review

I'm Back Babydolls!

I know I have not been posting as much lately. I find that I have been consumed by the time sucking vortex that is known as World of Warcraft.  I've known of these types of games for many years, there was a time when someone I knew was playing a MMORPG game called Everquest and wanted me to play. I wisely declined, I thought then that I wasn't nerdy enough to play these, guess I was wrong. Plus, I could not spare time for that as I had Sims to care for, which was cool and not geeky. Later on, I played and enjoyed Dark Age of Camelot. When I stopped playing that, I really didn't think much about it when suddenly I thought it would be fun to try one of these games again. I love it and find that all of my spare time when not at work or doing school work is spent questing with one of my many characters. I can't believe how excited I get every time I level up or find a cool item. But I have managed to squeeze in some reading and I will review this week 4 books that I have completed.

We Two -- Victoria and Albert: Rulers, Partners, Rivals by Gillian Gill
I think besides the Tudor dynasty, I find the rule of Queen Victoria to be the most fascinating. Since each book and author has their own take on this groundbreaking monarch,  it often makes me feel like Elizabeth Bennet trying to make out the character of Mr. Darcy, “I do not get on at all. I hear such different accounts of you as to puzzle me exceedingly.” Even though there is a profusion of documentary evidence, letters, photographs, diaries, newspaper articles, and first person accounts, the available data can be construed in any number of ways.
Author Gillian Gill places Victoria and Albert as firmly a product of their time. Victoria believed that women were subjects to their men and Albert was a misogynist who thought very little of women as a whole, although this was not a rare quality in upper middle class men of this era. It is this juxtaposition where the problems in their relationship lie. Before her marriage Victoria was a very gay young woman, who loved to stay up late, dance, play cards, go to plays, and concerts, and tuck into a good dinner.  Having been under the thumb of her domineering mother and the odious Sir John Conroy until she turned 18, the taste of freedom was very sweet to her. There were times that she liked to think that she would never marry at all. But, society was very different from her formidable virgin predecessor and she eventually bowed to convention and pressure to consent to a husband. It did not hurt that upon careful grooming of Albert as the “perfect” partner for Victoria and his striking good looks, that she, to use modern vernacular developed the hots for him. The English have always been an insular and xenophobic people, and although at first they were ready to begrudgingly accept Albert, his haughty demeanor, humorlessness, and ego quickly turned the public and even his own class against him.
The real problem was that Victoria was Queen, but Albert thought that because he was a man and her husband, that he should rule in her stead. Victoria was an extremely smart and educated woman herself, and was easily capable of rule and it was sad to see how eventually she began to lose even this. The duty of state was oftentimes shared between them though, in there dual desks. He tried for years to get Parliament to crown him King and they never acceded to this demand. This book talks much about their domestic lives. How the many children Victoria was forced to bear eventually harmed not only her health but threatened her sanity. I honestly think that this poor woman suffered for years from untreated post-partum depression, repeated 9 times, exacerbated by an uncaring and cold husband who had no time for these “women’s” issues.  That Albert blamed Victoria, at least partially, for his not being King and for his unpopularity, because to his mind he was without fault. Albert’s court was as cold and humorless as he was, and eventually, he managed to separate his wife and growing family from everyone. They lived alone in a fish bowl. Much of the joy and humor was slowly drained out of Victoria over the years in her quest to please her husband, turning her into an unforgiving and dour woman.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

I can admit when I'm Wrong

-->I have to give credit where it is due and it is due to Obama. Bravo Obama for rejecting the Keystone pipeline. Sure it will bring short term jobs that will give a short term boost to economy, but at what cost? The pipeline will pollute freshwater supplies in America’s agricultural heartland, that's food that you and I eat. The Keystone XL pipeline would carry thick, toxic Tar Sands Oil for refining in the Gulf states, effectively transporting pollution from Canada to the United States.  Tar sands oil contains more sulfur, nitrogen, and metals than conventional crudes. They also create emissions of sulfur dioxide and nitrous oxide which contribute to acid rain. Pollutants from the refineries contribute to a wide range of human health problems, which include heart and lung disease, asthma, and cancer. Also, this oil will in no way contribute to our domestic energy needs as the oil will be bound to foreign markets, that is why it needs to cross America to a port city. So in the end, is a few short term jobs worth it? Apparently the Republicans tried to put the screws to Obama and he told them to stick it where the sun don't shine. I am thrilled by this development. If he also stands up and throws out SOPA/PIPA (if you have not heard about this get your head out of the sand and Google is your friend) then he will definitely have my vote, not only that I will donate and work for his campaign. I had been thinking of supporting a primary challenger or voting Green but Obama, you may just become the President I hoped you would be.

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Year in Review -- Part Two

This year was full of rumbles that shook the world. There was the Arab spring, the Occupy movement, the revolts all over from London to Greece. DADT was repelled finally and the uniforms didn't become pink and the barracks weren't redecorated with some chintz and a few nice throw pillows. The clown car that is the Republican party has become a complete real life dumb and dumber with sequels. Plus Wisconsin is doing a pretty good job with the recall Scott Wanker effort, hopefully they will prevail. We have the original dumb and dumber (Bachmann and Perry), corrupt and corrupter (Cain and Gingrich) and "Whose that?" starring Huntsman and Paul. Anybody but Romney each has a go before the Rombot 2012 gets the nomination in the end. There was so much more but I get tired of politics after a while. It either makes me angry or depresses me. We will see what next years brings. I will finish up with a few more thoughts tomorrow. Take care tonight and be safe.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Year in Review 2011 Part One

I guess this is the start of the countdown to the end of the world as we know it. I give the 2012 date a little more credence than a crazy religious nut and they made a movie about it so it is bound to happen, John Cusack wouldn't lie to me. So this being the last full year of lazy and complacent normalcy, it behooves me to look back upon it.

Once again 2011 was filled with some fabulous TV. Here are a few of my top picks.

American Horror Story:
What can I say about this hot mess. This is like the episodic series equivalent of Monty Python's Whizzo Chocolate Company's Crunchy Frog sweetmeat. The crazy was everywhere rendering you powerless in the face of it, and it was a joy to behold. I did not miss an episode and most of them had me gasping for breath. I find it hard to believe that this came from the mind of the man who created Glee but that show is a horror story of a different nature. Although this atones a bit, I will never quite forgive him for unleashing the obnoxious Lea Michele and her nasally singing on the world.  Jessica Lange was phenomenal, the ending was sad and strangely uplifting, loved Zach Quinto in his first post coming out performance and we all know that everything is better with a gimp. All aspects of this show was so wrong it became one big right.

Doctor Who:
I still mourn the loss of David Tennant but I have grown to like Matt Smith (although at times I feel he is trying way too hard). But it was the 2011 season that saw the introduction of the Silence, one of the scariest Who villains ever to be introduced, even eclipsing the Weeping Angels. It was the Who equivalent of the first time we saw the Borg in the Star Trek verse. This creature is like a menacing Observer that you forget the second you look away. Like many things about this show, the concept is fascinating. I hope like the Cybermen and the Daleks, this will be a villain that will return regularly as they are far scarier and less camp.

 Revenge:
What a delightful guilty pleasure this is. I love a good soap and this one has it all. Secrets, lies, deceptions, sex, intrigue, the rich, the fabulous, and amazing wardrobes.  The story of a woman, Emily Thorne (or is she?) returning to where her life was ruined to exact, you guessed it, REVENGE (loud crack of thunder rents the silence). The various schemes and machinations that Emily sets up to do this are just cool. This show isn't deep, it won't change the world but it will give you an incredibly entertaining hour of viewing.

The Walking Dead:
Being a huge fan of the zombie genre from movies and books to games, of course I love this show. I found season 2 to not be as engaging as the first, but that could be due to the firing of Frank Darabont or stretching the concept from 6 tight episodes to a more leisurely 13. This season so far has lurched along with all the grace of one of the walkers, with far more talk than action and way tooooo much Lori. On the other hand, watching Daryl grow and change as a character, and now one of my favorites, has been awesome. I love every scene he is in. Glen was pitifully underused but at least he got some action (in more ways than one if you know what I mean hubba hubba), far more then Token, oh sorry, I mean T-Dog. There were some great moments, the zombie in the well and the shooting of Otis are two that spring to mind. But the round house kick to the head was the reveal in the last 5 minutes of the mid-season finale. By this time I was sick to death of the search for Sophia and wished that they'd just find her already dead or alive. I was unprepared for when they finally did. What a powerful conclusion and a way to guarantee I'll be back. We all hope that good will prevail, that Daryl's sweet promise to Carol, to see her daughter back safe in her arms, that he could be the hero would win out in the end. Instead, the nihilism embodied in Shane's view of the world prevailed. This was a game changer and should sweep the show to the conclusion on a high note.

Not all was great. I watched Dexter through but it was the worst season of this show to date and having Deb realize she was a love with Dexter all along?!? Oh gag me and how hard that must have been for Jennifer Carpenter after MCH cheated on her and now they are divorced. I guess she should have listened to the advice Cosmo gave to Bridget Jones about never dipping your nib in the office ink. But, like the Walking Dead, the final few minutes were amazing. True Blood also seems to be losing its bloom and becomes a parody of itself more times than not these days. All in all there was more to enjoy than not. Tomorrow I will talk about events in 2011.