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Book Blurbs
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Trash Culture: Popular Culture and the
Great Tradition
by Richard K. Simon, PhD '77
University of California Press, 1999; $15.95 (pop culture).
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Who
is Prince Harry's real father? Will Ally McBeal ever find
true love? Does Oprah have a new diet plan? Inquiring minds
are hungry to know, and pop culture delivers all the junk
food you can eat. But Simon pulls the garbage out of the
disposal, arguing that today's pop sagas disguise deeper,
archetypal stories, recast to sate a consumer society.
Comparing works of "low" and "high" culture, he draws some
surprising parallels: People magazine can be read as
Greek tragedy, Rambo seen as a modern-day
Iliad and Star Trek as an upbeat Gulliver's
Travels. It's a fun, provocative treatise by the chair
of humanities at Cal Poly, who finds that his students get
more out of the old and new narratives by analyzing them in
pairs.
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24/7: Living It Up and Doubling Down in
the New Las Vegas
by Andrés Martinez, MA '89
Villard, 1999; $25 (urban studies/gambling).
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With
a $50,000 book advance in his pocket, Martinez headed for
the nation's fastest-growing city, bent on losing his wad of
traveler's checks and finding the essence of the modern-day
Gomorrah. What the former Wall Street Journal
reporter discovered was the ultimate American theme park, a
place where "everything is a superlative or runs the risk of
being blown up." At the heart of this book, organized as a
tour of the city's overgrown hotels, are the characters
Martinez found: the minister who shines shoes at a topless
joint ("This is where the Lord wants me," he says. "There's
a lot of hurt here"), the aging courtesan turned day trader
("It's better odds than you'll find here," she says), the
professional gambler who managed to raise six kids while
losing $8 million. The author, on the other hand, somehow
avoided losing his whole advance.
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Fool
by Frederick G. Dillen, '70
Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 1999; $23.95 (fiction).
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Barnaby
Griswold is a fool&emdash;a clumsy, self-absorbed,
insensitive man who plays fast and loose, both with women
and with money. In this, Dillen's second novel (Hero
was named best first novel of 1994 by the Dictionary of
Literary Biography), Griswold loses
everything&emdash;his wife and daughters, his livelihood,
and his social and business connections. He's even kicked
out of his last refuge&emdash;his boyhood summer home.
Divorced, deserted and flat broke, Griswold must try to
rebuild his life. That begins when, humbled by his losses,
he takes on the responsibility of caring for his wife's
ailing mother and finally realizes what a meaningful
relationship is all about. This is a story of redemption, of
a man's ability to bounce back from failure and find hope,
joy and love.
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Momma and the Meaning of Life: Tales of
Psychotherapy
by Irvin D. Yalom, professor emeritus of psychiatry
Basic Books, 1999; $24 (philosophy/psychology).
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In
an era when Prozac, Xanax and Paxil are practically
household names, Yalom is still fascinated by old-fashioned
talk therapy. In this follow-up to his bestselling Love's
Executioner, Yalom again takes readers behind the
therapist's closed door. Four chapters are drawn directly
from experiences in his Stanford practice; the other two are
fictional. We meet Paula, a terminally ill dynamo; Magnolia,
a patient Yalom longs to confide in; Irene, a depressed
surgeon with whom the psychiatrist almost comes to blows.
The tales often reveal as much about Yalom's inner
life&emdash;his fears, secret attractions, memories of his
mother&emdash;as they do about his patients'.
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