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Book Blurbs
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Naked Pueblo
by Mark Jude Poirier, MA '92
Harmony Books, 1999; $21 (fiction).
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In
this debut collection of 12 unsettling stories, Poirier
paints a vision of the new American West. Set among the
strip malls, taco joints and trailer parks of Tucson, Ariz.,
his hometown, each piece chronicles the perverse, yet
poignant, lives of dysfunctional young men and women. In
"Something Good," employees at a thrift store plunder
donations meant for charity, scoping out collector's items
like a Waltons board game and a CHiPs Ponch
doll (missing a boot). "La Zona Roja" focuses on the
relationship of two brothers, one of whom dies after falling
short while diving off a roof into a pool. In
"Tilt-A-Whirl," a boy named Chigger buries his mother's
amputated leg. Despite the morbid undercurrents, Poirier's
characters develop troubled relationships that somehow keep
them afloat -- and even have the occasional epiphany about
their value as human beings.
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The Angelic Darkness
by Richard Zimler, MA '82
Norton, 1999; $24 (fiction).
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Bill
Ticino, a compulsive philanderer whose wife has just left
him, seeks companionship by advertising for a housemate. He
gets more than he bargained for in Peter, a mysterious
androgyne from Brazil who moves in and tries to heal -- or
is it corrupt? -- his lonely landlord. The novel is a
suspenseful, sexually charged tale of the occult, set in San
Francisco and inspired by Zimler's master's thesis on street
prostitution in the Tenderloin district. An American living
in Portugal, Zimler published his first novel, the
international bestseller The Last Kabbalist of
Lisbon, in 1998.
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The Work of Writing: Literature and
Social Change in Britain, 1700-1830
by Clifford Siskin, '72
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999; $16.95 (literary
history).
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Though
focused on the 18th century, this study addresses a
21st-century concern: technology's impact on society. The
author, a literature professor at the University of Glasgow,
argues that writing was once a revolutionary technology.
Among other things, it led to the classification of
knowledge into disciplines, including literature, and
formalized the division of labor into manual versus mental
tasks. As if to allay electronic-era anxieties about the
fate of literature, Siskin observes that print is merely one
application for writing, just as trains are only one mode of
transportation. "Clearly there are now alternatives to
trains and to the traditional forms of Literature," he
writes. But there are also new adaptations of old vehicles,
such as monorails, bullet trains -- and e-books.
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American Compact: James Madison and the
Problem of Founding
by Gary Rosen, '88
University Press of Kansas, 1999; $29.95 (political
thought).
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He
was a rationalist who believed that republicanism was
spiritually uplifting. He was devoted to government by the
people but insisted that only an elite could write the
Constitution. Those are just two of the seeming
contradictions that made James Madison one of the more
complicated American founders. But Rosen, an editor at
Commentary, sees a deeper consistency. He argues that
Madison was guided throughout his career by his own
interpretation of the social compact -- the Enlightenment
notion that human society rises above the state of nature
through a shared understanding of rights and
responsibilities. In his conclusion, Rosen makes a case that
the philosophical principles Madison established can help
solve today's disputes over diversity, states' rights and
the separation of church and state.
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