Saturday, October 21, 2017

'The Garden of Evening Mists' by Tan Twan Eng

The Garden of Evening Mists, Tan Twan Eng (4.0)

There were many things I liked about this book and with just a few minor detractions. I particularly enjoyed reading about a time and place with which I was unfamiliar. The story takes place in Malaysia after WWII. It is told from the point of view of a Chinese Malaysian judge who returns after many years to the rural area near to where she was held in a POW camp by the Japanese. The story dips back to the time immediately after the war, when she worked with the tribunals to bring various Japanese and Malay collaborators to justice. It then spends most of the time on the many years of healing where she searched for solace as a survivor of the camp. During that time, she apprenticed with a Japanese gardener to create a tribute to her sister, who died as a prisoner. The angst and anger she feels towards the gardener battle with the admiration she has for his work. At first the writing of the book seemed too overwrought for me, but it seemed to become less flowery and more poetic as the story progressed. I appreciated his ability to paint a picture with words. He also made clear the conflicts of culture and history with the various people living in Malaya during and after WWII. Throughout the story, these facets are woven around the mystery of where she was held and what role the gardener had in the war – both making for a compelling plot.

Monday, October 16, 2017

'At the Existential Cafe' by Sarah Bakewell

At the Existential Café: Freedom, Being, and Apricot Cocktails with Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, Martin Heidegger, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Others, Sarah Bakewell (3)

This turned out to be a bit more of a biography of famous Existentialists and a description of the history around them as their philosophical movement was emerging than a book describing Existentialism. The main players are those in the title in addition to a couple of big players in phenomenology, the precursor of Existentialism. I enjoyed the parts that linked the events of history to the each person’s actions and beliefs, particularly those around WWII and the emergence of communism. Does true existentialism jive with communism? Likely not, though several of the leaders of the movement were enamored with it and suffered for that dichotomy. Unfortunately, I found the writing to be jarring at times, particularly when the author would change from third person to first. Her inserted opinions or feelings broke the flow of reading. I will give her credit for inspiring me to read Sartre and de Beauvoir’s most famous writings.

Thursday, October 12, 2017

'The Man in the High Castle' Philip K. Dick

The Man in the High Castle, Philip K. Dick (4.5)

As a fan of PKD, this is a re-read for me. I enjoyed it even more than the first time, not surprising, as this is one of his most accessible stories. Based on an alternative past in which the Axis powers won WWII and divided the Allied forces between them. Japan rules the western US and Germany has much of Europe and Africa. Written in 1962, it has many post-WWII anger scenarios such as the Germans targeting and obliterating the Africans in much the same way they did the Jewish people. Interestingly, the Japanese are treated as somewhat more gracious winners, though just barely. They covet items of past Americana and antique shops become popular. As the story unfolds, PKD dips into the meta-world as it becomes clear that a resistance is forming based on a book written about an alternate future in which the Allies won! Clever and thought provoking as usual, this is one of his best.