Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Donald Hall, Essays After Eighty *** 1/2

Not all of the personal essays in this collection from (former) poet Donald Hall are about aging. There are pieces about eating, exercising, facial hair, New Hampshire, and being a poet. The title essay is about the joys of writing, especially rewriting, and about how "poetry abandoned me" around the time he turned eighty. (He is now 88.) 

As befits a book from a poet, Essays After Eighty is lyrical, intimate, and brief. The first essay, "Out the Window," sets the stage well. It is about aging, and about melancholy joy of watching the world recur and change from the window of his New Hampshire farmhouse. I also enjoyed "Three Beards":
My present hairiness is monumental, and I intend to carry it into the grave. (I must avoid chemotherapy.) ... During the Civil War, beards were as common as sepsis.

Friday, February 24, 2017

Jim Crace, Quarantine **** 1/2

Around this time last year, I read my first Jim Crace novel, Being Dead, and I loved it. Quarantine is the book he wrote just before Being Dead, and it shares many of the same virtues. I'll quote my earlier review, substituting the title:
What I really like about Quarantine is how Crace manages to emphasize the physical (and aggressively non-spirtitual) details while also showing how human thoughts and feelings bring meaning to them. His prose is poetic and naturalistic at the same time.
 Quarantine takes place in the Judean desert and features Jesus as a character, so the emergence of spirituality through an emphasis on the physical is part of its theme. There's something unique and satisfying about the way Crace puts together a sentence or description.

Monday, February 20, 2017

Jordan Ellenberg, How Not to be Wrong *** 1/2

Jordan Ellenberg is a mathematics professor who writes on mathematical subjects in the popular press. The subtitle of the book is "The Power of Mathematical Thinking."

Ellenberg has a clear, relaxed writing style and a talent for choosing clear examples of real-world situations where mathematical thinking comes in to play. I found the book both entertaining and informative. The only reason I haven't given it a higher rating is that its scope is mostly limited to probability and statistics, with only small forays into the more certain areas of math. (Admittedly, the study of uncertainty applies more commonly to everyday issues.) The discussion also wandered a bit.

His examples drive home the point that small sample sizes show greater variance, and that studies often focus on the outliers so that regression to the mean is a likely explanation for changes. I also learned about the asymmetric domination effect.

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Elizabeth McKenzie, The Portable Veblen **** 1/2

In this low-key and quirky novel, Paul and Veblen get engaged then start wondering whether they are doing the right thing. They are both young enough to still have doubts about their own value and about whether their idiosyncrasies are compatible. Veblen is a freelance translator who talks to squirrels and worries about her passive-aggressive mother; Paul is a doctor who has invented a tool for treating traumatic brain injuries and resents his parents' coddling of his mentally challenged brother. Can they and their families overcome their differences and live happily ever after?

McKenzie's prose reminds me of Lorrie Moore's with its light insightful touch regarding family relationships and off-kilter observations that make perfect sense. (Moore: "She was trying to tease him, but it came out wrong, like a lizard with a little hat on." McKenzie: "In it gleamed a diamond so large it would be a pill to avoid for those who easily gag.") I especially enjoyed her character-establishing anecdotes.