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Book reviews for "Alain" sorted by average review score:

A Russian Mother: A Novel (French Expressions)
Published in Hardcover by Holmes & Meier Publishers, Inc. (March, 1996)
Authors: Alain Bosquet and Barbara Bray
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A postmodern homage that is haunting, complex, and profound.

Although Mr. Bosquet is probably best known for his poetry, here he proves to be a noteworthy novelist in this profound study of the relationship between a mother and her only son. A complex blend of biography, history, and autobiography, this novel asks the reader to be--at times--a psychoanalyst, a literary theorist, and an historian. Originally published in 1978, the novel won the Grand Prix du Roman from the Académie Française. Intense and moving, this is the first novel of Mr. Bosquet's to appear in English. With Barbara Bray's fine translation (albeit choppy near the end of the book), its value for international readers is bound to increase with its reception by anglophone audiences. There is no mistaking this book for something other than deliberate and heavy duty literature. The most persistent question that follows us through this postmodern homage is deciding how much autobiography is interwoven into the fictional biography being written. This unease is only added to by the uncertain status of the afterword by Germaine Brée, one of America's most important French professors, and the introductory note that, combined, inform us of Mr. Bosquet's work, life, and who his Russian mother was.

Mr. Bosquet's opening line ("You're my mother; you're dead; all I feel is relief.") recalls Albert Camus's opening line from "The Stranger" when Mersault tells us Maman has died. With this as our starting point in "A Russian Mother," we follow the narrator's relationship with his mother over two continents and five decades; from Odessa where the family has to flee in 1918 (first to Sofia and later to Brussels), to New York of the 1940s and 1950s where the narrator's parents live removed from war-ravaged Europe. As with all biographies, much is revealed about an author's self when undertaking the task of writing someone else's life and this novel is no different. Mr. Bosquet has captured the difficult web of memory and filial emotions that at once allow a son to see his mother as she operated within the family, while also having to admit that it is most likely those closest to us whom we know the least. This is especially true of the family here where privacy and autonomy are necessary to those members who hope to guard a certain sense of sovereignty over their roles and lives. In the course of the novel, we learn of the son's shady past of black market deals and nights in bordellos. He runs a brisk bartering business in post-WWII Berlin but eventually becomes (like, not ironically, Mr. Bosquet) a writer based in Paris. That so much about the son is learned from the descriptions of his relationship to his mother lends to the narrative slipperiness we feel from start to finish as we read through this book.

There is once peculiar scene that will haunt readers for the novel's duration since it addresses the sexual tension implicit in the relationship. But Mr. Bosquet's canny narrative works in such a way that satisfying this drive or desire has to occur so the story can continue. From Russia to Belgium to America, from childhood to adulthood, the picture of how a bitter relationship formed between son and mother becomes clearer as the mother becomes less a Freudian object of association and more a full blown character in a work of fiction. At one point, the postmodern narrator admits: "Is it done to cut one's mother up into chapters? Does one distort her by clothing her in words? I'm embarking on a dubious and uncertain operation: that of trying to resuscitate you by telling your story as if you were a character in a book, no truer and no more false than those to whom I sometimes give life in my work but who have never really existed." The narrator knows how divergent and convergent life and literature can be, but those closest to us can either come to life or be obscured and misconstrued by having our words mediate memory and record on their behalf. This dilemma is skillfully presented in its full complexity by Mr. Bosquet. If writing this story is a form of distortion, we can be certain that not writing it is worse despite whatever the son's motives are for representing or misrepresenting the life of his mother.

The one minor drawback to the work might be its overall structurelessness. Mr. Bosquet's reasons for this are not mysterious: chronological shifts effectively show the cyclical nature of memory. But even so, how the image the son constructs of the mother evolves is somewhat confusing. It is basically unclear who she is or what the depths of personality are; all we are certain of is the son's bitterness. Although Mr. Bosquet makes no such suggestions, I wonder how the novel would read if read according to its chronological order as opposed to its chapter sequence. Indeed, it could be very revealing to read it in the way Milorad Pavic sets up "Landscape Painted with Tea," where a crossword puzzle at mid-point presents many viable endings based on the order in which the remaining chapters are read. Here we have no such choice but we may not be the worse off for it. This essentially eloquent and powerful story reminds us that we are forever our parents' children.

Craig A. Hamilton


The Tale of Alain
Published in Paperback by Schoolhouse Press (February, 1983)
Authors: Arnold Zimmermann and Chris Swansen
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An Excellent dramatic children's tale
A perfect story for a rainy day! It is a gripping tale.


Two Novels: Jealousy and in the Labyrinth (In the Labyrinth)
Published in Paperback by Grove Press (December, 1989)
Authors: Robbe Grillet, Alain Robbe-Grillet, and Richard Howard
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Interesting Experimental Fiction
These two novels (the author's third and fourth, respectively) make for a pretty good introduction to the strange world of Alain Robbe-Grillet. I tend to think of his books as post-modern detective stories, in which the mystery to be solved is nothing less than existence itself; that the reader often finds himself in the dark is very much to the point. They should be interesting to anyone looking for an off-the-beaten-path read.

"Jealousy" (the better of the two) deals with a love triangle in a remote African plantation... which may or may not be all in the narrator's mind. It's creepy and enigmatic. "In the Labyrinth" is a vaguely Kafkaesque tale about a soldier attempting to deliver a mysterious package in a vast, unnamed city. Admittedly, Robbe-Grillet is not the most approachable of authors, but these densely composed novels amply pay off the attention required to read them.


Umbr(a): Drive
Published in Paperback by Center for Psychoanalysis and Culture (14 April, 1997)
Authors: Joan Copjec, Jacques-Alain Miller, Glogowski, Bruce Fink, and Daniel Collins
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excellent resource!
there isn't much written on this subject but here you can find it all in one place!


Vermeer
Published in Unknown Binding by Hazan ()
Author: Alain Rérat
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IF YOU'VE SEEN THE MET EXHIBIT, BUY THIS BOOK!!
After reading "Girl With the Pearl Earring" and seeing the Metropolitan Museum's current 'Vermeer' exhibit, it's hard to stop there. One wants to know more about the man who only has 35 paintings in his catalog raisonnee. But reviewing the Met's exhibition catalog proved too dense with minutia to be readable, even for an Art History major in college. The Pascal Bonafoux "Vermeer" is a perfect companion to the exhibit. It provides large-format illustrations of all 35 paintings, and provides a "cutural context" to the paintings much the way the exhibit did. There are other artists' portraits and scenes used as a comparison to Vermeer's, also the way the exhibit provided. Details from the paintings are shown within the context of society at the time; for example the Postal System is explored in the text while illustrations of letters being read in the paintings are shown. Other topics include "The Beginning of the Scientific Method", "The Geographer" "The Concert" and "Woman Reading a Letter", among others. Written in 1992, Pascal Bonafoux forshadows the Met exhibit in including many of the same paintings which are key to understanding Vermeer. His chapter "Painting in Delft" includes the Carel Fabritius "View of Delft" which was painted to be looked at in a perspective box which is a highlight of the Met show. And even though Bonafoux includes a comparative Delft street scene by Pieter de Hooch, my two favorite Courtyard scenes by de Hooche are not reproduced in the book, so I am very happy I bought the postcards! Although there is no table of contents or index, this is a slim volume which includes a complete Table of Works. With only 35 paintings, this suffices. Also included is an extensive (though "select") bibliography, with an International collection of sources dating back to 1886, and including several standard references as well as periodical articles. Though this is not a detailed scholarly work, it is a FABULOUS book for the price. The only reason it did not earn 5 stars is that the illustrations, while good, are not outstanding. They are missing the whites which jump out of the paintings, and are captured in the only book I did buy at the exhibit, "Vermeer The Complete Works" which is printed on high quality glossy paper, and does justice to the paintings. But if you have seen the exhibit, you will want to own the Bonafoux "Vermeer". Out of print, it is worth the search, and a bargain at the price.


Yves Lion (Current Architecture Catalogues)
Published in Paperback by Gustavo Gili (March, 1993)
Authors: Yves Lion, Xavier Guell, and Pierre-Alain Croset
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Una solución de Viviendas fachada
Libro que permite contemplar como las viviendas pueden ser pensadas incluso desplazando los nucleos humedos hasta constituirse en fachadas permeables. Lo demas tampoco es para tanto


Horny? Los Angeles
Published in Paperback by Really Great Books (01 December, 2001)
Authors: Jessica Hundley and Jon Alain Guzik
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Still Horny? Yes..after reading this book!
This book is just a book mostly on strip clubs, shopping, and night clubs. This book might be good for men who are trying to locate the ultimate strip club, or where to pick up a bimbo, but for anything else...forghettaboutit! I personally bought the book to find out how they rated some of the swinging clubs, but there was only a mention of two. Out of all the swing clubs, underground sex clubs and parties out here in Los angeles...they only mention two. Oh yea..if youre looking for a good spa to get a facial or something, or shopping for sex toys and sexy clothes...its cool! But if youre looking for all the places where you can have some crazy sexual fun in Los Angeles... forgettaboutit! Keep looking!

hilarious and much needed for uptight america
This book kept me in stitches. Written with so much clever humor. I am a straight woman who wants to know about what's up in my fair city. Now I want to grab the husband and hit some of these clubs after reading the guide.

Hello Los Angeles!
Voltaire once said "Work saves us from three great evils: boredom, vice and need." But hey, we all need some vice every now and then, mostly we need vice now! It seems like these two writers, Hundley and Guzik, really dug deep into the Los Angeles underbelly, did their gumshoe work and came out with an excellent guide to not only Sex, but dare I say, a great book on the beatific city of Los Angeles. This book has everything you'd ever want to know about Sex in Los Angeles, but didn't have the druthers, or knew the right questions, to ask. Also, the writing (funny as all get out) is worth the price of admission alone, not to mention all the sex info. Buy it and you won't be disappointed!


The Provence Of Alain Ducasse
Published in Hardcover by Assouline (March, 2001)
Authors: Alain Ducasse and Francois Simon
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know why you are buying this book
This book is a nice, cute, coffee-table book. It has lovely pictures, text in a font which is difficult to read but looks handwritten, and not much content.

I had hoped to get some significant culinary info for an upcoming trip to Provence, but found this book long on looks and cutesy text but with frustratingly little information. Much better for those trying to figure out how to buy/eat there is "Markets of Provence" and, believe it or not, the Peter Mayle books.

So if you want a nice coffee table book with the name of Mr. Ducasse on the cover, buy it. If you want useful info for planning the culinary part of your trip to Provence (and food in Provence is pretty close to heaven, people), choose another book.

Great book, disappointing format
This is a beautiful book - lovely recipes, great photography, useful information for a food lover's trip to Provence, BUT - it's too big and bulky to bring along on your trip. (I had hoped for a book similar to Carla Capalbo's "The Food Lover's Companion to Tuscany.") It's a great book, but I won't be bringing it to Provence next month.

A Hardcover Trip to Provence
As a person who loves Provence I find this book to be a true find! Who cares if you like to cook! The pictures alone will make you want to jump on a plane. The "Stopping Along the Way" section in the back is a superb travel/eating/drinking guide.

Well worth buying whether you have been to Provence many times or can't wait to go!


A Dictionary of Symbols
Published in Paperback by Penguin USA (Paper) (March, 1997)
Authors: Jean Chevalier, Alain Gheerbrant, and John Buchanan-Brown
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Bad publisher
I saw this book in the Spanish translation, a real encyclopedia full of graphics, alkaline paper, and hardback. Amazon sells this one ....
This version in English is austere, printed on newspaper bad quality paper- the ink stains fingers, the pages rip as you turn them.
This ... quality does a disservice to the authors, who have spent their lives compending this fabulous work.

Dictionary for Thinkers
This is a thinker's dictionary, not a guide to road signs and icons. The editors took the trouble to recruit symbol experts from many different professions, ranging from the paranormal to the skeptical academic. The result is a dictionary with entries that have more depth than the usual "quick hits" that other symbolism dictionaries give you. Chevalier is not afraid to give contradictory or contrasting meanings of icons. (He is not a universalist, but a relativist.) He is usually careful to identify the culture in which a particular meaning is given. I keep this in easy reach on my bookshelf, reminding myself, however, that no dictionary on this subject can possibly cover all the meanings a symbol may have. It is worth having around.

Best esoteric symbol interpretation I have seen
I have about a dozen symbol books... most of the classics. This one is the best for interpreting those strange symbols in your dreams, daydreams, etc. It is not the shallow stupid interpretations "you are going on a journey..." stuff, but true archetypical and esoteric interpretations.


Sun Certification Training Guide (310-080): Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) Web Component Developer
Published in Paperback by Que (07 November, 2002)
Author: Alain Trottier
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Don't bother
Sun's certification exams are challenging. They demand careful preparation and thorough study. And they call for careful self-assessment.

The book offers only a point-by-point exposition of Sun's own objectives for the exam. While this fidelity to the exam objectives is laudable, it presents very little material beyond regurgitation of the Servlet API, example code written by others and little material of practical use in developing web applications with servlets and JSP. Sun puts much thought into its exam objectives and they strive to make the exams more than mastery of API trivia. This book It seems that the author has little experience with servlets and JSP outside of writing the book and is unable to illuminate why Sun considers its exam objectives are important.

I mentioned the certification exams call for careful self-assessment. It easy to wear your Hiliter to a nub but practice exams are crucial testing your mastery and indicating areas of further study.

Unfortunately, the three practice exams included in the book haven't even had the passing glance of an editor. Questions call for two multiple choice answers and the answer key gives one or three. Fill in the blank questions are answered in the key as multiple choice. Other answers to questions are flat out wrong. Beyond these obvious errors, a sizeable fraction of the questions are confusingly worded.

And then there is the included CD. The book advertises it as containing a "powerful, full-feature test engine." What it neglects to mention is that the engine is a Windows application. Is it so much more difficult to develop a Java test engine that can be run on a variety of platforms? Isn't that the Java way? Or, failing that, mention somewhere in the book the system requirements for the CD?

Good, and yet crap...
Being an experienced web developer I found this book to be pitched at the right level to fill out the blanks in my knowledge. The author explains up front that the book is not a comprehensive work on servlets and JSPs, but covers the areas that are on the exam. He also states that you will have to refer back to the appropriate Sun specifications if you want to fill out your understanding - which I found at some points, I needed to do. With further reading lists provided at the end of each chapter this is not a spoon-feeding book - but it does point you in the right direction.

The material is well covered and some additional real world information is given.

The book's major let-down is the review questions. They are extremely poorly worded - to the point where you question whether the answers you got "right" are actually right. Questions that ask you to pick two answers may actually have one or three when you look them up in the answers section. This is such a tragic oversight that I had to question whether anyone even cast an eye over it in the editing process - a real embarassment for the publisher.

The book is not bad, though. Well covered and on the level. However, if you want to see how you are progressing you would do well to use one of the many free sample exams available on the web, because the review questions are so hopeless.

mediocre
I found the practice questions at the end of each chapter to be disappointing. Some were irrelevant to the test, many were confusingly or ambiguously worded and some of the answers given were flat-out wrong.

If you only want to use one book I recomment SCWCD Exam Study Kit: Java Web Component Developer Certification by Hanumant Deshmukh, Jignesh Malavia.


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