List price: $17.35 (that's 30% off!)
I beg that the publisher re-issue this monumental document, so that others' eyes may be opened as magically as were mine.
This issue deals with death, both future and past. The series of short stories by some of the most hot authors around, all seem to flow easily from one story to the next.
Includes Jeremy Harking, John Gregory Dunne, Eugene Richards, Edmund White, Teresa Pamies, Mary McCarthy, Adam Mars-Jones, Roger GTarfitt, Michael Ignatieff, John Treherne, William Cooper, Rudolf Schafer, Christopher Petit, and oddly enough Louise Erdrich.
The photographs are all very moving and fit right in with the shorts. If you have ever sat still and wondered about your future fate, or reflected upon what comes at the end, this is a book worth reading -- if only for the reflections that it might cause you.
Buford's second technique, employed in the middle section, uses a more scholarly approach as the author relates the supporters' behavior to the tenets of modern sociology, especially those that deal with the dynamics of the group or the crowd.
Although possessing a thoroughly interesting subject, especially for Americans whose sports are comparitively homoginized in the face of such thuggery, Buford's somewhat schitzophrenic approach takes away from the novel as a whole. When Buford immerses himself in the thug life, the reader immerses himself, too, thus providing for entertaining and slightly voyeuristic literature. Buford's sociology lesson is boring and repetitive, however, and the incompatible narrative methods keep the book from attaining its full depth.
In all, Buford presents an flawed yet interesting tale about a subject to which few Americans can relate.
The rest of the issue includes some arresting photo portraits of WWI veterans, 30+ pages devoted to the consequences of the end of the Soviet empire, a long piece by Jonathan Rabin about the Mississippi flooding which didn't look that interesting, a 40 page short story by Ethan Canin that I also skipped, and more intriguingly, an 18 page story by Nick Hornby called "Fourteen and After." This story is basically an early draft of the earliest parts of "High Fidelity", in some areas word for word. Neat.
If you are looking for factual articles with little slant then you have come to the wrong place. If you want lots of "Long live the proletariat..hail Marx!" type of stuff..then you will want to fill in an subscription post haste.
But, my reason for getting this issue was the Stroessner interview, and it was the only thing of real value IMHO..
I am writing to you, and I am looking for help, I am currently doing a story about Dalai Lama and Panchen Lama, I know there is a book named The Search For The Panchen Lama, the author is Isbel Hilton, is there anyone who can help me to get the email address and the contact with her? I heard that she is travelling in India, one of my colleague is going to travel in India, so, if some one can provide me the contact with her, I would appreciate it. Thanks.
Charles