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Complex race relations, uncertain zealotry, budding sexuality all mix well in this stew. Go to your local library (they probably have a copy) and give it a read. I finally found a good used copy and treasure it.
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For me, the most deeply pleasurable novels are possessed of what I call drag and draw.
In a novel with draw, plot tangles and untangles, character blossoms and booms, and we are compelled to turn the pages, to read on. John Grisham succeeds again and again at draw.
If, however, a novelist has drag, we find ourselves, as we advance through her book, dragged back to the preceding pages periodically to check the density of the weave and admire the texture of the sentences. As far as I can tell, John Grisham has no drag. Does anyone ever return to a sentence of his for the sheer pleasure of reading it again?
Some writers have drag and draw. Charles Dickens is a master of the double art. Jack Butler is such another. Butler's fourth novel, DREAMERS, is richly embued with both qualities. What will become of Jody Nightwood as she advances farther and farther into her study of dreams and her romance with the mysteriou! s John Shade? If you are impressed by the way Stephen King uses dreams to inform action in the waking world of THE STAND, read DREAMERS. Jack Butler'll show you something really scary. Here there be spooky matters both governmental and vampiric. Read on. But know that DREAMERS will frequently drag you back with the sheer gorgeosity and yumyumyum of its sentences. Here's one: "And now the caravan crept even more slowly over one-lane wooden bridges under which ran the thready, superluminous clarity of the Holy Ghost broken on the world's dark rocks and between summer homes set back in pockets of the world's last green, sweet private prospects that somehow wore the look of coming abandon, as if they knew they were soon to be shut down and soon to lose the spirits that had given them habitation and soon to be forgotten in drifting snow." There's lots more where that came from. If you're looking for a flow with which to go, DREAMERS is a fine current! in which to swim. But be on the ready for rip tides.
No! rman Mailer once complained of Truman Capote that he wrote the most beautiful sentences in America but had nothing to say. Jack Butler writes some of the most beautiful sentences in America these days. And he has tons to say.
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Buy a copy for yourself. Then buy one for everyone you know who doesn't believe in the transformative powers of fiction; everyone you know who believes the novel is dead; and anyone who needs to have the focus of their worldview adjusted to sharpen the magic and blur the ordinary.
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I didn't learn much by reading the book, and the recipes were rather useless for me (a strict vegetarian), but it has been nevertheless an enjoyable read (or rather browse) for an afternoon.
1> The massive, reference-kind. Containing not just recipies, but info on how to buy an avacodo, the difference between a pinch and a dash, seventy five different things you can do with garlic, etc. For me, these books are useful, but they take all of the fun out of cooking. Worse, they don't encourage experimentation
2> The regional or course-specific kind. You know, books just about chocolate or cajun or brunch. Again, nice to have (especially if you're marrying someone Italian and you happen to be Jamacian... or something like that), but a little too specific for every day use.
3> The book that tries to do a good bit of the above, but focuses more on stoking your enthusiasm, your experimentation, and your built in love of food (you know you have one).
Jack's Skillet is fixed squarely in category number three. This slim book offers 50-odd chapters on every course or occasion or meal that you might come across in a year. Family get-togethers, Easter dinners, oysters, miles of chicken dishes, homemade pizza, shortcake, salads, barbeque, soups, blackberry pies, coffee, margaritas, biscuits, camping, meat loaf, cake and even home made crackers ("more convenient than going to the store").
Each chapter reads like an ode to the food and the situation it's being prepared in. The "flavor text" is entertainment in and of itself. When the time comes for the recipies at then end of each chapter, you're already drooling.
The recipies themselves are straightforward. Jack takes you through them in prose, then again in regular recipe form. The recipies avoid the banal of the over-simple and complex ornate-ness of the caterer. This is home cooking.
While there's a fair amount of regional pride from Jack (who's lived in Mississippi, Arkansas and New Mexico), Jack makes a strong effort to avoid limiting his scope and pulls recipies from all over.
Experimentation is encouraged and the reader is given a nice framework to experiment in.
In short, this is a book that encourages cooking. It gives the reader the enthusiasm that one only gets from a well-written cookbook; not just a book with good recipies. Pick it up!
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For starters, Butler paints the same kind of landscapes that Robert Heinlein does. You won't find a lot of exposition, the action comes at you fast, and the reader has to do some work keeping abreast of the slang of 22nd Century Mars. There's also a slight political undertone. Never pedantic, Our Author prefers to show situations that have resulted from the extremes of human nature and technology.
Hellas is a Martian frontier town, a community living in one of Mars' 30 mile wide craters. The atmosphere being thin, an enormous tent keeps the air pressure at habitable levels. Within this settlement live the kind of folk one expects to see in any Martian Colony of the future: genetically engineered beasts, ranchers, enhanced people, and intelligent robots.
The story (and I don't like giving stuff away), deals mostly with a war for independance from Earth. But focus is kept on our hero--a rancher turned leader of the cecessionists--who is about 400 years old.
The book gets off to a bit of a slow start. Somewhere about a quarter of the way through--somewhere about the time you've figured out how this world works--the story sinks it's talons into you and takes you away. You're helpless.
Nightshade is not without it's flaws, but I really enjoyed this book and would love to see it come back into print. In the meantime, see if you can find a copy somewhere.
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If you want to read a better, even great, Vietnam novel, I'd recommend you try Fields of Fire by Webb, or Close Quarters by Heinemann, or Better Times than These by Groom. Fragments pales in comparison to those works.
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