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Investment in the oil infrastructure is heavily emphasized, but the viability of real and substantial amounts of oil in the ground has yet to be proven in Central Asia. Access to viable markets is also dubious for that reason.
Real economic vitality in Central Asia will ultimately hinge less on building airports and pipelines than on stimulating open and viable economic activity among the domestic populations there. Economic interaction of a self-sustaining nature is a far better path to political reform, political stability, viable tax bases (rather than dependencies on FDI), and satisfaction of demographic conflicts.
That is the essence of the new, global economy. A sense entirely missed by this book.
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No, the Holocaust should never be forgotten. One would like to believe though, that those who helped should not be forgotten either.--Seymour Dalkoff
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difficulties await. Will Wolff be able to rescue his wife from the horrible fate that awaits her? Was there ever any doubt?
The specific ploy Wolff comes up with to defeat the villain is pretty clever, and is probably the best part of the book, which overall is just the same old same old. Instead of displaced societies, this volume's worlds feature geographic problems that the group has to overcome in order to get through the next gate. The result is a lot less swordplay and a lot more death trekking, not really Farmer's forte. The excitement level is pretty low, and the suspense level is almost non-existent, since many will guess the kidnapper's secret well before it is revealed, and many more will have stopped caring long before then. Farmer's characters are painfully flat; some of the siblings are no more than cannon fodder, while even the more important characters just strike the same single note over and over. As a result, the reader never cares whether the party succeeds in their venture or not. (This reader was even tempted to start hoping the villain would just kill them all off and spare us all any more unpleasantness). Wolff is a capable leader and combatant, but he has few other human qualities of any interest, and his siblings are plain irritating. So even though this book starts much faster and has a stronger ending than its predecessor, there still isn't much to like about it. Younger readers who can handle brutal, pointless violence may find this book a welcome diversion, but so far, this is the weakest series Farmer has written. Will A Private Cosmos be any better? This reviewer is disinclined to even bother to find out.
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This slight story is merely a frame on which is hung the overpowering expression of a developing artistic sensibility, as it transforms the world around it - the sights, sounds and smells; the description of storms, city streets, parks, dust-winds, snows. The language is continually, fluidly metamorphosing, in keeping with the artist's mind, so that the reader is continually jolted and carried away from thought to evocation to feeling. In this world, the human beings are passive, phantom-like, while things, objects, nature, have an active, conscious power.
Like Joyce's similar 'Portrait of the artist as a young man', this dense poetry of autobiography and bildungsroman strives towards the creation of a work of art, in this case a rather portentous drama (which is apparently devastatingly beautiful in the Russian); while the reader is always conscious of the shadows of war and Revolution (the book was published in 1934).
According to Lydia Slater in the introduction, George Reavey's translation came out at a time (1959; revised 1960) when hundreds of inferior, rushed translations were cashing in on the success of 'Doctor Zhivago' and the author's Nobel Prize refusal - she says 'it is surprising to find that some translations from Pasternak really do have something in common with the original text'. Reavey captures the density of Pasternak's language and his jarring stylistic effects, but he rarely captures that 'pure and undiluted poetry', that 'drama and lyricism' Slater finds in the original. In any case, Pasternak's illumination of the mundane and of awakening consciousness seem, to me, to lack the magic or humour of Nabokov's contemporary Russian work.
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Pahor's experience was in Natzweiler -- and later in Dachau. He tells the
grisly tale of how Italy persecuted the speakers of Slovenian and
Serbo-Croatian in the areas it annaxed after World War I and expanded into after the outbreak of World War II. For Pahor, a Triestino Jew barred from speaking his own language and whose main memories are of gravestones on which the names were italianized and of the main Slovenian library in Trieste being burned to the ground by blackshirted fascists, Natzweiler (he does not explain why he ended in that camp high in the Vosges mountains of France) proved that the ties among "Yugoslavs" were strong despite the signs of breakup after the death of Tito.
This is a literary memoir -- awfully hard to read with constant flashbacks
from present to past and back again -- that does flesh out some horrors.
For example, the hot water in the showers at Natzweiler came from boilers placed above the crematorium ovens (something I did not find in
Buchenwald).
Peculiarly, Pahor hardly mentions his own Jewishness.
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Skip it - there are plenty of other good books by these authors.
Achilles Choice was a light but enjoyable read. I am looking forward to a sequel.
I would recommend this novel for the age group 8-22 years of age. If you are an older reader the predictability of the storyline may be discouraging.