
Used price: $2.90
Collectible price: $6.35
Buy one from zShops for: $6.15



Kandel's writing style is remeniscent of Hawthorne's deconstructionist narrator in "The House of the Seven Gables" - omniscient and chatty, with just the right tone of menace. In addition, Kandel makes poetry and beauty of the mathematical aspects of the story. At one point, he describes the angles of a triangle in such luscious language you want to curl up with one, just to see what it would be like.
I cannot recommend this book highly enough. I know it will haunt me for months..

Kandel's writing style is remeniscent of Hawthorne's deconstructionist narrator in "The House of the Seven Gables" - omniscient and chatty, with just the right tone of menace.
In addition, Kandel makes poetry and beauty of the mathematical aspects of the story. At one point, he describes the angles of a triangle in such luscious language you want to curl up with one, just to see what it would be like.
I cannot recommend this book highly enough. I know it will haunt me for months....

Used price: $1.99
Collectible price: $11.65




Used price: $1.60
Collectible price: $2.92


Huelle comes from a country where borders have shifted, and the land and people have been occupied by both their 'aggressor' (Germany) and their 'saviour' (Russia). In this dizzying political climate, those who were your friends one day would be enemies the next. Collective identity is more important than individual; therefore, a German or Russian becomes threatening, due to the history of occupation. Nothing is stable, or dependable in this situation; and Huelle has created a fine book of stories which reflect a Polish viewpoint of imaginative, fantastic literature.
In the story "Table", a Polish family under Communism needs a new kitchen table. However, they cannot get a table like their old one, because that year, the Comrades building tables have decreed that tables must be triangular - which does not fit their room, or their settings. Seeking to find a woodworker who can (illegally) make them a proper table, they are at first successful, but run into problems, when the woodworker keeps delaying. He finally offers them a table - with the catch that it once belonged to a German officer. The main character's mother is furious, holding a deep-set hatred for the German people, and she wants no part of a table having belonged to one. This anger is not the only thing which comes with this furniture; the main character starts seeing a German ghost in the house. The story shows a family grappling with the very real effects of a Communist system and the memories of a Nazi occupation, all through a single piece of furniture.
A disappearing village is the mystery of "Uncle Heinrich," a story in which the main character and his Uncle go on a skiing trip and lose their way. Uncle Heinrich is an adventuresome man,given to encouraging his young nephew to forsake books and explore nature at its most rugged. On their excursion, they not only lose their way, but lose the map which has been guiding them. They come across a village where they find food and shelter until the storm is gone. The kindly villagers reveal some eccentric customs when Uncle Heinrich and nephew are called upon to act as outside judges to a town election, leaving them both with a threatened feeling. Years later, Uncle Heinrich writes his nephew, detailing his efforts to again find that village - but cannot, and cannot find any map with reference to the place. This story draws a correlation to the Baltic country of Lithuania, part of Poland before World War II, and made part of the USSR when borders were redrawn after the war. When one looks at the maps chronicling Poland's border shifts, one can see how entire areas seem to "disappear" into the USSR. The story underlines ethnic tensions between Lithuanians and Poles, as well as the uncertainty that comes with such an unstable boundary. Are those Poles who lived in Lithuania Polish or Lithuanian? Is this land the same as it was before the war? And after the fall of the USSR?
Probably the strongest piece is "In Dublin's Fair City," the final story in the book. It follows the main character as he visits Dublin, and remembers his grandfather who became an eccentric character in his old age. The narrator begins his visit in a Catholic Church, where his thoughts turn to his family, and how they survived under Communist regime. Throughout this piece, he thinks of his grandfather, who left his grandmother and lived far north in the country with another woman. But this isn't the whole story. When his grandfather dies, the narrator and his father must take the trip to retrieve the body, and find more than they expected; the grandfather was alone not to have an affair, but to build a submarine, with hopes of getting out of the country under the sea. The father and son push the submarine into the water, for if discovered, they know they will be punished as his family.
While these recollections surface, the narrator meets a young woman who accidentally hits him in her chips van, and takes him under her wing, to a party held by artists after.
The Irish in the story are all looking for a way out of their own lives, whether escaping their poverty through decadent parties, their loneliness through drink, or their very identities through play-acting. While he observes the surreal events unfolding around him, he reflects on his own grandfather's attempts to escape, and on his own - he is, after all, in a Western country.
Huelle makes a sound comparison between Ireland and Poland, for both were (and Northern Ireland contintues to be) colonized states well after most countries had become independent. The piece is richly layered, the mystery of the grandfather's activities being solved very gradually, so the reader shares in the narrator's triumph when he remembers it all, and makes the connection between his grandfather's secret and his bravery. And feels the sadness for a man who died before he could see his escape plans come true.
Moving House collects richly layered stories, intricate in their structure, complex in their theme, and beautifully written. This book is a must for those interested in Polish history and fiction, and those who take the time to read between the lines will be well rewarded.

List price: $15.00 (that's 75% off!)
Used price: $5.75
Buy one from zShops for: $11.01


A word of causion, though. Altough Lem is depicted as a "Science Fiction" author, _HMV_ is not your regular "Arthur C. Clark"-like book. Dont expect racing starships or multi-handed aliens; it's a book about mankind, and it's failures, and is even more novel then Asimov's _I, Robot_, or Lem's own _Solaris_.

This book is not light reading. Many parts require a mental effort like, say, that needed to play chess. This can be irritating, even infuriating. For readers are up to the task, however, the book rewards the effort many times over.

Yet, while scanning the Amazon web pages for signals of intelligent life from distant galaxies, I came across this book that fully lives up to be called, let me rephrase define, science-fiction. A couple of years before the movie made it's way to a wider audience I read Sagan's Contact. While the decoding of the many levels of the "message" in this book went a long way in pleasing the Nerd in me, the story itself was flat as a pancake.
Lem's HMV proceeds Contact by many years and reflects a sophistication from a civilization that is light-years ahead of the one that produced Sagan. Written in the sixties, during the Cold War, behind the Iron Curtain, HMV is a work that can be read on at least two levels. Firstly, it is a critique against Cold War politics, military and political decision making, and the conduct of science/scientist. In this respect the work could be regarded as an accurate Swiftian satire. Secondly and most importantly, however, HMV is a psychological and philosophical essay on the limitations of the human mind facing the truly unknown. This second layer is in my opinion the part that makes this book so unique.
Earlier this year I wrestled my way through Foucault's "Order of Things" a post-modern classic of contemporary structuralist philosophy. Lem may not claim to be a philosopher, but by the middle of just the preface of HMV, he has encapsulated all of Foucault's arguments in one focused concise essay in clear language. Throughout the rest of the book Lem exposes the reader to many schools of philosophy, discussion of the possibilities and limitations of science and the extent to which the human mind is limited to the level of projecting itself in the analysis of an unknown subject. An argument could be made that Lem does little more than using the subtext of HMV to give a synopsis of 20+ centuries of philosophy. Yet, both the construction of this novel and the beautiful way in which Lem concludes Hogarth's account of man finding reason without answers in the post-Nietzschian world is truly impressive.
The X-files always claims that the truth is out there. While it took me over thirty years, I have finally been able to recover the part that Lem's HMV contributed to it.

Used price: $10.00
Buy one from zShops for: $13.81





Used price: $4.50
Collectible price: $5.25
Buy one from zShops for: $5.98





Used price: $5.99
Buy one from zShops for: $11.99




List price: $15.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $3.88
Collectible price: $4.50


Anyway, it is a must for any real SF fan. Especially after Star diaries, Futurologic congress and things like Peace on Earth and Fiasco.



Used price: $2.65
Collectible price: $8.47


"The Happy Man" features a dead man who is raised from the dead so he can financially support his family, the catch is that his consciousness must reside in hell part of the time. There he has bizarre nightmares that lead to an unfortunately predictable denouement. In "Vanilla Dunk," professional basketball players are issued suits giving them skills of former greats. From this interesting idea, Lethem fabricates one of the best sports stories I've ever read, as an obnoxious white kid wins the "draft lottery" and gets to be the next Michael Jordan and racial tensions ensue. "Light and the Sufferer" follows a crack addict, his brother, and the mysterious alien who follows them around New York. The humans' story ends rather obviously, but the significance of the aliens is left somewhat obscure. "Forever, Said the Duck" is about a cocktail party inhabited by clones of everyone who's had sex with the two hosts. It's promising enough at first, but degenerates into a psychedelic nonsense. The nifty notion of "The Hardened Criminals" is that convicts are physically hardened and used as bricks for a massive prison tower. Lethem seemed totally unable to make anything out of the premise, however, and when a young criminal meets his father in the wall, the result is rather forced. "Five ..." presents the mystery of a woman who has sex with a man and "loses" two weeks of her life. Unfortunately, the story implodes rather than leading anywhere interesting. The final story, "Sleepy People" is simply odd and makes you wonder why it was included.
Lethem is certainly a creative genius, however, he's still pretty hit or miss in harnessing his creativity. Sometimes he doesn't seem to know what to do with it and ends up writing himself into a bizarre corner. Still, I'll continue to read him to catch the sparkling stuff.


Some worked better than others, and from reading the other reviews here it seems the selection varies from reader to reader. Yet the range and boldness of his ideas nearly staggers the imagination, and to have pulled this off -- not once, but seven times -- is astonishing.

Used price: $2.45
Collectible price: $4.00


What starts off promising to be an exploration of the zone between insanity and sanity, wanders into more of a farce by the book's end. Still it's worth reading for the laughs, and the beginning which features a schizotypal mental patient who has to figure out that he's not hallucinating, but is indeed being contacted by aliens.
It's worth reading and should be brought back into print.