ThePoliticalCat

A Blog devoted to progressive politics, environmental issues, LGBT issues, social justice, workers' rights, womens' rights, and, most importantly, Cats.

Monday, June 02, 2008

In Memoriam Steve Gilliard


Steve Gilliard passed away a year ago. He is still sorely missed.

This blog got its start thanks to Steve. His analysis of Iraq and Afghanistan, and his ability to draw parallels with other conflicts was so impressive. Since we at La Casa de Los Gatos were dead set against the war from the start, we were inspired by Steve to educate ourselves and &mdash tentatively, at first &mdash begin writing about the war and attempting to analyze, in our own limited way, its causes and effects.

You were a great guy, Steve. A great writer, a great blogger, a fine, impassioned human being. Nobody kicked ass like you did. Nobody had a better nose for bullshit.

Read Steve's Compleat Works here.

Sardonyx, over at DailyKos, has a fine collection of other memorial writings.

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Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Book Review June 2007

Daughters of a Coral Dawn - Katherine V. Forrest

Borrowed? No.

What possessed me to read this, I can't possibly imagine. I have a load of books by this author, all from a time when I was looking for books written by women, about women, preferably strong women. She's not a very good writer, but this was in the days before I discovered writers like Sandra Scoppetone, Sheri Tepper, and Sara Paretsky, and was looking for detective fiction to while away the time with. She is not a good writer at all, come to think of it. So why did I read this particular book? A thread over at Twisty Faster's turned into a discussion of feminist utopias in fiction, and this was one of the books mentioned in the thread. I thought it might provide good background for another project I'm working on. Suffice it to say that I've learned my lesson.

Recommended? Good Lord, no.

Reread? Perhaps I'll try again, if I get further on my project and get stuck.

Dictionary of Asian Mythology - David Leeming

Borrowed? No.

An excellent, handy little reference, very useful for looking up things that you kind of know, or ought to know, or vaguely remember, about myths and legends of China, India, and every country around and in between.

Recommended? Highly.

Reread? As needed.

Ethan of Athos - Lois McMaster Bujold

Borrowed? No.

I've always liked Lois McMaster Bujold as a writer of science fiction. She has a certain sly humour and charm. This book was lightweight, a quick easy read, and thoroughly enjoyable. Yes, it was part of the "feminist utopias in fiction" project. The project doesn't have a name yet, and it's not in any way related to "The Bobbed-Haired Girl" project.

Recommended? Light reading, yes.

Reread? Probably not.

Martin Chuzzlewit - Charles Dickens

Borrowed? No.

Although it was slow to start, eventually, as all Dickensian dramas do, this book gripped me, and I couldn't turn the pages fast enough to find out what happened next. As always, the bad guys get their comeuppance, and the good their just reward, and of course Dickens is exceedingly verbose, but it was some 800 pages of enjoyment. Verbose but talented. With what skill he describes each scene, each character, how well he delves, without heavy-handed framing, the depths and heights of emotion. Bit cloying in the approved manner of the time, at times, but nevertheless a good read. Most interesting of all is his description of America.

Recommended? Highly.

Reread? Not for a good while.

Palli Samaj (The Homecoming) - SharatChandra Chattopadhyay

Borrowed? No.

Reading another of this writer's works translated into English brought home to me the importance of a good translator. Regrettably, this translation was a bit too literal, and Bangla does not translate directly into English, so much of the beauty is lost, and the idiom is clumsy and ineffective. Nevertheless, as with all of SharatChandra's work, this novel deals with the mores of village life and the difference between the urbanized protagonist and his rural childhood companion, and the maze of relationships, customs, prejudices, and regulations that make up life in rural areas. The book would have been far more enjoyable in the hands of a skilled translator. I wish I could get a copy in the original!

Recommended? Only in the original, or in a better translation

Reread? Only in the original or a better translation

Pather Dabi - SharatChandra Chattopadhyay

Borrowed? Nicki.

The translator of this work is excellent, and this is one of SharatChandra's finest novels. Loosely translated, Pather Dabi means "Right of Way." The novel chronicles the awakening of a young man to the injustices imposed by the society in which he is raised. In parts painful, in parts filled with pathos, excitement, rage, this is a novel to stir one's soul. The British did their best to suppress this work when it was first published. Read it and you'll see why.

Recommended? Highly.

Reread? Whenever I can.

Tears of the Giraffe - Alexander McCall Smith

Borrowed? Smokey again.

An amusing little work of detective fiction about the adventures of the No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency, set in Botswana. I believe the first of those works is about to be turned into a film. The writing is good, the characters well drawn and textured, and the writer captures the sweetness of the native culture along with its suffering from change. Good pace, interesting occurrences. It left me wanting to visit Africa, notably Botswana.

Recommended? Yes, if you like detective fiction, light reading matter, and Africana.


Reread? Probably not. Once you've read a piece of detective fiction, you know how it ends, and then what's the point?

The Amber Spyglass - Phillip Pullman

Borrowed? K.B.

Oh, my. Phillip Pullman has written a fascinating trilogy, part science fiction, part fantasy, all thrilling. The writing was quite good, and although after the first book it became a little more predictable in parts, it was still a rollicking good read. It's being made into a film, and I saw the preview and felt as if I must read the book. The film is beautiful, if it all keeps the same high quality as the preview I saw. I can't wait for it to open. As for the books, I read all three volumes in a single night. So there.

Recommended? Yes, if you like science fiction, fantasy, or fast-paced adventure. Definitely light reading, though.

Reread? Maybe.

The Boss Dog - M.F.K. Fisher

Borrowed? Smoke, again.

I've always loved M.F.K. Fisher as a writer. There's a lyrical quality to her descriptions of scenes and people. Neither overly descriptive nor cloying, yet utterly sympathetic and very visual. This book, as you can tell from the title, is about a dog, and an excellent device was that dog as a way of describing the relationship between a woman and her two daughters and the time they spent living in France. As with all of Fisher's books, it was a veritable treasure of culinary and cultural information. A thoroughly enjoyable read.

Recommended? Mais certainement.

Reread? Someday when I have some free time!

The Golden Compass - Phillip Pullman

Borrowed? K.B.

This is the first book in Phillip Pullman's trilogy, and I think the most exciting. His portrait of the little girl who is the protagonist is very good, I think. An excellent writer with a vivid imagination, I blame him for my subsequent insomnia.

Recommended? Highly, for those in search of entertaining reading material.

Reread? Probably, but not for years.

The Subtle Knife - Phillip Pullman

Borrowed? K.B.

This is the final book in Pullman's excellent trilogy. I didn't like it quite as much as I liked the first, but it's still well written and well worth reading.

Recommended? Yes.

Reread? Maybe.

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Monday, July 16, 2007

Book List June 2007

Nothing like destroying your own posts because you're too tired to see straight. What's the matter with me, I wonder. Anyway, here's the original post on the book list, retitled June 2007. Does anyone believe I have a prayer of finishing all these books by 12/31/2007?

A History of Malaysia - Barbara Watson Andaya & Leonard Andaya
A History of Modern Indonesia Since C. 1300 - M.C. Ricklefs
A History of Selangor - J.M. Gullick
A Point of Light - The Life of Family Planning Pioneer Constance Goh - Zhou Mei
A Spy's Revenge - Richard V. Hall
A Will For Freedom - Romen Bose
Abraham's Promise - Philip Jeyaretnam
Agnes Smedley - The Life and Times of an American Radical - J.R. & S.R. MacKinnon
Amerika - Franz Kafka
Armed Communist Movements in Southeast Asia - Ed. Lim Joo Jock & Vani S.
Beating the Blues - Thase & Lang
Believer Book of Writers Talking To Writers - Vendela Vida
Bird by Bird - Anne Lamott
Bonfire of the Vanities - Tom Wolfe
Captains of Consciousness - Stuart Ewen
Captives of Shanghai - The Story of the President Harrison - David H. & Gretchen G. Grover
Chandranath - SharatChandra Chattopadhyay
Chinese Blue and White - Ann Frank
Clay Walls - Kim Ronyoung
Colonial Masculinity - Mrinalini Sinha
Daniel Deronda - George Eliot
Daughters of a Coral Dawn - Katherine V. Forrest
Death and Justice - Mark Fuhrman
Dena-Paona - SharatChandra Chattopadhyay
Devdas - SharatChandra Chattopadhyay
Don't Know Much About Mythology - Kenneth C. Davis
Ethan of Athos - Lois McMaster Bujold
Extraordinary Popular Delusions - Mackay
Folklore of Tamil Nadu - S.M.L. Lakshman Chettiar
Force 136 Story of A WWII Resistance Fighter - Tan Chong Tee
From Pacific War to Merdeka - James Wong Wing On
Gaijin - James Clavell
Glory - Vladimir Nabokov
Heart Politics - Fran Peavey
How I Adore You - Mark Pritchard
How To Write A Damn Good Novel - James Frey
Imaginary Homelands - Salman Rushdie
In My Dreams - Kassandra Kane
In Pursuit of Mountain Rats - Anthony Short
Jai Bhim - Terry Pilchik
Kempeitai - The Japanese Secret Service Then and Now - Richard Deacon
Kempeitai Japan's Dreaded Military Police - Raymond Lamont-Brown
Labour Unrest in Malaya, 1934-1941 The Rise of the Workers' Movement - Tai Yuen
Lest We Forget - Joyce E. Williams & Alice M. Coleman
Life As The River Flows Women in the Malayan Anti-Colonial Struggle - Agnes Khoo
Living Hell - Story of a WWII Survivor at the Death Railway - Goh Chor Boon
Malay Folk Beliefs - An Integration of Disparate Elements - Mohd. Taib Osman
Malaya and Singapore During The Japanese Occupation - Ed. Paul Kratoska
Malaysia - R. Emerson
Maria - Leslie Netto
Martin Chuzzlewit - Charles Dickens
Modern Japan - A Historical Survey - Mikiso Hane
Murder on the Verandah - Eric Lawlor
My Brother Jack - George Johnston
Night Butterfly - Tan Guan Heng
Niskriti - SharatChandra Chattopadhyay
No Cowardly Past - Dominic Puthucheary
Nonsense - Robert J. Gula
On Beauty - Zadie Smith
On the Beach - Nevil Shute
Orientalism - Edward W. Said
Outwitting the Gestapo - Lucie Aubrac
Palli Samaj (The Homecoming) - SharatChandra Chattopadhyay
Pandit Moshai - SharatChandra Chattopadhyay
Pather Dabi - SharatChandra Chattopadhyay
Pearl S. Buck - A Cultural Biography - Peter Conn
Plays, Vol. 2 - Bertholdt Brecht
Praxis - Faye Weldon
Prehistory of the Indo-Malaysian Archipelago - Peter Bellwood
Prometheus Rising - Robert Anton Wilson
Raffles - Maurice Collis
Reading Lolita In Teheran - Azar Nafisi
Reality Isn't What It Used To Be - Walter Truett Anderson
Red Star Over Malaya Resistance & Social Conflict During And After The Japanese Occupation, 1941-1946 - Cheah Boon Kheng
Rehearsal For War The Underground War Against The Japanese - Ban Kah Choon Yap Hong Kuan
Rethinking Raffles - Syed Muhd Khairudin Aljunied
Revolt in Paradise - K'tut Tantri
Robert van Gulik - His Life, His Work - Jan Willem van de Wetering
Shanghai Refuge A Memoir of the World War II Jewish Ghetto - Ernest G. Heppner
Shantung Compound - Langdon Gilkey
Shirin Fozdar, Asia's Foremost Feminist - Rose Ong
Silences - Tillie Olsen
Singapore - Journey Into Nationhood
Singapore The Air-Conditioned Nation - Cherian George
Singapore The Pregnable Fortress - Peter Elphick
Singapore's People's Action Party - Its History, Organization and Leadership - Pang Cheng Liang
Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas - Maya Angelou
Sinister Twilight The Fall of Singapore - Noel Barber
Sisters in The Resistance - How Women Fought To Free France, 1940-1945 - Margaret Collins Weitz
Sisters and Strangers - Women in the Shanghai Cotton Mills, 1919-1949 - Emily Honig
Soldiers Alive - Ishikawa Tatsuzo
Southeast Asia In The Age of Commerce 1450-1680 - Anthony Reid
Spices & Condiments - J.S. Pruthi
Stones From The River - Ursula Hegi
Strangers Always - A Jewish Family in Wartime Shanghai - Rena Krasno
Streets of Georgetown, Penang - Khoo Su Nin
Syonan - My Story - The Japanese Occupation of Singapore - Mamoru Shinozaki
Taming the Wind of Desire - Psychology, Medicine, and Aesthetics in Malay Shamanistic Performance - Carol Laderman
Tears of the Giraffe - Alexander McCall Smith
The Age of Diminished Expectations - Krugman
The Amber Spyglass - Phillip Pullman
The Argumentative Indian - Writings on Indian Histolry, Culture, and Identity - Amartya Sen
The Art of the Novel - Milan Kundera
The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian - Nirad C. Chaudhury
The Book of Tea - Okakura Kakuzo
The Boss Dog - M.F.K. Fisher
The Communist Struggle in Malaya - Gene Z. Hanrahan
The Courtship of Robert Browning & Elizabeth Barrett - Karlin
The Death of Woman Wang - Jonathan D. Spence
The Devil Finds Work - James Baldwin
The Fall of Shanghai - Noel Barber
The Family:They Fuck You Up - Granta
The Forgotten Army - India's Armed Struggle for Independence 1942-1945 - Peter Ward Fay
The Ginger Man - J.P. Donleavy
The Golden Compass - Phillip Pullman
The Great Hedge of India - Roy Moxham
The Great Indian Novel - Shashi Tharoor
The Hollowing - Robert Holdstock
The Jungle is Neutral - F. Spencer Chapman D.S.O.
The Literature & The Story - Vivian Gornick
The Lives of Agnes Smedley - Ruth Price
The Mak Nyahs - Teh Yik Koon
The Makioka Sisters - Junichiro Tanizaki
The Malay Archipelago - Alfred Russell Wallace
The Malayan Union Controversy, 1942-1948 - Albert Lau
The Marquis A Tale of Syonan-to - E.J.H. Corner
The Mind's I - Hofstadter & Dennett
The Origins Of The Second World War In Asia And The Pacific - Akira Iriye
The Pacific War 1931-1945 - Saburo Ienaga
The Physics of Star Trek - Lawrence Krauss
The Plague - Albert Camus
The Political Economy of Social Control in Singapore - Christopher Tremewan
The Price of Peace - True Accounts of the Japanese Occupation - Ed. Foong Choon Hon
The Rise and Fall of the Knights Templar - Gordon Napier
The Scents of Eden - A History Of The Spice Trade - Charles Corn
The Selfish Gene - Richard Dawkins
The Singapore Council of Women and The Women's Movement - Phyllis Ghim Lian Chew
The Subtle Knife - Phillip Pullman
The Unabomber Manifesto -
The Vintage Book of Indian Writing 1947-1997 - Ed. Salman Rushdie & Elizabeth West
The War in Malaya - Lt. Gen. A.E. Percival
The World of the Shining Prince - Court Life in Ancient Japan - Ivan Morris
Three Came Home - Agnes Newton Keith
Till Morning Comes - Han Suyin
Time Bombs in Malaysia - Lim Kit Siang
Tipping the Velvet - Sarah Waters
Tokyo Rose - Masayo Duus
Understanding Media - Marshall McLuhan
War and Memory in Malaysia and Singapore - Ed. P. Lim Pui Huen & Diana Wong
Water for Elephants - Sara Gruen
Who Won The Malayan Emergency - Herbert Andrew
Why I Am Not A Muslim - ibn Warraq
Women in the Holocaust - Eds. Dalia Ofer & Lenore J. Weitzman
Women of China - Bobby Siu
Women, Outcastes, Peasants & Rebels - Bardhan
Writers Workshop In A Book - Alan Cheuse and Lisa Alvarez
Writing Past Dark - Bonnie Friedman
You Shall Know Our Velocity - Dave Eggers
You'll Never Get Off The Island - Keith Wilson
Your Memory:A User's Guide - Alan Baddeley

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Thursday, June 21, 2007

Smokey's Corner

Today's treat is a poem from Smokey

Misrepresented


The Angels are angry
bitterly and intensely angry.

They feel used.
Used by painters, sculptors,
tombstone carvers and
church leaders.

Their purpose has been misrepresented
for centuries.

Their one and only task
given by their Creator
has been to make each and
every Lesbian
happy
deliriously happy.

© 2007 K Smokey Cormier

Does anyone remember that ubiquitous slogan from the mid-'80s/'90s, "Dip me in honey and throw me to the lesbians"? I used to have a button that said that. I think I'm gonna make me a tee-shirt.

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Sunday, April 01, 2007

Books Read in March

Well, this was a piss-poor showing. I guess I need an excuse factory for all the books I failed to read!

Excuse of the Month:

1. Pneumonia - delirious and uncomprehending for ~2 weeks; and
2. Gardening - the weather is beautiful and I have to get all the weeds gone before the annual fire inspections.

Books of the Month:
  • A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius - Dave Eggers

    Borrowed? Yes. I blame Smokey.

    This book got rave reviews from many well-respected authors and reviewers. Mr. Eggers, when it comes time for you to review my work, I hope you'll develop the same convenient amnesia that appears to be plaguing the entire current administration. This book is very clever.

    Recommended? For readers who enjoy cleverness.
    Reread? No. I prefer books that either move me or teach me.

  • The China Study - Thomas M. Campbell and Colin T. Campbell

    Borrowed? Yes. Thanks, Jay.

    This book has changed my life. The Campbells have put together an excellent and much-needed epic on nutrition and human disease. The epidemic of diseases that faces the 21st century human is very different from the previous century. Our worries center around obesity, diabetes, atherosclerosis, heart diseases, cancer. Diseases of affluence and longer lifespans. Except, according to Dr. Campbell, it ain't necessarily so. Why are the wealthiest not the healthiest? Don't we have all the science, the research, the necessary tools? Let Dr. Campbell tell you why. If this book doesn't change your life, I'll eat my hat. Or you'll eat yours, or something. It'd be better for you than that hamburger, in any event.


    Recommended? Highly.
    Reread? Yes, as soon as I notice any evidence of slackment.

  • The Easy Way To Stop Smoking - Allen Carr

    Borrowed? No.

    Okay, what's with the self-helpalooza? I'll tell you what. It's time to quit smoking, once and for all. When your lungs feel like hot buttered knives are ripping through them with every breath it is time to stub out the last little stinker and say goodbye to that feeelthy habit. This is an excellent book. Really. The book can be repetitive at times, but repetition is needed when trying to get rid of an ancient and deeply ingrained - and life-destroying - habit.


    Recommended? To any smoker trying to quit. To families and friends of smokers who want to help their loved one kick the habit.
    Reread? Every time I need to.

  • You Must Set Forth At Dawn - Wole Soyinka

    Borrowed? Smoke, again!

    What a wonderful book! It's so richly evocative of Africa, written with all the love that a person feels for their country and culture. It made me wish I was in Africa, it made me want to read a million books of African history and culture and language, and music, and art, and long for all Africana. It gave me hope. Africa can be the hope of the old world and the new world and the third world. It's funny, Jonathan Raban's book about Africana is the polar opposite of this, though well-written in its own way. Professor Soyinka has played a vital part in Nigeria's history, and is a writer of great talent and skill. I am glad he is still writing.


    Recommended? Oh, yes!
    Reread? Someday. After reading all the books on African history and culture.

  • Women's Lip - TBD

    Borrowed? Gift

    An amusing little collection of feminist snark, which is going to feature on this blog sooner or later.

    Recommended? For amusement only.
    Reread? No.

  • Pronatalism: The Myth of Mom & Apple Pie - Ellen Peck, Judith Senderowitz, Eds.

    Borrowed? Nope.

    This is an excellent collection of essays about the institutionalized pronatalism that has led the global population to increase by 50% over the last 40 years. Whatever happened to the ZPG movement? Forty years ago, governments concluded that the human population of the planet had grown too large and must be managed down to zero growth. Forty years later, we are seeing a vicious wave of pronatalism nearly unprecedented in previous history. Even as people endlessly whine about the rising cost of living, the pollution of the atmosphere, the water, the very earth, the crowded conditions of our cities, the lack of opportunities for young people entering schools and the workforce, we are breeding like cockroaches, with disastrous consequences, and no one is drawing the logical conclusion.

    Recommended? Highly. For anyone interested in women's studies, feminism, social studies, population studies, ecology, sustainability, and the fate of the world.
    Reread? As soon as ever I can.



I just noticed that four out of the six books I read this month were weighty and not a quick read. So there's that in my defense. I will stop beating myself up now and post an updated booklist to be read by July 1.

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Sunday, March 25, 2007

A Quote For The Ages

I just lost a bunch of stuff that I was going to post, so instead I will post this beautiful quote I found:

How long would it take before a savaged people woke up, recovered their sense of worth, and knocked him off his pedestal into a hole so deep that generations to come would seek his remains in vain?

Wole Soyinka, "You Must Set Forth At Dawn"

He's talking about Sani Abacha, of course, but those words did strike home quite hard. If you haven't read the book already, do yourself a favour and buy, beg, borrow a copy today. And read it. What a life Professor Soyinka has lived!

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