Justin Howe's Blog, page 55

January 31, 2012

Three Reasons Why People Should be Reading Steve Aylett

1. A shop with its own weather, the Thousand Spiders was a place of gut-turning symmetries and the slap of palpable etheric manipulation. In fact it was impossible to tell whether you really wanted to buy what you bought there.

2. In the past everyone had feared Dumbar because his head was actually a chrysalis for another animal. In recent times his face had been almost transparent and they could see something bustle and shift behind it. Finally he'd stopped short in the middle of a...

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Published on January 31, 2012 22:38

January 30, 2012

Murderwort

"Professor Mannhardt relates a strange legend current in Mecklenburg to the effect that in a certain secluded and barren spot, where a murder had been committed, there grows up every day at noon a peculiarly-shaped thistle, unlike any other of its kind. On inspection there are to be seen human arms, hands, and heads, and as soon as twelve heads have appeared, the weird plant vanishes. It is further added that on one occasion a shepherd happened to pass the mysterious spot where the thistle...

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Published on January 30, 2012 12:45

January 25, 2012

The Joke by Milan Kundera

This one got passed to me by someone in Korea. My wife is a fan of Kundera. Or was, before I ruined her taste with comic books and Fritz Leiber.

The Joke details several "jokes", none of which are the haha kind. The first one is a postcard written by Ludvik Jahn when he was a student that caused him to be sentenced to the coal mines. This event propels the plot in so much as the plot is about Ludvik's quest for revenge fifteen years later. In the ways his plan gets fulfilled and in the ways...

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Published on January 25, 2012 10:37

January 23, 2012

Winding It Down


My vacation's about over. I'm in Boston until Thursday when I'll once more enter the air travel relay race and fly back to Korea. It's been a great trip. I've had time to catch up with family and friends, and in between all the running around and socializing I got to be pretty damn lazy. No complaints there. Now to figure out how to fit that pile of books above into my suitcases.


All of which is to say things are still on hiatus here.



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Published on January 23, 2012 07:40

January 14, 2012

Service Announcement

There's likely to be a lack of posts while I'm visiting the USA.


My flight was more or less fine. The whole thing "door to door" took close to 30 hours. I think only 15 of those hours involved being on an airplane. The rest was spent in transit or sitting around. No highlights, except for the leg early on between Korea and Japan where the woman seated beside me burst into tears halfway through the flight. Yeah… fun times.



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Published on January 14, 2012 18:53

January 5, 2012

Warchild by Rick Bowes

All right, this book is one of those I wish I had read as a fifteen year old. At fifteen I would have gobbled this up as I did Moorcock's Eternal Champion. A Mohawk-sporting, telepathic juvenile delinquent hops through time and dimensions to raise an army to do battle with mind parasites?

Yes. Sign me up.

Now sometimes this is a mixed bag. Often encountering something that speaks to our teen-self only increases our awareness of time's passing, and you either succumb to wistful nostalgia or get ...

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Published on January 05, 2012 22:15

January 4, 2012

More From Disorienting Encounters

"There is no better way of obtaining useful information than by mixing with people. According to a wise saying of the ancients: "The eye never tires from seeing, nor the ear from hearing."

Therefore, I decided with the help of God to blacken these pages with what I saw and heard during this voyage, be it clear or obscure. For I am but a woodgatherer of the night, the one who lags behind, a horse who is out of the race."

- Disorienting Encounters: Travels of a Moroccan Scholar in France in 1845...

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Published on January 04, 2012 03:21

January 2, 2012

One Book Four Covers

It's time for another edition of one book, four covers. This time Lolly Willowes.

Once again I read the NYRB edition. That's the one all the way over on the left. I think it's a bit lousy–misleading and unappealing. It calls to mind Native American or folk artwork and certainly doesn't tell you what the book's likely to be about. The second one… umm.. yeah… First I guess it was published during the 60s/70s Gothic boom where a cover required an old house, a young woman, and some stuffy...

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Published on January 02, 2012 05:43

Lolly Willowes by Sylvia Townsend Warner

Here's the first read for 2012: Sylvia Townsend Warner's Lolly Willowes. Yup, it's another New York Review Book and it hasn't shaken my conviction that all of their books are great. Warner combines the perceptiveness of Jane Austen with the supernatural touch of Shirley Jackson.

Laura "Lolly" Willowes is a single woman in the early 20th century, and the novel concerns her spiritual renewal late in life (well after she has been consigned to the role of spinster aunt by her family) when she...

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Published on January 02, 2012 05:33