Katherine Addison's Blog, page 21
September 16, 2018
Review: Rodriguez, The Daughters of Juarez

My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This book, published in 2007, is about the skyrocketing rate of murder against women in Ciudad Juarez starting in 1993 and the horrific corruption in the police, the government, and the judiciary that caused/enabled/obfuscated the murders.
It's not a great book. It's not Rodriguez's fault that her topic is open-ended (there hadn't been, as of 2007, a single conviction in any of the murders that wasn't dubious at best) or that it is mind-bogglingly complicated. However, the same things can be said of Michelle McNamara's I'll Be Gone in the Dark, which I'm listening to right now and which has the added burden of being UNFINISHED and yet is excellent. Rodriguez doesn't seem to have a strong enough sense of where she wants her story to be, with the victims' families, with the police corruption, with the overarching problem of violence against women being judged unimportant by the men in power. And, yes, her story can be all of those things, but it takes some serious chops to make that kind of shift in scale from micro to macro work, and Rodriguez is an okay writer, but not the kind of powerhouse she'd need to be to pull it off. Perhaps what was lacking was the person of the author. Both McNamara and Ann Rule (whose Green River Running Red is another extremely complicated story being told on multiple levels) include themselves in the story. This isn't always necessary, or even desirable, but it gives the reader a yardstick, a little human figure to scale that keeps the horrifying numbers from receding into that muffled middle ground between the personal and the historical. And Rodriguez's numbers ARE horrifying--even more horrifying is that nobody really knows what the numbers ARE. Maybe it's that Rodriguez, after her Preface and Introduction, both of which promise a kind of sensibility that the book itself does not have, effaces her subject-position, which makes it feel, to me, like the book doesn't have any backbone--not in the sense of courage, but in the sense of a structure to hang its bones on.
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Published on September 16, 2018 07:37
Review: Sanchez Romero & Schwalb, Beast

My rating: 2 of 5 stars
I watched The Brotherhood of the Wolf (2001) shortly after it came out (I think I mentioned it in my dissertation), and I knew it was based on something that really happened (although the movie diverges wildly and happily from reality), so I was glad to find a book that was a history of the story behind the folklore that inspired TBotW.
I would have been more glad if it had been a better book.
The first part is an imaginative account of the rampages of la Bete, including my particular hobby horse, passages from the point of view of the victims. The second part is a discussion of what la Bete (or les Betes, for there were (at least) two of them) actually was. The subtitle promises "werewolves, serial killers, and man-eaters," but there's no substantive discussion of either werewolves or serial killers, since it's perfectly obvious from the accounts of survivors and, hello, the AUTOPSIES, that la Bete was neither of those things and Sanchez Romero & Schwalb knew that going in. I find the blatant PR move more than a little annoying, especially since they weren't substantive discussions, just sort of glancing through the history of things like porphyria and lycanthropy (which is a psychiatric phenomenon where people believe that and behave like they are wolves, up to and including cannibalism). It was more retelling of folklore than anything else.
The proper discussion of what la Bete was is repetitive and for all that they lay out tables and drawings of skulls and so on, it was hard to get any sense of acumen or incisiveness out of it. (The word I'm circling is sharp, that sense of the authors knowing exactly what they want to say and how to say it. Hear No Evil may or may not be out on the lunatic fringe, but it is very sharply written.) Their consensus is that la Bete premiere, the Chazes Wolf, was in fact a massive wolf, and la Bete deuxieme, the Tenazeyre Canid, was a wolf-dog hybrid.
This isn't a very long book, but there's a lot of padding in it.
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Published on September 16, 2018 07:33
Review: Michaud & Price, The Devil's Right Hand Man

My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I wanted this book to be a lot better than it was.
And it wasn't BAD. It was an interesting book about the way a volunteer cold case squad in Colorado Springs coaxed serial killer Robert Charles Browne in helping them to solve one of his early murders that had only been classed as a missing persons case.
But it doesn't feel finished. Not just because there are dozens of other murders Browne claims to have committed, but because Michaud & Price published their book while several of these murders were waiting on DNA evidence. I know with the laboratory backlog, an author CAN'T wait for all the DNA to come in, but it makes this book feel rushed. Like there's some invisible deadline Michaud & Price felt they had to meet.
(I know another book about Browne just came out, Hello Charlie, but this is TEN YEARS LATER. Who the heck were Michaud & Price trying to scoop?)
So it feels rushed and superficial, like a bad documentary. (I just watched a bad History Channel documentary about the Zodiac Killer, so the comparison is easy to make.) I feel as if there's a lot more work Michaud & Price could have done, more questions they could have asked. Honestly, the sharpest and most incisive thing about this book is its title, and that's a quote from one of Browne's ex-wives.
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Published on September 16, 2018 07:24
Review: Francis, Judge Sewell's Apology

My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a biography of Samuel Sewell, who was one of the judges in the Salem witchcraft trials. It is well-written and well-researched. I would have liked it better if it had been more about the witchcraft trials and less about Samuel Sewell, and I would have liked it better if Francis had not been so concerned to show how remarkable Sewell was, how humane he was and how idealistic, etc. etc. Francis also argues that Sewell marks the transition from allegory to psychology as a way of understanding human lives, but the problem there is that to do so, he has to pretty much ignore the entire Renaissance. Sewell IS that person for the Puritans of New England, and as such is important to the development of American thought, but in his eagerness to show how special Sewell is, Francis tends to forget that the Puritans were 100 to 200 years behind the curve here.
This is a great depiction of life in Puritan Boston around the turn of the seventeenth century, and definitely if you're interested in early American history it is well worth your time. But the subtitle: "The Salem Witch Trials and the Formation of an American Conscience": is a little bit misleading, since the book isn't interested in Salem and doesn't provide any new insights. (I was very disappointed in Francis for heading straight down the FRAUD interpretation without really much nuance.) Honestly, I found much of the day to day minutiae of Sewell's life boring rather than charming and actually FINISHED the book mostly out of pig-headedness. But a different reader will have a different experience. YMMV.
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Published on September 16, 2018 07:19
Review: Hallcox & Welch, Bodies We've Buried

My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I'm going to be perfectly honest. I did not like this book.
There's nothing wrong with it, per se, and I was very interested in its subject matter: the National Forensic Academy's 10 week CSI training program. But I developed a dislike for the authors on about page 3 and it never went away.
I want to differentiate between the authors as human beings, the flesh-and-blood people Jarrett Hallcox and Amy Welch, whom I have never met, and the authors as they present themselves (and it's "we" throughout, not Hallcox and Welch, but Hallcox-and-Welch) in the book. I don't know anything about the flesh and blood people--who by the evidence of material that made it possible for them to write this book are in fact fantastic at their job--I'm only talking about the author-construct. And I disliked the author-construct intensely by the time I was done.
They're too pleased with themselves. "Smarmy" is a harsh word, but it's not wrong. They try to be funny and mostly fail, because humor is extremely hard. There's a feeling throughout of LOOK AT US! AREN'T WE COOL! that rubbed me violently the wrong way.
So if you want to know what CSI training looks like, this is an in-depth and in fact thoughtful discussion of what and how they spend ten weeks teaching their students to do. I just wish I liked it better.
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Published on September 16, 2018 07:14
Review: Evans, The Father of Forensics

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Biography of Sir Bernard Spilsbury. Does what it says on the tin.
Since Spilsbury was a man consumed by his work, it's not surprising that the most interesting aspect of the book is Evans' discussion of the cases Spilsbury testified in, from George Joseph Smith (the Brides in the Bath man) and Hawley Harvey Crippen to the Wartime Ripper, Gordon Cummins. Evans writes very clearly, both about the murders and about the forensics of catching the killers, and he's very careful to include discussion of cases where Spilsbury was uncertain or wrong, to refute the image of Spilsbury as an infallible monolith. He also talks about Spilsbury's courtroom performance, how his certainty in his conclusions infected juries for thirty years.
This was a good book (four stars), but not a great book (definitely not five stars), and I'm trying to figure out what was missing. I don't know if it's that Evans' prose feels a little facile (and he uses section headers in his chapters, which, I dunno) or that for all that this is a carefully even-handed biography, it feels shallow ... there's something that could be there and isn't.
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Published on September 16, 2018 07:08
September 6, 2018
The Cobbler's Boy
New LGBT historical mystery by Elizabeth Bear and me starring a teenage Christopher Marlowe! Available on Amazon. Also a bunch of other places.
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Published on September 06, 2018 09:05
August 16, 2018
NPR's top 100 horror stories
Published on August 16, 2018 10:22
August 4, 2018
New story
I have a story in
Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet
38, "The Oracle of Abbey Road (blackbird singing in the dead of night)."
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Published on August 04, 2018 08:35
August 3, 2018
Ashland MFA Faculty FTW
I am back from the two-week residency/workshop for Ashland University's low residency MFA program, and I just want to tell you all how awesome the faculty is. If you're looking for literary fiction, creative non-fiction, and/or poetry, I whole-heartedly recommend the following writers:
Literary Fiction
Kirsten Chen
Brian Conn
Nayomi Munaweera
Derek Palacio
Naomi Williams
Christian Kiefer
Creative Non-Fiction
Chris Feliciano Arnold
Lily Hoang
Kate Hopper
Lauren Markham
Katherine Standefer
Poetry
Dexter Booth
Marcelo Hernandez Castillo
Kate Gale
Douglas Manuel
Sandra Simonds
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Literary Fiction
Kirsten Chen
Brian Conn
Nayomi Munaweera
Derek Palacio
Naomi Williams
Christian Kiefer
Creative Non-Fiction
Chris Feliciano Arnold
Lily Hoang
Kate Hopper
Lauren Markham
Katherine Standefer
Poetry
Dexter Booth
Marcelo Hernandez Castillo
Kate Gale
Douglas Manuel
Sandra Simonds

Published on August 03, 2018 12:34