SRB: Enough kVeitching Already
SRB Picks of the Week 19 July 2008
By Jeremy
Rose
No, I'm not going to have a kvetch about
the wretched Veitch affair, I just couldn't resist the
headline. A story combining three of the media's pet
obsessions violence, celebrity and cover-ups was always
going to be recipe for saturation coverage. All it needs
now is for some sordid sex tapes to emerge and a Royal
connection and it will be a tabloid full house. But even
with just three of the five, the Sunday Star Times
deemed it important enough to dedicate 100 percent of its
comment section to the affair and the bulk of its news
coverage to boot. Okay, maybe a little kvetching's in
order.
When it comes to combining celebrity and hard news the French do it with so much more style. It's been hard to miss the Sarkozy and Bruni show the ultimate mix of glamour and politics. The lastest installment has Bruni hitting the charts.
But a more enlightening coming together of hard news and celebrity is this conversation between French philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy and Mia Farrow on the crisis in Darfur. You may not agree with everything Lévy says but one thing you can't accuse him of his being an ivory tower academic. Well worth a read and/or listen.
A boycott by American Christians is being blamed for the rumoured cancellation of the second-part of the Phillip Pullman Dark Materials Triology. The Golden Compass did well everywhere except the crucial US market which The Independent reports might be enough to kill the planned second and third installments.
When I mentioned to publisher Mary Varnham that I was setting up the Scoop Review of Books she suggested a regular feature where people could suggest out of print New Zealand books they thought deserved a re-run. I had forgotten the suggestion till I came across this fascinating piece on A Country Doctor's Notebook by Mikhail Bulgakov. So if any of you can think of great New Zealand books that have been out of print for too long drop me a line (jeremy@scoop.co.nz) and I'll publish your suggestions on-line.
Finally, Ralph Nader's copped plenty of flack for supposedly losing Al Gore the Presidency - but but America would be a poorer place without him. His latest piece on "socialists in Washington" is worth a read.
Published
This Week by the Scoop
Review of Books.
A Window Through
the Islamic Mesh
A Thousand Splendid Suns
By Khaled Hosseini
Bloomsbury Paperbacks, $28.
Reviewed by ALISON McCULLOCH
When she is first made to
wear a burqa, Mariam, one of the two main characters in
Khaled Hosseini’s A Thousand Splendid Suns, finds some
comfort in it. The “shameful secrets of her past” –
that she was born a harami or illegitimate child – are
hidden from the outside world, “from the scrutinizing eyes
of strangers.” But it’s tricky to walk without tripping
over the hem, the headpiece is “tight and heavy” and
it’s strange “seeing the world through a mesh
screen.”Read
more »
The Perkins Star Shines Again
Novel About My Wife, by Emily
Perkins
Bloomsbury, $35. Reviewed by JANE
BLAIKIE
Kiwi celebrity writer Emily Perkins is back with
a hot new story – very contemporary, on an old theme.
Novel About My Wife is just that. Tom Stone, a London
sceenwriter recalls the last years of his marriage to Ann,
an Australian-born sculptor. The action sits on a nexus of
art, alcohol, love and madness – being a scenario that
could go by any number of names: the creative life,
self-destruction, abuse, the female as muse, addiction, a
conflicted anima, and so on. Read
more »
A Century Tailor-Made for
Remembrance
The Dom: A Century of News,
edited by Karl du Fresne.
Wellington: The Dominion
Post, 2007. Reviewed by ALAN SAMSON
Let’s be blunt.
Despite management spin and the timeline claims of this
centenary publication, Wellington-based newspaper the
Dominion did not merge with its sister publication The
Evening Post in the big news media shake-up of 2002. That
was the year when, in a shroud of secrecy but as a surprise
to no one (apart, perhaps, for the timing), Wellington’s
afternoon paper the Evening Post gave in to ever-falling
circulation figures and closed. Read
more »
Poem of the Week: Calypso
From: Calypso by Bob Orr, AUP,
$25.
Read
more
»
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