Showing posts with label Stamatis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stamatis. Show all posts

Monday, December 7, 2009

Chicago: City on the Make #2

Chicago: City on the Make #2

IN GENERAL
This is a slow read. I REALLY appreciate the notes section in back.
After reading a small section, I check out the notes immediately and it helps me understand who and what he is talking about—after all we are translating from a different language!

PORTRAIT OF A CITY
Chicago is a strange place—there are so many different areas and eras—it is difficult to put your finger on what Chicago is all about.

“It’s a ball game between the do-as-I-sayers and the live-and-let-livers—but it’s a rigged ball game.”
“The only way a mayor can procceed is to just keep things in repair”
The battle goes on between the people who follow the laws and those who realize there is no point in doing that—to survive (or sometimes just live) you may have to bend or even break them. There needs to be a place for these people and I was amazed that it was all confined to the Old Levee district, isolated from the rest of society. See note on bottom of pg 110

THERE IS MORE…
Algren tells an anecdote about one thing but he is really saying something else.
Re: the ball game and the blacklist. On pg 34-36 when he tells the story about being stopped on the northside by kids who demand he tell his favorite player and then berate him on his choices—it becomes commentary on the McCarty hearings. The phrases and terms used: Guilt of association, conspiracy, the committee, chairman all make a clever reference to a very twisted past.

WRITING
His writing is beautiful and has a wonderful sound when read aloud.

I have mixed feeling about the anachronistic “Chicago: City on the Make”. I think writing should be understood, without too much work for the reader. In another sense, I find the deciphering and decoding a thrill and a complete hassle at the same time. But, if he didn’t word things in his dated slang the way he did, his prose would lose all its beauty and cadence.

Montgomery-Ward sleepwalkers—Shoppers at a department store
Straw Kelly—Summer hat
Cribs—Brothels

Friday, December 4, 2009

Fire Sale #2

Fire Sale #2

After I finished:

Great Character––V.I. Warshawski

After tensions were resolved, I was not very surprised. There was a long string of clues that took a long time to arrive to an inevitable conclusion.

Paretsky has an agenda and it is very noticeable: workers' rights at a big box store, gangs & basketball as their only hope, class issues, the giant chasm that exists between the haves and have nots etc...I don't mind as it is timely and apropos.

Warshawski is the righteous problem solver super hero. She fixes the injustices all over the town. From the small things to the big things. Warshawski's character was consistent, deep and tough. I like her, I don't like the clients & suspects she deals with, and I want her to figure everything out and kick some ass. I want to see the good gal beat up the bad guy. It vicariously heals all the injustices I have dealt with in the past.

Of all people, Warshawski reminded me of the John McClane (Bruce Willis) DIE HARD character. She gets wounded in the first scene, she is then hospitalized, and ends up a walking corpse by the end of the book being hospitalized again. She is beaten up and still relentless.

I don't really have a lot to say about the writing. It is competent and it appropriately delivers the story without getting in the way or drawing attention to itself. In that regard, i was not a participant. more of an observer of the cinematic story.

I think this would make a great movie. It seems to be overflowing with attitude from each character. I have yet to see the film that was already made in 1991.

Fire Sale #1

Fire Sale #1

Here are some of my thoughts as I was reading the book:

I am intrigued to find out what happens to the cheating couple (marcina & roach), the kid & josie, and to find out who started the fire even though i have a pretty good idea.

But, this is dragging on. Not much action happened from the fire in the beginning up until the 2nd half of the book. I like the historical chicago bits of info.

The by-smart, non-union, no benefits, cheap labor overseas, working class hero stuff is wearing on me at this point. Not from this book, but in our society. It is ridiculous that the denial of essential, civilized rights (like benefits and the ability to unionize) could be calmly accepted by the workers.

V.I. Warshawski is preachy, pushing, and a professional meddler, yet most other characters put her in her place and call her out on her behavior. She is also extremely self critical which makes her more believable——like she just can't help being the way she is.

I guess it makes me wonder why ALL private detectives aren't simply ignored by the potential suspects in mystery stories? It's not like you are ignoring the police! Unlike a police detective, a P.I. is just some busybody who everybody can shove aside.

Some scenes are great——like the "punta" scene was pretty funny.

Chicago: City on the make—#1

Chicago: City on the make—#1

I was poking around on Chowhound website trying to find a substitute for one of my favorite restaurants that closed years ago, BUSY BEE. Somebody posted that we should all check out a place called:

Podhalanka (pronounced, poe-deh-lanka)
1549 W. Division St.

Unfortunately, this did not pacify my desire for Busy Bee pierogi. My wife had already taken me there about 8 years ago. She swore they had the best Borscht. She was right. I loved this place and I loved the feeling i had being there eating and just hanging out. It is not chic, hip, or expensive. It is a real place — not a stepping stone to a restaurant chain franchise, not a stop in a sequence of higher schemes. This was it. I REALLy enjoy finding places like this.

Podhalanka reminded me and many others of the Busy Bee restaurant—a peirogi joint at milwaukee, damen and north avenue.

Then something happened...Somebody else on Chowhound responded with this:



I saw the connection. When I think back, people actually used to talk about Nelson Algren at a places i used to frequent—-i confirmed this with my wife as she used to hang out at these places a great deal more than me.

One was Busy Bee the other is the Rainbow club (1150 N Damen Ave., between Haddon Ave & Division St). They serve $2 PBR on a friday night—that says a good deal about this dive bar.

I don't recall much more than the regulars saying that Algren was a regular at the Rainbow Club. I don't think busy bee was around when Algren was alive, but the folks there used to talk about him and they said he hung out at the Rainbow club.

Busy bee was an amazing place, too bad it closed down.

It was amazing in the sense that it was owned and operated by somebody who enjoyed serving people large portions of good, inexpensive food. Sophie, the owner, created a community dinning area - a giant rectangular bar/counter with the servers in the center. There were also tables in an other area.

Policemen would double park out front, jump out run in and pick up there order as the exchanged some happy talk with Sophie as hustlers, hoods, locals and travelers, killing time, ate at the bar. I went in there the first time to fill my belly. My very dear friend is Polish and his mother always had really great food available for me. I walked by Busy Bee, I saw people eating pierogi and rushed in.

It was a place rich with characters and it was a microcosm of the eclectic and strange city in which it resided. It was a place you could write about. It was a place where you could go to eat some great cheap food and write. I can picture Algren sitting there chowing away and getting into frank and curt discussions with the other diners.

The Actual—#2

The Actual—#2

I think The Actual a great example of modern writing in that there is really no emphasis on plot and much of what we encounter are fragments that are decontextualized. Some of the players involved have implied roles, yet offer no true forward momentum to constructing a plot.

There is a collection of cinematic scenes, internal thoughts, and observations. The reader must put all of this together. We end up trying to figure out what the story IS while we are reading. And, it is a bit of a twist to see the fragments i THOUGHT might develop where actually red herrings (as you mentioned). In the end it was a simple old flame who really did make our main, mysterious character truly conscious.

The old flame theme idea rears its head in a completely realistic manner. Life goes on with its monotony on one side and its chaos on the other. Many times during a day one connects with their past—externally and internally. Even if you change locale and friends—its always inside you.

The immediacy of life hit me in the face by the end of the book. Marriage, love, and trying to cope with it all while Death hangs over head. Old relationships, ones that could have been but never where.

There are some people who have a profound ineffable affect on me. There is an attraction way beyond the physical. It is the missed opportunities with those unique people which are often viewed with regret. We all have them.

I am thankful that I attained closure with two unrealized loves from my past. I sought one of them out, and the other found me. I walked away much wiser with a strong acceptance of our attraction and incompatibility. Unfortunately, i am also reminded of all the loves that where realized yet ended unresolved and without closure. There is a residue from these things that lingers until you get so old you forget everything you ever did and everybody you ever knew.

The Actual—#1

The Actual—#1

We all had a little confusion in class about the shower scene. I went back to check it over: Harry, Jay and Amy where all in the shower. Amy and Jay were not married at the time. FYI.

I love this book. This is the first Bellow book i've read. I plan to read many more. A story that starts anywhere and then kinda ends where ever it needs to always pulls me in.

As i stated in class, Bellow did a wonderful job revealing enough information to keep me interested, but leaving out just enough to keep me involved. He had me trying to piece things together in an enjoyable way.

Bellow offers little assistance to the reader when dialog is involved. It is challenging to know who is speaking at a given moment.
Shifts in time take place with little to no warning. Both of these techniques work because Bellow KNOWS he did this and he drops clues in the following text to help you keep your place. It is refreshing to have this tension and resolutions in some areas, and unresolved mystery and ambiguity in others. So, I don't know everything, but i know enough to want to know more. As i continued to try and piece together one thing, other fragments are introduced. Its like a fugue.

The repetition of facts and events did strengthen the back stories of each character so they STUCK in my memory. Often, you would re-experience the same scene retold from a different perspective and this would validate, reinforce and broaden your experience of the scene and the characters involved.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

The Jungle—#2 Interactive Google map is ready

All of this is from a book:
Upton Sinclair: The Lithuanian Jungle,
by Gierdrius Subacius

This discusses Sinclair’s initial sources and investigates the reasoning behind his ultimate choice for Lithuanian characters.

Click here to see an interactive Google map that shows the whole area where the story took place.

The outlined perimeter of the Google map links to ANOTHER map actually from the era.
I have added many annotations and it is worth a quick look.

The Jungle—#1

The Jungle—post#1

Sinclair’s Tactics

All conditions of life— social, moral, political, economic, commercial, climatic, bacteriological are assembled, drilled into order, arranged under the proper standards and led by converging roads to the assault

Winston Churchill (commenting on The Jungle)

Sinclair’s unrelenting documentation of every aspect of life that contributes to suffering took a toll on this reader. Yet, it did prove to be an interesting tactic—it did prod and engage me. If the use of tension had intentionally and frequently been resolved to create stasis, or equilibrium, I don’t believe my participation would have been as active.

Sinclair crafted a deadly and stressful environment that could only be resolved with his (client’s) solution—socialism. After all, he was commissioned and paid to write a serial about “wage slavery” for the socialist newspaper, An Appeal to Reason. The editor, Fred D. Warren, advanced Sinclair $500 for the serial rights of the novel and Sinclair selected the stockyard as its setting. “The recent strike had brought the subject to my thoughts”, said Sinclair in his autobiography from 1962.

Yet, in The Jungle, there is an answer outside of socialism—LEAVE THE CITY!
Jurgis did run away after his injuries; the rape of his wife; the blacklisting; his arrest and imprisonment; the loss of his job and home; the death of his wife and child. As he tramped around the country, Jurgis was revived and felt strong again. Kind and helpful people provided food and lodging—even job opportunities. Why not stay there?

The struggle in the book becomes (not one of workers against the beef trust and capitalism run amuck; but,) one of somebody trying to stubbornly prove they can adapt to an environment.
Jurgis, for example, is challenged by Chicago and he systematically alters his strategies to survive the system. His instinctive work ethic, and his belief that right will prevail in the face of injustice both lure him back from the country to look for work in the same exact area that ruined him!
After failed attempts he decides to become a criminal. As he witnesses the newer immigrants arriving—viewing life from the other side—he decides to become somebody with “pull”. HE is the one taking bribes for assisting the voters on election day. HE is getting compensated for being a union scab etc… He already escaped, why does he go back for more?

It is amazing. We are truly creatures of habit. What else causes somebody to stay in a horrible situation rather than venture out into the unknown?

In this city, I have met with my own private shit storm; but, here I remain. WHY? Who knows? Family ties, I guess. But, I’m optimistic that somewhere in this world…(far away from here) it might be better. Workers of the world, disperse!
[cue: Over the Rainbow]

Devil in the White City - #2

Devil in the White City—#2

I’ll quickly mention what I found problematic with this book. It is a mere observation and not a bashing session.
Then, I’ll go over what I enjoyed and found fascinating.

For every malleable story in the mind there are a myriad of possible presentations. I did enjoy the stories in TDITWC, but I did not enjoy the manner in which they where delivered or how they were structured. I did not like the delivery at all. Not in a boat. Not in a plane. Not on a bike. Not in the rain. I did not like his writing style said stam I am.

The main problem: there simply were too many wonderful epic stories occurring simultaneously.

I applaud Larson for telling them all. The history of Chicago, the Titanic, Architecture in general, The story of Burnham, The story of Holmes, (and many others) are injected into the main story of the challenge to complete the world’s fair on time. This struggle alone is story enough.

It is pointless for me to say anything more about the writer’s style; and, I do not have any solutions for the problem of simultaneity except one: structuring the book into two sections—one for the building of the white city and one for Holmes.

The white city portion is long, detailed, and mostly factual while the Holmes story is shorter and mainly speculative with many factual supports along the way. Perhaps, if the white city is presented first, some of its details could be referenced and synchronized with the Holmes story, as it unfolds.

It seems that Larson approaches storytelling by interweaving two or more tales together. This is not the first book he has written that does this.

What I like about the book:

THE WHITE CITY
  1. Setting: Larson did manage to successfully capture the city setting of this era and put the reader there.

  2. The Challenge to Chicago’s Architects: He appealed to the designer in me by offering reasons as to why an architect chose one solution over another—this apparently bored the rest of you to tears. Any project (or the design process) is almost always full of things that practically drive you to an insane asylum. Whether you are recording a CD, having a booklet printed, picking a cabinet for the bathroom, planning a wedding, or deciding which $150 garbage can you want from a store that only sells containers: something may go wrong and you must improvise and adapt until the project is complete. That being said, I did enjoy this angle on the architect’s dilemma and constraints and how they successfully completed their projects. The long rants from Olmsted made me nuts. He was usually right, but what a fussy little ponce.

  3. Bloom. What a character! I can’t believe this man wrote the tune that became “there’s a place on mars where the women smoke cigars…” bottom of page 208-209

HOLMES

I have VERY mixed feelings about stories or films involving serial killers. Like most people, my interest only lies in understanding why somebody performs these violent acts. I found certain moments in TDITWC incredibly enlightening in this regard. Even the famous quote from Holmes sheds some light on his behavior.

“I was born with the devil in me. I could not help the fact that I was a murderer, no more than the poet can help the inspiration to sing.”

Pg 87: describing the psychopath, “Beside his own person and his own interests, nothing is sacred to the psychopath.” “a subtly complex reflex machine which can mimic the human personality perfectly…So perfect is his reproduction of a whole and normal man that one who examines him in a clinical setting can point out in scientific or objective terms why, or how, he is not real”

Pg 408 “Acquiring Minnie” notes: Philippe Pinel’s appraisal of psychopathic serial killer:
“The serial killer is typically a sociopathic personality who lacks internal control—guilt or conscience—to guide his own behavior, but has an excessive need to control and dominate others. He definitely knows right from wrong, definitely realizes he has committed a sinful act, but simply doesn’t care about his human prey. The sociopath has never internalized a moral code that prohibits murder. Having fun is all that matters.”

Pg 200: “What he craved was possession and the power it gave him; what he adored was anticipation—the slow acquisition of love, then life, and finally the secrets within. The ultimate disposition of the material was irrelevant, a recreation. That he happened to have found a way to disposal efficient and profitable was simply a testament to his power.”

Pg 296: “This is the time he most craved. It brought him a period of sexual release that seemed to last for hours, even though in fact the screams and pleading faded rather quickly.”

Pg 257: “The possession he craved was a transient thing, like the scent of a fresh-cut hyacinth. Once it was gone, only another acquisition could restore it.”

It seems that Holmes was addicted to a sensation—an emotional reaction (in the form of the sexual release) that came from the acquisition and possession of victims AND the power he held over them. It wasn’t the grizzly act, itself; it was the feeling he had during the moments of controlling somebody before the taking of life. The killing and disposal was necessary side work, or “clean-up”, so he could continue his addictive activities uninterrupted. Holmes was addicted to this sensation; and, like all addicts, he had to repeat the act to experience that sensation again.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Carl Sandburg: Chicago Poems—#2

Carl Sandburg: Chicago Poems—#2

Maybe sometime after 1906 Carl Sandburg met Jurgis Rudkus when they were both hobo-ing it across the Midwest. In the poem, ‘Boes, Sandburg states: We were three in all, the other being a Lithuanian who got drunk on pay day at the steel works and got to fighting a policeman.

I’d like to think that Socialism was just another of the many disappointments in Jurgis’ life. After quitting his bellboy job—mainly due to the boring and endless speeches— he returned to the slaughterhouse to look for secluded, sonically superior work where he could never hear anybody make speeches. But, he was never picked from the line: being too old and weak. So, he went back to the steel mill and harvester works and found employment. Jurgis pacified his pain with drink and convenient companionship. The policeman he punched was trying to arrest Jurgis’ recycled sweetheart as she was on her way to meet Jurgis at the same whorehouse where Marija lived and worked.

I could be wrong. Maybe it was a different Lithuanian hobo who liked to drink and fight policemen after working at the steel mill. Its great reading Sandburg again after Devil in the White city and The Jungle!

Monday, October 19, 2009

Carl Sandburg: Chicago Poems—#1

Carl Sandburg: Chicago Poems—#1
I felt that there were a few gems in this seemingly unedited collection of poems. Some descriptions are clichés that one might find in a high school kid’s journal. Sandburg may have invented these clichés, but the combination of these AND the formulaic writing wear me down:
  • There is an event.
  • It happens to somebody in the upper crust of society.
  • It is compared and contrasted against somebody in the lower rungs.
  • Themes are mostly about the suffering poor.
Cumulatives offers a more interesting way of comparing and contrasting.

The ones that really spoke to me:

CHICAGO POEMS
Chicago
Happiness

To certain Journeymen
Mag
Under a hat rim
Bath is cool—a man transformed by music
To a Contemporary Bunkshooter—here I don’t mind his rambling ‘cause he is kicking some hypocritical ass.
Skyscraper

HANDFULS
Fog
Pool
Choose
Crimson
Troths

WAR POEMS
Iron
Murmurings
Buttons
And they obey
Wars

THE ROAD AND THE END—zilch

FOGS AND FIRES
At a Window
Under a Harvest Moon
Monotone
Two
On the Breakwater
I sang—only the 1st two lines are needed, just great!
Bones
Margaret

SHADOWS
It is much
Harrison Street Court—I live on Harrison street, and I feel it.
Gone—Chick Lorimer, what a gal.

OTHER DAYS
Waiting
Dream Girl—very corny, but nicely put
Old Woman
Under a telephone pole
Languages
The Junkman

Monday, October 5, 2009