Let's eat ... food!

pollan-cover.jpgJust can't get away from the book reviewing habit -- recently I picked up a copy of Michael Pollan's most recent book, In Defense of Food, at work (yes, it's in the collection of the FKCC Library!) and found it a quick, engaging and interesting read -- so engaging I started taking notes. Next thing I knew, I was reviewing it for Solares Hill and the review appears in the current edition (that link takes  you to a PDF of the entire issue). The review is also available on the Citizen's website, where Solares Hill's book review appears each week, down at the bottom of the page. The book is a great, easily understood and entertaining take on America's dysfunctional attitude toward food. Plus Pollan's up there in my personal nonfiction pantheon -- along with the likes of Calvin Trillin, Ian Frazier, and Tony Horwitz (hmmm ... must add some women to that list*). I'll read almost anything these guys write and it's almost all great. Check it out -- here at the college library, from your local bookstore or from the Monroe County Library system -- they have two copies, in Marathon and Big Pine, both currently checked out. And here's to healthier eating!

*I feel compelled to add here that it's not like I don't read and admire women who write nonfiction -- Joan Acocella, Margaret Talbot, Melissa Fay Greene -- "Praying For Sheetrock" is one of those books that every nonfiction writer should read every year -- and of course my personal pantheon of Annie Dillard and Madeleine Blais -- I just think of them as more literary and less reporterly. I wonder if that's some sort of internalized sexist classification system. Got kind of a love-hate thing with Susan Orlean -- for instance, I thought "The Orchid Thief" was one of the world's great magazine articles, but stretched too thin as a book.

But wait ... there's more!

More from Kris on book clubs at the Key West library: "The All for One Book Club at the Key West Library will discusses Ann Patchett's novel Bel Canto next week.  The group will meet Wednesday afternoon March 19  at 4:00--bring your afternoon coffee, tea and snacks to the discussion!Here is a link for a reading guide for the novel:  http://www.bookbrowse.com/reading_guides/detail/index.cfm?book_number=833 Books for discussion are not chosen ahead of time.  When we finish discussing Bel Canto the group will decide what to read for next month's meeting. Hope to see you at the library!"

Toni tomorrow

From Kris Neihouse at the Key West library: "Sorry for the late notice (again!) but at least this time nothing has changed. This is just a reminder about Book Bites tomorrow night March 12th  at the Key West Library at 5:30.  We will be discussing Pulitzer AND Nobel Prize winning author Toni Morrison.  So come on by for a discussion of The Bluest Eye, Beloved and other amazing works by this amazing author. (Note:  There is a Maritime Society lecture in the auditorium at 7:00 so we will need to end our group promptly by 6:30.)"

The mysteries of Sweden

When not gulping down episodes of "The Wire" and "Rome" (on DVD, courtesy of the Monroe County Library). I recently read a couple books from the collection of my employer, the FKCC Library: "In Defense of Food" by Michael Pollan -- which I reviewed for Solares Hill, probably appearing in Friday's edition. And I read my first Swedish mystery, a book called Sun Storm by Asa Larsson. I'm not a big mystery reader but I do like well-written mysteries (P.D. James or Kate Atkinson, for example) as recreational reading and I am half-Swedish so I figured I might be able to relate. Plus my friend Betsy is a big fan of this genre so I thought it was worth checking out. At first I was disappointed -- it was not a P.D. James-level novel (surprise!) and my impression is that the translation made it more stilted (unless people actually talk like that in Sweden, which I kind of doubt). But I kept going, partly because the literary novel I've got going is even more depressing, and the story wound up snaring me as they usually do in mysteries. If this were Entertainment Weekly I'd give it a B-. We've got another in our collection here at the college, called "The Princess of Burundi," by Kjell Eriksson. I'll probably give that one a try. My sister, who is a Swedish translator and an avid mystery reader, recommends two other writers: Kerstin Ekman and Hakkan Nesser. She also contributes this website from the Springfield (Mass.) City Library, which goes to show that when it comes to foreign crime fiction, peace-loving, ABBA-producing Sweden can murder with the best of them.