Posts Tagged ‘books

19
Jun
09

Review: John Brunner’s “The Squares of the City”

I love novels about cities that manage to compellingly capture both the social mileau and the individual people who comprise it.

chess in the park, by Duchamp

There are unfortunately too few of these. Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Unconsoled, one of my favorite books, is the best example of this narrow genre. The Unconsoled is usually noted for its experimental style, a blend of magical realism in the image of Salman Rushdie’s with Ishiguro’s own elegant prose. Maybe it is no coincidence that John Brunner’s The Squares of the City, a not unlaudable “city novel”, is also an experiment, which succeeds more than it fails.

Brunner’s gimmick is that the novel is a fictionalization of a real-life chess game, with the pieces represented by characters, and all the moves corresponding to a progression in the plot. It is too easy to see how this would hamstring an author, and indeed Squares fails in exactly the ways you would expect. The plot, which for the first two thirds of the book manages to work these moves into a compelling political intrigue, falls apart completely in the final act when the author is forced to play out the endgame: characters threaten each other, maneuver and die in a sudden and impossible to follow storm of activity which is weakly tied into the overall arc. The denouement is both surreal and unsatisfying.

Despite this, Squares is a good read. Although the stage suffers from a crowd of minor players, the central characters are charming and surprisingly real. Brunner coyly eschews cliche: the protagonist is an introspective and intellectual traffic engineer, hardly a heroic archetype; his main foil, a stunning Latina widow, never quite becomes a love interest. Although the author explicitly groups the characters into “black” and “white” teams, the political struggle which forms the novel’s centerpiece is textured and morally ambiguous. Wisely, Brunner never tells us how it is resolved. Stylistically, Squares is also a success. The use of chess as both a central metaphor and recurring motif is deftly handled, and the apparently pragmatic prose frequently conceals sophisticated description and observation. Brunner’s occasional detours into the hard details of traffic engineering or government propagandizing are charming rather than jarring.

Above all, Squares succeeds as a city novel. Like the unnamed Central European city in The Unconsoled, Brunner’s Ciudad de Vardos, a recently constructed ‘ideal’ city in a fictional South American nation, is a major character and palpable presence in the book. Vardos’s squares, streets, offices, villas, plazas and slums are vividly imagined and are as one in the reader’s mind with its citizens, bureaucrats, artists, villains and heros. This is not least because, by a clever plot device, many of the residents had a direct hand in the city’s design and construction. The slow but inevitable embroilment of the protagonist, an outsider, into Vardos politics and society is matched by the reader’s. Unfortunately, the collapse of the plot in the final act disrupts this deep and satisfying involvement.

Read Squares if, like me, you love a good city novel and want something thoughtful and vivid. Don’t read it if you are deterred by overt experimentation, or think you are picking up a political thriller.

Image: “chess in the park“, by Duchamp. Shared under CC Attribution 2.0 Generic license.

09
Feb
09

Mini-review: Mary Doria Russell’s The Sparrow and Children of God [SPOILERS]

31
Aug
08

Please don’t petition Stephenie Meyer to continue writing “Midnight Sun”

About four months ago, an epidemic broke out here in Sydney. The disease stuck only females of around fifteen to twenty-five years of age, and was characterised by sighing, distant looks and frequent conversational reference to vampires and somebody named “Edwardo”. It was communicated via contact with any book in the “Twilight Series” by author Stephenie Meyer.

From what I have gathered, Edwardo is the main attraction of this series, a position he holds by virtue of being some kind of vampiric super-boyfriend. He cooks, he cleans, he shares his feelings, to be honest I haven’t actually read the books but I assume he does a lot of other things very well too. The point is, he is raising the bar ridiculously high and all us real world males just can’t compete. When one of my Edwardo-besotted friends told me that Meyer was so upset over a leaked early draft of her new book, Midnight Sun, that she decided to stop writing, I cackled with schadenfreudian glee. My friend seemed to think I would go against my natural interest by spreading the word about this petition to Meyer begging her to continue writing. The fool. So please don’t follow this link and sign this heartfelt plea from some very upset fans. That’s right, don’t click here and sign now.

12
Aug
08

Show Me More Ads!

The only thing better than a free lunch, IMHO, is a free book. In the last six months I’ve made my way through dozens of great ebooks and audiobooks that I got for free, completely legally, because their authors chose to release them under Creative Commons licences. Cory Doctorow claims that he releases his books for free because it drives up sales of his print editions, and I have no doubt that, for him, this is true. As attractive as this sounds, it is not a long term strategy. Releasing high-quality works under CC drives up print sales because it is still a rare enough event that potential readers who would otherwise not have heard of the work become aware of it. Doctorow acknowledges this when he paraphrases Tim O’Reilly: the problem artists face is not piracy, but obscurity. If all artists were to release their media under CC, overall they would get poorer: their works will still be just as obscure, and those handful who are interested in it can just take it for free.

I’m addicted to the Economist’s audiobook edition. At first I tried to obtain it legitimately, but soon discovered that the legit route was an incredibly painful one. Their distributor’s website refused to accept my registration for days, crashed constantly, and generally spread misery. After a few weeks of this, I gave up and started getting the download from bittorrent, painlessly, freely, and illegally. This is file-sharing, and it’s not going away. As long as media can be digitised, they will be shared. Why waste money and effort on something that can be obtained freely and easily?

So giving media away for free won’t work, and people are not going to stop pirating and sharing the non-free stuff. A world in which the only cultural products around are labours of love, or government backed, or donation-supported, would be a world in which the pool of cultural products would be tepid and a good lot smaller. None of the commonly predicted equilibria – musicians living off live concert profits, authors living off donations and hard copy sales – are remotely plausible except for the top percentile of cultural products. Markets are supposed to find the equilibrium that nobody could ever have guessed, but this isn’t a typical public goods problem: how does a market function when there are no realistically enforceable property rights?

Rather than backing bold and implausible schemes, I think the better part of wisdom is to sit back and see what happens, while supporting the partial solution that has worked for many a non-excludable good in the past: advertising. Please, keep writing your books and audiobooks, and please keep releasing them under CC. But make sure you’re still making money for yourselves. I’d rather hear or read a few ads then have you shut down production entirely. And Economist, I have no idea if your audiobook is breaking even in the face of file-sharing. It’s in my best interest for you to remember though: nobody is ever going to stop pirating your audiobook. However, the world would be a worse place if you stopped producing it.