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6 December 2006

READ - The Rough Guides to Music and Film

The Rough Guides to Music and Film [Rough Guides - $14.99 - $28.99]

Virtually any place on the planet that can host human life, any place on the planet affected by human life (see the guide on climate change, or the one on environmentally-conscious shopping), and any form of cultural expression that can be identified, categorized and celebrated, is gist for the mill in these broad reaching, artfully arranged compositions.  Indeed, The Rough Guides to Music and Film alone would make any culture junkie salivate.  A single The Rough Guide or an armful of ‘em would make the perfect gift for anyone you know who has both a brain and a heart. New music titles include: Punk, Soul and R&B, World Music: Africa and Middle East; new film titles include American Independent Film, Chick Flicks and Westerns.  Just a couple of the new titles that we perused here at PopMatters are:

The Rough Guide to British Cult Comedy by Judy Hall (October 2006) is, well, funny, even to those who avoid stand up comedians and turn their noses up at sitcoms, and it’s funny even though its meant to be a guide to comedy – not necessarily a source of comedy.  Read this and not only get a good laugh, but get some really good trivia, too ("Highest average punch line delivery: 12 punch lines per minute, Phyllis Diller").  Bios of comedians are found in “The Icons” section, complete with samples of their humor, from the wry to the rude, e.g., “I came on the train today, though I think I managed to pass it off as an asthma attack” from the cheeky Jenny Éclair.  You’ll get a good read on canonical televised comedy shows, the coolest live acts in cult comedy (#1 is Eddie Izzard, but of course, humor is relative), venues, festivals, and comedic terms, defined (look up “the rhythm method"), to a section on how to deal with hecklers (Jim Tavare’s “I’m schizophrenic” gag has been greeted with “You can both fuck off").  In true guide fashion, after nearly every entry readers are directed to additional books, DVDs, and online resources on the subject.  With each giggle rendered, a history lesson, too, is painlessly applied. Humor may be relative, but this book crosses all divides. [Amazon]

The Rough Guide to Chick Flicks by Samantha Cook (September 2006) opens with a play list that will surprise you “. . . because there’s more to chick flick soundtracks than ‘I Will Always Love You’ . . .” Let’s start with “Do Your Thing” by Basement Jaxx in Bend it Like Beckham.  “‘And a boom boom boom and a bang bang bang, boom bang, boom bang and bang’”.  That’s a good ass-shaking start to a not-so-tear-jerky look at movies that move the estrogen ridden.  Sure, Pride and Prejudice makes mention in the ‘The Lit/Flick Crossover” chapter (a fun section on women-authored books made into ‘women’s movies’, including Virginia Woolf and Alice Walker, of course), and doe-eyed Audrey Hepburn and sunny girl Doris Day get their respective (and respected) curtsies; but so, too, portrayals of haughty Katharine Hepburn and fearless Susan Sarandon.  Steel Magnolias is of course, an entry, but I’d never have guessed The Red Shoes—or why.  Men women love to look at and the movies they’re in get room in these pages; Rudolph Valentino, Cary Grant, Brad Pitt . . . An all too brief mention of films from India, Iran, Italy and New Zealand compel the reader to start out with this guide in hand and look a little further.  I don’t think you’ll find any other resource for “chick flicks” than this, but you will expand your vocabulary—and your respect – for this genre. [Amazon]

Karen Zarker

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6 December 2006

READ - BlackBook List: Jet Set 2006

BlackBook List: Jet Set 2006 by BlackBook editors [BlackBook Media - $9.95]

Chuck the Fodors and scratch the Lonely Planet: today’s US traveler needs naught but BlackBook’s Jet Set in their backpack. The best bars, clubs, hotels, and restaurants in America’s hippest metro centers are only a page-flip away. The book provides detailed maps to help you find the right spot for the perfect bourbon and Coke, and offers brief, chirpy overviews of each listed venue. It’s cheap, it’s handy, it would suit just about anyone looking for a break. [Amazon]

Nikki Tranter

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5 December 2006

READ - The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book XVII: The Other Side of Psychoanalysis

The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book XVII: The Other Side of Psychoanalysis by Jacques Lacan [W.W. Norton - $27.95]

Early drafts of Russell Grigg’s translation circulated surreptitiously for years, and so it is a delight to see Lacan’s most obviously political seminar arrive this holiday season for a generation of film theorists, cultural studies buffs, and others interested in psychoanalysis to absorb. Seminar XVII has served as the subtext for the one-man theoretical explosion that is Slavoj Zizek, and its publication will allow for a reassessment of Zizek’s contribution. Seminar XVII offers up both the clearest account of Lacan’s debts to Marx and Hegel and an uncannily prescient critique of the cannibalization of psychoanalysis by academics. [Amazon]

Jason B. Jones

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4 December 2006

READ - Factotum by Charles Bukowski

Factotum by Charles Bukowski [Ecco - $13.95]

Released this year in a compact new edition to coincide with the film’s release, Bukowski’s second novel is his most heartbreaking and funny. Factotum chronicles would-be writer Henry Chaiski’s journey from dead-end job to unemployment line and back again (and again). Thirty years after its initial release, Factotum remains one of the finest investigations into artistic self-deprivation and devastation ever written. It’s also a wonderful comment on writing as freedom from that devastation. A great gift for the writer (or the unemployed) in your family.  [Amazon]

Nikki Tranter

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1 December 2006

READ - The Grand Ole Opry: The Making of an American Icon

The Grand Ole Opry: The Making of an American Icon by Colin Escott [Center Street - $24.99]

Nashville is in the ascendant.  Country music is again the best-selling musical genre in the U.S.  Not since the late ‘80s and early ‘90s have the hat acts been so dominant at the cash register and in our cultural consciousness.  So, going back to revisit the history of the Opry, the birthplace of so many storied country careers, is both timely and instructive.  Escott’s photo-laden volume paints this illustrious history through lengthy first-person narratives from many of the Opry’s leading lights, including Country Music Hall of Fame members Bill Monroe, Ernest Tubb, Roy Acuff and Minnie Pearl, as well as behind-the-scenes talent at both the Opry and it’s broadcast host, WSM Radio.  Say “how-dee” to an American legend. [Amazon]

Sarah Zupko

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1 December 2006

READ - Lost Girls by Alan Moore

Lost Girls by Alan Moore & Melinda Gebbie [Top Shelf Productions - $75.00]

Nothing says “Christmas gift” like seven-plus pounds of lavishly illustrated pornography. Moore’s been obsessed with the sexual politics of Victorian England for some time (witness From Hell and even The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen), and this is the payoff: three iconic Victorian or Edwardian nymphets are transformed into insatiable erotic adventurers, until World War I brings their era to a close. [Amazon]

Jason B. Jones

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