All the Light We Cannot See – Review

Anthony Doerr. All the Light We Cannot See. New York: Scribner, 2014. Print.

This book won accolades from critics all over. The cover of the edition I have tells us that the New York Times named it one of the ten best books of the year. And it received a Pulitzer Prize, not a guarantee that the work is great, but a good sign. Was it worth reading? Yes, most definitely, yes.

Even the title, All the Light We Cannot See, suggests the nature of the writing. There is a mysterious quality to it, yet it makes sense. It is rhythmic, even poetic. The title echoes the famous line from The Merchant of Venice: “All that glisters is not gold.”

Instead of a gold casket, part of the tale involves a priceless diamond said to have originated in Borneo called the Sea of Flames. It has supposed occult powers, making its owner immortal but those around the owner accursed. It has been the property of the Museum of Natural History in Paris until World War II when much of the museum’s mineral wealth is dispersed among the French countryside to avoid appropriation by the blitzing Germans.

As with other such jewels, copies have also been made, so no keeper of gems knows whether he has the originals. One of the story lines tells of the search of a Sergeant Major von Rumpel for this stone. He is one of the few Aryan gemologists in Germany, so he is commissioned to locate valuable gems for the Reich just as others were commissioned to capture valuable works of art for the country.

Von Rumpel may only have a few months to live because of a cancerous tumor. He hopes to find the Sea of Flames not so much for the fatherland but so that he can live on. Ironically, as secularists like Hitler or this character reject the historical faith in God, they grasp at superstitious straws. He who believes in nothing will fall for anything. Alas, when such a person has the power of a Hitler that can devastate the whole world. (There is a brief description of the mustard gas treatments Von Rumpel was given for the cancer. Those reminded this reader of John Gunther’s Death Be Not Proud who described in some detail the mustard treatments his son would be subjected to for a similar tumor.)

One of the people who is apparently given one of the stones (whether the original or the copy, we have to read to find out) is the museum’s locksmith, a M. LeBlanc. He has created some unique devices for safely storing some of the museum’s valuables. He also has made a scale model of the Latin Quarter of Paris where he lives with his daughter Marie-Laure, who is blind. She learns her way around by touching the buildings, sidewalks, lampposts, storm drains, and other features of the model and then using it as a map she has memorized to find her way around the city.

When it becomes clear the Germans will occupy Paris, most of the museum’s employees are told to flee. M. LeBlanc and Marie-Laure, with some adventures on the way, flee to Saint-Malo where M. LeBlanc’s eccentric Uncle Etienne lives.

Saint-Malo is an exotic location even for the French. It is in Brittany in northwest France and is an island citadel just off the coast. At low tide, people can walk the causeway to the city, but at high tide, it is completely moated. Its residents also consider themselves a people apart to some degree. We are told that they are first Malouin, then Breton, and finally French if there is anything left over.

Much of the story focuses on Marie. The writing is exquisite. Doerr’s imagery is unsurpassed in prose. Marie’s world is one of touch and sound and occasionally smell. She understands light and color because she went blind at age six, so her ways of visualizing are distinctive.

When they move to Saint-Malo, her father makes a model of the island similar to the one that he made of the Latin Quarter. Twelve-year-old Marie-Laure, thanks to associates at the museum, has also developed an interest and knowledge about mollusks. She can feel the shells and in many cases tell what they are. She is overjoyed when at Saint-Malo she discovers a place where thousands of snails find shelter on the water’s edge.

She loves stories. Her Uncle Etienne reads her stories. She reads and re-reads the few Braille books that she owns. Her favorites are two by Jules Verne: Around the World in Eighty Days and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. The second book is longer, and for a long time she just owns volume one, which she has practically memorized.

Marie’s story is told parallel to the story of Werner Pfennig, a German orphan who is fascinated with radio and electricity. Though the orphanage only has a handmade crystal set, he is able to hear faraway places and broadcasts in different languages. He grows up in the Ruhr Valley. Elena, the mistress of the orphanage, grew up in disputed territory just to the West, so her first language was French. The orphans, then, pick up some French along with their German.

Werner knows that most of the boys in his town are fated to work in the coal mines, where his father worked and met his death. Werner believes that if he learns enough about radio, he can perhaps go into a different line of work.

That is indeed what happens. Locally, he is treated as kind of boy genius because of his ability to repair radios. When he is fourteen, he is called away from his home town to a special military school. Most of the boys there are sons of government or military officials, but some like Werner get scholarships because of athletic or intellectual abilities.

Not only does this military school indoctrinate the boys into Nazi beliefs, it practices them. Weakness is not tolerated. The slow runners and the physically smaller and weaker boys are weeded out. It is pure Darwinism—the survival of the fittest. Lord of the Flies with adult supervision.

Werner is small for his age, but he is quick. And every evening a colonel brings him into his house so he can study radio, trigonometry, and repair broken radio sets. Even among these more elite adults, he has a reputation of being a genius when it comes to building and fixing radios. He ends up constructing a radio direction finder (RDF) that is more effective than the types that the German military has been using.

Eventually, the colonel declares that Werner is eighteen, not sixteen, and sends him to the Eastern Front and then to France to locate and silence partisan and underground radio broadcasts, which he does with great success. We see that eventually he will meet Marie-Laure in Saint-Malo as he tracks down the resistance radio station there which Uncle Etienne operates.

One of the most striking themes, perhaps contrasts, are the descriptions of natural scenes like the grotto of shells or a field of Queen Anne’s Lace with scenes of savagery at the military school and on the battlefield. Since Marie-Laure likes the two adventures Verne about world travel, Uncle Etienne reads to her Darwin’s Voyage of the Beagle. There is a gorgeous passage from this book describing Darwin’s first awed impression of seeing the Amazon rain forest.

Of course, The Voyage of the Beagle was published in 1839, twenty years before On the Origin of Species, and nineteen before Darwin’s first published article hypothesizing evolution. In Walden (published in 1854) Thoreau speaks highly of “Darwin the naturalist.” That, too, is before The Origin and when the name Darwin became loaded.

This becomes one of the themes of All the Light We Cannot See. We hear the young Darwin, Darwin the naturalist, telling us the beauties of the natural world. We get this through Marie and her fascination with shells and Werner’s friend Frederick who loves birds and observes the living world around him while the bullies are devising ways to intimidate him because he is “weak.”

So then we see the effects of the older Darwin, Darwin the theoretician, giving a “scientific” justification for cruelty and amorality: Orwell’s vision of the future, “a boot stamping on a human face—forever.” Survival of the “fittest”? Fit for what?

Doerr does understand one thing. While there are books and articles refuting virtually every claim made by Darwin and his disciples, an intellectual case against Darwin in and of itself is not generally effective. It is, as always, a question of the human heart. Pride is such a terrible beast to bring down. What price will it take? Unsettling stories like this that remind us of how a good naturalist got corrupted who knows how just as a civilized country got corrupted by his philosophy—and it is a philosophical tautology, not observable science.

I am not aware that Doerr knew this, but the passage from The Voyage of the Beagle about the Amazon rain forest is cited in Darwin’s own autobiography, which he wrote much later, after he had become an atheist and published his theories. He said that when he saw the majesty of such a creation, that he could not help be a theist, a believer in God. He said he thought then that “there was more to man than breath of his body.” It was only later that he was able to suppress such thoughts. A very significant quotation. “It may be truly I am like a man who has become color-blind,” he noted when looking back on that time. Didn’t Jesus say something about the blind leading the blind?

There is a lot more. The title also suggests the lessons in physics that Werner hears over the radio coming from France. Scientists are learning that light is just a small part of a much larger electromagnetic spectrum we cannot see including the electric waves which operate turbines and electric motors, magnetic waves which create electrical currents, and radio waves which we can send long distance through the air and change into sound waves.

Doerr deliberately includes a contemporary scene with people talking on cell phones, sending text messages, and accessing the Internet to show how the technology continues to change us.

All the Light We Cannot See, though fiction, is quite realistic. Some of the war descriptions are not for the faint of heart. The book does not sensationalize them, but it is direct. We appreciate all the more those who do survive, and what they had to go through to eventually lead a normal life in pursuit of happiness.

All the French, except perhaps one very old woman, seem to be existentialists. Was that way of thinking that prevalent in France? Even before the war? Perhaps so, but I am just asking that. I do recall reading Georges Bernanos’ La Joie (Joy) and Journal d’un Cure de Campagne (Diary of a Country Priest) or Andre Maurois who were contemporaries of Camus and Sartre and hardly thought as they did. Eh, well.

Doerr’s narrative technique is a little different, and some readers may find it unsettling. The chapters are very short and alternate among various characters, usually between Marie or some other French person and Werner or some other German. On top of that, the chapters wander all over time. Even the section headings which give dates really only apply to the first chapter in that section, and not always even then.

Still, there are enough context clues that the reader can usually clearly figure out where and when the episode is taking place. And together, the chapters do progress in such a way that we see that the main story begins in 1939 right before the German occupation and ends in 1944 after the liberation of Paris, but it has a good deal of prologue and some epilogue as well. It all works together. All the Light We Cannot See is a pièce de résistance if not a chef d’œuvre.

A Single Shard & A Long Walk to Water – Reviews

Linda Sue Park. A Single Shard. New York: Houghton, 2001. Print.
—————. A Long Walk to Water. New York: Houghton, 2010. Print.

Both of these books by Linda Sue Park tell the story of orphans who overcame great odds, one in twelfth-century Korea and one in contemporary Africa. The author presents both stories in a bare, realistic manner, yet they are meant to inspire.

A Single Shard is the story of Tree-Ear, who lives under a bridge with a lame homeless beggar named Crane-Man. The village where they live is known for its clay which is used to make very distinctive celadon pottery.

Tree-Ear manages to get a job, for no pay but with a good meal, as a go-fer for Min, the potter whom Tree-Ear considers the best in the town. He mostly cuts wood for the kiln and digs clay for the pottery. He learns about taking the raw clay and refining it.

The details about ceramics and the life of beggars are carefully and lovingly set out. Tree-Ear sees how only about a fifth of the items taken to the kiln are good enough for Min. But he will learn also—as the title suggests—even a shard of high quality has value.

While most of A Single Shard is set in Tree-Ear’s seaside village, the boy at one point has to make a long overland journey to the capital city. (This is a few centuries before Seoul is even founded.) The story focuses on art but includes adventure.

The ending reminded me of other stories where the protagonists had to overcome great odds but left behind something of great value or beauty. While the tale is quite different, I could not help thinking of The Cloister and the Hearth. Similarly, I was reminded of Amos Fortune: Free Man, a book of the same reading level featuring a protagonist who overcame long odds.

A Long Walk to Water focuses on Salva, one of the Lost Boys, victims of civil war in southern Sudan in the 1980s. His story is primarily one of survival—guerillas, crocodiles, lions, desert. It is intense and not for the weak of stomach.

The story begins when he is eleven. While school is in session, his village is attacked by some soldiers. His teacher tells all the students to escape to the bush: the village means certain death.

So he goes east for months, crossing savanna, the Nile River, and desert, eventually making it to a refugee camp in Ethiopia where he stays for six years. When that camp is closed down, he becomes a leader of a group of over 1,000 boys from the camp who make a trek to a camp in Kenya. While slightly fictionalized, A Long Walk to Water is based on the true story of Salva Dut.

Interspersed with Salva’s adventures are brief descriptions of a girl named Nya in a Sudanese village in 2008. She spends half of most of her days getting water for her family. Curiously, some of her experiences of extracting water from clay soil are similar to Tree-Ear’s as he extracts impurities and water from the clay he works with.

Both of Mrs. Park’s stories have very moving conclusions. These are sophisticated young adult books—relatively short with main characters in their pre-teens or early teens. A Single Shard won a Newbery Award, which places the audience at late elementary or middle school. But do not be fooled, older readers will be moved as well.

Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Collection – Review

Arthur Conan Doyle. Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Collection. Amazon.com. 15 March 2015. E-book.

It has been a long time since I read any collection of Sherlock Holmes stories. This one is billed as complete. It does include a few stories that are often overlooked such as the two Holmes stories narrated by Sherlock Holmes himself rather than Watson. Since there are over 50 stories in this collection, it would serve no purpose by reviewing them all, but this collection is fun.

Like someone’s favorite TV show, there are a few episodes in which it appears that a very similar plot has been recycled. Doyle seemed to like backstories with complicated family relationships. People from foreign countries (i.e., not England) seem to have a penchant for crime. Still, Holmes’ aplomb and cool temperament while on a case are very entertaining. Watson always seems dazzled, even when he contributes a lot to the solving of a crime.

Not all the stories investigate crimes. There are other mysteries occasionally. For example, in “A Case of Identity,” Holmes is hired to try to make sense of an affair of the heart. No actual crime was committed, but there is certainly questionable behavior.

Some stories I remembered from previous readings years ago, but most were somewhat new to me. As with many mysteries, part of the enjoyment is trying to figure out the mystery before the sleuth reveals the solution. In “A Case of Identity,” for example, I did figure out the motive for the unusual circumstances, but the actual method was still something of a surprise. And in so many of the stories, as in true life crimes and mysteries, money is a motivator.

I had read The Hound of the Baskervilles at least twice in the past, and I did have a vague recollection of the plot, but it was still fun to read. That story had a little bit of everything, and probably deservedly is considered Doyle’s best. It is a page-turner with a number of surprises and terrors. I remembered some things about the hound and about the Baskerville family, but there is a fascinating supporting cast such as the escaped criminal Selden, the Baskerville’s housekeeper, the local entomologist and his sister, the country doctor whom Watson naturally takes to, the shepherd boy who spies on Watson, the missing boot. The plot truly does thicken.

There are four novels or novellas in the Holmes corpus. Three are well known. Besides The Hound of the Baskervilles, there is A Study in Scarlet and The Sign of the Four. A Study in Scarlet was the first Holmes story, where Watson meets Holmes and shares an apartment with him until Watson’s wedding.

As a kid, I recall enjoying The Sign of the Four, probably because of its exotic Indian characters and backstory. The woman who becomes Mrs. Watson is Holmes’ client in this one. Re-reading it made me think of Wilkie Collins’ The Moonstone which also involves a theft of Indian jewels.

The fourth novel I do not recall ever reading before. The Valley of Fear may have been the best mystery, but it had a weakness. The main mystery is solved in about the first third of the book. It was a very clever story. The murder victim and his widow had come to England from America. He apparently was involved in some criminal activity in Chicago and the West, but had gone straight and was trying to start a new life in England.

About half of the novel after the mystery is solved tells a discursive story about the victim in America before he left for Europe. It adds little to the story and almost seems purposeless.

The backstory in A Study in Scarlet is similar in that it tells of the three main characters in that story when they all live in the American West before coming to England. That is tenser and quite entertaining. It reminded me very much of Zane Grey’s The Riders of the Purple Sage with its Mormon vigilantes. It also relates more directly to the mystery Holmes is trying to solve.

The ultimate purpose of the rambling backstory in The Valley of Fear, without giving away too much, is to introduce the reader to Professor James Moriarty. There is not much more than a mention of him in this story, but Holmes expresses his belief that the professor is the Napoleon of Crime who is behind most criminal activity in England.

Moriarty is really only a living character on the pages of one story, namely, “The Final Problem.” The Valley of Fear was apparently written to lead us to Holmes’ “death” in Switzerland. Four other stories mention Moriarty in passing, but always with the understanding that he is dead. Holmes returns in “The Adventure of the Empty House,” so that tale tells the Reichenbach Falls story from the detective’s point of view. Three other later stories mention Moriarty briefly.

In other words, Moriarty is perhaps the most powerful criminal Holmes encountered, but Moriarty does not figure in too many stories. He is no Brainiac or Joker.

“The Five Orange Pips” also has a victim who came from America to straighten out his life. In his case, he belonged to the Ku Klux Klan and wanted to break free.

Holmes also comes across as a rather kindhearted. If he was working on a case apart from the police, he frequently let the perpetrator of the crime go. This was not always true, but he seems easily persuaded that the criminal has learned his or her lesson and will not be a repeat offender. In some cases—Irene Adler, for example—it is easier to simply let them leave the country, so at least they will no longer be bothering any Englishmen.

“Silver Blaze” was worth re-reading. I did recall the basic details about the stolen horse, but I had forgotten there was a murder and some other unusual goings-on. “Silver Blaze” has the line which has become a cliché in recent years about “The curious incident of the dog”:

“Is there any point to which you would wish to draw my attention?”
“To the curious incident of the dog in the night-time.”
“The dog did nothing in the night-time.”
“That was the curious incident,” remarked Sherlock Holmes.

This collection claims to be complete with 57 stories. Other collections have 56, apparently there are some questions about the provenance of one. It also claims to be unabridged.

I recall being skeptical in the seventies when the Seven Percent Solution came out as a novel and then as a film. In the seventies the hippie drug culture was still something new, and here was a claim that the very brainy Sherlock Holmes used cocaine recreationally. I just figured it was from someone trying to cash in on hippies.

My experience with Holmes stories had been mostly from a collection entitled The Boys’ Sherlock Holmes. Some of those stories I realize now had been edited to pare down some of the chitchat but also to get rid of the drug references. We also know that some American versions of the stories were abridged by American publishers.

This collection does contain several stories which describe Holmes’ use of cocaine. Watson expresses his concern over this in a friendly bedside manner. There is also a sense that Holmes may be manic or bipolar. When he is not on a case, he gets depressed easily; however, that could also be caused by mere idleness.

Because this is a Kindle edition, there is one thing lacking in this collection. None of the drawings which contribute to the stories are included. I seem to recall a drawing in “The Sign of the Four” of the letter the Four signed in one edition I read. The most glaring omission is the dancing men in “The Adventure of the Dancing Men.” These were simple stick figures used in a secret code. The original had the various messages using the code drawn in the text. Perhaps a reader could solve the mystery with Holmes. In this edition there is simply a blank spot where the pictures should go.

As is often the case with low-cost and public domain e-books, there are a handful of typographical errors, nothing major. The only one that puzzled me was in The Hound of the Baskervilles when Holmes referred to a “bogie hound.” An Englishman would have recognized immediately that it should have been “bogle hound.” A bogle in England is a ghost, goblin, or scarecrow. It is a very precise word in this instance.

I found one thing a bit curious myself. Three times in all the stories do we see Watson’s first name. Twice it is John. Once it is James. We are told in the Wikipedia entry at the back of the book that Doyle had a friend named Dr. James Watson. Perhaps in “The Man with the Twisted Lip,” Doyle was thinking of him. He is John in the subtitle of a collection and in “The Problem of Thor Bridge”—an effective story in which this reader confesses that he missed a couple of significant clues.

Still, have fun. Relax. Be amazed. Sherlock is guaranteed to entertain and get his readers to think.

Tom Clancy: Commander in Chief – Review

Mark Greaney. Tom Clancy: Commander in Chief. New York: Putnam, 2015. Print.

Commander in Chief is the latest “Tom Clancy” novel, and it is the best since Clancy himself passed away. This is the kind of yarn (to use President Reagan’s term) that made readers fall in love with Clancy’s books. It even has Russian submarines!

Russian Premier Volodin, a stand-in for Putin, is trying to build on his successes in the Ukraine and getting NATO to stand down in Eastern Europe. His only problem is that the prices of oil and natural gas have tanked, so the country and its billionaires are not prospering.

An explosion at a natural gas facility in Lithuania, the assassination of a Saudi oil minister in Los Angeles, even the apparent harassment of the President’s son Jack Ryan, Jr., by an Italian paparazzo are all attempts to raise the price of oil and natural gas by Russian surrogates. When a Russian military train en route to the Kaliningrad Oblast is attacked in Lithuania, Russia uses this as a grounds for war—even though they instigated the attack as well as an attempt to kidnap an American diplomat in Lithuania by Russia-trained Serbians.

Yes, there are echoes of Red Storm Rising here, though now there is no international Communist cause, just the desire for money and power. Russia has developed submarines and tanks more sophisticated than any in the West. Volodin is confident.

Typical of the Clancy style, there are multiple interconnected plots. Dom Caruso and Ding Chavez are in Poland, Germany, Lithuania, and Brussels. Jack Ryan, Jr., goes from Italy to Luxembourg. Jack Clark is in the British Virgin Islands. War, espionage, diplomacy, and high finance all appear in this novel.

Jack, Jr., is a forensic economist. He is tracking laundered Russian money through Italian art galleries when he stumbles upon something bigger. Volodin himself is putting away much of his own billions through untraceable Bitcoin transactions. Is this a Plan B or just a sign that Volodin really does not trust anyone?

Besides some new submarine technology, which may or may not be real, we get hints of some more sophisticated ways of waging war. Not only do we have crypto-currencies like Bitcoin which are nearly impossible to trace, but there is also a new GPS-based mapping technique in which computers can help station soldiers in very specific positions in anticipation of the likeliest direction and type of attack on any geographic position.

Greaney’s writing style is a bit different from Clancy’s, and that is fine. He has found a voice. And he wisely does not focus too much on Jack Ryan, Sr. Ryan will always be Clancy’s creation, and he cannot change him too much. Alas, Jack Ryan is probably a far superior president than any the United States has had in recent decades. Fiction is the stuff that dreams are made on.

The title might be a bit ironic. The book is far more about Volodin, the Russian Commander in Chief, than it is about Ryan. However, Ryan appears to have better advisors and is clearly more interested in the well being of the United States than any personal power, reputation, or wealth.

A couple of things that longtime technodudes and technodudesses will enjoy: One featured naval vessel is the USS James Greer, named for one the main characters in the early Clancy novels, Admiral Greer. And one line of realpolitik given by Volodin when asked by a Russian news reporter if Lithuania would accept the presence of the Russian Army in their territory: “Tanks don’t need visas” (303)—echoes of Stalin’s remark, “How many divisions does the Pope have?”

A Treasury of Old-Fashioned Christmas Stories – Review

A Treasury of Old-Fashioned Christmas Stories. Ed. Michele Slung. New York: Carroll and Graf, 2006. Print.

A Treasury of Old-Fashioned Christmas Stories lives up to its title. In our English-speaking world, the term old-fashioned Christmas story suggests two tales above all: “A Visit from St. Nicholas” (a.k.a. “The Night Before Christmas”) and A Christmas Carol. Both of them were written in the first half of the nineteenth century and represent a certain culture and tradition. So the 21 stories in A Treasury of Old-Fashioned Christmas Stories were all written some time between about 1850 and 1920 and evoke some of the same sense as those two classics.

There are a few of the sentimental Christmas stories, always popular, that one could see being adapted for the Hallmark Channel. There are a few that tell of Christmas-related conversions that echo Dickens’ classic. There are a few sad stories as well, notably “A Bird in the Snow” by Spaniard Armando Palacio Valdés that could have been written Ambrose Bierce with some help from Theodore Dreiser. The period that the editor drew from is reflected in some ghost stories involving haunted houses. Some have real literary quality.

Though more didactic than sentimental, William Dean Howells’ “Christmas Every Day” was made into a television film. It also reflects the pre-Coca Cola Santa Claus. Here Santa is still as described by Clement Clark Moore, an elf, not a full-size human. This story was the only one in this collection that the reviewer has seen in other collections. Slung tried to find an eclectic set of stories that readers were likely not familiar with.

One surprise was “Jack’s Sermon,” perhaps the most treacly of all the sentimental selections in this collection. Jack is a dog. It is a Christmas story. Need I say more? The surprise is that its author is Jacob Riis, known as a hard-boiled muckraking journalist. Even tough guys have tear ducts.

Here are a few of the other stories. While some are by writers who are not otherwise well known today, we will be mostly noting those who are.

Mary E. Wilkins Freeman’s “The Christmas Masquerade” is set like most of her stories in a small New England town. However, rather than a realistic tale like most of her work, it is a fairy tale. (One could argue that it is a fantasy, I suppose.) It is perhaps the most imaginative story in the collection, more like a Narnia story than “The Revolt of Mother.”

Paul Laurence Dunbar’s “The Colonel’s Awakening” is a thought-provoking almost gothic tale of a post-Civil War Southern family trying to hang on to vestiges of the old ways. From the narrator’s perspective, it is both tender and pathetic. The war is over. Your side lost. Let’s move on.

Anthony Trollope’s “Not if I Know It” is fun. Trollope is mostly known for long sets of novels. This short story could fit right in with one of his family sagas of the British upper classes. According to some sources this is the last story Trollope wrote before he died. It has an ultimate theme of “good will to men,” but in a veddy, veddy British stiff-upper-lip manner.

“The Feast by J*s*ph C*nr*d” by Max Beerbohm is a sarcastic satire on—can you guess?—Joseph Conrad. It is all in good fun if you like black humor. Of all the stories, the Christmas setting in this one seems merely incidental or, perhaps, makes the humor that much darker.

W. A. Wilson’s “A Christmas White Elephant” is one of the sweet sentimental stories. Apparently W. A. Wilson is a nom de plume, for the editor could not find out anything about this author’s identity. The story was published in the 1880s, so it is not the same person who wrote The Accidental Hitman. All I could think of was Poe’s story “William Wilson”; that, however, is a creepy horror story. Still, William Wilson may be the name of a doppelganger in the Poe story, so maybe the writer thought it as an appropriate pseudonym.

O. Henry’s “Christmas by Injunction” is different O. Henry Christmas fare. His “The Gift of the Magi” is a Christmas story almost as well known as the two mentioned in the introduction above. This story involves tough guys from a mining town in the Wild West, but it has a typical O. Henry twist.

To this reader probably the biggest surprise and the most subtle story was “Rosa’s Tale” by Louisa May Alcott. The narrator uses the old legend, suggested in the last century by Thomas Hardy, that animals can talk on Christmas Eve. We then hear the story of what the horse Rosa told the narrator during that magic Christmas hour. Rosa has been sold and resold a number of times. She has been in races and survived the Civil War. She has lived with some very appealing families and also had a few cruel masters that she thought would kill her.

I have read some short stories by Alcott. They tend to be didactic. At least twice I have attempted to read Little Women but could not get through it. It is a favorite of my wife’s but must be too much of a chick book for me. “Rosa’s Tale” was really different. When we realize that Rosa’s tale is not so much that of a horse but the tale of an American slave, the story takes on a new and richer meaning.

The Team that Changed Baseball – Review

Bruce Markusen. The Team that Changed Baseball: Roberto Clemente and the 1971 Pittsburgh Pirates. Yardley PA: Westholme, 2009. Print.

The Team that Changed Baseball is a baseball history book for baseball fans. It is direct, clear, and well written, but it mostly summarizes the 1971 season of the Pittsburgh Pirates which culminated in an exciting seven-game World Series.

There is a chapter devoted to each month of the season; then, a chapter for the National League Championship Series—back then each league had two divisions and no wild cards. The winner of each division played for the league pennant. Then there are four chapters devoted to the World Series. The last chapter is entitled “The Legacy” which actually deals with the thesis of the subtitle, why the 1971 Pirates were significant.

As has been mentioned elsewhere in this blog, this reviewer is a Pirates fan. I recall being in New England during the 1971 season, but I followed the playoffs and World Series as best I could when I could find an available television. Also, as a boy, my baseball hero was Roberto Clemente. I always felt he was overlooked because Pittsburgh is a small market city. Markusen writes that after the 1971 World Series Clemente felt for the first time that he got the respect he deserved.

Markusen also tells of Clemente’s reputation as a hypochondriac. He quotes a few people who criticized Clemente for that, though he also explains that Clemente injured his back in a serious auto accident in 1954 and lived the rest of his life with three damaged spinal disks. Perhaps because I was a kid, I remembered it differently (I never knew about the car accident till I read this book). I recall people saying that Clemente only played well when he did not feel good. It was more like, “Clemente’s sick today—wink, wink, nod, nod—thank goodness!”

The Team that Changed Baseball also notes that the then Brooklyn Dodgers first signed Clemente and then tried to hide his talent. They were afraid their rivals the New York Giants would sign him. Even then, though the Dodgers were the first team in the modern era to sign a black player, they also had a quota which limited themselves to four minority players on their roster of 25.

By the mid-fifties Branch Rickey, the Dodgers’ general manager who had signed Jackie Robinson, was working for the Pirates. When a Pirate scout visited the Montreal minor league Dodgers’ affiliate to watch Clemente, the Montreal manager pulled Clemente from the lineup. Still, the scout saw Clemente throw a baseball nearly 400 feet and knew he was looking at some real talent.

The reason that the 1971 Pirates changed baseball was that it was a truly color blind team. For most of the season a majority of its starters were African American or black Hispanic. Even a couple of its starting pitchers were. For the first time in major league history for any team, on September 1, 1971, every starting player for Pirates was black.

I recall Sports Illustrated pointing this out, but no one on the Pirates made a big deal of it. It was not done to make a statement or prove a point like, for example, the Bobby Riggs-Billie Jean King tennis match. It happened to be the best lineup of healthy players available for that game and situation. Manager Danny Murtagh downplayed it. It was only about the third or fourth inning that third baseman Dave Cash noticed it and pointed it out to the others. Murtagh just said, “I had nine Pirates out there on the field.” (109)

Markusen notes that as early as 1967 the Pirates had fielded a starting lineup that had eight black position players with the pitcher as the only Caucasian. Markusen also states that most teams would have black starters but their bench players would be all white. Minority players had to be exceptional to make it to a major league roster.

Markusen had apparently overlooked earlier Pirates teams. Indeed, their previous world champion team from 1960 had only one black player as a regular starter, namely Clemete; but they had seven black bench players: Bennie Daniels, Earl Francis, Diomedes Olivo, Gene Baker, R. C. Stevens, Joe Christopher, and Roman Mejias. Joe Christopher pinch ran in game seven of the World Series and scored a run. R. C. was Stevens’ given name, just the initials. Even a decade earlier the Pirates were filling their roster against type.

Markusen tells us “the 1971 Pirates proved conclusively, and really for the first time, that a pool of athletes representing a variety of backgrounds and nationalities could work together effectively and win a World Series championship.” (189) By the end of the decade other championship teams, notably the Oakland Athletics and the New York Yankees, would be following the same pattern. “There was no pendulum swing back and forth.” (188)

There is something else Markusen notes. Like the 1960 and 1979 World Series which featured the Pirates, the 1971 World Series had some exciting games. That is why the author devotes whole chapters to games six and seven. They were close nail-biters. Willie Stargell said of the underrated Pirates, “When it [the World Series] began you would have thought the Pittsburgh Pirates were nothing more than the invited guests at the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre.” (181) It did not turn out that way, but it was no cakewalk, either.

The Team that Changed Baseball reminds us that baseball is exciting. A column in the New York Daily News said, “The 1971 World Series renewed for most people the assurance that baseball is indeed an exciting game, something, for some reason, they had been brainwashed into doubting.” (186) Even this year (2015) the ALDS between Texas and Toronto reminded us of this. As longtime Pirate broadcaster Bob Prince would say of the 1960 Series: “It makes baseball unmatched in the world of sports.”

P.S. As a kind of postscript there is an interesting appendix, a kind of “Where are they now?” which lists the subsequent careers of many of the 1971 Pirates and what they were doing as of the time the book was published. The Team that Changed Baseball could also be a companion to Color Blind, about a pioneering integrated minor league team from the 1930s.

A Puzzle in a Pear Tree – Review

Parnell Hall. A Puzzle in a Pear Tree. New York: Bantam, 2002. Print.

A Puzzle in a Pear Tree is one of a series of crossword puzzle mysteries featuring Cora Felton and her niece Sherry Carter. This clever “cozy” murder mystery begins as a Broadway washout director is directing both a high school production of The Sea Gull and some skits in the town of Bakerhaven’s Christmas pageant. The pageant’s pièce de résistance is a live re-enactment of the “The Twelve Days of Christmas” in which both ladies have small parts.

During a rehearsal the model partridge in the artificial pear tree prop has been replaced by an acrostic puzzle which warns that a leading lady is going to die. The police dispatch a deputy to keep surveillance on Becky Baldwin, the lead singer in the pageant. Only the person murdered turns out to be Dorrie, the high school senior who had the lead in The Sea Gull. She was killed while posing as Mary in a live nativity scene on the town green.

The local police arrest Sherry for the murder with the help of an officious but experienced British detective who happens to be visiting his daughter who lives with his ex-wife and who was best friends of the murder victim. Sherry does not even know the victim, though her family is prominent in town, but the police are convinced she killed Dorrie by mistake instead of Ms. Baldwin. In an ingenious plot twist, Becky Baldwin is also acting as Sherry’s defense attorney. Even the judge cannot figure that one out!

There are more surprises, including more acrostics, as Cora and Sherry try to prove Sherry’s innocence. More people die, but the story retains a lighthearted tone. There are enough clues that the reader might solve the mystery before it is solved in the book—and this one is not revealed until the very end. This reviewer did correctly identify the murderer with about fifty pages left, though I misjudged the killer’s motive. That was still a surprise.

Bakerhaven is supposedly a small town in western Connecticut. The nearest city is said to be New Haven. Even though it has haven in its name, we are told that the town in not on the coast. While the setting may not be as specific as the novels of Justin Scott or John J. Gilmore, the fact that the director used to work in New York City makes a Connecticut setting realistic, though it could be an American small town anywhere. I am familiar with the village of Bakerville in Litchfield County, Connecticut. While Bakerville is a little closer to Hartford than New Haven, a Litchfield County setting does seem most likely.

This is a cozy, character-based mystery. There are numerous jokes about the number of ex-husbands Cora has had. Like Chaucer’s wife of Bath,

Of remedies of love she knew perchance,
For she could of that art the old dance. (Prologue.477,478)

Still there is a streak of realism in the court scenes and the fact that not all the loose ends are tied up.

Nowhere to Hide – Review

Sigmund Brouwer. Nowhere to Hide. Eugene OR: Harvest House, 2015. Print.

Nowhere to Hide is fast-paced young adult thriller. William King—call him King—lives on a sparsely populated island in Puget Sound in Washington State. He and his buddies helped the FBI solve a mystery, and he and his two high school and college friends are recruited again.

This time some things do not ring true. The agent who contacted him does not know the pass phrase. He and his friends are taken to a posh Seattle hotel where it appears they are going to be temporarily imprisoned. Each of the 58 chapters averages slightly over three pages. In plot complications one might call this a Robert Ludlum for teens. In pace of action, it is more like Tony Abbott.

The ending contains a surprise twist. One reader shared that the twist ruined the story, as though it were more like Alice in Wonderland where the conflict builds to a head and it is “only a dream.” However, there are enough clues dropped so that the twist is not a complete surprise and the story does wrap things up. No one is killed and no national secrets are betrayed.

Folks from Washington State on either side of the Cascades will get a kick out of the setting. From an urban computer hacker to a survivalist living in a desert trailer, welcome to the modern Wild West.

Four Scarlet Pimpernel Books – Review

Baroness Emmuska Orczy Orczy. I Will Repay. 1906; Project Gutenberg, 2014. E-book.
———. The League of the Scarlet Pimpernel. 1919; Project Gutenberg, 2004. E-book.
———. The Elusive Pimpernel. 1908; Project Gutenberg, 2013. E-book.
———. Lord Tony’s Wife: An Adventure of the Scarlet Pimpernel. 1917; Project Gutenberg, 2011. E-book.

They seek him here, they seek him there;
The Frenchies seek him everywhere.

Readers may be familiar with The Scarlet Pimpernel, a swashbuckling novel about an English nobleman and master of disguise who helps Frenchmen destined for the guillotine during the French Revolution to escape. I read that many years ago in high school and enjoyed it immensely. About twenty years ago I saw the 1930s film version which was also lots of fun. In the thirties they knew how to make swashbucklers—Robin Hood, Captain Blood—Sorry, but the Pirates of the Caribbean movies, except maybe the first, are really science fiction or fantasy.

Even back in high school I had a vague impression that Baroness Orczy had written a sequel or two. I was inspired recently to read some Scarlet Pimpernel stories, so I checked on my source of pre-1924 classics, Project Gutenberg. There I saw a substantial list, and Wikipedia listed them in order of publication and in historical chronology. Many were written after 1924, so I suppose non-Americans can check those out at Project Gutenberg Australia. A list follows this review if WordPress lets me use html tables.

I read the above books in the order listed. One might call it a binge, except that the books are quick reads. I have not had such relatively mindless fun reading books in a while (maybe since a Gordon Korman book). These books are a hoot.

I Will Repay
establishes a continuing conflict between Committee of Public Safety officer Citizen Chauvelin and the Pimpernel. Indeed, the Scarlet Pimpernel becomes Chauvelin’s nemesis. In I Will Repay Chauvelin hatches a plan to trap the Pimpernel, but I am not giving away much of the plot by saying that his plan is thwarted.

One could say that Chauvelin is Wile E. Coyote to the Pimpernel’s Roadrunner. Like the Coyote, the reader never quite sympathizes with Chauvelin. He is a friend of Robespierre and devastated when Marat is killed. He is ruthless and self-serving. However, he had been an ambassador to England before the Revolution and traveled in the same circles as Sir Percy Blakeney. Blakeney is the Pimpernel’s alter ego. What adds to the intrigue of many of these stories is that in I Will Repay Chauvelin identifies the Pimpernel as Blakeney. In other words, he is not like Lois Lane who seems to have never figured out that Clark Kent is Superman. That also, of course, heightens the tension.

(It has been noted by many that The Scarlet Pimpernel may have inspired the Superman-style superhero with an alter ego like the Shadow or the Phantom, both of whom predated Clark Kent and Bruce Wayne.)

The League of the Scarlet Pimpernel is a set of short stories or episodes each involving an escape from France assisted by the Pimpernel or one of his associates. There are somewhere around a dozen friends of Sir Percy who have joined him in his adventures. These tales reminded me a lot of the Sherlock Holmes stories in style and effect. The difference is that instead of solving a mystery as Holmes does, the Pimpernel creates mystery and distraction and disguise to outwit his adversaries.

Some of these stories like The Elusive Pimpernel novel remind us that the Revolution did not only go after selfish aristocrats but also that many middle and lower class workers were victims as well. I was reminded of the seamstress who gets executed along with Sydney Carton in A Tale of Two Cities. The Pimpernel does not limit his aid to aristocrats.

Like the Holmes stories, some were better than others. A few had plots similar to other stories in the series, but for the most part they were fresh enough.

The Elusive Pimpernel may have been the tensest of the four books. Here most of the victims are not aristocrats but people who worked for aristocrats and were still faithful to the Catholic Church. We are reminded, too, of Merlin’s law, what Dickens called the law of the suspected: “that every man, woman or child, who was suspected by the Republic of being a traitor was a traitor in fact.” (1597-1598). This law was originally proposed by a deputy named Philippe-Antoine Merlin, so Orczy often calls it Merlin’s Law. This was not unlike Article 58 in the Soviet Union which proscribed “anti-Soviet behavior,” which in reality meant nearly anything if they wanted to get you.

Chauvelin here gets wind that the Pimpernel is in town. He has his victims placed in the most secure cells in the most secure prison until they can be put on trial. At the same time, he hopes to trap the Pimpernel and his allies. Great fun!

Lord Tony’s Wife concerns Blakeney’s friend and Pimpernel League member Sir Anthony Dewhurst. Dewhurst has fallen in love with a French emigrée, and the feeling is mutual. However, Blakeney (who disguises himself even in England) finds out that her father, the Duc de Kernogan, wants her to marry someone else. The reader knows that the “someone else” is really the duke’s sworn enemy, but the duke is too inattentive to realize it.

While we do sympathize with Lord Tony and his new bride, we also understand that like the Marquis de St. Evrémonde in A Tale of Two Cities, the duke here is at best careless and at worst evil himself. Orczy does remind us that there is a reason why the French Revolution began in the first place.

Lord Tony’s Wife is mostly set in Nantes. The political leader in Nantes is extraordinarily cruel. Jean-Baptiste Carrier was frustrated at the slowness of executions using the guillotine. He instituted the noyades (“drownings”) where fifty or more people roped to each other were placed on a specially constructed barge. Plugs would be pulled when the barge was in a deep part of the Loire River to sink the barge and drown all its passengers. He also instituted what he called Republican Marriages, where a sentenced man and woman would be tied together and weighted and tossed into the river. Thousands “slept with the fishes” in Nantes.

While the main characters in the Pimpernel stories are fictional, there are people appearing in the story like Robespierre, Carrier, and the Prince of Wales who are historical figures. There actually was an ambassador to England named Chauvelin, a marquis who joined the Revolution and survived. While Orczy seems to indicate that the Chauvelin in her stories and novels is different (e.g., he has a different first name), there are some career similarities with the real Ambassador Chauvelin.

While the historical setting is important in all the Pimpernel stories, we do not read them primarily for the history. We read them for the adventure. They are great entertainment.

Book Title Setting Notes & Publication Date
The Laughing Cavalier January 1623 1913
The First Sir Percy March 1624 1920
The Scarlet Pimpernel September–October 1792 1905
Sir Percy Leads the Band January 1793 1936
The League of the Scarlet Pimpernel July 1793 Short stories. 1919
I Will Repay August–September 1793 1906
The Elusive Pimpernel September–October 1793 1908
Lord Tony’s Wife November–December 1793 1917
The Way of the Scarlet Pimpernel late 1793 Concurrent with preceding 2 or 3 novels. 1933
Eldorado January 1794 Unclear whether before, after, or concurrent with Mam’zelle Guillotine. 1913
Mam’zelle Guillotine January 1794 Unclear whether before, after, or concurrent with Eldorado. 1940
Sir Percy Hits Back May–June 1794 1927
Adventures of the Scarlet Pimpernel 1794? Exact dates unclear. Short stories. 1929
The Triumph of the Scarlet Pimpernel April 1794 Seems to have happened later than dates indicate. 1922
A Child of the Revolution July 1794 1932
Pimpernel and Rosemary 1917–1924 1924

Note: Books with publication dates before 1924 are available from Project Gutenberg. Those with dates after 1923 are available from Project Gutenberg Australia. The first two titles are about Blakeney’s ancestors. The last one concerns his descendants. The reference is a Kindle E-book position, not page numbers.

For reviews of three more Scarlet Pimpernel stories, click here.

Until the Robin Walks on Snow – Review

Bernice L. Rocque. Until the Robin Walks on Snow. Trumbull CT: 3 Houses, 2012. Print.

Until the Robin Walks on Snow is great little story about a miracle baby—and an excellent portrayal of a family of recent immigrants to the United States circa 1922. The author tells us a fictionalized account of her family’s experiences. Although set some forty or so years later in history, its style is reminiscent of the Little House on the Prairie books though Until the Robin Walks on Snow shares the actions of the adult characters.

What one could consider the main character does nothing much but eat and sleep. The story focuses on the birth and infancy of the author’s Uncle Tony—Antoni in Polish, but they made sure his birth certificate said it the “American” way, Anthony. Antoni was a preemie, only one and a half pounds at birth. This was before any neonatal care units. Premature babies at this time had about a 5% chance of living. Birth at only a pound and a half even reduced those small odds.

For six weeks after he was born on November 29, his mother Marianna virtually never left his side. She never slept more than three hours at a time. Her midwife and best friend Helena spent most of that time with the family until the following March.

In mid-January in order that Marianna could get more sleep, they placed the baby overnight in a section of their wood and coal-burning stove wrapped in a towel in a basket. Anyone familiar with such stoves in a New England farmhouse knows that these stoves heat the whole house and are tricky to regulate.

Still, Until the Robin Walks on Snow is more than just the story of a baby’s survival. We see the dynamics of a family new to the New World but having opportunities that would have been unheard of in Poland and Lithuania.

Marianna’s husband Andrzej, from a Poland ruled by Russia, came to America after registering for the Russian Army’s draft in 1911. Stories tell us that peasants who were drafted were often coerced into a lifetime commitment and would become cannon fodder in the World War that would begin three years later.

Perhaps the most interesting character is Marianna’s father Nikodimas. Her family had lived in Lithuania near the German border. Her brothers actually crossed the Nemanus River into Germany to go to school. Her mother stayed in Lithuania for almost twenty years as her father at first went back and forth a few times between the Old Country and America. Because of the political and educational realities of where they were brought up, some of the main characters could speak four languages: Polish, Lithuanian, Russian, and German. When they came to the United States, they had to learn a fifth.

At the time Toni was born, Nikodimas, who was a trained carpenter and who had worked at an American rifle factory during the war, now discovered that he could make more money delivering adult beverages “imported” into New York and sold to Connecticut speakeasies.

Nikodimas was not worried about being arrested because he said that the police and authorities for the most part did not like the Prohibition law. It gave him a chance to earn more money than he otherwise would have.

We also hear of the faith of the entire family, both men and women as they pray for Antoni and support each other in taking care of him and his older brother and sister. Their prayers to God, to Mary, and to the Archangel Michal [their spelling] are answered.

Because of the serious nature of the baby’s condition, midwife Helena stayed with Marianna’s family until spring. She had no children at the time, but her husband was not happy with the arrangement. There is, then, additional conflict as well, but the main effect of the story is one of faith and family and how not only a premature baby survived but how an immigrant family, relatively speaking, thrived in their adopted homeland.

I am not giving anything away to say that the author recently informed readers that her Uncle Tony celebrated his ninety-third birthday last week! A miracle child indeed! And a tender, endearing story tells us how he came into the world.

Book Reviews and Observations on the English Language