Mermaid Confidential

Mermaid Confidential: A Novel (Serge Storms, 25)

Mermaid Confidential

To me, the publishing house, Barnes & Noble always felt like a second tier option. An afterthought? An “also ran?” A long, storied namesake. But the other, long-dead, giant chain, with its cool accoutrements — Borders — crashed and burned, long before the seismic shift in bookstores and book-buying. All of this is best left in the dust and history of the public with its retail-book habits.

Mermaid Confidential: A Novel (Serge Storms, 25)

For me, I’ve experienced mixed results, at best, with purchasing top-selling books on Amazon. True, I link to them, and true, I can earn a commission from the link and sale, but not enough of ya’ll are buying from my links, and that doesn’t matter. Not always on time, like a Tuesday release date doesn’t get delivered on Tuesday, as suggested.

When the Tim Dorsey books go on sale? I prefer buying local. To be sure, there is merry war of wits between Barnes & Noble, Amazon, and Costco. That last one, Costco, only carries authors who sell at a certain level, and I tend to not favor too many of those bestsellers, but it is a favorite spot because of the price — and sales count towards bestseller status.

Tim Dorsey himself answered a query e-mail from me, about which one was better for him, as an author, and his response was that it didn’t matter. I just wanted to buy where it helped the author the most.

Most of the Barnes & Noble I’ve been in, certainly all of them locally? There’s a branded Starbuck’s coffee shop, and rock-bottom remainders, plus best sellers, and similar, all under one roof. Craft, cruft, crass, and curated. Careful examination of “classics” reveals that the giant has a deep canon of public domain copies of classics, published under its own name, hence serving the name of “publisher” rather than just bookstore. Plus a proprietary e-reader.

What disturbed me the most, I rolled up on Wednesday because I was at the rock shop on the release date itself, and to no avail. “We didn’t get that one in, do you want us to order it for you?” Probably not, you know, because it should be on the bestseller shelf before too long. Supply chain problem.

I have two local libraries, both digital, and one popped the book up in a hurry. So there is that. I still need a hardback, first edition, and I’m still slightly perturbed that my buddy is no longe getting an ARC, but times being what they are?

Mermaid Confidential

Mermaid Confidential: A Novel (Serge Storms, 25)

There’s a kind of sheer insanity brilliance, and prose style that rips forward, crashes forward, at an alarming pace. For the record, the Serge novels do hold up well under subsequent rereading, hallmarks of good literature, topical references be damned. There’s a crazy amount of information buried, with trivia and diatribes, long-winded bits of exposition that deliver nuanced, or maybe blatantly, flavored data.

If there is a theme? Sort of a vertical trailer-park. Condo-commandos in the Keys? With a decent swipe — Serge style — at medical billing policies and practices.
Mermaid Confidential

Mermaid Confidential

Mermaid Confidential: A Novel (Serge Storms, 25)

Thus Spake Falstaff

Thus Spake Falstaff

“I am as poor as Job, my lord, but not so patient.”
2 Henry 4, I.II.38
Job

13th Sign?

#Shakespeare

This is Shakespeare

This is Shakespeare

This is Shakespeare – Emma Smith

“Ambiguity is the oxygen of these works,” page 3, introduction.

So it is. After several years, and at least one academic book about Shakespeare, and dozens of podcasts by the same author, I have clues as to her analysis and thinking. But that single snippet sums up a great deal about what is up ahead.

The first chapter is on Taming of the Shrew, and as I would expect from her excellent (podcast) lectures, the books asks questions, but leaves no definite answer.

Then again, isn’t that the nature of great art? Make the spectator ask questions and find answers for his, or her, self?

I was left a little underwhelmed by the first book I read by the esteemed Emma Smith, but that’s a judgement based on my expectations, not a swipe at her or her street credentials. That noted, the first chapter alone delivered what I wanted, background, scholarship, questions, and observations I’ve never actively considered.

Which is what I look for in text like this.

Her commentary on The Comedy of Errors starts out, lifted almost, from her podcast and lecture, I would guess, but turn a page, there’s new material, drilling down a little deeper.

At the conclusion to Chapter 4, on Richard II, the final line, “…again, we make Shakespeare mean what we want him to mean.” (Page 66).

This is Shakespeare Some of the material, I’ve listened to a handful of her podcasts over and over, but some of her material delves into more metaphysical realms, and thereby, touches upon — gives voice to — sentiments, and prescient observations I’ve used in my own works. One comment, when it surfaced the third or fourth time, made me think back to long, boring rides to and from Austin with her podcast reverberating in my ears, and her question of “agency.”

“Agency” in this setting, a way I never heard it before, it was the question of “free-will” versus “pre-determined” outcomes. Thankfully, that question isn’t yet resolved, not in my mind. Is it the stars above that govern our dispositions? Or are we in charge, masters of our own fates?

“At the time of Shakespeare’s writing, philosophies of causation were on the move.” (Page 72)

In the chapter on Romeo and Juliette, using the play’s preface as a springboard, the question of the nature of tragedy, set against the characters, and that preface. Who is in charge? Questions, not answers, and questions best left to the readers themselves.

Throughout her take on Romeo and Juliet, there was the academic suggestion that it appeared at the same time as Midsummer’s Night’s Eve, and in doing so, has crossed swords. I couldn’t help but think about Shakespeare for Squirrels since that was one or two books before, in my reading stack.

This is Shakespeare

The book itself, with March 31, 2020 release date, might be one of the earliest examples of a pandemic victim. I missed the release entirely, and it wasn’t until a local bookstore started to let me browse again, did I happen across the title. Flipped it open, red the first few lines of the introduction, checked to make sure it was that Emma Smith that I knew from her excellent podcasts and whatnot?

Full price, at the moment. No question. Worth every cent. While some of this is certainly high-brow Oxford professor stuff, she can also draw a direct line between one of Shakespeare’s fan-favorite’s Falstaff, and our own modern day Homer Simpson, “D’oh.”

This is Shakespeare

For the last two dozen years, maybe longer, I’ve held one, then two texts as my “go-to” for Shakespeare studies and preparations, Bloom and Garber. So in the last seven years, I’ve added — toyed with — several Shakespeare-themed podcasts. Emma Smith’s lecture series nailed it best, but to this day, I still find the Chopped Bard podcast equally refreshing, if somewhat longer-winded.

I won’t completely replace the previously mentioned texts, but when possible, the Emma Smith book is just — for me — easier to read, more enjoyable, and has a kind of even-handed approach, fraught with possibilities and questions, but not promising an easy solution.

As a reference book, suppose I’m about to watch a play, or see a movie, something by Shakespeare? If it is play she’s covered in the book? A few minutes rereading her comments and questions adds a world of background, and helps flesh out the material, and makes it easier to understand what is happening, and why.

But, in its heart? It’s just more questions rather than answers.

This is Shakespeare

Part of this is not just about the book, but its contents. The book-buying adventure, first it was in a corner of a big-box bookstore, the local Barnes & Noble. I knew of the book’s publication, but not the exact date. Part of the first round of pandemic pause material. I started reading it, and got, maybe halfway through, then it was set aside.

On rare occasions, I would check the online libraries for a copy, if I needed a quick reference.

In bed, the other evening, looking at baseball games, Shakespeare performances, and Moon Phases for fishing, I wondered if Emma Smith’s This is Shakespeare was available as an e-book.

It was on sale, $4.99 on the i-books thing. Store. Whatever. Well-worth it. I keep a copy of digital copy of King James, Marcus Aurelius, and The Complete Works. Plus a couple of library books, whatever I might be reading at the time.

There are very few, count on one hand, the number of authors where I keep a hardback copy of the text, and a digital copy.

It’s brilliant, timely, succinct, and the best reference I have for Shakespeare’s Works, better than anything else I’ve found. Accessible yet academic in the same breath. Worth it to have two copies.

This is Shakespeare

This is Shakespeare – Emma Smith

#Shakespeare

How A Single Book

How A Single Book

Every good Mercury Retrograde deserves a series of books to read. Better yet, a great series like these.

New Moon in Aquarius, Aquarius author, what’s not to love?

How a single book gave way to me reading a series? The single novel was the lovingly twisted, “No one saw that coming,” Dream Girl by Laura Lippman. Looked online, and come up with Baltimore Blues.

  • Baltimore Blues

Baltimore Blues: The First Tess Monaghan Novel
Several references to Housman, the poet, A.E. Housman. One of my favorite poems.

  • Charm City

Charm City: A Tess Monaghan Novel

Besides, why look at some boring old court documents or chat up sources when you can chase someone across his own front lawn, screaming, “How do you feel?” Page 50.

Explains a lot about the author. Hat tip. Band wants to move to Austin? Yeah, dates it. Brought back exquisite memories.

  • Butcher’s Hill

Butchers Hill: A Tess Monaghan Novel
Nicely done, good twist in a twist, and they lived happily ever after with typical inner-city corruption.

  • In Big Trouble

In Big Trouble: A Tess Monaghan Novel
“Remember the Alamo,” huh. More than a nod to the author of the Blanco County Mysteries series. Afterword as a fitting nod to Texas and its diversity of character.

  • The Sugar House

The Sugar House: A Tess Monaghan Mystery (Tess Monaghan Novel Book 5)
Can a city, a place, be part of the characters in a novel? Food issues.

  • In a Strange City

In a Strange City: A Tess Monaghan Novel

“You know, carrying grudges can damage your vertebrae, Detective.” Page 39.

(I’m stealing that line.)

Support your local library.

Mercury’s Retrograde

The Portable Mercury Retrograde

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Portable Mercury Retrograde: astrofish.net’s Mercury in Retrograde

Binary Quest

Binary Question

“Pascal’s Wager is a bit of philosophical detritus that recently resurfaced. In short?”

Binary Question

cf., Pascal’s Wager (in Pisces).