the Scott Stein


There are lots of Scott Steins out there, but this is the Scott Stein, the one you’re looking for

The Rape of Nanking
Posted on Monday February 25, 2008 at 4:05pm.
I just finished reading Iris Chang's The Rape of Nanking. I've read my share of horrifying nonfiction these last couple of years, including books about the Soviet Gulag, the fire-bombing of Dresden, and the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. All contain gruesome details of intense human suffering. And none of them is quite as haunting — as immediate and violent — as Chang's book. Rough stuff. No horror writer's fantasies can compare to what real life has provided in abundance. It's unfortunate that so many people don't even know to what "the Rape" refers. Almost as disturbing as the atrocities themselves is what people are being taught today in Japan about Japan's actions in and around World War II. Chang does a good job of exploring that as well. The Rape of Nanking is a hard book to read because of its content, but an easy and engaging one, and I recommend it, despite the odds of it interfering with peaceful sleep. You've been warned. (And if you're squeamish, do not look at the photos.)
Hammered
Posted on Tuesday January 8, 2008 at 12:10pm.
I had never read anything by Mickey Spillane, so recently I decided to get The Mike Hammer Collection, which contains the first three Mike Hammer novels. I decided this because the book was only one dollar (as part of a book club offer), because I was looking for an entertaining page-turner of a diversion, and because I was curious. After all, the Mike Hammer novels have sold millions of copies over the last sixty years, were made into movies and television shows, and have loyal fans even today. I wanted to know what all the fuss was about.

For a period of a few years I was a literary snob, looking down on genre books and most bestsellers. Probably this was caused by taking so many literature courses and going for the MFA degree. Fortunately, I've been mostly cured of that snobbery. While I think that plenty of genre books are formulaic and not well-written, with little point to them, I have no love of "literary" books that are apparently intended to be read only by graduate students. What matters — nearly all that matters — is if a book is good, regardless of how publishers and academics and retailers choose to categorize them. Many genre books are well-crafted and compelling. I bring this up to assure you that I had a positive attitude when I started the first Mike Hammer novel, I, The Jury. I was looking forward to a fun read to end my winter vacation.

I, The Jury is a very bad book.
Nanny State review
Posted on Sunday January 6, 2008 at 9:04am.
My review of David Harsanyi's Nanny State is in today's Philadelphia Inquirer, Section C on page four. It is also available here online.
My 2007 in Books
Posted on Friday December 28, 2007 at 12:27pm.
2007 is almost over. Below, more or less in order of reading, are the books I read this calendar year. Most were not published in 2007. It was an interesting year in books for me. I read some good, completely absorbing novels, and some disappointing, overhyped novels. (I'll leave it to you to guess which is which.) I read some intriguing and informative nonfiction. If I had to pick, I'd say that the book that will stay with me the longest is GULAG. Feel free to weigh in about any of the books on this list, whether or not you've read them. Here's to a good 2008 in books.

1. AMERICAN GODS, a novel by Neil Gaiman

2. UNDERSTANDING COMICS: THE INVISIBLE ART, by Scott McCloud

3. NEUROMANCER, a novel by William Gibson

4. SHOCKWAVE: COUNTDOWN TO HIROSHIMA, by Stephen Walker

5. THE AMAZING ADVENTURES OF KAVALIER AND CLAY, a novel by Michael Chabon

6. RESTORING THE LOST CONSTITUTION: THE PRESUMPTION OF LIBERTY, by Randy E. Barnett

7. THE AGE OF ABUNDANCE: HOW PROSPERITY TRANSFORMED AMERICA'S POLITICS AND CULTURE, by Brink Lindsey (Read the review I wrote for the Philadelphia Inquirer, published on Sunday, July 8, 2007)

8. THE TIME TRAVELER'S WIFE, a novel by Audrey Niffenegger

9. ON THE ROAD, a novel by Jack Kerouac

10. ENDER'S GAME, a novel by Orson Scott Card

11. A HISTORY OF THE WORLD IN 6 GLASSES, by Tom Standage

12. SENSE AND SENSIBILITY, a novel by Jane Austen

13. THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD, a novel by John Le Carre

14. JEEVES AND THE TIE THAT BINDS, a novel by P.G. Wodehouse

15. MILES: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY, by Miles Davis and Quincy Troupe

16. THE COLOR OF MAGIC, a novel by Terry Pratchett

17. MADAME BOVARY, a novel by Gustave Flaubert

18. SERVANTS OF THE MAP, stories by Andrea Barrett

19. NANNY STATE: HOW FOOD FASCISTS, TEETOTALING DO-GOODERS, PRIGGISH MORALISTS, AND OTHER BONEHEADED BUREAUCRATS ARE TURNING AMERICA INTO A NATION OF CHILDREN, by David Harsanyi (My review should be in the Philadelphia Inquirer on January 6, 2008. I'll link to it when it's published)

20. GULAG: A HISTORY, by Anne Applebaum

21. INVISIBLE CITIES, fiction by Italo Calvino

22. THE DIVING BELL AND THE BUTTERFLY, by Jean-Dominique Bauby

23. DINOSAUR LIVES: UNEARTHING AN EVOLUTIONARY SAGA, by John R. Horner and Edwin Dobb

Arthur C. Clarke...
Posted on Monday December 17, 2007 at 4:27pm.
... turns 90. I didn't know he was still alive. Good for him. Happy birthday.
Pietra Dunmore on Book Cover
Posted on Wednesday September 19, 2007 at 10:45am.
My former student, Pietra Dunmore, a recent graduate of Drexel University, writes to tell me that she is on the cover of a new novel, She's No Angel by Janine A. Morris. Pietra is a model as well as an aspiring writer, and that's her on the front cover, below. Congratulations to Pietra.


Jeeves and Diminishing Returns
Posted on Wednesday September 19, 2007 at 12:04am.
I read Code of the Woosters, by P.G. Wodehouse, in June of 2006. It was my first Jeeves novel. It was one of the funniest, most entertaining novels I'd ever read.

It probably didn't hurt that, at the time, I was on vacation with my wife in Montauk, New York. Our son was staying with my parents in Queens, and we had a few days to ourselves. So I read while lounging on a breezy beach and drinking a tall Captain Morgan and coke. Ideal conditions for laughing along with Bertie and Jeeves.

But it wasn't the rum or the sand that made Code of the Woosters so much fun. It was the novel. My students who've read it, for a course I teach, have laughed just as hard as I did when I first read it. I have no reason to suspect that they supplemented the assigned reading with rum of any kind.

I have since read three more Jeeves novels. They've each been easy enough to read and amusing in spots, but each has been less entertaining than the previous one. The last one I read, just recently (Jeeves and the Tie that Binds), was even a bit tedious. I don't know if I'll read any more of them. As the Grumpy Old Bookman pointed out, Wodehouse wrote a "series of books which are, effectively, the same book each time, but with enough variation to hold the reader's attention." For me, the variation is no longer enough. I remain convinced, however, that my preference for Code of the Woosters is not simply because I read it first (though that might be part of it), but because it is a better novel than the ones I read later.

On a related note, I've watched episodes from the first season of Jeeves and Wooster, starring Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry. They are competently acted and produced, but they don't come close to capturing the humor of Code of the Woosters. It all comes down to the narrator's tone, his idiosyncratic way of expressing himself, which a movie or television show cannot duplicate. Some books are meant to be books. If you haven't read any P.G. Wodehouse, I obviously recommend Code of the Woosters. It's very funny. Rum is optional.

Update: The conversation has continued over at Books, Inq.

Another Update: The conversation also continues at Brandywine Books.
Review of Age of Abundance
Posted on Sunday July 8, 2007 at 10:39am.
You can read my review of The Age of Abundance in the Philadelphia Inquirer, today, July 8, 2007.
Book Note: Understanding Comics, by Scott McCloud
Posted on Sunday January 7, 2007 at 10:03pm.
Understanding Comics was recommended on two separate occasions by my friend and colleague, author Paula Marantz Cohen. Last week, I put my Barnes & Noble holiday gift cards to good use and picked up a copy. My trust in Paula's judgment was, as I expected, well-placed: Understanding Comics is that rare book that lives up to its enthusiastic back cover praise. I was a big comic book fan through my mid-teenage years, regularly reading nearly a dozen Marvel titles. I finally outgrew their limitations, but as McCloud argues, those limitations might not have had anything to do with the form itself. I don't know if I'm fully convinced, but maybe mostly. Understanding Comics is a wonderfully absorbing comic book about comics, an explanation of the craft of storytelling and the tools available to the artist that should interest all writers. McCloud not only explains, but also demonstrates comic book technique with great wit and insight throughout. I don't agree with everything McCloud argues--his definition of "art," for example, is so broad as to make it include practically everything, which I think makes "art" and "artist" mean nothing at all. Still, even on this count, McCloud's explanation is engaging and fun to grapple with. This is a book worth reading and re-reading, for fans of comic books and storytelling of any kind, and for fiction writers.

Book Note: American Gods by Neil Gaiman
Posted on Wednesday January 3, 2007 at 2:47pm.
I wanted to like American Gods. It sounded like a fun concept--ripe for commentary and satire, perhaps--and was a bestseller, with some enthusiastic praise on the back cover. Neil Gaiman's name had popped up here and there, for me, notably as the writer of a blurb on Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, one of my favorite novels that I read in 2006. Gaiman's praise for Clarke's book, and his success, had me looking forward to reading his novel.

I'm not going to bother you with a plot summary, something about old gods (Odin and the like) battling new gods (media and the like) in America. The main character, Shadow, is lifeless. The prose is mostly dull, sometimes clunky. The drama doesn't exist. I didn't care who lived or who died, and thought most of the content simply went nowhere. I didn't laugh or smile. I could have stopped reading at any time and wouldn't have wondered what I'd missed by not finishing. It wasn't painful reading--I would have abandoned it--just long and boring. The too-effusive back cover blurbs and the brief author interview at the book's end suggest that there is a meditation in the novel, somewhere, on what America is. I found nothing profound or insightful--hardly anything at all--on that count. The concept of people believing in technology and modern appliances rather than gods left room for meditation, but nothing was remotely developed. This book is just empty, not only devoid of meaning--which I didn't demand but the book implied was there--but of entertainment value as well. I don't read sci-fi or fantasy like I did when I was younger, but I do make an effort to not let any residual MFA snobbery prevent me from enjoying a good read, whatever the "literary" merits might be. I will embrace any story that is sufficiently entertaining or witty or suspenseful and skillfully rendered. American Gods never came alive. There's no there, there.