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What book is everyone reading at the moment? Part 2.

Cop Hater, Ed McBain

This is the first 87th Precinct novel, first published in 1956. McBain was a pseudonym adopted by Evan Hunter for his police procedurals.

He's an excellent writer under either name. The 87th Precinct series went on for an extraordinarily long run of 49 years, and gradually the novels became denser and longer. Cop Hater began as a paperback original, a modest novel not far from a potboiler. In his intro, McBain notes that he sold the concept on the basis of creating mysteries with a composite detective: a whole squad of precinct detectives. Then he had to research real police forces. And create a completely fictional city - we don't even know its name. However, it's like a woman....

For a first entry, Cop Hater is an absorbing read. Someone is shooting and killing the detectives of the squad, with no apparent motive, one every few days, and the others set out on a dogged search for the murderer. McBain has a good ear for dialogue (though he admits he at first imitated the clipped tones of Dragnet, radio version). He merges vivid description with action deftly. My God, he loved weather! The mystery reaches a satisfying conclusion, and the reader comes away with the impression of having met people with varied and memorable personalities. Though some perform heroic acts, the cops are not heroes, just flawed yet gifted people doing dangerous, difficult jobs.

I liked it.
I read the first eight or so 87th Precinct books a few years ago and I enjoyed them all. I've also read I think two of the last ones and liked those as well.

Not only were the stories and characterizations good, but they're a fascinating look at police procedure in the 1950s (or at least Hunter's knowledge of it) before computers and even when radios weren't in every car.

Good stories.
 
If at All Possible, Involve a Cow: The Book of College Pranks, Neil Stenberg

Saw this one in a North Atlanta bookshop (new, used, collectible) and picked it up because I was a college student for about eight years, all told, and then a college professor for about thirty years, all told, and it looked funny.

Steinberg sets out to present a history of American college pranks, locations ranging from Podunk campuses to the iviest of leagues (but with a strong emphasis on Caltech). Oh, those rascally students! What hijinks they pull, my word. While a student at Yale, James Fenimore Cooper impishly set fire to a friend’s room by forcing gunpowder though his keyhole and then igniting it! He presumably stopped giggling when he was expelled. Then, too, in the late 19th Century, Cornell upperclassmen decided to trick the lowly freshmen by sabotaging their Freshman Banquet. They did so by piping chlorine gas into the dining room, except they accidentally bored a hole in the kitchen next door and instead of sickening all the freshmen, they merely fatally poisoned the cook. A similar sort-of jape at another school showered a roomful of students in ammonia. Nobody died, though several were blinded, so that wasn’t quite as humorous.

Not all the pranks were so horrendous, many were amusing, and some were just meh. The Harvard Lampoon faced frequent thefts of its iconic emblem, a bronze ibis that crowned its headquarters. On one occasion the birdnappers shipped it to the USSR (not really, that was part of the prank). Caltech has, or anyway, had, Ditch Day, when all seniors would ditch classes and head for the beach—and underclassmen would break into their dorm rooms and, oh fill them with four feet of water or two tons of sand, until the seniors counterattacked by creating incredibly intricate stacks (puzzles and booby traps) that the younger students would have to negotiate even to gain entrance to the rooms. In the old, old days, a student would steal the college president’s horse and shave it. In more modern times, they’d steal a professor’s BMW and hoist to the roof of a campus building and then persuade the campus cops to write a ticket for illegal parting.

Sadly, I found most of the stories on the “meh” side, but they did remind me of a prank a friend of mine and I once played on a favorite professor. He taught one class without much enthusiasm, a sophomore-level American poetry survey. My friend and I were then graduate assistants, and we realized that the professor had developed a habit of giving a weekly short-response quiz every Friday. He’d write out three or four topics and have the students write no more than one page responding to any one they chose. He was very forgetful, and every Friday he’d come hurrying into the faculty lounge, scrawl out three or four sentences, and photocopy them. He’d get to class five or ten minutes late, but generally the students were done with their papers in thirty minutes instead of the regulation fifty-five minutes of class.

So my friend and I helped him by preparing in advance a weekly quiz one Friday: 1. Robert Frost said writing free verse was like playing tennis with the net down. In a match between Frost and Walt Whitman, who would win and why? 2. In Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” he says “My little horse must think it queer / To stop without a farmhouse near.” How queer did the horse think it was? Would he go out on a trip with the speaker again? On a dark night? 3. Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken” and Carl Sandburg’s “Fog” have nothing in common. Briefly compare them.

We expected to get a laugh from the students. Nope. Every dang one of them wrote a page on one or the other of those idiotic topics. When the professor came in with his stack of topics, he saw they were all writing away, so he sat at his desk and collected the papers. After we confessed, he said he enjoyed it but asked us never to do it again

Some of the student responses, though, got an “A.”
 
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Folk Lore, Old Customs, and Superstitions in Shakespeareland, J. Harvey Bloom (1927)

A diverting, very discursive discussion of the topic. I'm There is more of folk ways than folklore here (how to construct a barn, why the archaeological record is thin on glass and metal kitchenware, why oxen are better at ploughing than horses, etc.). Dancing, poetry, and pageantry also show up, with sections on farming, babies, education, adulthood, old age, burial customs, and so on. The tone is stuffy but dry and humorous. Worth a read.
 
Dipped into Bill Knox again, The Klondyker. There's a ship damaged by a sea monster in the islands of Scotland and Carrick and Merlin investigate. With a lady scientist....
 
Berlin Brænder (or: Berlin is Burning), which describes the lives of a number of Danes working in Berling during WW2. Mostly members of the diplomatic corps and reporters.

It's the first of two parts, covering the period leading up to the breakdown of the in the circumstances friendly Dano-German relations in late 1943, with the second part covering the period until the final battles of 1945.
 
Stephen Fry in America: Fifty States and the Man Who Set Out to See Them All, Stephen Fry

A companion volume to Fry's TV series, this is ( as one might expect) a wry, witty, and quite affectionate ramble through the U S of A. Many things delight him (American football, a Southern Thanksgiving dinner, breathtaking vistas). Some disgust him (Trump's Taj Mahal, corn dogs, a body farm). Quite a few amuse him (Mount Rushmore, the Chief Crazy Horse memorial). Still others move him to tears ("God Bless America" sung by a crowd and ditto "The start spangled Banner" - he can't imagine reacting like that to "God Save the Queen").

Lots of photos, lots of warm portraits or his American hosts, lots of self-deprecating humor. He has two unpleasant run-ins with horses and breaks an arm messing about in boats. And he drives to every state but two in a taxi. Brave man, that.
 
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Stephen Fry in America: Fifty States and the Man Who Set Out to See Them All, Stephen Fry

A companion volume to Fry's TV series, this is ( as one might expect) a wry, witty, and quite affectionate ramble through the U S of A. Many things delight him (American football, a Southern Thanksgiving dinner, breathtaking vistas). Some disgust him (Trump's Taj Mahal, corn dogs, a body farm). Quite a few amuse him (Mount Rushmore, the Chief Crazy Horse memorial). Still others move him to tears ("God Bless America" sung by a crowd and ditto "The start spangled Banner" - he can't imagine reacting like that to "God Save the Queen").

Lots of photos, lots of warm portraits or his American hosts, lots of self-deprecating humor. He has two unpleasant run-ins with horses and breaks an arm messing about in boats. And he drives to every state but two in a taxi. Brave man, that.
The hell? Body farms are important science. I thought Stephen Fry was better than this kind of sensationalist nonsense.
 
Colour: Travels Through the Paintbox, by Victoria Finlay, 2022.

Fascinating book of stories and travels researching the world's pigments and dyes.

Beautifully written, highly readable, and well resourced, full of interesting facts and anecdotes about artists, cultures, and history.

Half-way through so far (438 page book).
 
Colour: Travels Through the Paintbox, by Victoria Finlay, 2022.

Fascinating book of stories and travels researching the world's pigments and dyes.

Beautifully written, highly readable, and well resourced, full of interesting facts and anecdotes about artists, cultures, and history.

Half-way through so far (438 page book).
That sounds good so I looked into it. It appears there are a couple versions of the book. The second is Color: A Natural History of the Palette, which has the same cover but is a bit shorter (448 pages) than the "Colour" version you mentioned (Amazon shows it at 512 pages. And $344 for the hardcover, vs $32.52 for the paperback!) Getting active in painting again I'm going to look into this. BTW, I'm color-blind (red-green), which is why you will rarely see reds in my paintings.
Looks like I can get a Good used copy for a lot less. Kindle is not an option for a book of this type.
 
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That sounds good so I looked into it. It appears there are a couple versions of the book. The second is Color: A Natural History of the Palette, which has the same cover but is a bit shorter (448 pages) than the "Colour" version you mentioned (Amazon shows it at 512 pages. And $344 for the hardcover, vs $32.52 for the paperback!) Getting active in painting again I'm going to look into this. BTW, I'm color-blind (red-green), which is why you will rarely see reds in my paintings.
Looks like I can get a Good used copy for a lot less. Kindle is not an option for a book of this type.
Actually, the one I've got (paperback) is 494 pages including references, index, etc. The publisher is Sceptre.

I'm sure you'd find it very interesting!
 
One of my favourite books of all time. The later Foucault's Pendulum is also excellent.

I dipped in to Eco, but found him insufferable. His penchant for obscure and lengthy words when a shorter one would suffice made reading his prose more of a chore than a pleasure. I have a pretty good vocabulary, but I had to keep looking up unfamiliar words, which rapidly became tedious.
Just finished reading the entire Canterbury Tales, in modern English of course. Good stuff. Surprisingly bawdy, funny and engaging.
 
The hell? Body farms are important science. I thought Stephen Fry was better than this kind of sensationalist nonsense.
He treats it quite seriously and explains the forensic importance, but when his host shows him what happens to a murder victim in a capped oil drum after a couple of months, he admits his visceral revulsion.
 
Ten Little ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ (aka: Ten Little Indians) (aka: And Then There Were None) by Agatha Christie
 
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Cop Hater, Ed McBain

This is the first 87th Precinct novel, first published in 1956. McBain was a pseudonym adopted by Evan Hunter for his police procedurals.

[...] respectful snip for space
An Ed McBain book was the first one I ever read that had been published in the US and imported by someone into the UK. I can't remember the title or plot now - it was in about 1978 - but I can still remember the strangeness of the font and layout; so different to the way paperbacks were in the UK.

In the car I'm listening to the second Elizabeth Peters (pen name of Egyptologist Barbara Mertz) novel in the Amelia Peabody series, A Crocodile on the Sandbank. Great fun and some interesting Egyptian history as well, set in a framework of late Victorian life.

Not in the car, I've discovered E. R. Punshon's golden age detective novels; I've raced through the first seven (!) and am now on the eighth, Mystery of Mr Jessop. The protagonist, police officer Bobby Owen, is currently wrestling with the disconnect between his 1930s instinct to be deferent towards a duke, and his police training to suspect everyone. I can see a bit of the solution, but I don't think I've got the right murderer yet.
 
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One of my favourite books of all time. The later Foucault's Pendulum is also excellent.
I'm really struggling with this one though. Fairly enjoying the mystery part but the book is so dense with theological discussions which I just cant stand. I don't want to read 15 pages about if Jesus ever laughed or not...I've started to lightly read those parts.
 
The Mugger, Ed McBain

The second in the 87th Precinct series, this police procedural is, natch, about a serial mugger who specializes in attacking women, punching them, and stealing their purses, which in the City means he usually gets away with fifty bucks or less. Newlywed detective Steve Carella is off on his honeymoon with his deaf-mute wife Teddy, so the burden of the investigation falls on the short, polite, but deadly Hal Willis, the brutal, big, but corrupt and violent Roger Havilland, and the youthful beat patrolman Bert Kling, who aspires to become a Detective 3rd Grade.

This is the novel that introduces one of McBain's favorite tropes - the extended metaphor "The City is a woman . . .." In this one it goes on for a page and a bit, and in later novels he lovingly revisits and rings changes on it. And, I noticed, in Guards, Guards! Sir Terry Pratchett pays homage to it from the viewpoint of a drunken Sam Vimes: "The city wasa, wasa, wasa wossname. Thing. Woman."

Like most of the early 87th Precinct novels this one clips right along, a fast read with a satisfying mystery and a wicked little curveball for those coming to it for the first time. We meet Monaghan and Monroe, two Homicide detectives who are cut from the same bolt of cloth (sharkskin) and who spend all their time snarking about the lower-class precinct detectives and making bad jokes. God forbid they should ever do any actual police work. This novel also introduces the reader to the bald-as-an-egg, preternaturally patient Meyer Meyer, who narrates a long, complicated tale about the detectives of the 33rd, who are struggling to solve the case of an actual cat burglar.

And one of the detectives meets a future flame or two, the weather has shifted from sultry summer to balmy, colorful autumn, and the City, well, the City is like a woman.
 
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