Sunday, August 24, 2008

Updated Book List Part 2

This is the new book list. As I said, it's pretty lengthy. And it will undergo further revision because I have a box full of books on Indian culture, history, politics, economy, etc., and a box full of books on China that need to go into this mix at some point.

Damn, I think I'm addicted to books. And I STILL haven't read all my Science News, dammit!
  1. A History of Cambodia - David Chandler
  2. A History of Malaysia - Barbara Watson Andaya & Leonard Andaya
  3. A History of Modern Indonesia - M.C. Ricklefs
  4. A History of Selangor - J. M. Gullick
  5. A Will For Freedom - Romen Bose
  6. Alexander the Great - W.W. Tarn
  7. Between Two Oceans - Murkett, Miskic, Farrell, & Chiang
  8. Bird by Bird - Anne Lamott
  9. Blood on the Golden Sands - Lim Kean Siew
  10. Broca's Brain - Carl Sagan
  11. Chandranath - Sharat Chandra Chattopadhyay
  12. Chinese Customs - Henri Dore
  13. Clay Walls - Kim Ronyoung
  14. Daniel Deronda - George Eliot
  15. Dictionary of the Khazars - Milorad Pavic
  16. Finnegan's Wake - James Joyce
  17. First Person Singular - Joyce Carol Oates
  18. From Pacific War to Merdeka - James Wong Wing On
  19. Gandhi's Truth - Erik H. Erikson
  20. How I Adore You - Mark Pritchard
  21. In The Time of The Butterflies - Julia Alvarez
  22. Kempeitai, Japan's Dreaded Military Police - Raymond Lamont-Brown
  23. Kempeitai:The Japanese Secret Service Then And Now - Richard Deacon
  24. Labour Unrest in Malaya - Tai Yuen
  25. Life As The River Flows - Agnes Khoo
  26. Malay Folk Beliefs - Mohd Taib Osman
  27. Malaysia - R. Emerson
  28. Memory in Mind and Brain - Morton F. Reiser
  29. Modern Japan, A Historical Survey - Hane Mikiso
  30. Mrs. Dalloway - Virginia Woolf
  31. Murder on the Verandah - Eric Lawlor
  32. Niels Lyhne - Jens Peter Jacobsen
  33. Orientalism - Edward W. Said
  34. Orlando - Virginia Woolf
  35. Outwitting the Gestapo - Lucie Aubrac
  36. Palli Samaj (The Homecoming) - Sharat Chandra Chattopadhyay
  37. Patchwork Shawl Chronicles of South Asian Women in America - Shamita Das Dasgupta
  38. People's War, People's Army - Vo Nguyen Giap
  39. Power Politics - Arundhati Roy
  40. Primitive Art - Franz Boas
  41. Raffles - Maurice Collis
  42. Rehearsal for War - Ban Kah Choon & Yap Hong Kuan
  43. Rethinking Raffles - Syed Muhd Khairudin Aljunied
  44. Revolt in Paradise - K'tut Tantri
  45. Rosie - Anne Lamott
  46. Satyajit Ray: The Inner Eye (The Biography Of A Master Film-Maker - Andrew Robinson
  47. Screenwriting 434 - Lew Hunter
  48. Shanghai Refuge, A Memoir of the WWII Jewish Ghetto - Ernest G. Heppner
  49. Sherpas Through Their Rituals - Sherry B. Ortner
  50. Shut Up, I'm Talking - Gregory Levey
  51. Sisters in the Resistance - Margaret Collins Weitz
  52. Soldiers Alive - Ishikawa Tatsuzo
  53. Strangers Always A Jewish Family in Wartime Shanghai - Rena Krasno
  54. Taming the Wind of Desire - Carol Laderman
  55. The Art of the Novel - Milan Kundera
  56. The Bengal Muslims 1871 - 1906 - Rafiuddin Ahmed
  57. The Birth of Vietnam - Keith Weller Taylor
  58. The British Humiliation of Burma - Terrence Blackburn
  59. The Demon-Haunted World - Carl Sagan
  60. The Dutch Seaborne Empire 1600 - 1800 - C.R. Boxer
  61. The Emergence of Modern Turkey - Bernard Lewis
  62. The Eye Over The Golden Sands - Lim Kean Siew
  63. The Gift - Lewis Hyde
  64. The Mak Nyahs: Malaysian Male to Female Transexuals - Teh Yik Koon
  65. The March of Folly From Troy To Vietnam - Barbara W. Tuchman
  66. The Nanking Massacre - M.E.Sharpe
  67. The Origins of The Second World War in Asia and the Pacific - Iriye Akira
  68. The Pacific War - Ienaga Saburo
  69. The Plague - Albert Camus
  70. The Price of Peace - Foong Choon Hon, Ed.
  71. The Prince and The Discourses - Niccolo Machiavelli
  72. The Remembered Village - M. N. Srinivas
  73. The Right To Die - Derek Humphry & Ann Wickett
  74. The Tin Drum - Gunther Grass
  75. The Way of All Flesh - Samuel Butler
  76. Till Morning Comes - Han Suyin
  77. To The Lighthouse - Virginia Woolf
  78. Tokyo Rose - Masayo Duus
  79. Vietnam: A Long History - Nguyen Khac Vien
  80. War & Memory in Malaysia & Singapore - P. Lim Pui Huen, Diana Wong, Eds.
  81. Witness To An Era - Frank Moraes
  82. Women in the Holocaust - Dalia Ofer, Lenore J. Weitzman, Eds.
  83. Women, Outcastes, Peasants & Rebels - Kalpana Bardhan
  84. Writers' Workshop in a Book - Cheuse and Alvarez
  85. You'll Die in Singapore - Charles McCormac
  86. You'll Never Get Off The Island - Keith Wilson
  87. Your Memory — A User's Guide - Alan Baddeley

Updated Book List Part 1

Book review to follow.

So in January of this year, I posted a book list of 101 books. Here it is, in its original and (somewhat) pristine glory.
  1. A Cloistered War - Maisie Duncan
  2. A Field Guide To Writing Fiction - A.B. Guthrie Jr.
  3. A History of Malaysia - Barbara Watson Andaya & Leonard Andaya
  4. A History of Modern Indonesia - M.C. Ricklefs
  5. A History of Selangor - J. M. Gullick
  6. A Map of the World - Jane Hamilton
  7. A Point of Light - Zhou Mei
  8. A Suitable Boy - Vikram Seth
  9. A Will For Freedom - Romen Bose
  10. Abraham's Promise - Philip Jeyaretnam
  11. Agnes Smedley - J.R. & S.R. MacKinnon
  12. Asian Labour In The Japanese Wartime Empire - Paul H. Kratoska, Ed.
  13. Baba Nonnie Goes To War - Ron Mitchell
  14. Between Two Oceans - Murkett, Miskic, Farrell, & Chiang
  15. Bird by Bird - Anne Lamott
  16. Chandranath - Sharat Chandra Chattopadhyay
  17. Chinese Customs - Henri Dore
  18. Clay Walls - Kim Ronyoung
  19. Daniel Deronda - George Eliot
  20. Dictionary of the Khazars - Milorad Pavic
  21. Finnegan's Wake - James Joyce
  22. From Pacific War to Merdeka - James Wong Wing On
  23. Golden Gate - Vikram Seth
  24. How I Adore You - Mark Pritchard
  25. In Pursuit of Mountain Rats - Anthony Short
  26. In The Grip of a Crisis - Rudy Mosbergen
  27. Kempeitai, Japan's Dreaded Military Police - Raymond Lamont-Brown
  28. Kempeitai:The Japanese Secret Service Then And Now - Richard Deacon
  29. Kim - Rudyard Kipling
  30. Krait:The Fishing Boat That Went To War - Lynette Ramsay Silver
  31. Kranji - Romen Bose
  32. Labour Unrest in Malaya - Tai Yuen
  33. Lest We Forget - Alice M. Coleman & Joyce E. Williams
  34. Life As The River Flows - Agnes Khoo
  35. Living Hell - Goh Chor Boon
  36. Malay Folk Beliefs - Mohd Taib Osman
  37. Malaya and Singapore During the Japanese Occupation - Paul H. Kratoska, Ed.
  38. Malaysia - R. Emerson
  39. Modern Japan, A Historical Survey - Hane Mikiso
  40. Mrs. Dalloway - Virginia Woolf
  41. Night Butterfly - Tan Guan Heng
  42. No Cowardly Past - James Puthucheary
  43. Operation Matador - Ong Chit Chung
  44. Orlando - Virginia Woolf
  45. Outwitting the Gestapo - Aubrac
  46. Palli Samaj (The Homecoming) - Sharat Chandra Chattopadhyay
  47. Power Politics - Arundhati Roy
  48. Prehistory of the Indo-Malayan Archipelago - Peter Bellwood
  49. Red Star Over Malaya - Cheah Boon Kheng
  50. Rehearsal for War - Ban Kah Choon & Yap Hong Kuan
  51. Revolt in Paradise - K'tut Tantri
  52. Rosie - Anne Lamott
  53. Rouge of the North - Chang Ai Ling
  54. Shanghai Refuge, A Memoir of the WWII Jewish Ghetto - Ernest G. Heppner
  55. Singapore & The Many-Headed Monster - Joe Conceicao
  56. Sisters in the Resistance - Margaret Collins Weitz
  57. Soldiers Alive - Ishikawa Tatsuzo
  58. Strangers Always A Jewish Family in Wartime Shanghai - Rena Krasno
  59. Taming the Wind of Desire - Carol Laderman
  60. The Age of Diminished Expectations - Paul Krugman
  61. The Art of the Novel - Milan Kundera
  62. The Crippled Tree - Han Suyin
  63. The Double Tenth Trial - C. Sleeman, S.C. Sillein, Eds.
  64. The End of the War - Romen Bose
  65. The Gift - Lewis Hyde
  66. The Makioka Sisters - Junichiro Tanizaki
  67. The Malay Archipelago - Alfred Russell Wallace
  68. The Malayan Union Controversy, 1942-1948 - Albert Lau
  69. The Marquis - A Tale of Syonan-To - S.J.H. Conner
  70. The Nanking Massacre - M.E.Sharpe
  71. The Origins of The Second World War in Asia and the Pacific - Iriye Akira
  72. The Pacific War - Ienaga Saburo
  73. The Plague - Albert Camus
  74. The Price of Peace - Foong Choon Hon, Ed.
  75. The Rape of Nanking - Iris Chang
  76. The Tin Drum - Gunther Grass
  77. The War in Malaya - A.E. Percival
  78. The Way of All Flesh - Samuel Butler
  79. Three Came Home - Agnes Newton Keith
  80. To The Lighthouse - Virginia Woolf
  81. Tokyo Rose - Masayo Duus
  82. War & Memory in Malaysia & Singapore - P. Lim Pui Huen, Diana Wong, Eds.
  83. Women in the Holocaust - Dalia Ofer, Lenore J. Weitzman, Eds.
  84. Women, Outcastes, Peasants & Rebels - Kalpana Bardhan
  85. Writers' Workshop in a Book - Cheuse and Alvarez
  86. You'll Die in Singapore - Charles McCormac

  87. A Choice of Evils - Meira Chand
  88. Force 136:Story of A Resistance Fighter in WWII - Tan Chong Tee
  89. King Rat - James Clavell
  90. Murder on the Verandah - Eric Lawlor
  91. No Dram of Mercy - Sybil Kathigasu
  92. Rehearsal for War - Ban Kah Choon, Yap Hong Kuan
  93. Singa, Lion of Malaya - Gurchan Singh
  94. Singapore The Pregnable Fortress - Peter Elphick
  95. Sinister Twilight - Noel Barber
  96. Sold For Silver - Janet Lim
  97. Syonan - My Story (The Japanese Occupation of Singapore) - Mamoru Shinozaki
  98. The Fall of Shanghai - Noel Barber
  99. The Jungle is Neutral - F. Spencer Chapman
  100. The War Of The Running Dogs - Noel Barber
  101. You'll Never Get Off The Island - Keith Wilson
So, naturally, at the end of 8 months, I have acquired another boatload or two of books and upon reinspecting the list and the number of books read and the general topics, I find that I am, once again, rushing ahead of myself.

I mean, how could I possibly read about WWII and its effects on the European colonies of the Far East without first reading the histories of the various countries involved, political, economic, social, cultural. Oh, my.

So much to read, so little time.

At any rate, by my count, I have added 70 books to that list (at least), but of the original 101, I have read 84. Which leaves a mere 17 books in order to complete the assigned reading list. However, I now want to change the list itself and put some of my new acquisitions on it. Therefore, I will review the number of books I've read between the last review and the present, and will then publish the new list. It's quite long, but I don't expect to read more than perhaps 20 of the books on it, as I'm hoping to have surgery later this year. Cuts into one's reading time something dreadful.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Wounded by Percival Everett


I don't do this very often ... write about a book I'm reading. I usually wait until my mid-year review of all books read ... then my end of year "Books read by Ms. Manitoba" list. But I'm reading a book that is just so good I want to recommend it now: Wounded by Percival Everett.


First, the writing is so very very good. The writing is so good you are there in the action, living and breathing and walking with the characters. Plus, the characters are so interesting and well-formed -- so much so, that you don't even feel that they are characters -- they're real people. At least I wished they were and I wished I could go visit them. Right now. Mr. Everett is also tackling some tough subjects: an anti-gay hate crime and a prickly gay man; racism in Wyoming and the rest of America; disappointment and betrayal in marriage; cruelty towards animals. Big topics. And he treats them with sensitivity, respect, and intelligence.

To read a full description of the plot, go to amazon.com here.


I highly recommend Wounded by Percival Everett.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Beijing's National Stadium Looks Gorgeous at Night


Here's a photo released by Getty Images taken by Clive Rose.

Ms. Manitoba strives to be fair. It sure doesn't look like a bedpan in this photo. See my earlier post.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

The San Francisco International Festival of Short Films


Aug 6 to 9 ... check it out at this site:SF Shorts web site

And if you want to watch a very cool short film, go here and watch Johnny Kelly's Procrastination.

It Looks Like a Fu**ing Bedpan!

Photo by Ng Han Guan/Associated Press

Folks, I'm not schooled in architecture ... I'm one of the common people ... of course, that never stops me from commenting on something. But the National Stadium in Beijing looks like a hospital bedpan to me. The New York Times has an article on it in today's online edition. The writer of the piece, Nicolai Ouroussoff, says that people have nicknamed it the "Bird's Nest". Sorry. "Beijing Bedpan" to me. Considering that, Ouroussoff's following words cracked me up:

"Given the astounding expectations piled upon the National Stadium, I’m surprised it hasn’t collapsed under the strain."


More from Ouroussoff:

More than 90,000 spectators will stream through its gates on Friday for the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games; billions are expected to watch the fireworks on television. At the center of it all is this dazzling stadium, which is said to embody everything from China’s muscle-flexing nationalism to a newfound cultural sophistication.

Expect to be overwhelmed. Designed by the Swiss architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron, the stadium lives up to its aspiration as a global landmark. Its elliptical latticework shell, which has earned it the nickname the Bird’s Nest, has an intoxicating beauty that lingers in the imagination. Its allure is only likely to deepen once the enormous crowds disperse and the Olympic Games fade into memory.

"Intoxicating beauty" ????!!!!!!

The Emperor has no clothes.

Friday, August 1, 2008

When do I get to vote on YOUR marriage?


Leah Garchik is reporting in her column today (sfgate.com) in the San Francisco Chronicle:

P.S.: As to fashion statements, Donald Currie saw the T-shirt in the window of the In-Jean-ious Lounge on Castro Street: "When do I get to vote on YOUR marriage?"
I REALLY REALLY WANT ONE OF THOSE T SHIRTS!!

I may even drive into San Francisco tomorrow to get one. I better call first and have them hold one for me.