Sunday, April 27, 2008

Strange Trips Indeed


Tony Horwitz takes on the lost horizons of what happened before the Pilgrims landed at that famous rock.  Who really touched down on North America and what did they have to go through to get lost in the history books and in our psyches? He revisits the voyages of Eirik the Red, Columbus, De Soto, Coronado, Cabeza de Vaca and others who traversed and explored the continent.  "A Voyage Long and Strange" is Horwitz at his best as he plumbs historical accounts, follows the trails, and gets lost in a wilderness of tourists, myths, and forgotten plunders.   Lewis and Clark's expedition was a cakewalk compared to De Soto's and De Vaca's epic journeys across the south and southwest nearly 300 years earlier.  
  
Which brings us back into the modern day vistas of Mexico's Sierra Madres through Richard Grant's  "God's Middle Finger: Into the Lawless Heart of the Sierra Madre."  Grant's journey takes us into the heart of the narcos in a stubborn wide-eyed look at a region many don't get to see but after reading this we either don't want or can't wait to see.  Its a region the Apache's retreated to well into the 20s, Pancho Villa ruled, Huston and Bogart romanticized, but not much seen or explored by sun worshipers looking to exchange dollars into cervezas.   Grant rides into a major drug producing region surrounded by stunning vistas with the tenuous passport of knowing someone who knows someone. This is a travelogue that's difficult to put down.  

Monday, April 21, 2008

Views from the Dusty Covers, Web Images Rediscovered



My favorite recent book is the volume published from the website Bibliodyssey aptly titled "Bibliodyssey: Amazing Archival Images from the Dusty Corners of the Internet!" Collected here are images from the website (along with images that didn't make it onto the website.) A great colection from science, history, architectural volumes along with Visual Materia Obscura. There's also wonderful explainations of the images and historical and bibliographic background.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

A Recipe for Royalties, One Author's View

Michael Ruhlman's The Elements of Cooking is a great starting point for any home chef to explore essentials of cooking and to ramp up their game. His main point of the differences between the skilled home chef and the pro sweating it out on the line is basically two words - veal stock. If you basically learn to have this on hand and infuse your offerings with this wonderful base you'll improve your cooking and impress the most hardened foodie at your table.

Ruhlman also has a great webpage that's worth checking out. You'll find a wonderful entry about the changing aspects of the publishing world and the financing, advances and payments to authors, and how that world is quickly changing. Although his situation is a little different then most authors - culinary co-author of The French Laundry Cookbook with Thomas Keller, Food Network personality, friend to Bourdain, his relationship with his publisher might foretell the future of the publishing world at least in respects to the place of authors within it. Its a bit heavy on the numbers side but its a fascinating look into the book world that many don't get to see. Its well worth a look.