Snap Judgments

Sheerly Avni, Peggy Nauts, Dashka Slater, Dan Strachota, Scott Hocker

BOOK
Katharine Noel: Halfway House
(Grove/Atlantic)

TV
California and the American
Dream
(PBS, April 13-May 4) 

BOOK
Rachel Rodriquez: Through Georgia's Eyes
(Henry Holt and Company) 
CD
Various Artists: Soul Sides, Volume One
(Zealous Records) 
BOOK
Michael Pollan: The Omnivore's Dilema
(The Penguin Press) 
Anyone who has suffered through bipolar disorder, either directly or with a loved one, will find this first novel by San Francisco author
and former Stegner fellow Katharine Noel a welcome affirmation. The story focuses on Angie Voorster, a bright, popular high school student and champion swimmer whose “teenage mood swings” give way to something much darker. Angie’s suffering is dramatic, but
as her parents and younger brother try to support her through hospitalizations,
disappearances, and suicide attempts, the lower-middle-class New England family begins to unravel as well. While the characters serve more as pawns to the author’s purposes than as the richly textured men and women we expect from great fiction, this is a compassionate exploration
of a nightmarish disease and the havoc it wreaks
on ordinary lives. B
Sheerly Avni 

The pursuit of the American dream works something like an earthquake: it shakes everything up, creating new landscapes and tragedies. What better place to examine its effects than in our economically divided, ethnically diverse state? Though at times the transitions between topics are a bit fuzzy, this four-part series is engrossing and often moving, especially the episode on Indian gaming (April 13), which includes a segment on a casino conflict in Rohnert Park. "We’ve gone from stupid, drunk Indians
to rich, greedy Indians all within two decades," says a Cabazon Native American. The final episode explores genetic engineering and the tensions between agribusiness, with its reliance on fossil fuels, and small-scale producers like David Mas Masumoto, whose business was saved in part by restaurants such as Chez Panisse buying his glorious Sun Crest peaches at a time when he was getting just 50 cents a box. As always, Alice Waters speaks about seasonality, buying locally, and teaching kids to eat right; she’s been so thoroughly covered you can probably guess what she’ll say. But on the whole, the episode will engage people who care about what they put in their mouths. B+
Peggy Nauts

 

Georgia O’Keeffe’s vivid, visceral images were born of

One of the best aspects of the digital revolution has been the onset of MP3 weblogs, sites offering free downloads of "borrowed" songs. With these blogs becoming legitimate—record labels send promos their way, magazines like Rolling Stone champion them—it was only a matter of time before someone went totally legal and produced a for-sale CD. That would be San Francisco’s Oliver Wang, a former KALX DJ, Bay Guardian scribe, and creator of www.soul-sides.com, an MP3 blog devoted mostly to old-school, long-unavailable soul, funk, and hip-hop. For this compilation, Wang chose tracks he’d featured on the blog and much else from among his 7,000 LPs. Bursting with groovy, gritty soul from the ’60s and ’70s (and one similar track from 2005, Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings’ "All Over Again"), the collection stands tall alongside similar excavations by master DJs like Gilles Peterson and Keb Darge. A few recognizable names and well-known recordings are here, but most songs will sound brand new. Anyone into the sweet melodies and sultry vocals of Al Green, Stevie Wonder, or Ann Peebles will swoon at these unearthed nuggets. With any luck, Soul Sides will be the first of many music blogs to go public, thus offering the ordinary listener the pleasure of feeling like a record-collecting fiend. A-
Dan Strachota
 

 

As readers of his books (The Botany of Desire most recently) and New York Times Magazine pieces know, Michael Pollan’s strength lies in transforming near-incomprehensible information into engaging narratives. This time, Pollan, now
a professor at UC Berkeley’s graduate school of journalism, traces the origins of three meals: one from
industrial products, one from organic foods, and one the result of hunting and gathering. In the first section, he explains how a simple grain like corn has become an overproduced, government-subsidized commodity, the reason you’re seeing high-fructose corn syrup on so many ingredient labels. The second part is a meticulous and revelatory look at the difference between organic and sustainably produced food. The story detours into holier-than-thou territory in the third part, though, where we find Pollan hunting wild pig, foraging morels, and culling cherries from a neighbor’s tree in a noble attempt to reduce eating to its primal essence, with one person responsible for producing or gathering everything he eats. It’s informative but also alienating; you feel like shoving a Big Mac down your maw just to spite him. Then you think back on the parallels he’s drawn and the insights he’s provided, and you want to buy him a drink. B+
Scott Hocker

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A Q&A with Dale DeGroff

11/18/08—King Cocktail talks classic drinks and his new book, The Essential Cocktail.

From their lips to the White House's ears

10/20/08—Copy chief & reviews editor Mia Lipman volunteers at a star-studded rally for words.

Burning Man Decompression 2008

10/14/08—Rebecca Pariser and her camera crash the annual Burning Man after party.

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2008

Editorial intern and bluegrass musician Brian Heffernan reviews the eighth annual festival's highlights.

ARTS

Treasure Island Music Festival 2008

The eyes at San Francisco magazine capture two days of good, clean, carnival-themed fun at the second annual festival.

START/ EDIT NOTES

Nellie's gotta go

Irascible, iconoclastic, infectious—what made Don Nelson this way?

PUB NOTES

Publisher's note

When you’re traveling, sometimes knowing what’s ahead is even more exciting than anticipating the unknown.

Slaughterhouse redux

In a follow up to San Francisco's August feature on the future of slaughterhouses, Incanto chef Chris Cosentino offers a view of the past with a look at his collection of vintage abattoir photos.

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