Tuesday, October 22, 2019

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=93Q2srbfUPU


Oh my God!

Who Killed the Fonz? by Henry Boice



Who Killed the Fonz?

A one-sit wonder, which is what I call a book I start and finish in a couple of hours. Who Killed the Fonz carefully navigates the shoals of fan fiction and actually manages to be about something. It probably helps if you were a fan of Happy Days (I wasn't, but had no problem with all of the major references --- though I am sure I missed plenty as that will enhance the nostalgia factor). But the story of Richard Cunningham coming back to Milwaukee as a middle-aged man discontented with his life more than makes up for (1) the utter lack of mystery and (2) the mildly lame sitcom elements with Potsie and Ralph at the climax of the story. It is a very sweet read without being cloying.


Friday, October 18, 2019

 
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A delayed pleasure. I haven't read this because I wanted one more Kate Fansler mystery before lights out. Alas, Kate is a peripheral character in some ways, but central in ways that don't add up. Heilbrun went out on a sour note with the academic community within which she functioned. The themes in this book pick up on others that run throughout the Fansler ouevre, but with a twist. The protagonist is a fat --- her incessant word, not mine --- female private investigator who tools around on a motorcycle. Woody, as she is known, is sent to Kate about a case involving an academic homicide.

And we're off. Woody is presented as an academic naif, despite the fact that she has attended college and law school, which seems like a lot of higher education for someone who doesn't understand the concept of a core curriculum. Woody looks into the murder of the Chair of the English Department at Clifton College, a small liberal arts college in New Jersey. I myself work at a small liberal arts college in North Carolina. And no one, but no one, uses the language Heilbrun puts into the mouths of the Clifton professors. As long as the stories were told from Kate's point of view, Heilbrun's style made sense. It was like Woody Allen's concept of New York City dwellers' conversation. Something to which one could aspire. But Woody blows it. She wants us to believe that she finds academics odd when she herself uses the word "chap." This is a pet word of Heilbrun's; her characters have always called each other that, and the reader thinks, "oh, well, somewhere there are bunch of WASPS who do that." (I seriously doubt it.) But to have your narrator mocking the oppressor --- because Heilbrun clearly used her swansong to settle accounts with the patriarchy --- while talking just like them? The reader is constantly jarred out of the story. And that isn't hard to do, because there really isn't one. That fact is underscored so hard by the "solution" to the "mystery" that I wound up slamming the book shut with unnecessary violence.

But Kate does float through the story, acting much as she always has, and there is a final glimpse of Banny and Reed. Read it for that.

  Year of the King: An Actor's Diary and Sketchbook by   Antony Sher really liked it Very good read. Sher is an excellent writer, and th...