Over the next four years, Disney plans to release 10 animated movies, 8 of which will be in digital 3-D. Coming up will be two princess movies, two sequels to Pixar films, what looks like an Underdog take-off, and one based on a Phillip K. Dick story.
Tags: Disney, animation, 3D
From the Corner of His Eye, by Dean Koontz
Be easy in your ceaseless care for me. I got my walk in tonight. It looks to be the only one I’ll get this week, but it’s something. The temperature was tolerable, if I bundled up, and enough sun filtered through the light clouds to give me a diaphanous shadow.
Tomorrow night it’s supposed to rain. In any case, I’ll be running to the airport to pick up Moloch and his wife, back from China.
Which means that it’s just possible, if I hear that traffic’s bad, that I’ll skip posting altogether.
Steel yourselves. I know you can survive it.
I promise I’m not going to review every Dean Koontz novel I read, as I go through them alphabetically.
But I’m going to review the really outstanding ones. And From the Corner of His Eye definitely qualifies.
I suppose it’s possible that Koontz could produce a better novel than this. I haven’t read them all yet. But at this point I can’t imagine a better one.
This is a big, sprawling book that covers a long period of time, kind of like those Victorian novels I’ve never read, by Thackeray and Trollope.
And it’s populated by a remarkable cast of quirky, fascinating characters worthy of Charles Dickens.
And it’s built on a Sci Fi/Supernatural premise, like… well, like a Dean Koontz book.
The blurb on the inside page of the paperback is misleading. It makes it sound as if this is the story of Bartholomew Lampion. Bartholomew is certainly a central character, but he’s a baby for half the book. The story is actually about a whole network of people, all bound together by the strange effects of a radio sermon called, “This Momentous Day.”
The story begins in January, 1965. First of all (though not first in the narrative), in Oregon, a narcissistic sociopath named Enoch Cain murders his beautiful, loving wife. The next day, in two places in California, two babies are born—a boy and a girl—in circumstances of extreme family tragedy. Nevertheless each child finds a loving home and shows early signs of being a prodigy.
But Enoch Cain is out there, and he has become aware that there’s a child who he believes is a danger to him. He grows obsessed with finding that child and killing him.
Cain is an interesting character. He’s evil and does horrible things that cause great pain to people the reader has come to care for. Nevertheless, Koontz treats him to a large degree as a comic figure (he explains his rationale for this through one of his characters in the course of the book). Cain thinks he’s a genius, a connoisseur, and God’s gift to women, but in fact he’s not particularly bright, likes only the things critics tell him to like, and most people who meet him find him rather creepy. He’s blissfully unaware of this. Also his suppressed conscience expresses itself forcefully in some painful and embarrassing physical reaction, every time he commits a murder.
As the plot works itself out, and all the characters come to know one another, we observe the working out of Koontz’ premise, that just as quantum physics and string theory tell us that every point in the universe is connected, so all people are connected, and all our actions have infinite consequences—and not only in our own universe.
I loved every page of this book. I don’t think I’ve ever read a novel this long (over 700 pages) before and wanted it to be longer. As the saying goes, I laughed; I cried.
There are strong Christian elements (along with some speculation which could serve as fodder for late night discussions).
From the Corner of His Eye gets my highest recommendation.
Update: Scratch tomorrow’s rain. We’re going to get snow.
If Nature is our Mother, our family is dysfunctional.
Distracted
Chattanooga Matters (formerly the Chattanooga Resource Foundation) has a seminar from earlier this year with John Stonestreet of Bryan College on YouTube. It’s a nine part video series, and in this part, John makes a great statement. “In my view the worst thing about contemporary entertainment . . . [is that] it makes us think about things that aren’t important and keeps us from thinking about things that are. It distracts us from the real world. We are a distracted generation.”
Everyone’s Favorite
A Harris poll has tried to ferret out America’s favorite book by asking 2,513 people.
Literature and Writing Conferences
Calvin College’s Festival of Faith & Writing is coming next week, April 17-19, in more or less beautiful Grand Rapids, Michigan. That’s quite a drive from where I live, but even further is the C.S. Lewis Foundation’s Oxbridge conference at the end of July in Oxford and Cambridge, England. That would be an experience.
Your Own Classic TV Marathon
CBS.com has all of the original Star Trek shows online in a good quality stream with a few commercials. Other shows are available too. Looks like a great way to waste time.
Unsprung
It’s spring, but the wrong kind. More April in Bergen than Paris.
The weekend was nice. The weekend was great. As I drove around, spending too much money on stuff I’d put off buying for too long, I actually had to roll my car window down a little, to cool off. It got up to about 70° (that’s about 20° for you Celsius types).
But yesterday and today have been cool and overcast, with some rain. “Cool” in this case means temps in the 40s, which would have seemed tropical a couple weeks back. So I’m being unreasonable. I admit it freely.
My motives, however, are honorable. I want to go out and take my evening walks. And in my present health condition, still dragging the corpse of the flu around behind me, I refuse to tempt fate by walking in a chill breeze. Especially if it’s drizzling.
And I’ve come to the conclusion that working out on my ski machine in the basement actually causes me to get sick. Maybe there’s mold in the air down there.
Or maybe I’m just sick of the ski machine.
In any case, I watch for the sun as the watchman on the city wall waits for the dawn.
I’m sure that’s a biblical citation, but I can’t find it in my Cruden’s.
I bet I could find it if the sun was shining.
First Look at Pixar’s Wall-E
The guys at Rotten Tomatoes got to see 30 minutes of Pixar’s new summer movie, Wall-E, and talk to the director afterward.
What kind of reaction were you getting because in the first 30 minutes there was no dialogue in the film?
Andrew Stanton: First of all, I think that that’s a misnomer. There is dialog all through it. All I am saying is that they are not necessarily saying words in a language that you know. What I wanted was integrity. It all comes down to just as much as I believe that Luxo is a lamp and that it has a life in it and it thinks like a lamp and acts like a lamp and I don’t have to be told that, it doesn’t have to be spelled out to me, I just get it right away, I wanted the same thing with the robots.
I’d like a diagram of that last sentence, please.
Wrong-headed Journalism
The Pulitzer Prize for Journalism doesn’t help newspaper solve their primary problem, reaching and information their readership, argues Jeff Jarvis.
And in other news, CBS News is going out of business. CBS appears to be interested in outsourcing its news to CNN.
News Organizations Need New Business Models
Jay Rosen weighs in on newspapers in a brave new world at the Britannica Blog.
One weakness of the old subsidy system was that it hid the true cost of serious journalism from the people who benefit. Instead of finding new ways to hide the cost, a wiser course might be to increase the number of people who understand that serious reporting is a public good, who have a grasp of the economics. In other words, public opinion might have to come to the rescue.