• MT VOID, 10/20/23 -- Vol. 42, No. 16, Whole Number 2298

    From evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 22 07:25:39 2023
    THE MT VOID
    10/20/23 -- Vol. 42, No. 16, Whole Number 2298

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    Topics:
    Mini Reviews, Part 8 (THE MOST REMOTE RESTAURANT IN THE
    WORLD; SORRY, WE'RE CLOSED) (film reviews
    by Mark R. Leeper and Evelyn C. Leeper)
    10 Greatest Sci-Fi Movies You've Probably Never Seen
    NETTLE AND BONE by T. Kingfisher (audio book review
    by Joe Karpierz)
    WINGS: A HISTORY OF AVIATION FROM KITES TO THE SPACE AGE
    (book review by Greg Frederick)
    This Week's Reading (THE SECOND MURDERER) (book comments
    by Evelyn C. Leeper)

    ===================================================================

    TOPIC: Mini Reviews, Part 8 (film reviews by Mark R. Leeper and
    Evelyn C. Leeper)

    This is the eighth batch of mini-reviews for this season, two
    documentaries about restaurants.

    THE MOST REMOTE RESTAURANT IN THE WORLD (2023): THE MOST REMOTE
    RESTAURANT IN THE WORLD is about the opening of the two-star
    Michelin restaurant KOKS in Ilimanaq, Greenland, relocating from
    the Faroe Islands. Ilimanaq has a population of 53, at least
    before the restaurant staff of 21 move there. (It does have a
    school; eight children attend first through ninth grade there.)

    KOKS serves a 17- to 22-course tasting meal (the number seemed to
    fluctuate) for 3200 DKK (US$455), and had about 1800 reservations
    before they even opened, for a restaurant that seats 30. People
    can arrive on their own, but the meal is also included in some
    high-end tours.

    Part of the pressure to open on time in spite of all the problems
    was that the people who had booked the first night included a man
    coming from Hong Kong just for this, a couple celebrating their
    anniversary on opening day. Chef Poul Andrias said at one point
    that people were spending 10,000 DKK (roughly US$1500), which
    probably only includes travel from nearby airports such as Denmark
    or Iceland, plus boat fare.

    The film covers the problems of opening a restaurant, exacerbated
    by the remote location, the lack of infrastructure, and the attempt
    to serve only seasonal, locally sourced food. For example, when
    they first turned on the oven, the entire village lost power. It
    turned out that seal is not as easy to source locally as they
    thought, and since the Greenland whale harvest is limited to two
    per year, that is also problematic.

    Andrias described it at one point as, "everything that could go
    wrong is going wrong, and everything that couldn't go wrong is also
    going wrong."

    They did not give the entire menu (which presumably has some
    variations because of supply problems), but what they did mention
    were mattak (whale skin); shrimp in a chamomile-kombucha sauce;
    Arctic ptarmigan with tumak (reindeer fat), cream, and a berry
    salsa; grilled seal ribs; Arctic char; whale with a blue mussel
    glaze with beetroot; tartlet of seal blood and seaweed; fried
    shrimp head; scallop; halibut; salmon skin; braised musk ox in a
    glaze of burnt crab shell; a lovage dessert; and petit fours of
    carmelised onion and fermented garlic.

    What makes it more complicated is that apparently the meals/dishes
    are staggered, i.e., they are not starting everyone at the same
    time. So for example, they may be serving Table 1 the musk ox
    while they are serving Table 2 the seal ribs.

    [WARNING: The film shows a whale being cut up. It also has a lot
    of profanity.]

    [-ecl]

    Released on Viaplay streaming 31 October 2023. Rating: high +1 (-4
    to +4), or 6/10.

    Film Credits:
    <https://www.imdb.com/title/tt27494797/reference>

    SORRY, WE'RE CLOSED (2023): SORRY, WE'RE CLOSED is billed as a look
    at how the pandemic affected the restaurant industry. But a lot of
    it is how the pandemic affected people in general, even if all the
    people xyz is interviewing are in the restaurant business. And
    what is specific to the restaurant industry is almost entirely
    "fine dining". Comments about the fast food segment, or even
    "family dining" ae mostly critical of how some of the pandemic
    funds went to them instead of individually owned restaurants. I
    will note that a lot of this segment consists of franchises, rather
    than corporate owned, and the staff who worked in them also have
    families to fee and mortgages to pay.

    And that's where I have a problem. Yes, it's sad that someone who
    spent two million dollars to "build out" a restaurant that barely
    had a chance to open, before it had to close permanently. But it
    is my personal opinion that the "fine dining" segment in particular
    was built on a booming economy for enough well-off people. (And
    the other end--fast food and family dining--is built on very low
    wages and cost-cutting in order to keep prices unreasonably low.)

    And for those restaurants that have come back, the labor force
    marketplace has changed. Many restaurant workers who were laid off
    found other jobs and don't want to go back to hard labor for low
    wages. (This is true in other service industries as well.)

    (Do we really need a Chinese restaurant in *every* strip mall? How
    did they all survive even before the pandemic?)

    The film did conclude that people will have to pay more for their
    food in restaurants, and for food in general. And I suppose the
    pandemic showed how shaky the business model was for more
    restaurants--though how to construct a business model that allows
    for a yearlong shutdown is not clear to me.

    Maybe we had a "restaurant bubble" and the pandemic popped it.
    [-ecl]

    Released streaming 08 August 2023. Rating: +1 (-4 to +4), or 6/10.

    Film Credits:
    <https://www.imdb.com/title/tt22060684/reference>

    What others are saying:
    <https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/sorry_were_closed>

    ===================================================================

    TOPIC: 10 Greatest Sci-Fi Movies You've Probably Never Seen

    <https://movieweb.com/
    greatest-sci-fi-movies-youve-probably-never-seen>

    [In case you're wondering, we've seen all ten. -ecl]

    ===================================================================

    TOPIC: NETTLE AND BONE by T. Kingfisher (copyright 2022, Macmillan
    Audio, 9 hours and 3 minutes, ASIN: B08TYT2GZZ, narrated by Amara
    Jasper) (audio book review by Joe Karpierz)

    I've not read much T. Kingfisher. My only familiarity with her is
    as a result of two Hugo-nominated short stories, 2018's “The Rose
    MacGregor Drinking and Admiration Society” and 2020's Hugo-winning
    story “Metal Like Blood in the Dark”, which I remember as being a
    story that I did like quite a bit. But that's it. Once again, she
    shows up on the Hugo ballot in two categories, one of them being
    NETTLE AND BONE. T. Kingfisher has something of a reputation as a
    horror writer, or maybe at least dark fantasy, and I really didn't
    know what to expect.

    What I got was a fairy tale, but certainly not the kind with heroic
    and handsome prince, the beautiful young girl protagonist, and all
    the happiness and joy that goes along with that kind of story. We
    have the prince, although he a cruel and abusive man; we have three
    sisters, one who is a focal point of the story (Marra), raised in a
    convent so that she can be sheltered from that evil prince; a dust
    witch, with her demon-possessed chicken; a godmother with a cursed
    chick (no, I'm not making that up); a bone dog, which was created
    by Marra as one of her three impossible tasks before the dust witch
    would agree to help her with her quest (we'll get to that); and a
    disgraced knight, who Marra found with the aid of the chick (no,
    I'm still not making that up) in a sort of magical market.

    Marra has discovered that her sisters, who have married the prince
    (not at the same time, mind you, but in a serial fashion) in order
    to form an alliance with his kingdom, are being abused and tortured
    by the prince. The first sister died, and the second is living a
    miserable life as the prince's wife, with her only crime being that
    she has not provided the prince an heir (because what is a kingdom
    without a line of succession anyway?). So, Marra decides she has
    to go to his kingdom and kill him. Along the way, starting with
    the dust witch, she forms her band of companions in an effort to
    put together a team that will help her carry out her goal. The
    problem is, she has a starting point and an ending point, but no
    plan to actually make it from point A to point B.

    It should be obvious by now that this is a quest story, a fairy
    tale that doesn't read like a traditional fairy tale. It certainly
    is a dark fantasy. It starts out like a horror novel, as the
    opening chapter finds Marra creating the bone dog, and turns a bit
    more gruesome when she has to make a cloak out of nettle. And
    whether you call a story about what seems to be something of an
    insane prince who tortures his wives when he doesn't get what he
    wants a dark fantasy--which does include a scene where Marra gets
    to go to the underground catacombs where all the kings are
    entombed to try to get a curse lifted--or a horror story, NETTLE
    AND BONE is unnerving in spots. And it really is a fine story,
    well written and crafted, with nicely developed characters.

    What it is not (and stop me if you've read this from me in another
    review recently) is a Hugo worthy novel.

    Please don't get me wrong here. I *liked* NETTLE AND BONE. It's
    an enjoyable read (well, listen, in my case). While it's not a
    book that I would pick up on my own to read, I certainly don't feel
    like I wasted my time listening to it (unlike Greg Egan's DIASPORA,
    for example, which I felt was a waste of my time), nor do I regret
    having listened to it. But what it is, ultimately, is a quest
    fairy tale, although to be sure it is just a bit different because
    of its darker tones and themes. It's got a princess, a godmother,
    a witch, a handsome man, an evil prince, and three enchanted
    creatures. And they all go on a quest to kill someone, which I
    admit causes it to deviate from your standard fairy tale. But it
    really doesn't do anything new here. I'm being harsh on NETTLE AND
    BONE because I'm reviewing it as a candidate for science fiction
    and fantasy's highest award, and as a candidate for that award I
    think it is out of place. It is a good book. It just doesn't
    belong here--in my apparently not so humble opinion. I'd certainly
    recommend that people read the book. But it's not, well, fill in
    the blank with any one of your favorite Hugo winners here.

    As far as the obligatory mention of the narrator, I will have to
    admit that while Amara Jasper's narration of NETTLE AND BONE did
    not throw me out of the story, neither did it stand out in any
    other way. Which, I guess, is good. It was a solid performance,
    but to be honest I don't remember that much about it. [-jak]

    ===================================================================

    TOPIC: WINGS--A HISTORY OF AVIATION FROM KITES TO THE SPACE AGE by
    Tom D. Crouch (book review by Greg Frederick)

    WINGS--A HISTORY OF AVIATION FROM KITES TO THE SPACE AGE is a book
    written by Tom D. Crouch. This book provides a comprehensive and
    detailed history of aviation, starting from the early days of kites
    and moving through the development of airplanes and rockets into
    the space age. It covers the major milestones, key figures, and
    technological advancements in the field of aviation and aerospace.

    Crouch is a noted historian and curator at the National Air and
    Space Museum of the Smithsonian Institution. His expertise in
    aviation history and his access to the museum's extensive
    collection of aircraft and artifacts make WINGS a well-researched
    and authoritative resource on the subject.

    The book offers a rich exploration of the evolution of flight, from
    the Wright brothers' first powered flight to the achievements of
    space exploration. It is a valuable resource for anyone interested
    in the history of aviation and the incredible progress made in this
    field over the years. [-gf]

    ===================================================================

    TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

    THE SECOND MURDERER by Denise Mina (Mulholland Books, ISBN
    978-0-316-26564-5) is the latest of the new Philip Marlowe novels.
    Two weeks ago I talked about THE BIG SLEEP, Raymond Chandler's
    first Marlowe novel. Last week I reviewed ONLY TO SLEEP (by
    Lawrence Osborne), one of the post-Chandler Marlowe novels. (And
    next week, if USPS comes through, I hope to cover TEN PERCENT OF
    LIFE, a translation of Hiber Conteris's EL DIEZ POR CIENTO DE VIDA,
    a Spanish Marlowe novel.)

    As should be clear is that the Chandler estate has not done what
    the Ian Fleming estate did, and settle on a single author to
    continue the series. For Bond, (the British) John Gardner wrote
    fourteen novels. When he retired, Raymond Benson was chosen and
    wrote six more novels. The Robert B. Parker estate did the same
    with both Jesse Stone and Spenser. Whether this is because
    Chandler's estate hasn't found the "perfect" author yet, or doesn't
    want any one author to overshadow Chandler, or what, isn't clear.

    In any case, of the seven post-Chandler novels, only POODLE SPRINGS
    and PERCHANCE TO DREAM have the same author, Robert B. Parker.
    The first of these had been partially written by Chandler when
    Parker took over, and the second is a sequel to THE BIG SLEEP
    (hence set in an already created world with already created
    characters). The next, THE BLACK-EYED BLONDE by John Banville, is
    a sequel to THE LONG GOODBYE. Then came ONLY TO SLEEP by Lawrence
    Osborne, set in 1988 Mexico, and THE GOODBYE COAST by Joe Ide, a "re-imagining" of Marlowe in 2022 Los Angeles.

    Mina returns to the original time of Marlowe, and to Los Angeles.
    Marlowe starts out with a missing person case, but of course it
    ends up with murder, because what is a Philip Marlowe novel without
    Marlowe finding a body? The plot is complicated, with various
    twists and turns, because what is a Philip Marlowe novel ... Well,
    you get the idea. Mina even has a character for FAREWELL, MY
    LOVELY, though one could not really call this a sequel.

    Mina has added some elements missing from Chandler's novels,
    reflecting more of the diversity of the Los Angeles of the time.
    Chandler tended to show that diversity only in his minor
    characters (even the one major Mexican character turns out to be an
    Anglo); Mina brings them out of the shadows. This is not to say
    Marlowe (or anyone else) is "woke", but they do have to deal with
    these people rather than just dismiss them.

    All in all, I found this more satisfying than ONLY TO SLEEP. [-ecl]

    ===================================================================

    Mark Leeper
    mleeper@optonline.net


    Books are the blessed chloroform of the mind.
    --Robert Chambers

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