Apr 012013
 
The Hundredth Review

(First posted on Liquorature, Feb 2012) With the write up on the Barbancourt 15 Year Old I have reached a sort of personal milestone. I’ve written a hundred rum reviews and that’s not as easy as it may sound, since I put a lot of effort and energy into crafting each one, chosing the verbiage and doing the research, all the while juggling my photographic hobby, reading, as well as domestic and professional duties which permit me my alcoholic habit. At this rate, if there really are around fifteen hundred rums in production in the world, I’ll be a candidate for [Click here for the full review…]


Apr 012013
 
Wolfenstein 3D

May 5th 1992. A release date that will live for…well, a heckuva long time. Because, before Assassin’s Creed, before Metal Gear Solid, Socomm or Call of Duty, before Quake and Duke Nukem (long may he reign as King of Vaporware), there was the ur-game of them all, the ancient DNA of all first person shooters, and it was released that day. Nope, not Doom, but its startlingly original, blood spattered, laughingly and irreverently pixellated daddy, Wolfenstein 3d. While I fully acknowledge the origin of the game in Muse software’s 1984 incarnation, it was id Software’s 1992 revisit of the game that [Click here for the full review…]


Apr 012013
 
Three Obscure Films That Quote "I love You."

Every now and then I get an idea and just run with it. This is an adaptation of an essay I put together which briefly explored several themes I thought intriguing. And what the hellI like the arts as well as rum, so why not? *** As Mulder and Scully, “The Third Man”, “Babylon 5,” “Lucas,” and so many others have showed us so many times, unrequited love is probably the most heart-rending of them all. Done badly, features or shows which do not honour the underlying depth of such feelings are sentimental tripe. Done well, and one watches something [Click here for the full review…]


Apr 012013
 
4 Early Novels by Dick Francis

Dick Francis became a more known quantity in American letters in the last decade or so – one saw his newest offerings on store shelves presented front and center quite often, and they became plumper over the years – but for my money, I’ve always admired and loved his earlier, shorter and tighter works, and have, over the last twenty years or so, picked up most of them. This is in spite of the fact that his name still raises an interrogative eyebrow in most cases when I bring it up: Dick who? Francis is perhaps better known in Britain than [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 312013
 
Ten Decent Rums (Roughly) Under $200

  Here is another in my ongoing series offavouritelists. This one focuses on the premium segment. *** Make your enemies green with envy, please your friends, impress wannabe hangers-on and have an all-round good time with these expensive rums that will cheerfully excavate your wallet. Mix not required, and what the hell, ditch the ice as well….you don’t need that either. I know this is spouting Liquorature heresy, but I think even some maltsters might do well to sample some of these. Yeah Hippie, it’s you I’m lookinat. This posting is meant to list (in no particular [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 312013
 
Ten Decent Rums (Roughly) Under $50

(First posted December 2010) * Christmas is right around the corner, and soon, if not already, we’ll be having hair of the dog, doing the hearty party and drinking to excess on every possible occasion on our best friendsdime. We’ll be buying gifts, attending bashes and often will be tasked with chosing a decent rum for our West Indian friends or rum lovers in general. What can we buy that is the perfect match of decent quality but won’t bust our slender wallet? Here’s a list to get you started (in no particular order, and with Calgary prices). 1. Captain [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 312013
 
Watership Down

It’s a curiosity of Watership Down that everyone who has ever read it (at least, those I have met) seems to believe it is a discovery all his or her own. People get this look in their eye when the book comes up: it’s like they are welcoming you into a secret brotherhood or something. There are a few books like that: they’ve dropped out of sight and memory, but their adherents revere them and reread them, constantly. Watership Down was published in the UK 1972 and has much faded from public view, I think, though Stephen King has mentioned [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 292013
 
Ron Abuelo Centuria - Review

A liquid, light peanut butter and jelly sandwich, heightened with unsweetened chocolate and displaying enormous smoothness and quality. Great product. Ron Abuelo Centuria is the top of the line Panamanian rum originating from Varela Hermanos, the outfit that brought the 7 year old and 12 year old to the table, issued in late 2010 to celebrate their Centennial. It’s said in some places to be solera-system-aged for thirty years in used bourbon barrels and in others that the blend of rums (some aged thirty years) was run through a solera: but one must always keep in mind that in any [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 262013
 
Royal Jamaican Gold Rum - Review

First posted 10th April 2011 on Liquorature Solid beginning leads to a disappointing finish: appearance and nose are excellent, but somehow not enough care was taken to follow through on these advantages. Appleton (or J. Wray & Nephew, if you will) so thoroughly dominates the rums of Jamaica, that it feels somehow wrong to see a bottle marked Jamaican Rum without the moniker of that famed distiller emblazoned on it. Now, not having been to Jamaica for many years (and having paid more attention to a winsome lass named Renu and markedly less to the available rums at the time), [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 232013
 
Ron Cartavio XO Solera - Review

A Millonario by another name, and as lovely. Soleras as a rule tend toward the smooth and sweet side, and have a rather full body redolent of all sorts of interesting fruity flavours. My maltster friends regard this type of drink the way they would a sherry bomb (or a disrobed virgin, if one desperate enough could be found), with a mixture of hidden liking and puritan disdain. Still, after having had two fairly dry products in as many weeks, perhaps it was time to relax in a perfumed boudoir instead of the sere desert air. And because the Ron [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 202013
 
Arabian Sands

Wilfred Thesiger, who died in 2003, was the last of the old land explorers, whose likes included Burton, Speke, Younghusband, Lawrence, Connolly, Hedin, Amundsen, and stretched as far back as Marco Polo. Fluent in Arabic and French Thesiger was the first European to cross and extensively map the dreaded Empty Quarter of Saudi Arabia, and wrote acclaimed travelogues of now-vanished times in the middle east, and the Marsh Arabs of Iraq. An unashamed Arabist, he loved the great empty silences of the desert, and the nomadic culture of the Bedu; he much preferred to travel and live the way they [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 202013
 
Chariots of the Gods

  Chariots of the Gods (1968) Before you wince, roll your eyes and question my hold on reality, hear me out. I’m aware of the stigma the subject matter has. There were always books around me, lots of them: my mother was a librarian, and my father’s jampacked shelves were treasure troves to be unearthed at leisure (he promised me his entire collection “one day”, years ago, and I’m still waiting). It was from these sources that I picked up “Steep Paths” by a now unknown Soviet writer called Vakhtang Ananyan; the Enid Blyton “Adventure” series, all of Willard Price’s [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 202013
 
Europe: A History

The other day I was having a spirited discussion with a friend of mine in Toronto. He cautiously started a sentence: “The fall of Constantinople in the 16th century…” “1453.” I said He gave me a doubtful look. It’s not one of those facts you expect a half drunk guest to have at his fingertips, and I kinda feel for him there. It was sort of unexpected. “Are you sure?” “1453, April to May, when the Ottoman Sultan Mehmet the 2nd laid siege to the city, then took it by storm. It marked the end of the Byzantine empire and the flood of émigrés [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 202013
 
The Coming Plague

The Coming Plague is a book about disease in the modern world. Not diseases that originated in the 20th century (though certainly this figures in the writing), but about how diseases in our worldspecifically during the 1950s to the 1990sspread, were identified, fought, and in some cases, ultimately conquered. It may sound like a dry subject, but Laurie Garrett’s prose, eye for the quirky detail and the topicality of the theme in a world made fearful by SARS, swine flu and H1N1, make it a riveting read. The book is divided up into chapters that focus on [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 202013
 
Masters of Doom

I don’t know of anyone from my generation who did not at least hear of Doom. This one gamefirst released in 1993 – was the single most eagerly awaited offering of any software company to that time, was a landmark event that crashed the servers of the hosting BBS one minute after the midnightopening”, and was reputedly the second most common reason quoted for the loss of productivity in offices worldwide (solitaire being the first). As a working pro who corrupted every team of auditors for three years into playing deathmatch games after hours in our darkened offices, I [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 202013
 
Diplomacy

Henry Kissinger is both respected and reviled as one of the most powerful American Secretaries of State ever (he also concurrently held the post of National Security Advisor) but there’s little argument that as an author and analyst the man is in a class by himself. Nowhere, in my not-so-humble opinion, is this more clearly to be seen than in his doorstopper of a book about statecraft, Diplomacy. Diplomacy is not for the timid, and should be avoided by those whose taste runs into fiction or who have the adult equivalent of ADD. Admittedly, we at the club have ploughed our way through Ayn [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 202013
 
The Great War for Civilization

  What an enormous, sprawling, wide-ranging, dense, tragic, magisterial narrative has Robert Fisk spun out of his journalistic experiences. I have read Edward Said’s works on the Middle East, Huntigndon’sClash of Civilizations,” and passed through many histories of that troubled part of the world, but it is my considered opinion that this outcome of thirty yearsreporting there is in a class by itself. Personal, compelling, well-researched and passionately written, it is on a par withBury My Heart at Wounded Kneefor unbridled emotional and intellectual impact. Fisk’s writing is a tour of the modern history of the [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 202013
 
The Fifties

The Pulitzer-prize winning author David Halberstam’s study of the 1950s remains, after three readings, one of the most enjoyable works of history I ever picked up by accident. I was in a small bookstore on Yonge Street in Toronto and needed two more books to round out the $25 I was spending. The other one has long since been relegated to a shelf somewhere, but I keep picking this one up every year or two to go through it again. Halberstam’s central thesis is that while the sixties was a seminal decade in American lifeVietnam, the counterculture, birth [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 202013
 
The Epic of Gilgamesh

Then came the flood, sent by godsintentAnd Ea [gave] this advice to me: “Arise and hear my words: Abandon your home and build a boat Choose to live and choose to loveBe moderate as you flee for survival In a boat that has no place for riches Take the seed of all you need aboard…” Tablet XI, Column i, The Epic of Gilgamesh Aside from historical and biblical scholars, not many people know about The Epic of Gilgamesh, though my research suggests that the character seems to be somewhat of a subterrannean cultural icon and is referenced quite often in [Click here for the full review…]


Mar 202013
 
Shogun

Book Review: ShogunJames Clavell James Clavell was the real thing. A prisoner of war in Changi (source of the inspiration of his first novel, King Rat) he somehow managed to rise above his experiences in war to write perhaps the definitive fictional account of pre-Tokugawa Japan in Shogun. Sure Christopher Nicole wrote a truer account in his novel Lord of the Golden Fan, but it lacked the snap and punch of Clavell’s creation, lacked the in-depth research, the feeling, the entire mentality of Japan. Let me put it this way: at the end of Shogun, you spoke some Japanese and had more than an inkling [Click here for the full review…]