Aquariums in Pyongyang

 

Title: Aquariums in Pyongyang
Author: Kang Chol-Hwan and Pierre Rigoulot
Genre: Biography
Year Published: 2001
Rating: 7 / 10

Everyone believes that concentration camps cannot exist anymore. How could a person be so cruel to another? Especially to ones country man? In this book the story takes place in North Korea under the rule of Kim Jong-il between 1970 to 1992. A rich Japanese family originally from Korea decide to make their way to North Korea during the 70's to become good Communists. After living there for a number of years in relative luxury, they get accused of some crime and sent to prison. As the custom is, your whole family is sent off, parents, children, grandparents. The grandmother is the one who convinced the whole family to go, even though the grandfather had several very successful casinos and they were very well of in Japan. They gave up their entire fortune to the North Korean government and integrated themselves into their new life. Most of the story takes place in a concentration camp called Yodok, where the family is imprisoned for the next 10 years. The accounts of their time there are hair raising and chilling. One keeps asking “How can anyone do this to another person? Children? Whole families?” Their life consists of trying to survive, not get beaten to death and meet work quotas so that they can live another day. They are constantly reminded how fortunate they are to be given another chance, that the great Kim Jong-il has given them a second chance, the redeem themselves and maybe one day be given the honour of rejoining society.

This book is scary mainly for the parallels between it and George Orwell's 1984. It seems like the North Korean government is using those political ideologies as their doctrine. From people spying on each other, to worshiping Kim Jong-il as a god. In a country where the government over exaggerates their factories outputs, to total control of the media. One should read 1984 before this book, to truly understand how frightening Kangs account is. Another frightening parallel is of this and Stalins Gulags and Hitlers Concentration Camps. Both places housed the undesirables. In Yodok, it was divided up into two different categories, the redeemable and not. The non-redeemable would never be allowed to leave, as their fate was sealed. Everyone there become an unperson, no one in the outside world knew what happened to them, not even the family or friends that got spared their fate. "Abandon all hope, ye who enter here" would have been an appropriates camp title, or as Hitlers Auschwitz's had "Arbeit Macht Frei" or "Work Will Make You Free".

A third of the population is in danger of starving right now, people disappear and are never seen again, the economy is crumbling. So the real question is, does the world help this country? If the UN sends food does that not only keep the problem going? Should the world not eliminate the problem and work from there? But once again we are faced with the issue of trying to re-educate an entire population who believe that Kim-Jong-il is the god, and the rest of the world are to blame for the problems they are seeing right now. Every ounce of blame is passed onto the rest of the world while the tyrannical government becomes the saviors and the defender of the free.

This book is a very easy read. It's not a long book and it's written in a way that should appeal to anyone. I would highly recommend this book as an insight into North Korea, a government which has absolute control and to get a glimpse of what it must have been like in Russian gulags and Germany's concentration camps.

Childhood’s End

 

Title: Childhood's End
Author: Arthur C. Clarke
Genre: Science Fiction
Year Published: 1953
Rating: 8 / 10

And the copy I have is the above one, first printing!!! WHOOT.
I ended up reading this book because of The Sentinel. Reading the short story, Guardian Angel will give you a good idea whether or not you would want to read this book. I ended up really enjoying it in the end, even though the book was not written as well as some other of Clarke's books. Most books of this type always leave you hanging too much in the end, letting you decide what may have happened and the final outcome of the story is. But in this book, I felt he left the story off just at the right place, giving you enough conclusion to the story and human civilization. The ending of the book is where the genius of Clarke really comes out. I highly recommend this book, it is a quick read, nothing too heavy, a great Sunday afternoon type of novel.

The idea of having a supreme beings come to earth and virtually take over is not an new one. The main difference is in this book we find out that they are just doing a job for another higher power. The Overlords as they become to be known slowly help mold our world into accepting them as they are. Since superstitions in so deeply embedded into our psyche, the Overlords realize that they will have to be very delicate of humanities fear center. The story describes that the Overlords have been seen once before by humans, not physically, but by some deep embedded memory, thus the need for secrecy and the need to remove superstitions, specifically the devil. For what we have called evil and been frightened of, would in the end watch over us, as humanity as we know it dies. As we find out, the Overlords are here to over see the evolution of Homo-Sapiens, into a higher being. The book goes into and begins to describe how truly marvelous and strange the universe can be, and how in our current state could never hope to understand it. The example given is a nearly two dimensional being living on a flat surface trying to understand the third dimension. The story ends as all the children under the age of 15 begin to evolve further than anyone had ever imagined. All of a sudden, they stop being human, they develop incredible powers, make rivers run backwards, and the moon spin. The rest of humanity does not take this well, having all the worlds children taken from them, knowing that they are the last, that death is at hand. The children begin to exhibit stranger and stranger behaviors, slowly becoming one being made up of many cells and finally evolve, leaving the Earth behind, taking all of it's energy with it and joining the Overmind. As we discover in the end, the Overlords are jealous of us, and of the many other races they have supervised during this evolutionary stage. Despite their technology which to the humans seemed god like, they are stuck, never to transcend their current state.

One interesting aspect was the Overlords willingness to partake in their function. Their acceptance of a higher power instructing them what to do, and knowing they cannot evolve to the same level. Watching an Earth, transcend from barbaric animals into the same being that governs and controls the Overlords must have been a difficult thing to watch. But time after time as this evolutionary step has happened, they study it, they watch trying to understand how they can be next. Our childhood ended, but they seem to be stuck for ever, as adolescent teens.

Venice by Night

 

Venice by Night

Lights flicker and dance, the Grand Canal is lit up with candles and the lights from homes. Dancing is taking place in the streets, a carnival, with song, dance and food. I step off the gondola and walk into the square with St. Mark cathedral my right. With a flash there is a thousand faces on me, waiting for eye contact and acknowledgment of their existence.
But as I look close, those thousand faces vanish behind masks and only a dozen or more new faces stare at me, with hollow and empty eyes. I step forward, the echo of my shoe on the stone erupts like a children's laughter. My hand is grabbed by a woman in a beautiful red flowing dress and she whirls me around as the surroundings begin to once again move like a machines cogs.

   THE JOY, THE LOVE THE HAPPINUESS
   THE SKY, THE MOON, THE STARS
   MINGLING TOGETHER, GIVING LIFE A REASON

She pawns me off for another, as the moon beams light up the ground at our feet.
A man in black top hat and a long coat grabs my hands and begins to turn me. His face blank and white.

   SHE IS GONE, THE LOVE, THE PAIN
   WHY DO I KEEP LIVING
   THE SORROW, THE DEATH THE LACK OF EMOTIONS

The moon eclipses, the stars fade, everyone begins to look the same.
The joy is gone, the man in front of me keeps dancing, the colour is gone.
Everyone is black, with a white mask of death. The night becomes atemporal and begins.

   A TRANCE OF DANCE, A TRANCE OF DRINK

A single thought of her send the mind and emotions on a roller coaster.
The darkness of the past with out the light of the future nor the present. A hand touches me, so soft, so warm.

   THE PAIN IS THERE, THE LACK OF LOVE, MISSING SOMEONE
   WHO WAITS THERE FOR YOU, WAKES UP THINKING OF YOU,
   FALLS ASLEEP THINKING OF YOU

Her other hand grabs mine, the square becomes silent and stares.

   I SAW YOU DANCE, LIFE WAS DRAINED, TRANCE ENSUED
   LOOK ROUND, SEE THE BEAUTY, SEE THE JOY, YOU ARE NOT ALONE

The moon rose, the firmament appeared, colour was everywhere.
A thousand and one faces looked at me once more and music erupted.

Why Can’t I Be a Movie Star?

 

Title: Why Can’t I Be A Movie Star?
Rating: 2/10
Genre: Drama
Released: 1998
Review: Why Can’t I Be A Movie Star? is an action packed rendition of Trailervision’s most acclaimed trailers as well as a shocking story of movie star weirdness. Trailervision, a production company based on the idea that the trailer is usually better than the movie, features trailers for fictional movies that don’t exist. On-screen will be the best no holds barred, visually exciting, barrier-pushing, action-packed, Hollywood-bashing movie-trailers Trailervison has to offer.
In 1999, Trailervision sent a group of fake movie stars to the Hollywood-dominated opening gala of the Toronto International Film Festival accompanied by a group of fake paparazzi, who screamed the stars names when the they alighted from their rented limousine. Security freaked and immediately rushed them into the green room with real Hollywood stars Alec Baldwin, Dave Foley and Bob Hoskins where they “got drunk like showbiz kings” Why Can’t I Be A Movie Star also follows one of those fake actors as he enters the frightening odyssey of trying to live by the rules of celebrity.

The Life of Brian

 

Title: The Life of Brian
Rating: 7/10
Genre: Drama
Released: 1998
Review: A classic comedy from the irreverent Monty Python crew. Brian is a Jew born on the original Christmas… in the stable next door. The wise men come in to distribute gifts, but the star moves next door, so they take them back and move on. So begins the life of Brian. The Jews, desperately seeking spiritual and political freedom, are on the constant lookout for the Messiah, and a group decides that Brian is the leader they seek. He cannot convince them that he is not, and he joins the Judean People’s Front, a revolutionary group that really does absolutely nothing except hate the Roman occupation. Brian becomes a reluctant messiah. Features Eric Idle’s classic song Always Look on the Bright Side of Life.

Phil the Alien

 

Title: Phil the Alien
Rating: 7/10
Genre: Drama
Released: 1998
Review: Crashing to earth from somewhere far, far away, Phil arrives in a small town in Northern Ontario. Perhaps predictably in this Canadian comedy, he makes friends with a young boy and a talking beaver (voice supplied by SCTV’s Joe Flaherty). It’s a strange town where everyone, including children, drinks hard liquor and carries a gun. Phil is an innocent and he quickly develops a drinking problem. Surrounded by hunters, prostitutes, an ex- CIA operative and other northern misfits, Phil finds refuge with the local bar band.

Wilby Wonderful

 

Title: Wilby Wonderful
Rating: 7/10
Genre: Drama
Released: 1998
Review: On the small island town of Wilby there lives a dyslexic sign painter in love with a video store owner who is trying to find a quiet place to kill himself. There also resides a single mother with a knack for making married men happy, and her daughter. Despite her apparent disapproval of her mother’s actions, the daughter is beginning an affair of her own. There is a heroic but disillusioned police officer, and his wife, a real estate agent desperate for acceptance from the mayor. A formidable group of outsiders and Islanders, their stories converge over the course of 24 hours.