Kit Kerr tipped me off to the existence of another ashram memoir, Tim Guest's A LIFE IN ORANGE, about growing up on a branch of the Rajneesh cult in England. I ordered it from amazon.uk and read it last night.

Although the sentences are well-written, the sensibility is thoughtful, and there are some moments of humor and insight, the book as a whole was in the last category I would have expected: worthy but dull. Although the goings-on were hair-raising, more was told than shown and it spent too much time as a history of Rajneesh, but retold without enough wit and flair to lift it above simple history. The author's personal recollections were recalled vividly but the telling was flat. I'm not sure what exactly went wrong, but I suspect not enough drafts. At one point my memoir had the same problems.

The Rajneeshis, by the way, resided in Pune, a charming and cosmopolitan town two hours away from the hick hell-hole I lived in. We at the Baba ashram thought they were a bunch of orange freaks and Rajneesh a sleazy sex-fiend con-man. While the latter description, at least, was dead-on, Rajneesh did show superior judgement in selecting a base of operations.

While in San Diego I finished THE DIM SUM OF ALL THINGS. It's quite charming and funny, but at some point the sheer number of stupid white people who immediately make some flagrantly stereotypical remark upon meeting the Chinese-American heroine began to strain my suspension of disbelief. I can well believe that she might have heard all those remarks in a lifetime, just not in the several-month span the novel occupies. Either that, or San Francisco needs to import a better grade of white folk.

Also read the manga DEMON DIARY volume 1, also on loan from Tweedkitten. The young demon lord Raenef, who is not a ten-year-old girl even though he looks like one, has been assigned a mentor, the extremely sexy bishonen demon lord Eclipse. Eclipse is supposed to teach Raenef magic, and also how to be evil and haughty. Raenef takes to magic like a fish to water. As for the rest of it, Eclipse gets him to memorize the phrase "How dare you admonish me, vermin?" only to hear Raenef use it in less-than-appropriate circumstances. On, and Raenef and Eclipse have a simmering attraction. It's quite funny and sweet. The two bonus stories at the end are of varying levels of incomprehensibility, and would probably be more affecting if I could tell what was going on or what gender the characters are supposed to be.

Finally, I began Jennifer Crusie's FAST WOMEN, about a depressed and situationally anorexic divorcee who takes a job at a down-at-the-heels detective agency. I love it, but I'm at the point where she steals the dachshund (this is the second Crusie novel I've read in which someone steals a dachshund) and I need a chart to follow the character relationships. Only click if you've already read the book.



Nell Dysart, the heroine, is divorced from Tim, who has taken up with Whitney.

Tim Dysart is the brother of Jack Dysart, a lawyer.

Jack Dysart is married to Suze.

Trevor Ogilvie is Jack Dysart's partner.

Budge Jenkins also works at the law firm. His girlfriend is Margie Ogilvie, Trevor Ogilvie's daughter.

Helena Ogilvie, Margie's mother, is deceased, possibly murdered by Trevor Ogilvie.

Gabe McKenna owns the detective agency. He often works for the Dysart/Ogilvie firm.

Chloe is Gabe's ex-wife; Lu is his daughter.

Riley McKenna is Gabe's brother and also works at the detective agency.

Patrick McKenna (deceased) is Gabe and Riley's father. He may have done something illegal connected with Trevor Ogilvie, possibly covered up Helena's murder.

Did I miss anything?


From: [identity profile] typhoid-mary.livejournal.com


Er... Chloe runs the shop downstairs, lives in the house next to Gabe, and sleeps with him quite often. Practically the only difference from when she was married to him is that she no longer does his secretary work. Oh, and Nell and Tim have a son, I think his name starts with a J.
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)

From: [personal profile] larryhammer


Right — and later in the book, Nell's son takes up (for in Crusie's bigger books, there's always a younger generation romance counterpointing the edges) with Lu, Gabe & Chloe's daughter.

---L.

From: [identity profile] tweedkitten.livejournal.com

A little bit of heart


There are a few problems I have with the book... for instance, she doesn't seem to be too mad at Steve but gets insane over Mr. Cajun's tube socks. But anyway. Enough about cajuns. I'm in town this weekend. Speaking of towns, Soju Town?

From: [identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com

Re: A little bit of heart


Yeah, I thought the whole Steve thing was a bit odd.

I'm down with Soju Town, but this weekend may be slightly tricky. I'm training till 1:00 on Saturday and 2:00 on Sunday (the women's kumite thing-- you won't be recovered enough for it, will you?) I'm available at night but will be tired and won't want to stay out too late. What about Friday?

Also, where will you be tonight?

From: [identity profile] copperwise.livejournal.com


Oh my. I grew up in Central Oregon after the Rajneeshees moved to Antelope (Rajneeshpuram). That's when they tryed to poison a whole bunch of folk by spreading salmonella or botulism at the local salad bar. Ma Anand Sheela and her bunch came into Bend regularly to buy clothes and jewelry. Interesting bunch of folks. And I mean that entirely in a "picture the worst possible diva celebrity behavior in a high end boutique, being carried out in a local Montgomery Ward store" kind of way.

Mia :P
.

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