Monday, July 27, 2009

More Bookish Thoughts...

We Need To Talk About Kevin

What effects do one ambivalent parent and one overly optimistic parent have on a child? Is nature or nurture to blame for creating a sociopath? What might drive a teenager to remorselessly commit murder? Lionel Shriver's We Need To Talk About Kevin poses these difficult questions and many more. The narrative, which leads with horrifying inevitability to the day when Kevin massacres seven of his schoolmates and a teacher at his upstate New York high school, is told as a series of letters from Kevin's mother, Eva, to her apparently estranged husband, Franklin. This method both affords the reader deep insight into Eva's consciousness and enables Shriver to pull off a huge and crushing shock at the end of the book. The novel is harrowing, psychologically astute and even darkly humourous; it proves the tenuousness between blame and empathy, retribution and forgiveness.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Conquering the Chilkoot

Jean and I just got home yesterday from a wonderful trip to Whitehorse. We went up for a week but I spent 2 1/2 days of that hiking the Chilkoot with Fred. The 53km Chilkoot Trail winds through the Coast Mountains, starting in Dyea, Alaska and finishing in Bennett, BC. During the Klondike Gold Rush, the trail was a major traffic route: prospectors would climb over the pass (multiple times in order to transport all their goods), build boats and float north down the Yukon River (accessible from Lake Bennett) to Dawson City. This was no mean feat and plenty of gold rushers died or turned back because of the harsh conditions. Today, the trail is a National Historic Sight and it boasts some amazing scenery. It starts out in coastal rain forest, climbs upward (about 3000 feet) into alpine terrain and ends up in boreal forest so the views and the vegetation are always changing. Of course, our experience was made even better by perfect weather and by overtaking all the groups of hikers who left camp before us. Not that we're proud or anything...


Climbing up the "golden stairs"


Pretty alpine terrain between the summit and Happy Camp



Heading towards Deep Lake

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

More Bookish Thoughts...

Apple a Day

Oddly enough for an arts major, one of my favourite classes at McGill was a chemistry elective: The World of Chemistry - Food. The course focused on food science and included lectures on artificial sweeteners, chocolate, cholesterol and much more. I found it fascinating, especially since the three co-professors seemed so engaged in the material and so eager to pass on their knowledge. One such prof, Dr. Joe Schwarcz, recently gave a lecture at UVic, which Jean and I attended and thoroughly enjoyed. An Apple A Day is Dr. Schwarcz's most recent book; it aims to dispel nutrition myths, to offset fear-mongering (think BPAs, GMOs etc), and to generally preach "informed common sense."

"Eat salmon. It's full of good omega-3 fats. Don't eat salmon. It's full of PCBs and mercury. Eat more veggies. They're full of good antioxidants. Don't eat more veggies. The pesticides will give you cancer." This is the kind of contradictory information that bombards consumers/newspaper readers everyday. And it demonstrates why we need Joe Schwarcz! First describing how food affects human health, his book examines the compounds in tomatoes, soy, broccoli etc. that, though not panaceas, can help maintain health. Then Dr. Schwarcz investigates how corporations manipulate our food supply, delving into the science of food additives and exploring how we might benefit from adding bacteria to certain foods. He sheds light on contaminants, examining everything from pesticide residues to remnants of antibiotics to trans fats to toxins that may leach into food from cookware. Finally, he takes a studied look at calorie consumption and debunks the "science" behind popular diets.

This is an amazing book for anyone concerned about nutrition who feels overwhelmed by conflicting media reports and manipulated by advertising. Dr. Schwarcz presents sound evidence and facts in a scientific (but not too scientific), lighthearted manner, reminding us that "science can never guarantee safety, it can only demonstrate harm." Check out his office's website too: www.oss.mcgill.ca