BOOKS a .0 s ! !VVVV w w w Mysteries in both music and meaning, CATCH OF THE DAY CRISPing, writing, perceptions, an The Unseen Hand and Other Plays by Sam Shepard $7.95, 352 pages Bantam Books Actor/playwright Sam Shepard has written more than forty plays. The Unseen Hand and Other Plays is a collection of his early works, written about twenty years ago. In the in- troduction, Shepard says that now, looking back on these plays he realizes he was lerning how to write, beaking the ice with himself. This is obvious to the reader if one follows the plays in chronological order. Shepard's progress as a writer is traceable. The plays are reactionary to the life and politics of the '60s and early '70s. Shepard introduces them by saying, "Today, I don't see how these plays make any real sense unless they're put into perspective with that time." He is quite right - they often don't make sense. However, there is one universal quality about all of the plays: the theme of difficulty in com- municating. Whether it is the 19th century outlaws in the 20th century America of The Unseen Hand, or the convict in The Killer's Head, all of them painfully try to convey "what's going on." The point condenses in The Rock Garden when the alternate characters repeatedly ask "You know?" But they don't know and neither does the audience and the urgency of the dilemma is painful. The characters are phantom snap- shots of people one might have known, if one could get a better look at them. They do not invoke pity or passion, rather they provoke thought. In "The Unseen Hand," Blue, an old outlaw, gives his view of contemporary life: "Used to be, a man would have hisself a misunderstanding and go out and set- tle it with a six-gun. Now it's all silent, secret. Everything moves like a fever. Don't know when they'll cut ya' down and when they do ya' don't know who done it." Shepard buffs it with Willie's (the space freak) explanation of his world: "Whenever our thoughts transcend those of the magicians the Hand squeezes down and forces our minds to contract into non- preoccupation ... Living death." The two unlikely worlds seem bound by sobering likeness, both are a form of living death. Beyond the technique of creating somehow surreal characters to provoke thought, Shepard rides on the dialogue. Sometimes flamboyant, more often abstract, the words mean nothing and everything. When The Man in The Rock Garden talks about making a rock garden one realizes he isn't talking about just a rock garden. He's trying to reach something he's unsure of: a life observation and communication with The Boy. This technique doesn't hide Shepard's flaws, however. There are several incongruencies one can't help but notice. In The Unseen Hand, Cisco, who is supposed to be telepathic, asks for a definition of "rocket" and later spontaneously breaks into the song "Rock Around the Clock." One wonders how a 19th century telepathic outlaw transported into the 20th century can know all the World Traveler Pack - Convertible from luggage HARD TO FIND TRAVEL ITEMS: -Electrical Adapters & Converters -Passport Carriers/Money Belts -Light Weight Raingeare words to "Rock Around the Clock." There are other problems too, like a drastic, unexplainable change in the characters of Kid and Sycamore that isn't really explained in the play. In virtually a single line of dialogue they become totally different. One might be able to account for Kid, but Sycamore? C'mon Sam! That's stret- ching things. By the time Shepard arrives at 1975 with Killer's Head, one sees definite improvement. In this one scene, one character play, he finds and traps an abstract emotion in the reader. Is one to be sympathetic or bewildered or.. .? Why does a man in an electric chair, talking about horses and pick-up trucks stir whatever that emotion is.? Overall, one can applaud Shepard for releasing this collection of "disposable plays." Not every playwright is brave enough to let trash out of the basket. Yes, while the collection has no merit besides chronicling the progress of Shepard, there are a few plays with outstanding features that make the read almost worth while. - Gloria Sanak Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe in Murder in E Minor BY Robert Goldsborough $13.95, hardcover, 196 pages Bantam Books Nero Wolfe is back. NERO WOLFE is back! NERO WOLFE IS BACK!!! Nero Wolfe for those unfortunate people who are unfamiliar with him) is a genius, a 286-pound gourmet, an orchid-lover, and the most eccentric and successful private detective in the world. Wolfe is assisted by his con- fidential secretary, leg-man, chauf- feur, and gadfly and biographer-Ar- chie Goodwin. Over a 41-year period, novelist Rex Stout wrote 33 novels and 39 novellas starring this world-famous detective. The last beingpublished in 1975. Rex Stout died soon thereafter and his many fans have missed Nero Wolfe ever since. Now, though, Nero Wolfe, has returned in this new adventure, writting by Robert Goldsborough, a long-time fan and recognized expert on Nero Wolfe. The plot of Murder in E Minor cen- ters around the murder of Milan Stevans, conductor of the New York Symphony. Wolfe is drawn into in- vestigating the murder when he is hired by Maria Radovich (Stevans grand-niece) to discover who was sending threatening letters to Stevans, prior to his death. Maria's fiancee, Gerald Miller, is charged with the murder, but Wolfe decides he is innocent and sets out to prove who is the guilty party. This novel follows the familiar .pat- tern of all Nero Wolfe stories. Wolfe sits and thinks and gives orders that Archie runs around trying to carry out. The denouement is, as ususal, in Wolfe's office with the suspects assembled and the police on hand to arrest the villian as soon as Wolfe has revealed his identity. The mystery is as complex as any written by Stout, the clues being well- buried and, at one point, requiring a working knowledge of German. In ad- dition, the ancillary characters that appeared in previous Nero Wolfe novels are well-represented and well-handled in this book. The reader is reacquainted with Fritz Brenner, the cook; Nathaniel Horstmann, Wolfe's gardener; In- specter Cramer and Sergeant Steb- bins of the New York City Police Department: Paul Panzer and Fred Durking; Wolfe's lawyer, Nathanial Parker; Archie's newspaper contact, Lou Cohen; and Archie's girlfriend, Lily Rowan. Murder in E Minor is a complete success and pure joy to read for Nero Wolfe fans. Goldsborough has recreated the essential elements of a Nero Wolfe novel, which is to say he has recreated the living, breathing characters of Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin in such a way that readers familiar with Rex Stout's writing style would not be able to tell that he hadn't written this book. In fact, not only was he confident enough of his knowledge of those in Wolfe's world to write about them in this book but he reached into Wolfe's mostly unknown past to create two fascinating new characters. The only possible discrepancy of this book from the rest of the Nero Wolfe books occurs early on. Archie identifies Wolfe from a photograph taken long ago in Yugoslavia when Wolfe was younger and much thinner than he is now. But in the novel "In the Best Families" Archie did not recognize a thinner, bearded Nero Wolfe until Wolfe revealed his identity to him. However, this discrepancy in no way detracts from enjoyment of the book. So real are Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin to their fans that some have said that Rex Stout merely functioned as the literary agent for Archie Goodwin. All Nero Wolfe fans can on- ce again rejoice; for Robert Gold- sborough has written an authentic, enjoyable mystery novel in the best tradition of Rex Stout. -By Mickey Brumm W E ALL HAVE to choose our fall courses this week. Some of my friends think I am neurotic because I make such a production out of it. All I talk about during CRISP is what I should take. I do that because there's so mch to learn that I can't decide what's most important. I'll be a senior next year. It will be my last year with all these resources, and all this time to devote to learning. Of course, I didn't realize what the hell I had here until now. Three years are virtually gone and I can't get them back. I did so much bitching - I got mad at the work, and I swore at my books, and I lost a lot of learning. You could be an optimist and say "Well, look at it this way, you're learning from your mistakes." I still wish I could have some of that time back. W RITING a weekly column has been my excuse to stop living. When anybody asks me to do something - go to a movie or a lecture - I say, ."I have a column due Thursday." This column has been my excuse for not growing. I sat in front of the typewriter for hours without depressing a single key because I couldn't think of anything to write about. I sat there in a writers block because I was not listening to anyone. I heard the words, and, if I was asked to, I could have repeated them - but I wasn't listening. It is very hard to grow when you always have something else to do. Routines make it hard for you to grow, to listen, and to learn. My routine is the "I have lots of school work and a column due Thursday" routine. My life this past year has been wrapped around that sentence. Just now, I refused to go to my first opera because of that sentence. But it's a lot more than not going to the opera. I've told my friends, "what I've been up to," and how busy I've been, but I haven't told them how I really feel, and if they cared enough to tell me how they feel, I didn't listen. And I haven't tried to meet any new people because "I won't have any time to spend with them anyway." I allowed the column to keep me from growing, but it could have been something else like a tough class schedule or applying for internships. You don't just say, "I'm going to grow this year." To grow you have to take risks, and maybe make a fool out of yourself, because you're no longer in your own little room, where everything stays the same and nobody can see you make mistakes. Next year, unless I decide that I'm willing to make myself vulnerable, I will have a brand new routine. W HY DON'T YOU look at us?" my friend Steve shouted, half- indignant and half-confused because everyone in the tour group was looking straight at the Alumni Building. The tour group was made up of high school seniors and their parents, and by looking at various buildings they were getting "a feel" for the University. The college students who walked by weren't part of the tour, and were thus of no in- terest to anyone in the group. Of course, there were pressing questions to ask about the size of the Alumni Building. Steve repeated his question, this time shaking his head. Finally they all turned. Steve wasn't the tourguide. And he certainly wasn't a building. This was a very strange in- terruption. "See all these people," Steve said pointing to students as they walked along, "we're students." "Look at me," he said, smiling. "Your kid could look like this in four years. See my long hair? And I used to be so clean-cut. "Have you shown them the long- haired freaks and the people scavenging for garbage yet?" he asked the tourguide, who was still talking about the Alumni Building. "Take a good long look at your daughter. Three years form now she might look the same, but you may not even know who she is. Why don't you start looking at who you're dropping her off with?" They stared at the kid who had in- terrupted the tour, and then they all looked back at the Alumni Building, which was completed in 1981. That's what the tourguide said. T HE LAST THING I want to talk about is love. Stay with me now, I know this isn't easy. I was on the phone with my father today and at the very end of the conversation I said "I love you." Maybe now you're thinking about that soppy ad for AT&T where the woman exclaims through her tears that "he just called to say I love you, Mom." I don't do that sort of thing. I have a hard enough time just writing the words, "I love you" at the end of a let- ter to my parents. Every time I go home on vacation, I plan to tell my father that I love him, but I never do. After a few failure, I thought how great it would be if Dad and I could get drunk together and have one of those "remember it for a lifetime conversations." Then maybe the words would come out of my mouth. What ended up happening is that we went out for a walk - his idea, not mine. We never do that. My father is one of those people who believes in a pratical education. The kind of education that gets you a job. And there I was, an English major whose main interest was creative writing. I thought on this walk that Dad might give me the same old speech about "geting all the right tickets" so that I could get a good job, and how I should be practical in my course choice. Instead he put his arm around me and said, "Mike, I'm really not worried about you. I don't think it matters what you do. You're going to do all right." Then he told me that he loved me, but not in the way he might at then end of a phone conversation, as sort of a routine way to end things. It wasn't one of those simple "I love you's" that you just say. He had to work up to it. And then I looked right -Ii I BUIM 1 I ife can be really tough whenYou've got a bad burger habit You! /hnd ourself thinking about burgers all day long You can't uaattill you ! get another "burgerfix'.'But it doesn thave tobe that uxiy' here is a fresh .alternative. Subum Sub Shops All our sandwiches and salads ! ure made/freseore our eves.So gtrid o/thatbureronyour back 1315 S. University " 761-4160 ! Mon.-Thurs. I 1a.m. - 2a.m. Fri.- Sat. I I a.m. - 3 a.m. " Sun. I I a.m. - I I p.m ! - -- --"-" """ BUY ONE S SUB AND for5 1315 S. UN ~1*50 any footlong si double meat with 1 1315 S. UN mmmmmi ONEID 0I ANY FOOTLOA~ with purchase 1315 S. UN M.. - - - ---* up at him, and didn't say anything. The words were screaming in my mind but I trapped them in my mouth before they could get out. We walked the rest of the way in silence. When I called my father, I wasn't thinking about saying "I love you" or planning out when I would say it. The words were there. They were already; out before I could stop myself. When I hung up the phone I had this huge smile on my face; as I told my roommate what I had just done, I was jumping around, and I shook him and shouted "I did it." Twenty years and I finally did it. Not on a birthday card, but in words, with my own voice. And it came out so goddamned easy it almost makes me want to cry (that's another thing I don't do) for waiting all these years. Now maybe when I go home for summer vacation I'll tell him that I love him right in front of him. I'll walk up to him and...well, forget plans. Maybe it will just creep out P again tence, This o Best o Mike schoo to backpack 4/ COMPLETE BACKPACKING SUPPLIES /4' TYPF OF SUB 330 S. State MENU 6" SNACK FT. I ONG( DI UQUAC CLUB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.69 $3.99 (Roast Beef- Turkey - Ham) B.M.T. . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.49 $3.79 (Ham - Pepperoni - Genoa - Bologna) SUBWAY SPECIAL . . $2.09 $3.19 (Ham - Genoa - Bologna) SPICY ITALIAN ..... $1.99 $2.99 (Pepperoni & Genoa) ROAST BEEF ........ $2.49 $3.99 HAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.09 $3.19 TURKEY BREAST ... $2.09 $3.19 TYPE OF SUB CHICKEN SALAI SEAFOOD & CRA TUNA ..........' ' ITALIAN EXPRES (Sausage & Meatba SAUSAGE...... MEATBALL .... CHEESE . . . . ... VEGETARIAN .. STEAK & CHEES] 761-6207 8 Weekend-April 11, 1986 -- -W