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- CRITICS' CHOICE, Page 9
-
-
- BOOKS
-
- OIL NOTES by Rick Bass (Houghton Mifflin/Seymour Lawrence;
- $16.95). There is no better conversation than good shop talk;
- here a petroleum geologist ("I know how to find oil") tells many
- of the tricks of his trade and proves, in the process, that he
- also knows how to write.
-
- POLAR STAR by Martin Cruz Smith (Random House; $19.95). In
- a sequel to his best-selling detective novel Gorky Park, Smith
- sets Moscow investigator Arkady Renko off on another bizarre
- case. The setting this time is a fishing boat on the Bering Sea;
- one dead body leads to others along an arc of increasing menace
- and violence.
-
- FROM BEIRUT TO JERUSALEM by Thomas L. Friedman (Farrar,
- Straus & Giroux; $22.95). Friedman won two Pulitzer Prizes
- during the 1980s while covering the Middle East for the New York
- Times. Now based in Washington, he looks back on the harsh
- realities of a region drenched in myths and bloodshed.
-
- THEATER
-
- SHOWING OFF. What ever happened to the witty little revue?
- It's thriving off-Broadway in this four-person jape at assorted
- cultural pretenses, including odious sing-alongs, the subject
- of the sing-along finale.
-
- BEN-HUR. Sci-fi writer Thomas Disch (The Brave Little
- Toaster) vigorously adapts an epic of early Christian days, at
- Baltimore's Peabody Conservatory.
-
- ART
-
- EDWARD HOPPER, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
- City. A major realist painter, Hopper (1882-1967) is also an
- enduringly popular chronicler of New England lighthouses,
- late-night cafes and other vignettes of the American scene. The
- Whitney's collection of his work is unmatched, as this sampling
- confirms. Through Nov. 5.
-
- ON THE ART OF FIXING A SHADOW: 150 YEARS OF PHOTOGRAPHY,
- National Gallery, Washington. The history of photography as
- art, assembled from public and private collections around the
- world. More than 400 original pictures representing 200
- photographers. Among them: Louis Daguerre, Alfred Stieglitz,
- Henri Cartier-Bresson, Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange. Through
- July 30.
-
- AGAINST NATURE: JAPANESE ART IN THE EIGHTIES, San Francisco
- Museum of Modern Art. Architect Arata Isozaki and fashion
- designer Issey Miyake are famous abroad, but contemporary visual
- art from Japan is still little known in the West. The first
- major U.S. museum show from Japan in more than 20 years brings
- Americans a survey of new work from the cultural center of East
- Asia. Through Aug. 6.
-
- MUSIC
-
- ERROLL GARNER: DANCING ON THE CEILING (Emarcy). This second
- volume of previously unreleased material shows off Garner's
- angular, driving, two-fisted piano at its best. His dazzling
- improvisations breathe new life into well-worn standards like
- It Had to Be You and show why, twelve years after his death,
- this legendary jazzman remains in a class of his own.
-
- TIN MACHINE: TIN MACHINE (EMI). It's David Bowie, lying low
- with a new band that he helped create and whose rough edges he
- hones to a good cutting edge. Lots of fever-blister guitar work
- and apocalyptic Bowie lyrics. Crack City ought to be a sci-fi
- hallucination, but Bowie knows better: he makes it into an
- everyday nightmare.
-
- TELEVISION
-
- YESTERDAY, TODAY AND TOMORROW (NBC, debuting Aug. 2, 10
- p.m. EDT). Topical issues will be examined from a tripartite
- perspective -- past, present and future -- in NBC's umpteenth
- try at a prime-time magazine show. Maria Shriver and Mary Alice
- Williams are among the on-camera crew.
-
- PRIME TIME LIVE (ABC, beginning Aug. 3, 10 p.m. EDT). And
- there's more, news junkies. In this ambitious new ABC offering,
- Diane Sawyer and Sam Donaldson each week will face a studio
- audience and the formidable task of putting a fresh spin on the
- news.
-
- DARK CIRCLE (PBS, Aug. 8, 10 p.m. on most stations). This
- documentary on nuclear power was set to air on PBS in 1986 but
- was scuttled because of its antinuclear bias. Now it turns up
- on P.O.V., the special summer series.
-
- MOVIES
-
- WHEN HARRY MET SALLY. . . it was loathe at first sight. But
- he (Billy Crystal) learned to accept her (Meg Ryan) with almost
- no romantic strings attached. The "almost" makes for a witty
- sexual tension in Rob Reiner's comic valentine to love,
- friendship and Woody Allen.
-
- GREAT BALLS OF FIRE. This biopic stamps demon rocker Jerry
- Lee Lewis as a feral innocent in a time warp, instead of a
- sexual threat for Middle America. Dennis Quaid inhabits Jerry
- Lee with a nicely calculating recklessness, and Winona Ryder is
- hypnotically enigmatic as the singer's nymphet bride.
-
-